Such a photo would never be used for any official identification purpose. A post-mortem photo of the deceased is what is usually used to identify the body. A relative's in-person viewing of the body for identification purposes, especially for one so accused, would not be allowed under any circumstance. I identified my son's body four days after his death from such a post mortem photograph.
The only photo I could supply the press with was one from his mother that was taken when he was 15. My photographs at the time were in storage. He was 32 years old. So things can most innocently get really screwed-up when people haven't their wits about them.
I was never contacted by the police. Immediately after learning what had happened, this now some 20 hours after it took place, I called the police seeking information about my son and was told a victim had my son's license in his pocket. As impossible as it was, I had some tiny bit of hope to cling to for a few days. While I read the ponderings of strangers online writing the most fantastic, untruthful and hurtful things.
c2w? wrote:
He has cause of action because Connecticut state officials decided to let him know his brother, mother and/or father were dead by wrongly naming him as the killer of 20 small children to (and also in front of) the whole damn world.
I would not want to be the one to bring that suit, because I doubt it would be successful. Proving the State is responsible for some AP report attributed to an "unidentified law enforcement official" will be next to impossible. Unless, that is, AP gives up their source and the name of the reporter reporting it.
Now that's where Ryan does have an easily winnable lawsuit; suing the AP, not the People of the State of Connecticut.
I have to tell you, some folks who've lost a loved one in such a grotesque event, like me, have been working the press to change their habits when covering such events. I was thrilled, well maybe not thrilled, but certainly thankful that law enforcement demanded the press keep their distance from victims. We do have a right to our privacy.
I'll try to locate a scathing post I submitted a few years ago to the Facebook page for the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma that concerned an opinion piece, Don't Rush the Healing, written by Dave Cullen, a reporter who had covered Columbine for 10 years. It was originally published on AOL news on Jan 12, 2011 and the FB posting was entitled: The Meaning of Grief.
You might care to read these:
Aurora's Horror: Tips for Responsible Coverage
Small Town, Big Story: Lessons from the Front Lines
Connecticut State Police Press Releases