Affleck and his wife,
Jennifer Garner, hope a beefed-up California law with keep the paparazzi
at a distance when it takes effect on New Year's Day.
"My kids aren't celebrities," Affleck said in a wide-ranging Playboy interview. "They never made that bargain."
The law, which Garner
joined Halle Berry to lobby for, doubles to a year the jail time a
photographer can get for harassment that "seriously alarms, annoys,
torments, or terrorizes" children. The law applies to children under 16
who are photographed because of their parent's occupation.
"The tragic thing is,
people who see those pictures naturally think it's sweet," Affleck said.
"They don't see the gigantic former gang member with a huge lens
standing over a 4-year-old and screaming to get the kid's attention."
Affleck and Garner have three children: Violet, 8, Serafina, 5 next month, and Samuel, who turns 2 in February.
"The kids are always
looking down because they're freaked out and scared of these people,"
Affleck said. "And so they yell. Which is fine if you're Lindsay Lohan
coming out of a club, or me, or any adult. With kids, it's tasteless at
best."
Affleck recounted a case
five years ago when a man was charged with stalking his family after
hiding among the pack of paparazzi that followed his children to nursery
school. The stalker "who had threatened to kill me, my wife and our
kids showed up at the school and got arrested," he said. "I mean, there
are real practical dangers to this."
A Los Angeles judge ruled
the man was mentally incompetent to stand trial. He was committed to a
mental health institution and ordered to stay away from the family for
10 years.
The California law does
not punish websites, newspapers or magazines for publishing photos of
children taken in violation of the law.
"A lot of these
photographs are being bought by legitimate magazines," Affleck said. "In
the UK, they have a good system: If you take a kid's picture, you have
to blur out the face. It protects the privacy of children, any child. I
wish we would do that here, though I don't expect it."
He wants a "bubble of
safety" around his children, with cameras staying at least 100 feet
away, he said. "They all have 300-millimeter lenses. I'm a photographer
myself, and I can tell you with complete confidence that you can get a
fine picture."
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