by Nomad
You may not know this but you really do have a constitutionally-protected right that is routinely ignored by law enforcement. And worse than that, there's not a lot you can do about it.
Civil liberties attorneys will tell you straight up that you have a right to photograph and videotape any public official doing their jobs when plainly visible in public spaces. And yes, that includes on-duty police officers.
The Interference Limitation
Delroy
Burton, chairman of D.C.’s Metropolitan Police Union and a 21-year veteran
on the force joins that chorus:
As a basic principle, we can’t tell you to stop recording. If you’re standing across the street videotaping, and I’m in a public place, carrying out my public functions, [then] I’m subject to recording, and there’s nothing legally the police officer can do to stop you from recording.”
There are some important limitations, of course.
In the
course of recording, you do not have the right to put your life or the lives of
others in danger. You cannot break the law in order to record, such as
trespassing or disturbing a crime scene. You should not interfere with
officers attempting to keep the peace in, for example, a riot or civil disturbance.
The recording should be done in a transparent manner, and not in a surreptitious or covert way. If you record public servants without their knowledge, you could be accused of - get this-
eavesdropping. Privacy laws protect the police too.
As Burton puts it succinctly "Record from a distance, stay out of the scene." As long as you are not directly involved, nothing more than a citizen witness, the police have no right to tell you to stop recording.
That's the theory, anyway.