Court Case To Test Legality of Recording the Police With Your Cell Phone
suraj.sun sends this excerpt from Ars Technica:
"If you pull out your cell phone to make a video of police officers arresting a suspect, are you 'secretly recording' them? 'No' seems like the obvious answer, but that's precisely the claim that three police officers made to justify their arrest of a Boston man. In arguments before the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit on Wednesday, the city also denied the man's claim that his First or Fourth Amendment rights had been violated. The case will be an important test of whether the Constitution protects individuals' right to record the police while they are on duty. Many states have 'one-party notification' wiretapping laws that allow any party to a conversation to secretly record it. But under the strict 'two-party notification' laws in Massachusetts, it's a crime to 'secretly record' audio communications unless 'all parties to such communication' have given their consent. The police arrested Glik for breaking this law. For good measure, they also charged Glik—who did no more than stand a few feet away with his cell phone—with 'aiding the escape of a prisoner' and 'disturbing the peace.'"
It's a good thing the US was founded with the notion of check and balances so as to prevent abuse of power...
Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once
when performing official duties for the good of the public.
If their supervisor showed up, they'd have to fully disclose everything which they were doing, ditto internal affairs, the police chief / superintendent, or a government functionary whose bailiwick involved the performance of their current duties.
If they have something to hide, which they don't want revealed in court, they need to find some other line of work.
Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
There is no reason to post on this subject. And if anyone does WE WILL BUST YOUR GODDAMN HEADS, YOU PINKO FUCKS! Now GET OUT OF THE CAR!
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
It seems like this is a tough argument, considering that the police have already consented to being recorded by cameras in their cars-- and I wonder if at any point a Mass. driver has officially consented to being recorded by those cameras.
Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
Just another case where someone gets mad when someone else did something they didn't like. Happens in politics, happens in business, happens in every police force around the globe. Good thing we have overly vague sections of law that we can use to arrest anyone with.
So getting freedom fondled by the TSA is okay, but recording official agents on official business representing the government is a no go?
Yeah, right...
The police are using a law not designed for them. They know it, and the writers knew it, but that didn't stop them from using it for purposes for which it was not intended. Hopefully the court recognizes this too...
Magic doesn't work in my presence. My power of disbelief is too strong.
It's a crime to collect evidence of police committing crimes. It must be a nice feeling to be above the law.
What the police do is police business, not yours. Glik should be thankful he wasn't dealing with Officer Bubbles.
How was he 'aiding the escape of a prisoner' and 'disturbing the peace?'
Did the "prisoner" get away because the police had to chase him down and confiscate his camera? How would it be his fault if they let the "prisoner" go (yes, I know they didn't let anyone go...)
Also, disturbing what peace? It seemed rather non-peaceful there.
Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
and should be encouraged
additionally, all the video in patrol cars, street lights, intersections...
we pay for that, and there should be a right to access those feeds if we pay a small fee and fill out some paperwork
i don't understand a world where the police have anything to fear by the truth being shown
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
I bet comrade didn't have his papers either...
Hopefully the First Circuit court doesn't forget their 1999 ruling in Iacobucci v. Boulter where the upheld the right to record public figures on public property. But according to the article the judges seem to find the reasoning of the city to be quite absurd so that is a good sign.
I'm a slashdot editor, and I can't distinguish between the concepts of "secretly" and "non-consensually".
Please give generously, so further people don't have to suffer the consequences of my stupidity.
Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
In the event that the outcome goes the wrong way, all that's needed is for enough campaign groups on both sides of the political spectrum to encourage their supporters to routinely record the police whenever they see them, providing they are in groups of more than some particular size and providing their camera streams to a remote server.
R v Sussex Justices, ex parte McCarthy brought the saying to English law that it is not enough that justice must be done - it must also be seen to be done. The principle is about impartiality and appeared before video cameras, but surely preventing or destroying any recording of a police officer acting in public under colour of law is, "creat[ing] a suspicion that there has been an improper interference with the course of justice."
Are you with us, or against us?
First of all, how can anyone prove someone recorded video? If I'm holding out my camera, how do you know I'm not just taking a snapshot? Same goes for my mobile phone. You can't presume I'm recording audio and video without confiscating my device and searching for recordings.
Hey COPS! If you're not doing anything wrong, you've got nothing to hide - remember?
It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
how would they even know???
That's like trying to outlaw a cop being secretly in a coffee shop, secretly eating a donut!!!
Bukowski said it. I believe it. That settles it.
The charges against him were dropped. This is a case brought by him against the City and the police.
At least in this case they didn't arrest him on the sole charge of Resisting Arrest.
Yes, that actually happens.
I sympathize with the guy, and was going to say that this will be an important case in turning back the overweening power of government, but will it?
The fact is, if he's in a state that REQUIRES the consent of both parties in a conversation to be recorded, and he didn't get the consent of both parties, it may be as simple as that.
I'm saying that the 2-party-consent law is BS, and that's the first thing that needs to be changed.
Nevertheless, I hope he wins.
-Styopa
Err ... when the Taxachusett's cops (or any others in two-party consent-to-tape state) question/interrogate someone, do they not tape the event? Absent consent, specific legal exemption or a warrent, aren't they violating the two-party statute?
There are some things you are better off losing.
Yet the jury is given such specific instructions that if they don't know their rights as a juror before serving on the jury, then the judge has nearly complete control over what happens.
I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.
...needs to start recording cops at every opportunity. Do this even if the cop is just standing on the corner. Make sure they see you.
Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
The idea that cops and most other public employees have any right to privacy at work is totally off the wall. The public must have the ability to observe, record and publish any actions of police and most other public employees on the job. Just why is it that cops want to hide their actions? The only issue I have at all is in any sudden reaching into pockets or purses when a crime is at hand. That might get someone shot but is no reason for arresting them. Cities need to be as eager to prosecute top level employees as well as cops with the same vigor as other law breakers.
Good overview of several similar cases coming up in Illinois, and their national implications:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/08/chicago-district-attorney-recording-bad-cops_n_872921.html
We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
Even then, some (all?) states have certain stipulations on that, like you have to be facing jail time of > 90 days and/or fines in excess of $15,000 in order to get the court to grant you a jury trial.
"I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
I am not a lawyer. But I think it is more than that. The same laws that allow people to video or photograph things going on in public should apply unless the police are doing something in a place that allows them an expectation of privacy. Otherwise they are in public. If I am correct, I believe that if you video or take pictures in public, people cannot come after you monetarily since they had no expectation of privacy.
In Canada, the supreme court ruled (and this is my understanding of it) that if there is enough of a social benefit, the privacy of a person is outweighed. I pretty sure that applies for photos taken in public and possibly in private. This is why newsworthy photos and video are covered, and usually where other people are incidental to a photo (i.e. part of the background crowd). But if you take a picture of someone and try to sell the picture for your own profit (even if you call it 'art'), you need explicit consent. When I did a lot of photography, I would always carry model releases in my camera bag just in case there was an interesting shot of someone. It came in handy a couple of times.
-- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
They are citizens too...
All citizens are equal, but...well, you know the rest.
If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
Agents of the government do not have an expectation of privacy when carrying out their official duties; private citizens should have an expectation of privacy whenever they are not in a public place. This is an important distinction, necessary to protect us from the sort of tyranny that people in some other countries face, and unfortunately it is a distinction that people frequently forget. We, as citizens, must have the ability to keep our private lives private; this right should only be revoked when there is evidence that a crime has been committed behind closed doors. The police, as government agents, should never be able to act secretly; we should be able to review everything the police do, in order to guard against wrongdoing and abuses of power.
Palm trees and 8
First of all, this is Massachusetts. The first communist state in American. We all know how a communist feels about a police state, they love them, and Massachusetts is no different. If a cop wants to search your house or vehicle and you don't want them to, the inevitable question they ask is "What do you have to hide?" I think the same applies here. What are they trying to hide? Then there is "But under the strict 'two-party notification' laws in Massachusetts, it's a crime to 'secretly record' audio communications unless 'all parties to such communication' have given their consent." The key here is the 'secretly record' part. This person was in the open, not hiding anything. Where did the "secret" part come in? This is only one thing. Intimidation by authority to conceal activity that was likely illegal.
It's the audio component of the phone-based video that seems to be the sticking point. Most in-store surveillance setups are video only.
I use irony whenever I can, but my shirts are still wrinkled...
If a news crew happen to be in the area and record what happens, are they violating the law also? Perhaps some legal expert can explain the difference to me.
Proverbs 21:19
At least that's what the police tell me.
Any insufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
If the city's position is to be upheld, wouldn't that have the chilling effect of making all video surveillance tapes in admissible because they were recorded without your permission?
Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
Huh. Yet another example of judges being completely illiterate and ignoring the plain language of the Constitution. Why does this ever surprise me?
that the people who make this silly claim are actually interested in an impartial and accurate assessment of the facts. If they were, then they would love to have an impartial witness.
I'm curious? If police officers are doing their job correctly and without abuse of their power. What do they have to hide? Police need to realize they are not above the law and must abide by it of face the consequences. And going by the police officers argument, does this mean if I own a shop on a street and have a video camera that points to the front door and windows from inside, but can see into the street because the door and windows are glass; that if I catch a police officer using excessive force on a citizen outside my store that the tape can't be used to prosecute the officer? Because he was not aware that he was being filmed?
Just because you are wrong and I called you out on it doesn't mean I am a Troll.
What if this was a reporter who happened to witness the same scenario and they had their camera guy there? Would they also be charged with this bullshit?
"No one will really be free until nerd persecution ends."
We should not have any permanent laws, only permanent protections from the law (i.e. the constitution). Times change, the needs of society change, and attitudes about what should be legal change. Laws should have a mandatory maximum lifespan of 10 years; if there is a need to keep laws on the books (for example, a law prohibiting murder), then the law should be renewed by an act of the legislature. Yes, this would mean a lot of boring days in congress, but it would help keep our legal system under control and prevent us from getting into the situation we are currently in.
Palm trees and 8
I think you may be confusing the public defendant statute. There are some situations where you can't get a public defender for very simple crimes, but everywhere that I know of will grant a jury trial for ANYTHING if you request it. Matter of fact, last time I was called in for jury duty it was for a trial in which a motorist failed to signal when turning and she requested a jury trial for a traffic violation with a fine of less than $200.
"People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
The police routinely use the no expectation of privacy argument with regard to city video camera surveillance of citizens walking around. It seems to me the argument goes both directions police shouldn't have an expectation of privacy in public places. Moreover citizens keeping government officials accountable for their actions in this way seems right in the spirit of our constitution obligation.
The charges were dropped, of course, since they had no chance of standing up in court. The point was to intimidate the guy and put him in jail. The problem is that cops can just arrest you for a bogus charge and then drop the charges later. You get screwed anyway.
I have had to go to the police once in a while for neighbor troubles and the like and gotten no traction. They always seem to side with the "jerk off, a-hole" neighbor.
Wait, I'm confused. The cops are siding with you? If your neighbors are doing something illegal, sure, call the cops. If your neighbors are having a party, didn't invite you, and some of their friends park legally on the street in front of your house, don't waste police time.
This is stupid really. OK, you believe you have a right to record the police on a cell phone while they are performing their duty. Great. Now how about having someone standing nearby recording you are you are arrested. Let's say it is a DUI stop. Or that the police have completely erroronously stopped you and arrest you for armed robbery while a witness is standing by pointing at you going "That's him, officer!"
Until you are happy with having your arrest recorded by someone else and possibly posted on various web sites, sit down and be quiet. If there is an explicit law that enables video recording of police performing their duty it will most certainly include the right of anyone to record the police arresting or questioning anyone. You have just lost any potential privacy rights you might have had.
This is why a lot of police are actively antagonistic towards people recording them - there is no control on what happens to the video. If they allow person A to record person A's arrest they have pretty much opened the door and now have to allow person B to record person A's arrest. You can argue that there is a difference, but there really isn't except a small matter of degree. No, the police do not allow the random taping of their efforts and only in somewhat rare cases will not chase anyone with a camera off or threaten them with arrest if they continue.
In some celebrity cases they let it go often because the person being arrested specifically agrees with allowing it to continue or are playing up to the photographers.
So they want to be able to record anyone at anytime with CCTV cameras, but they don't want to be filmed while in a PUBLIC place doing a PUBLIC duty ?!? What. The. Fuck. Those creeps should be in jail, not 'enforcing' laws.
Non-Linux Penguins ?
It's a shame how police over these last many decades have so tarnished their image by their bullying, arrogance, and disregard for the average citizen that many folks have no respect or even have disdain for them. Kids wave excitedly at firemen in their trucks, when was the last time your kid waved gleefully at a cop driving by.
But under the strict 'two-party notification' laws in Massachusetts, it's a crime to 'secretly record' audio communications unless 'all parties to such communication' have given their consent.
:) )
So the cops are (ab)using this law, however if I'm reading this correctly then I have the right to have anyone arrested recording me in public. Anyone could make a citizens arrest if they see they are being recorded under this law as well. (Including cops dash cams
I wonder how that would stand up in court?
recording an officer conducting an arrest comes from the point of perception. Usually, the camera starts rolling AFTER the incident that caused the person to be arrested. Mostly, you only see ONE SIDE of what is going on, or, the police swarming all over one "poor defenseless" person. Did the person shoot at an officer, pull a knife, drive a zillion miles an hour, try to run over someone, hit someone, or try to run down an officer? THAT is the problem with recording an officer incident to an arrest, perspective. I don't have a problem with video taping an officer, because, officers, as anyone under the color of authority, should be held to a higher standard than the general public, but, the problem with taping, is that you only see "one side" of an incident, and people not knowing the whole story, will get worked up about something that isn't what it really is. Bad police officers need to be thrown out, but this will get good officers labeled as bad, without knowing what really happened.
Don't forget the Anthony Graber case in Maryland. Maryland is a state that requires *all* parties of a recording to consent. *However* the court ruled that a police officer in the line of duty (not to mention the side of an interstate) does not have a presumption of privacy. i.e. if you're out on the street in public view it's fair to record.
Don't paparazzi tend to be photographers, as opposed to audio or video with audio?
I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
Ladies and Gentlemen: I give you the Blue Scholars track: Oskar Barnack ~ Oscar Grant -- The salient line in the lyrics is: Shoot the cops - take your camera out your pockets and shoot the cops.
http://bluescholars.bandcamp.com/track/oskar-barnack-oscar-grant
It's not about the size of the rulebook, it's about the amount of discretion -- and therefore power -- in the hands of men with no life experience and IQs that have been legally capped at 105 (Jordan v. New London). Men who are now being officially trained at the academy to ignore and even despise the public. Men who brag about committing felonies while above the law.
Think I'm being harsh? Don't take my word for it. Head over to the forums at "Officer.com" and listen to these men brag about the laws they've broken and the bribes they've taken.
I get your point about writing the law so narrowly it becomes unwieldy, but in view of current events, it's long past time we remove discretion from the hands of men purposefully chosen because they are too small to carry a badge.
I grew up on military bases in a military family, but yeah, I know, I'm just a "cop hater." How did I get that way? Easy. I had one officer become unhinged and begin screaming profanities at my six-year-old daughter when she asked him about the snow outside (Exact quote: "I'm not your fucking weatherman.") The other involved the arrest of my 70-year-old mother-in-law at the airport for not following the commands of a police officer. No one bothered to find out she didn't speak English and had no idea what a boy barely old enough to shave was screaming at her.
Yeah, I know. If you're not a cop you can never understand the stress and pressure and danger these men go through. I'll try to make that argument to my Marine Corps captain buddy who just got stopped for DWB after coming back from Iraq. I grew up among uniforms during the Vietnam War. What I routinely see out of civilian law enforcement these days makes me ill.
It is long past time we pull these men back under discipline.
He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
When I got hired at my current job, I had to sign a 50-page policy that included notice that all emails, phone calls and videocameras were the property of the company and that while I was employed, the company could use my audio and image for any purposes they chose.
When I got caught in the background for a company commercial, no one came to me or my guys for signed releases. They already had them from the day we were hired.
There is a camera in my office. My ID is trackable. When I pick up the phone or keyboard, the company has made me sign a piece of paper saying all communications of any kind are company property. I explicitly have no privacy rights while at work and EVERY SINGLE THING I do is documented three ways from Sunday, and all I do is maintain infrastructure. If a single card, if one dime, goes astray I will be held accountable.
Why should people who carry live ammunition be held to any lesser standard? If Seal Team Six can do their jobs while on camera, why can't Barney Fife?
He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
Modern devices can stream video offsite live, either for immediate viewing or for endless archived replays. Because anybody might have this technology, police have to assume that everybody does. The era of policemen thinking they can get a way with a little manual correction is over. Whether it's legal or not is irrelevant because there are enough people who would violate that law despite what punishment might come.
They don't know if you're recording video. All you have to do to engage their restraint is hold up the cell phone and pretend to be recording to restrain their exuberance.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
there will always be cases of injustice but that is no reason to condemn the entire system.
Um, isn't that PRECISELY a reason to condemn the entire system?! Isn't that pretty much the ONLY reason to condemn an entire system?
He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
I mean, what's wrong with just saying that you are recording them in the first place? I don't think consent is required for it to be legal... only knowledge.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
I don't think you quite grasp that most of us don't think that "mercilessly beating" anyone, even those who are not "innocent slobs", is right.
Falling prices will put a camera on throwaway items. The court can make any decision and be over ruled by the numbers.
15TW = 15,000 Nuclear Reactors. (Approx. one accident a month.)
"What happened here was the gradual habituation of the people, little by little, to being governed by surprise; to receiving decisions deliberated in secret; to believing that the situation was so complicated that the government had to act on information which the people could not understand, or so dangerous that, even if the people could not understand it, it could not be released because of national security. And their sense of identification with Hitler, their trust in him, made it easier to widen this gap and reassured those who would otherwise have worried about it.
"This separation of government from people, this widening of the gap, took place so gradually and so insensibly, each step disguised (perhaps not even intentionally) as a temporary emergency measure or associated with true patriotic allegiance or with real social purposes. And all the crises and reforms (real reforms, too) so occupied the people that they did not see the slow motion underneath, of the whole process of government growing remoter and remoter.
From "They Thought They Were Free -- The Germans 1933-45": http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/511928.html
thomasdamgaard.dk.
What police protocol directs you to give a merciless beating to anyone? You have a gun. You are entirely allowed to pull it out to subdue an armed suspect. You can even shoot him in the foot or something, if he is pointing the gun at you and refusing to drop it. If you are fired upon, return fire. You are authorized to do that. You are there to simply capture and arrest the criminals, not take revenge on them for shooting at you. Punishment is the job of the jury and courts. When did you get to decide, you can replace them?
The cops are upset because they have been burned so many times by videos of their actions. That's the ONLY reason they got upset and arrested the photographer. However the comment made about the privacy of the person arrested has merit, and if I was recording the incident, I would be looking for police brutality and other miscarriages of justice. If it was a simple cut and dry arrest and all parties behaved like adults, I would not use the recording out of principle. Also the recording would not be anything to show off anyhow. If the 'perp' had the audacity to try resisting arrest and the thing turned into a brawl and the police were justified using the force necessary to control the situation, then that's some great footage at the expense of the perpetrator, not the cops. As for how the police treated the photographer, if they changed their name to 'Gestapo', there would be no case. Everybody would understand their mission and their 'modus operendi'. Hell, we're already more than halfway there!
Mayhaps you are right that I was confused, thought it definitely wasn't about the public defendant statute. When I wrote my previous post, I was actually remembering this ballot measure from 2010, but as it turns out, it's for civil and not criminal trials.
"I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
...and what exactly is wrong with Mr. Heinlein's works? :)
Robert A. Heinlein had some great ideas as to how government really should have been. Actually READ Starship Troopers, not the movie named after the book. In it, in order to vote, one had to complete either military service, or at least some form of "Federal Service". This included Teaching, as all teachers were paid directly by the Federal level of government, not the city/county/state level of government. Heinlein was VERY ahead of his time, and it's a shame that here we are, well into the 21st century, and we're about as socially/politically backwards as we were 30 years ago.
Not looking for flamebait, just saying...
Stone