Questions

Can police tell me to stop filming?

Can police tell me to stop filming?

The police have no power to stop you filming or photographing officers on duty. Recording film footage on a police incident, or taking photographs of their actions, is not illegal. But, you must follow some basic guidelines if you choose to film police officers or law enforcement personnel.

Can you refuse to be filmed?

Neither members of the media nor the general public need permits to film or photograph in public places and police officers have no power to stop you filming or photographing incidents or police personnel. If your filming is questioned by a police officer, explain calmly and politely what you are doing.

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Do you have a right to not be filmed?

Until you ask to leave, your being stopped is considered voluntary under the law and is legal. In many situations where officers are not already being recorded, Sanchez says, filming can change officer-bystander relations.

Do you have to open the door to the police?

In general the police do not have the right to enter a person’s house or other private premises without their permission. However, they can enter without a warrant: when in close pursuit of someone the police believe has committed, or attempted to commit, a serious crime, or.

Can you stop people from filming you?

In California, call recording is a strictly two-person matter, meaning both parties must consent to being recorded otherwise the recording is illegal. The law is applicable to confidential communication and applies when either party has a clear expectation to their right to privacy.

Can you tell someone to stop filming you?

If a police officer warns a person to stop filming or attempts to indicate that videotaping of a police officer is against the law, calmly state that the act of videotaping police officers is a legal right under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.

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Can a police officer tell you to stop filming?

Officers do have a right to tell you to stop interfering with their work, Burton told me, but they still aren’t allowed to destroy film. Yet still some officers do. Last week, an amateur video appeared to show a U.S. Marshal confiscating and destroying a woman’s camera as she filmed him.

Can a police officer take your camera if you record them?

“Record from a distance, stay out of the scene, and the officer doesn’t have the right to come over and take your camera, confiscate it.” Officers do have a right to tell you to stop interfering with their work, Burton told me, but they still aren’t allowed to destroy film. Yet still some officers do.

What happens if a police officer says no to you?

If the officer says no, then you are being detained, something that under the law an officer cannot do without reasonable suspicion that you have or are about to commit a crime or are in the process of doing so. Until you ask to leave, your being stopped is considered voluntary under the law and is legal.

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Do bystanders have a legal right to film Police?

Most officers, says Sanchez, now know that bystanders have a legal right to film police. Now, instead of hearing assertions that they can’t record at all, he says that Copwatch volunteers are accused of interfering with police activity.