You are viewing a read-only archive of the Blogs.Harvard network. Learn more.

right to record

ws219135_hypothetical right to record
where in charlie is stopped, hypothetically, while recording in a public place and told by police to turn his recorder off

suppose charlie has his apartment rigged with a motion-activated net-nanny camera to check on babysitters and such. he responds to a knock on his front door by police who proceed to intrude and search his place without a warrant, seizing several items, all of it automatically recorded. has charlie violated the law? do the police have a right to unlawfully intrude in privacy?

0 Responses to “right to record”


Comments are currently closed.