Los Angeles - Pop star Justin Bieber on Wednesday called the death of
a paparazzo, who was chasing his white Ferrari in Los Angeles, a tragic
accident and said he hoped it would spur action to safeguard the lives
of celebrities, police and photographers.
Police said the freelance photographer, whose name has not officially
been released, was killed by another driver on Tuesday evening after he
crossed a busy highway to snap pictures of the Ferrari that had been
stopped by police for speeding.
Bieber, 18, was not in the sports car, which was reportedly being driven by a friend.
"While I was not present nor directly involved with this tragic
accident, my thoughts and prayers are with the family of the victim,"
the "Boyfriend" singer said in statement.
Bieber, who is followed day and night by photographers, said he hoped
the incident "will finally inspire meaningful legislation and whatever
other necessary steps to protect the lives and safety of celebrities,
police officers, innocent public bystanders, and the photographers
themselves."
Celebrity website TMZ.com said the photographer was following the
Ferrari after seeing it pulling out of a Beverly Hills hotel on Tuesday
evening, believing Bieber was inside the car.
Los Angeles police said the photographer was seen taking pictures of
the traffic stop and was ordered by highway patrol officers to return to
his car for safety reasons. He was struck by another motorist while
trying to cross four lanes of traffic.
Bieber was stopped by police for speeding on a Los Angeles freeway
last July, when the Canadian teen sensation told police he was being
hounded by paparazzi.
But a Los Angeles judge in November threw out criminal charges
against the photographer who was charged in that case under a new
California law aimed at cracking down on aggressive photographers and
celebrity media. Judge Thomas Robinson called the 2010 law "problematic"
and "overly inclusive."
The death on Tuesday brought calls from some other celebrities for a
halt to the sometimes 24/7 tracking of their activities at work, home
and leisure.
Singer Miley Cyrus, 20, a frequent paparazzi target, sent out a
stream of Twitter messages, referencing the death of Britain's Princess
Diana in a 1997 car crash while being chased by paparazzi in Paris.
"Hope this paparazzi/JB accident brings on some changes in '13
Paparazzi are dangerous! Wasn't Princess Di enough of a wake up call?!"
Cyrus tweeted.
"This was bound to happen! Your mom teaches u when your a child not
to play in the street! The chaos that comes with the paparazzi acting
like fools makes it impossible for anyone to make safe choices," Cyrus
added.
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