Illinois Passes Bill That Makes It Illegal To Record The Police

Illinois police
Illinois police

A new bill passed last week in Illinois would make it a felony to secret­ly tape any “pri­vate con­ver­sa­tions,” with steep­er pun­ish­ments for those sur­rep­ti­tious­ly record­ing the police. Critics of the pro­posed law claim it would scare cit­i­zens from record­ing inter­ac­tions with law enforce­ment, fol­low­ing a num­ber of high-pro­file police killings caught on camera.

The bill was passed by both the State House and Senate, and sent to Illinois Governor Pat Quinn on Dec. 4. It would crim­i­nal­ize secret­ly record­ing “pri­vate con­ver­sa­tions” between two or more peo­ple, where at least one had a “rea­son­able expec­ta­tion” of pri­va­cy. However, the pro­posed law would like­ly not make it ille­gal to record police inter­ac­tions in pub­lic. Recordings like those depict­ing the death of Eric Garner would there­fore not be affect­ed. The new bill attempts to pro­tect peo­ple from sur­rep­ti­tious and improp­er record­ing of their con­ver­sa­tions with­out infring­ing on free-speech rights, its spon­sors claim.

The most impor­tant thing the bill does is to restore Illinois to a stan­dard that requires every­one in a pri­vate con­ver­sa­tion to con­sent to a record­ing,” said Democratic Rep. Elaine Nekritz, one of the bill’s spon­sors, accord­ing to an AP report. “We sat­is­fy the Supreme Court require­ment by lim­it­ing that to con­ver­sa­tions where there is a rea­son­able expec­ta­tion of privacy.”

The bill is writ­ten around a U.S. Supreme Court rul­ing in March that struck down an eaves­drop­ping law that would made it a felony to record audio of police offi­cers work­ing in pub­lic. The court had ruled that the state could not make it ille­gal to record con­ver­sa­tions where there was no “rea­son­able expec­ta­tion of pri­va­cy,” and said it would “crim­i­nal­ize a wide range of inno­cent con­duct” and vio­late free-speech rights.

However, the new law does not make a clear dis­tinc­tion between what sit­u­a­tions qual­i­fy as a pri­vate encounter, the Illinois Policy Institute says. The pri­vate think tank says that it is “aimed at pro­mot­ing per­son­al free­dom and pros­per­i­ty,” and that the unclear nature of the bil­l’s word­ing make it open to wide interpretation.

The Illinois Supreme Court said that police don’t have an expec­ta­tion of pri­va­cy in ‘pub­lic’ encoun­ters with cit­i­zens, but it did not explain what counts as a ‘pub­lic’ encounter,” the insti­tute said in a blog post.

The bill is designed to scare cit­i­zens from record­ing police inter­ac­tions, the insti­tute claims, thanks to steep­er pun­ish­ments for record­ing the pri­vate con­ver­sa­tions of on-duty police and court offi­cers than pri­vate citizens.

It makes “unlaw­ful­ly record­ing a con­ver­sa­tion with police – or an attor­ney gen­er­al, assis­tant attor­ney gen­er­al, state’s attor­ney, assis­tant state’s attor­ney or judge – a class 3 felony, car­ry­ing a sen­tence of two to four years in prison.” Meanwhile, the pro­posed law would make record­ing pri­vate cit­i­zens a class 4 felony, “which car­ries a low­er sen­tenc­ing range of one to three years in prison.”

The bill must be signed by the gov­er­nor before it becomes law. The insti­tute claims that the pro­posed law could also be used as an argu­ment against police body cam­eras, since it could be argued that record­ings out­side of “pub­lic” places would be ille­gal, since peo­ple in pri­vate homes and oth­er areas have not con­sent­ed to the recording.

Concerns over police record­ing are large­ly mis­placed, accord­ing to Ed Yohnka, direc­tor of com­munca­tions and pub­lic pol­i­cy for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Illinois. While in-home record­ing may be argued as “pri­vate,” it is extreme­ly unlike­ly that any per­son would ever be pros­e­cut­ed for record­ing police action in their own home, he said.

Instead, the group has tak­en issue with the bill over the rights it extends to police offi­cers’ abil­i­ty to eaves­drop on sus­pects of crimes like mur­der, kid­nap­ping and some sex­u­al assaults. The ACLU of Illinois tes­ti­fied against the bill over a pro­vi­sion allow­ing police to secret­ly record con­ver­sa­tions for 24 hours with­out any judi­cial over­sight, as long as they had per­mis­sion from the state’s attor­ney. Yohnka claims the state’s attor­ney is much more like­ly to give cops pref­er­en­tial treat­ment than a judge, but said over­all that the new bill is much more respec­tive of an indi­vid­u­al’s right to film police action.

In a broad way, what this law rec­og­nizes is a notion that when a pub­lic offi­cial is doing their pub­lic job in a pub­lic place, they don’t have an expec­ta­tion of pri­va­cy,” Yohnka said. Compared to the over­turned eaves­drop­ping law, the new one is a “bet­ter reflec­tion of what the world looks like today when every­body is lit­er­al­ly a cit­i­zen jour­nal­ist and has the abil­i­ty to record infor­ma­tion and cap­ture video and images in public.”

One exam­ple of when police might have a rea­son­able expec­ta­tion of pri­va­cy might be an offi­cer meet­ing with a con­fi­den­tial infor­mant, he said. If the two left a bar and went into an alley to avoid being over­heard dur­ing a pri­vate con­ver­sa­tion, they would have a rea­son­able expec­ta­tion of privacy.

If some­one secret­ly snuck their hand around the cor­ner to record their con­ver­sa­tion, that would clear­ly be a vio­la­tion of this bill,” Yohnka said. http://​www​.ibtimes​.com/​i​l​l​i​n​o​i​s​-​p​a​s​s​e​s​-​b​i​l​l​-​m​a​k​e​s​-​i​t​-​i​l​l​e​g​a​l​-​r​e​c​o​r​d​-​p​o​l​i​c​e​-​1​7​4​4​7​2​4​#​.​V​I​c​S​O​E​9​_​V​0​U​.​f​a​c​e​b​ook

PUBLISHERS NOTE

This is creep­ing-peg assault on your lib­er­ties and rights to record wrong­do­ing by Agents of the State. States real­ly want to exert tighter con­trol of their cit­i­zens not less. As such it is impor­tant to note that this is one more attempt to fright­en, intim­i­date , and oth­er­wise dis­cour­age you from stand­ing on your Constitutionally guar­antied right to record what state agents do in your name.

We have con­sis­tent­ly told you, states do not want to cur­tail police abuse, they want to keep you under con­trol. Whatever means police uses to do so is quite accept­able to the states. We are going to bet that the Governor will sign this piece of leg­is­la­tion into law. 
It is leg­is­la­tion dis­guised as some­thing good for pri­va­cy, when it is fact a thin­ly veiled attempt to give police more pow­er to kill and make it much more dif­fi­cult for cit­i­zens to protest. 
All per­sons are Constitutionally guar­an­teed equal pro­tec­tion, if this is true how come the rules gov­ern­ing police action are dif­fer­ent even by this bil­l’s own language .