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SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY STUDENT QUESTIONS VA
SECURITY ACTIONS -- "It's a government building
and we're living in challenging times."

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http://www.syracuse.com/
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Story below:
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SU student questions VA security actions
She says medical center officers ordered her to
delete photographs she took.
By Michele Reaves
Staff writer
A Syracuse University graduate student taking photographs outside the VA
Medical Center says she was questioned and ordered to delete several
images by hospital security officers Thursday afternoon.
Mariam Jukaku, 24, of Michigan, said the officers also photocopied her
university ID and driver's license and asked if she was a U.S. citizen.
She wonders if her appearance played a part in how the incident was
handled.
Jukaku, a U.S. citizen of Indian descent, said she is Muslim and wears a
head scarf.
"I got actually kind of annoyed. I felt that the question had no
relevance," she said of being asked about her citizenship. "That's when
I started wondering, 'Maybe someone who didn't look like me might be
treated differently.' "
Gordon Sclar, a medical center spokesman, said security officers were
following hospital policy that restricts photographs on hospital
property. He said Jukaku was between the sidewalk and the parking lot.
She said she stayed on the sidewalk.
Her appearance was not an issue, Sclar said.
"There is a policy that requires if video or photographic equipment is
being used on our property and we don't know about it, (the operators)
will be questioned," Sclar said.
"It's a government building and we're living in challenging times," he
added.
But Sclar said photocopying her ID was not necessary and there is "zero
tolerance" for discrimination.
"Removing the images that she shot was inappropriate, so we apologize,"
Sclar said.
Jukaku is a graduate student in SU's S.I. Newhouse School of Public
Communications. She writes for The Post-Standard as part of the Newhouse
fellowship program.
Jukaku said she decided to practice some photo techniques after a
photography class. She snapped pictures of flags and signs for five to
10 minutes, catching passers-by walking in and out of the hospital. She
said she remained on the sidewalk the entire time.
As she walked away, she said, an officer called out and ordered Jukaku
to give her the camera. Another officer joined them.
Jukaku was then taken to the security office and questioned.
Sclar said the policy and its enforcement would be discussed.
Photographers can freely photograph federal buildings from outside the
property boundary, said Bert Krages, a copyright attorney who writes on
photographer's rights, in a 2006 article on PopPhoto.com.
Jukaku's photography instructor, Newhouse adjunct professor Doug
Wonders, said he has been teaching the course since 1996 and this is the
first time he has heard of students having problems with the medical
center.
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Larry Scott --