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Ilinois Eavesdropping Law

In Illinois it is no longer a felony to record audio footage of on duty police officers. It had previously been illegal, until the supreme court voted to not revive the law.

The law prohibiting audio recording was initially challenged by the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois (ACLU). They were fighting for a “police accountability program” that required audio and video recordings.

Laws vary from state to state when it comes to recording police officers – whether audio or video. It should, however, be uniform across the nation. The truth is that police officers are recorded daily, on surveillance cameras, on their cop car cams, on the digital audio recording devices. It is legal record people in public, why should it be illegal to record police officers?

The interesting case is Alvarez v. Connell et al, U.S. Supreme Court, No. 12-318.


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Big Brother is (usually) Listening

Homeland security is installing high definition video cameras equipped with audio on busses and transit lines in a few major cities across the United States: San Francisco, Eugene, Hartford, Columbus, Baltimore, and Traverse City, MI.

We’re also seeing devices in subways and trains. I don’t know about you, but I thought my private conversations — even in public places — was protected by our constitution?

Advances in audio technology has made it a viable addition to traditional video surveillance. But is it legal?

U.S. Federal Law states that it is illegal to record audio of another person’s conversation in private if they have not consented to the recording. However, in recent years, courts have often dismissed Fourth Amendment privacy rights and accepted audio evidence collected “illegally.”

By outfitting buses with audio / video devices, Homeland is saying that anywhere you are, outside of your home, is public. And therefore, anything you say, to yourself or another, may be used in court against you.



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Man Arrested for Recording Police

Twincities.com recently published a news story about Andrew Henderson, a Little Canada citizen who is being charged with obstruction of legal process and disorderly conduct.

Henderson video recorded police outside of his apartment as they were dealing with a bloody-face man. The Ramsey County deputy Jacqueline Muellner quickly took possession of Henderson’s camera, even though he was thirty feet away from the incident, and calmly reciting his legal right to be recording in a public space.

As of late, courts have been siding with the public in cases like Henderson’s, especially when dealing with police. It should be interesting to see how this one turns out, seeing as Henderson was completely within his right to record.


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