Updated for 2025

Recording Laws
by State

Complete guide to one-party vs two-party consent recording laws in all 50 states and Washington D.C. Know your rights before you press record.

50-State Guide Circuit Courts Police Tactics Body Cameras Everyday Recording Evidence State Comparison FAQ
📜 Understanding Consent Laws

One-Party vs Two-Party
Consent Explained

One-Party Consent (40 States + DC)

In one-party consent states, only one person in the conversation needs to consent to the recording — and that person can be you. If you are a participant in the conversation, you can legally record it without telling anyone else. See the Federal Wiretap Act (18 U.S.C. § 2511) for the federal framework.

You can record your own police encounters without notifying the officer.

Two-Party Consent (11 States)

In two-party (all-party) consent states, all parties to a conversation must consent to being recorded. Recording a private conversation without consent may violate wiretapping laws. However, this primarily applies to audio in private settings. Flex Your Rights has state-specific recording guidance.

Audio recording may require all parties' consent — but see exceptions below.

🇺🇸 First Amendment

Recording Police in Public
is ALWAYS Legal

Regardless of your state's consent laws, recording police officers performing their duties in public spaces is a constitutionally protected right. The DOJ Civil Rights Division has affirmed this position in formal guidance.

1st

First Amendment Protection

Upheld by Federal Circuit Courts

The First Amendment protects the right to record police officers performing their duties in public spaces. Multiple federal circuit courts have affirmed this right, and no circuit court has ruled against it. The ACLU and Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) actively defend recording rights nationwide.

Glik v. Cunniffe (2011)

First Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that recording police in public is clearly established under the First Amendment. The right to film government officials in public spaces is fundamental to a free society.

Turner v. Driver (2017)

Fifth Circuit confirmed the First Amendment right to record police. Even in two-party consent states, video recording of police in public does not require consent — consent laws apply to private audio conversations.

Key Legal Principles

  • Police have no reasonable expectation of privacy when performing duties in public
  • You do NOT need to ask permission to record police in a public place
  • An officer cannot legally order you to stop recording
  • An officer cannot confiscate your phone without a warrant (Riley v. California, 2014)
  • Two-party consent laws generally do NOT apply to recording police in public
  • You must not physically interfere with police operations while recording
🗺️ All 50 States + DC

Find Your State's
Recording Laws

Search or filter to find your state's specific recording consent requirements.

One-Party

Alabama

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
You may record any conversation you are a party to without informing others.
Violation Penalties
Ala. Code § 13A-11-31. Class A misdemeanor for illegal wiretapping.
One-Party

Alaska

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Alaska Stat. § 42.20.310. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Class A misdemeanor. Up to 1 year in jail and $10,000 fine.
One-Party

Arizona

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
A.R.S. § 13-3005. Note: AZ passed HB 2319 (2022) prohibiting recording police within 8 feet, though enforcement is disputed.
Violation Penalties
Class 5 felony for illegal wiretapping.
One-Party

Arkansas

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Ark. Code § 5-60-120. One party to the conversation must consent to recording.
Violation Penalties
Class D felony. Up to 6 years imprisonment.
Two-Party

California

+
Consent Type
Two-Party (All-Party) Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Cal. Penal Code § 632. All parties must consent to recording confidential communications. Does NOT apply to recording police in public — officers have no expectation of privacy.
Violation Penalties
Fine up to $2,500 and/or 1 year in jail. Civil damages of $5,000 per violation.
One-Party

Colorado

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
C.R.S. § 18-9-303. One party must consent. Colorado also has strong police accountability laws.
Violation Penalties
Class 6 felony. 12-18 months imprisonment.
Two-Party

Connecticut

+
Consent Type
Two-Party (All-Party) Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Conn. Gen. Stat. § 52-570d. All parties must consent. Exception for in-person communications where parties should know recording is likely.
Violation Penalties
Class D felony. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $5,000 fine.
Two-Party

Delaware

+
Consent Type
Two-Party (All-Party) Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Del. Code tit. 11, § 2402. All parties must consent to interception of communications.
Violation Penalties
Class D felony. Up to 8 years imprisonment.
One-Party

District of Columbia

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
D.C. Code § 23-542. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Up to 5 years imprisonment and $10,000 fine.
Two-Party

Florida

+
Consent Type
Two-Party (All-Party) Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Fla. Stat. § 934.03. All parties must consent to oral/electronic communications. Exception: no expectation of privacy in public settings.
Violation Penalties
Third-degree felony. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $5,000 fine.
One-Party

Georgia

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
O.C.G.A. § 16-11-62. One party must consent. Applies to phone and in-person conversations.
Violation Penalties
Felony. 1-5 years imprisonment and up to $10,000 fine.
One-Party

Hawaii

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Haw. Rev. Stat. § 803-42. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Class C felony. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $10,000 fine.
One-Party

Idaho

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Idaho Code § 18-6702. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Felony. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $5,000 fine.
Two-Party

Illinois

+
Consent Type
Two-Party (All-Party) Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
720 ILCS 5/14-2. All parties must consent. Note: Illinois Supreme Court struck down the old eavesdropping statute. Current law specifically exempts recording police in public.
Violation Penalties
Class 4 felony for private conversations. 1-3 years imprisonment.
One-Party

Indiana

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Ind. Code § 35-33.5-5-5. One party must consent to the recording.
Violation Penalties
Level 5 felony. 1-6 years imprisonment and up to $10,000 fine.
One-Party

Iowa

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Iowa Code § 808B.2. One party must consent.
Violation Penalties
Class D felony. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $7,500 fine.
One-Party

Kansas

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
K.S.A. § 21-6101. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Level 8 felony. Presumptive probation or 7-23 months imprisonment.
One-Party

Kentucky

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
KRS § 526.010. One party must consent to interception.
Violation Penalties
Class D felony. 1-5 years imprisonment.
One-Party

Louisiana

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
La. R.S. 15:1303. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Up to 5 years imprisonment and $10,000 fine at hard labor.
One-Party

Maine

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 15, § 709. One party must consent to recording.
Violation Penalties
Class C crime. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $5,000 fine.
Two-Party

Maryland

+
Consent Type
Two-Party (All-Party) Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Md. Code, Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 10-402. All parties must consent. However, Maryland courts have ruled that recording police in public is protected.
Violation Penalties
Felony. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $10,000 fine.
Two-Party

Massachusetts

+
Consent Type
Two-Party (All-Party) Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 272, § 99. Strictest wiretapping law in the US — bans ALL secret recording. Glik v. Cunniffe (2011) specifically established the right to openly record police here.
Violation Penalties
Felony. Up to 5 years in state prison and $10,000 fine.
One-Party

Michigan

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Mich. Comp. Laws § 750.539c. One party to a private conversation must consent.
Violation Penalties
Felony. Up to 2 years imprisonment and $2,000 fine.
One-Party

Minnesota

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Minn. Stat. § 626A.02. One party must consent.
Violation Penalties
Felony. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $20,000 fine.
One-Party

Mississippi

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Miss. Code § 41-29-531. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Up to 5 years imprisonment and $5,000 fine.
One-Party

Missouri

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Mo. Rev. Stat. § 542.402. One party must consent to recording.
Violation Penalties
Class E felony. Up to 4 years imprisonment.
Two-Party

Montana

+
Consent Type
Two-Party (All-Party) Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Mont. Code § 45-8-213. Consent of all parties required for electronic communications. Montana has strong privacy protections in its state constitution.
Violation Penalties
Up to 5 years imprisonment and $500 fine.
One-Party

Nebraska

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 86-702. One party must consent to the recording.
Violation Penalties
Class IV felony. Up to 2 years imprisonment and $10,000 fine.
One-Party

Nevada

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Nev. Rev. Stat. § 200.620. One party must consent. Note: Nevada has specific provisions about in-person vs phone recordings.
Violation Penalties
Category D felony. 1-4 years imprisonment and up to $5,000 fine.
Two-Party

New Hampshire

+
Consent Type
Two-Party (All-Party) Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
N.H. Rev. Stat. § 570-A:2. All parties must consent to recording of oral or telecommunication.
Violation Penalties
Class B felony. Up to 7 years imprisonment.
One-Party

New Jersey

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
N.J. Stat. § 2A:156A-4. One party must consent. NJ AG issued directive supporting right to record police.
Violation Penalties
Third-degree crime. 3-5 years imprisonment and up to $15,000 fine.
One-Party

New Mexico

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
N.M. Stat. § 30-12-1. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Fourth-degree felony. Up to 18 months imprisonment and $5,000 fine.
One-Party

New York

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
N.Y. Penal Law § 250.00. One party must consent. NYPD Patrol Guide explicitly acknowledges citizens' right to record.
Violation Penalties
Class E felony. Up to 4 years imprisonment.
One-Party

North Carolina

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-287. One party must consent to interception.
Violation Penalties
Class H felony. 4-25 months imprisonment.
One-Party

North Dakota

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
N.D. Cent. Code § 12.1-15-02. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Class C felony. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $10,000 fine.
One-Party

Ohio

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Ohio Rev. Code § 2933.52. One party must consent to interception of communications.
Violation Penalties
Fourth-degree felony. 6-18 months imprisonment and up to $5,000 fine.
One-Party

Oklahoma

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Okla. Stat. tit. 13, § 176.4. One party must consent to recording.
Violation Penalties
Felony. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $5,000 fine.
One-Party

Oregon

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Or. Rev. Stat. § 165.540. One party to an in-person or telephone conversation must consent.
Violation Penalties
Class A misdemeanor. Up to 1 year imprisonment and $6,250 fine.
Two-Party

Pennsylvania

+
Consent Type
Two-Party (All-Party) Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
18 Pa. C.S. § 5703. All parties must consent. Third Circuit has upheld right to record police in public (Fields v. City of Philadelphia, 2017).
Violation Penalties
Third-degree felony. Up to 7 years imprisonment and $15,000 fine.
One-Party

Rhode Island

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
R.I. Gen. Laws § 11-35-21. One party must consent to the recording.
Violation Penalties
Felony. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $5,000 fine.
One-Party

South Carolina

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
S.C. Code § 17-30-30. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Felony. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $5,000 fine.
One-Party

South Dakota

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
S.D. Codified Laws § 23A-35A-20. One party must consent.
Violation Penalties
Class 1 misdemeanor. Up to 1 year imprisonment and $2,000 fine.
One-Party

Tennessee

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Tenn. Code § 39-13-601. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Class D felony. 2-12 years imprisonment and up to $5,000 fine.
One-Party

Texas

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Tex. Penal Code § 16.02. One party must consent. Texas also has strong open carry and castle doctrine laws that interact with recording rights.
Violation Penalties
State jail felony. 180 days to 2 years and up to $10,000 fine.
One-Party

Utah

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Utah Code § 77-23a-4. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Third-degree felony. Up to 5 years imprisonment and $5,000 fine.
One-Party

Vermont

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Vt. Stat. tit. 13, § 1051. One party must consent. Vermont follows federal one-party consent standards.
Violation Penalties
Up to 5 years imprisonment and $10,000 fine.
One-Party

Virginia

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Va. Code § 19.2-62. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Class 6 felony. 1-5 years imprisonment or up to 12 months in jail.
Two-Party

Washington

+
Consent Type
Two-Party (All-Party) Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Wash. Rev. Code § 9.73.030. All parties must consent to recording private conversations. Exception for conversations in public where there is no expectation of privacy.
Violation Penalties
Gross misdemeanor. Up to 1 year imprisonment and $5,000 fine. Civil damages also available.
One-Party

West Virginia

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
W. Va. Code § 62-1D-3. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Felony. 1-5 years imprisonment and up to $10,000 fine.
One-Party

Wisconsin

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Wis. Stat. § 968.31. One party must consent to the interception.
Violation Penalties
Class H felony. Up to 6 years imprisonment and $10,000 fine.
One-Party

Wyoming

+
Consent Type
One-Party Consent
Recording Police in Public
Always Legal (1st Amendment)
Key Notes
Wyo. Stat. § 7-3-702. One party to the communication must consent.
Violation Penalties
Up to 5 years imprisonment and $10,000 fine.
💡 Practical Tips

Tips for Recording
During Encounters

Follow these guidelines to protect yourself and your recording during any police encounter.

✓ Do

  • • Keep your phone visible and in your hands
  • • Announce that you are recording (especially in two-party states)
  • • Remain calm, polite, and cooperative
  • • Keep a safe distance from officers if recording a third-party encounter
  • • Back up your recording to the cloud immediately
  • • Know your state's specific consent laws before you need them

✗ Don't

  • • Don't physically interfere with police operations
  • • Don't reach into pockets suddenly while recording
  • • Don't argue about your right to record during the encounter
  • • Don't hand your unlocked phone to an officer
  • • Don't delete recordings — this may constitute destruction of evidence
  • • Don't livestream if it compromises your safety
⚖️ Federal Circuit Courts

Circuit Court Rulings on
Recording Police

Every federal circuit court that has ruled on recording police has upheld the right. Here's the circuit-by-circuit breakdown of the landmark decisions that protect you.

1st

First Circuit — Glik v. Cunniffe (2011)

ME, MA, NH, RI, PR

Simon Glik was arrested in Boston Common for recording officers arresting another man. The court ruled unanimously that "the First Amendment right to gather news is, as the court has often noted, not one that inures solely to the benefit of the news media; rather, the public's right of access to information is coextensive with that of the press." The officers were denied qualified immunity — the right was "clearly established."

Impact: First federal appellate ruling explicitly protecting the right to record police in public. Set the precedent for all subsequent circuit decisions.

3rd

Third Circuit — Fields v. City of Philadelphia (2017)

NJ, PA, DE, VI

The en banc Third Circuit reversed a lower court and held that "recording police activity in public falls squarely within the First Amendment right of access to information." The court emphasized this right exists independently of any intent to use the recording for journalism or political expression. Amanda Geraci, a legal observer, was physically prevented from recording an arrest — the court ruled this violated her constitutional rights.

Impact: Established that you do NOT need a journalistic purpose to record police. The right belongs to every citizen.

5th

Fifth Circuit — Turner v. Driver (2017)

TX, LA, MS

Phillip Turner was recording a police station from a public sidewalk when officers detained him, handcuffed him, and took his camera. The Fifth Circuit held that "First Amendment principles, controlling authority, and persuasive precedent demonstrate that a First Amendment right to record the police does exist." However, the court granted qualified immunity because the right was not "clearly established" in the Fifth Circuit at the time of the incident — making this ruling the moment it became clearly established for TX, LA, and MS going forward.

Impact: Extended recording rights to the deep South. Critically, this means any future interference in TX, LA, or MS violates clearly established law — officers can be personally liable.

7th

Seventh Circuit — ACLU of Illinois v. Alvarez (2012)

IL, IN, WI

The ACLU challenged Illinois' eavesdropping statute — one of the strictest in the nation — which criminalized audio recording of police even in public. The Seventh Circuit struck down the law, ruling that "audio recording is entitled to First Amendment protection" and that the Illinois statute was an unconstitutional prior restraint on speech. The state's attorney had threatened to prosecute citizens recording police with Class 1 felony charges (up to 15 years).

Impact: Struck down the most aggressive anti-recording law in the country. Illinois later revised its eavesdropping statute to allow recording police in public.

9th

Ninth Circuit — Fordyce v. City of Seattle (2023)

AK, AZ, CA, HI, ID, MT, NV, OR, WA

The Ninth Circuit — covering 9 western states — ruled that "the right to record law enforcement officers in the public discharge of their duties is a clearly established First Amendment right." An independent journalist was pepper-sprayed and had his camera confiscated while recording during protests. The court held that officers who interfere with recording can be held personally liable, and that "the pervasive presence of combative conditions does not eliminate the right to record."

Impact: Extended explicit protection to the largest circuit (20% of US population). Confirmed that protest conditions do not eliminate recording rights.

11th

Eleventh Circuit — Smith v. City of Cumming (2000)

AL, FL, GA

One of the earliest circuit rulings, the Eleventh Circuit held that "the First Amendment protects the right to gather information about what public officials do on public property, and specifically, a right to record matters of public interest." The Smiths had been repeatedly stopped and ticketed by police for following and recording officers during routine traffic stops in Cumming, Georgia.

Impact: Earliest circuit court precedent confirming recording rights. Covers three major states including Florida, which has its own complex two-party consent law.

What About Circuits Without Explicit Rulings?

The 2nd, 4th, 6th, 8th, 10th, and D.C. Circuits have not issued definitive rulings, but district courts within these circuits have consistently upheld recording rights. No federal court at any level has ever ruled that citizens do not have the right to record police in public. The DOJ has also filed statements of interest in multiple cases affirming the right.

In 2012, the DOJ sent a letter to the Baltimore Police Department stating that "the right to record police officers while performing duties in a public place, as well as the right to be protected from the warrantless seizure and destruction of those recordings, are not combatable with the Constitution."

🚨 Police Interference Tactics

How Officers Try to Stop
Your Recording

Even though recording is legal, some officers still try to prevent it. Know these common tactics so you can respond appropriately while protecting your rights.

🔴

"You Need My Permission to Record"

FALSE. Officers in public have no expectation of privacy while performing their duties. You do not need consent from police to record them in a public place. This has been confirmed by multiple federal circuit courts.

Response: "I have a First Amendment right to record public officials performing their duties. I am not interfering with your work."

🔴

"Stop Recording or I'll Arrest You"

UNLAWFUL. An officer cannot legally arrest you for recording them in public. If arrested solely for recording, the charges will not hold up, and you may have grounds for a Section 1983 civil rights lawsuit. Do not resist arrest — comply and file a complaint afterward.

Response: "I understand, officer. I am exercising my First Amendment rights. I am not interfering. If you're ordering me to stop, I'd like your badge number for my records."

🔴

"Give Me Your Phone" / Confiscation

REQUIRES A WARRANT. Under Riley v. California (2014), the Supreme Court unanimously held that police need a warrant to search or seize a cell phone, even during an arrest. Your phone has more personal data than your home — it gets the same Fourth Amendment protection.

Response: "I do not consent to a search of my phone. Under Riley v. California, you need a warrant to access my device."

🔴

"You're Interfering With an Investigation"

ONLY IF YOU PHYSICALLY INTERFERE. Simply holding a phone and recording is never interference. Courts have consistently distinguished between observing and recording (protected) and physically obstructing (not protected). You have a right to be present in any public space where you're otherwise lawfully allowed to be.

Response: "I am standing at a safe distance and not interfering with your duties. I am simply observing and recording from a public area."

🔴

"This is a Crime Scene — No Recording"

PARTIALLY TRUE. Police can establish a perimeter around an active crime scene and exclude the public — but they cannot ban recording from outside that perimeter. If you're on a public sidewalk outside the tape, you can record. Officers sometimes try to expand the perimeter specifically to push back people recording.

Response: "I'll stay behind the perimeter line. I have a right to record from any public area outside the restricted zone."

🔴

"Delete That Video Right Now"

ABSOLUTELY ILLEGAL. Ordering you to delete recordings is illegal under federal law. It constitutes destruction of evidence and a violation of your First and Fourth Amendment rights. If an officer deletes your recording, this is grounds for a federal civil rights lawsuit. Use CopDefender's cloud backup to protect your footage.

Response: "I will not delete any recordings. Ordering me to delete evidence would be unlawful. My recordings are automatically backed up to the cloud."

📹 Body Camera Laws

Police Body Camera Policies
Across America

As of 2025, body-worn cameras are used by over 80% of large police departments, but policies on when they must be activated and when footage is released to the public vary dramatically by state.

34
States with BWC statutes
80%
Large depts using BWCs
16
States with no BWC laws

States Requiring Mandatory Body Camera Activation

These states have passed laws requiring officers to activate body cameras during all law enforcement encounters or face consequences for failing to do so:

California Colorado Connecticut Illinois Maryland Nevada New Jersey New Mexico Oregon South Carolina

Some states create an adverse inference if an officer fails to activate their camera — meaning a court may assume the missing footage would have supported the citizen's account.

Public Access to Body Camera Footage

Your ability to obtain body camera footage through FOIA/public records requests depends heavily on your state:

Open Access States

Florida, Utah, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Connecticut treat BWC footage as public records. You can request footage through standard FOIA requests, usually within 3-7 business days.

Restricted Access States

North Carolina, South Carolina, Kansas, and Georgia have exempted BWC footage from standard public records laws. Access often requires a court order or approval from the police chief.

Why Your Own Recording Still Matters

Even in states with mandatory body camera laws, your own recording is critical. Body camera footage is controlled by the department, can take months to release through FOIA requests, and has been known to "malfunction" or "accidentally" not be activated during controversial encounters. A 2020 study found that BWC footage was unavailable in 12% of use-of-force incidents due to officer non-compliance. Your phone recording is in your control — and with CopDefender's cloud backup, it's protected even if your phone is confiscated.

🏢 Beyond Police Encounters

Recording Laws in
Everyday Situations

Consent laws don't just apply to police — they affect workplace recordings, phone calls, and private conversations. Here's what you need to know.

📞 Recording Phone Calls

Federal law (18 U.S.C. § 2511) permits one-party consent for phone recordings. However, if you're calling across state lines, the stricter state's law typically applies. If you're in a one-party state calling someone in a two-party state, the two-party rule may govern.

Best Practice: If recording a call across state lines, announce "This call may be recorded." This satisfies all-party consent requirements everywhere.

🏢 Workplace Recording

Recording at work is generally governed by your state's consent laws — but employers can set their own policies. Even in one-party states, an employer can prohibit recording as a condition of employment. However, the NLRB has ruled that blanket recording bans can violate workers' rights to "concerted activity" under the National Labor Relations Act, particularly when documenting unsafe working conditions or labor violations.

Exception: Recording evidence of illegal activity (harassment, discrimination, safety violations) may be protected even against company policy under whistleblower laws.

🏫 Recording in Schools

Public school buildings are generally considered public property, but courts have upheld schools' authority to restrict recording to prevent disruption. FERPA (Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act) adds another layer — recordings that capture identifiable student information may be restricted. However, recording a school resource officer (SRO) performing law enforcement duties in a common area follows the same First Amendment protections as recording any officer in public.

Key Distinction: Recording an SRO detaining a student in a hallway is protected. Recording inside a classroom during instruction can be restricted.

🏠 Recording in Private Property

On private property, the property owner's rules generally apply. A store can ban recording as a condition of entry. However, once police are called to a private location, the encounter becomes a law enforcement matter. If officers enter your home, you have an absolute right to record them — your home is where you have the strongest expectation of privacy, which means officers have the weakest.

Critical: If police enter your home without a warrant, recording is the single most important thing you can do to protect your Fourth Amendment rights.

🔒 Evidence Preservation

Protecting Your Recording
as Legal Evidence

A recording is only valuable if it survives. Learn how to preserve, back up, and maintain chain of custody for your recordings.

1

Immediate Cloud Backup

The most critical step is getting your recording off your phone and into the cloud immediately. If your phone is confiscated, damaged, or forcibly unlocked, the original recording may be lost. CopDefender automatically segments your recording into 3-second chunks and uploads them to encrypted cloud storage in real-time. Even if recording is interrupted, everything captured up to that point is already safely stored.

2

Chain of Custody

For a recording to be admissible in court, you need to establish a chain of custody — proving the video hasn't been tampered with. CopDefender generates SHA-256 cryptographic hashes for every video segment at the moment of upload, creating a mathematical fingerprint that proves the footage is unaltered. Keep notes about the date, time, location, and circumstances of the recording. Do not edit, crop, or filter the original video.

3

What To Do After Recording

After an encounter: (1) Do NOT delete anything — deleting evidence can be charged as obstruction, even if you think the recording is unfavorable. (2) Write down everything you remember immediately — names, badge numbers, patrol car numbers, witness names. (3) Contact an attorney before sharing the recording publicly. Posting on social media before speaking with a lawyer can undermine your legal position. (4) File a formal complaint with internal affairs if your rights were violated. (5) Keep the original file untouched — make copies for sharing.

4

GPS Metadata & Timestamps

Metadata can make or break a case. GPS coordinates prove you were at the location. Timestamps prove when the incident occurred. CopDefender embeds GPS coordinates and timestamps into every recording session automatically, creating irrefutable proof of time and place. This metadata is critical when filing complaints or providing evidence to attorneys — it corroborates your written account independently.

❓ Recording Laws FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions
About Recording Laws

Can I record police during a traffic stop?

+

Yes. You have a constitutionally protected right to record police during a traffic stop in all 50 states. Keep your phone visible (on the dashboard or in a mount), announce that you're recording if in a two-party consent state, and do not make sudden movements. The officer may not order you to stop recording, and under Riley v. California (2014), they cannot search or seize your phone without a warrant.

Can I record police from inside my home?

+

Absolutely. Your home is your castle under the Fourth Amendment. You have every right to record officers who enter your home — with or without a warrant. If they entered without a warrant and without consent, recording their actions is the single most important thing you can do to preserve evidence of an illegal search. Security cameras, doorbell cameras, and phone recordings are all protected.

Can I record someone else's police encounter?

+

Yes. Bystander recording is protected by the First Amendment. Multiple federal courts have explicitly upheld the right of bystanders to record police encounters. Keep a safe distance (generally 10-15 feet or more), do not physically interfere with the officers, and do not cross police lines or barriers. In Arizona, a 2022 law (HB 2319) prohibits recording within 8 feet of police activity, though this law is being challenged in court.

What if an officer puts their hand over my camera?

+

An officer blocking, grabbing, or covering your camera is an unlawful seizure under the Fourth Amendment and a violation of your First Amendment rights. Do not physically resist — verbally note what is happening for the audio record ("Officer is blocking my camera at [time]"), then file a complaint and contact an attorney. This behavior can form the basis of a Section 1983 civil rights lawsuit.

Can I livestream a police encounter?

+

Yes, livestreaming is legally protected just like regular recording. In fact, livestreaming provides an additional layer of protection because the footage is immediately stored on third-party servers (Facebook, Instagram, YouTube) and cannot be destroyed by confiscating your phone. However, consider that livestreaming requires an active internet connection and uses significant data. For reliability, a dedicated recording app like CopDefender that uploads chunks to the cloud is more dependable than livestreaming.

Do two-party consent laws apply to dashcams?

+

Dashcams present a unique situation. Video-only dashcams (no audio) are legal everywhere because consent laws apply to audio recording of conversations, not video. If your dashcam records audio inside your vehicle, one-party consent applies — you're consenting to the recording. However, in two-party consent states, audio from a dashcam could be problematic if it captures private conversations of passengers who haven't consented. Most dashcam manufacturers offer audio-off modes for this reason.

Can recordings be used as evidence in court?

+

Yes. Legally obtained recordings are admissible in both criminal and civil proceedings. For criminal defense, recordings can show police misconduct, illegal searches, false testimony, or excessive force. For civil rights lawsuits (Section 1983), recordings are often the most powerful evidence available. To maximize admissibility: maintain the original unedited file, document the chain of custody, preserve metadata (GPS, timestamps), and have a forensic expert verify the file if the opposing side claims tampering.

What about recording in a courthouse or government building?

+

Government buildings have mixed rules. Courtrooms almost universally prohibit recording without the judge's permission. However, public areas of government buildings (lobbies, hallways, public meetings) are generally open to recording. Police stations vary — some allow recording in public areas, others prohibit it. City council meetings, school board meetings, and other public meetings are generally open to recording under open meeting laws. Always check posted signs and local rules.

What's the difference between "wiretapping" and "recording"?

+

Legally, "wiretapping" originally referred to intercepting telephone communications. Most state consent laws are technically "wiretapping statutes" even though they now cover in-person conversations too. The key distinction is between intercepting a conversation you're not part of (always illegal without a warrant) versus recording a conversation you're participating in (legal in one-party states, requires all-party consent in two-party states). When you record a police encounter you're involved in, you're a party to the conversation — not "wiretapping."

Can I be sued for recording someone?

+

In two-party consent states, recording a private conversation without consent can result in both criminal charges and civil lawsuits. Civil damages can range from $1,000 to $10,000+ per violation depending on the state. In California, civil damages are $5,000 per violation or three times actual damages, whichever is greater. However, these laws apply to private conversations where parties have a reasonable expectation of privacy — public encounters with police are not private conversations and are not covered by these laws.

📊 Quick Reference

Two-Party Consent States
Deep Comparison

The 11 two-party consent states each have different penalties, exceptions, and nuances. Here's the detailed comparison for the states where recording laws are most complex.

California

Strictest

Statute

Penal Code § 632

Criminal Penalty

Up to $2,500 fine + 1 year jail

Civil Damages

$5,000 per violation or 3x actual

Key Exception

Does not apply to public encounters with police

California's law specifically covers "confidential communications" — those carried on under circumstances that indicate any party has a reasonable expectation of privacy. Officers performing duties in public have no such expectation. The California Supreme Court has confirmed this in multiple decisions. However, recording a private conversation between officers in their patrol car (where they do have an expectation of privacy) could violate § 632.

Illinois

Reformed

Statute

720 ILCS 5/14-2

Criminal Penalty

Class 4 felony (1-3 years)

Civil Damages

Actual damages + attorney fees

Key Exception

2014 reform explicitly protects recording police

Illinois had the harshest eavesdropping law in America — recording any conversation without all-party consent was a Class 1 felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison. The Seventh Circuit struck this down in ACLU v. Alvarez (2012), and the state legislature passed a reformed law in 2014 that explicitly protects recording "law enforcement officers performing their duties in a public place." The new law still requires two-party consent for private conversations.

Massachusetts

Very Strict

Statute

G.L. c. 272, § 99

Criminal Penalty

Up to 5 years state prison

Civil Damages

Actual damages + punitive damages

Key Exception

Glik v. Cunniffe (2011) protects recording police

Massachusetts has one of the oldest and strictest wiretapping laws in the country, prohibiting secret recording of any conversation. However, the landmark Glik v. Cunniffe decision (from the First Circuit, which covers Massachusetts) established that openly recording police in public is constitutionally protected. The critical distinction in MA is "secret" vs. "open" recording — if your recording is open and obvious, it's protected. If you're secretly recording a private conversation, you could face felony charges. When recording police, keep your phone visible.

Florida

Complex

Statute

Fla. Stat. § 934.03

Criminal Penalty

3rd-degree felony (up to 5 years)

Civil Damages

$1,000 per violation or actual damages

Key Exception

Public encounters + Sunshine Law public records

Florida is a two-party consent state but has strong public records laws (the "Sunshine Law") that make government transparency a priority. Recording police in public is protected — the Eleventh Circuit (which covers Florida) confirmed this in Smith v. City of Cumming. However, Florida's statute specifically covers "oral communications" — defined as communications "uttered by a person exhibiting an expectation that such communication is not subject to interception." An officer shouting orders in public has no such expectation. Private conversations in a squad car do.

Pennsylvania

Strict

Statute

18 Pa.C.S. § 5704

Criminal Penalty

3rd-degree felony (up to 7 years)

Civil Damages

Statutory damages + punitive damages

Key Exception

Fields v. City of Philadelphia (2017)

Pennsylvania has some of the harshest penalties for wiretapping violations in the country — up to 7 years for a single offense. However, the Third Circuit's en banc ruling in Fields v. City of Philadelphia (2017) firmly established the right to record police in public in PA. The PA law covers "oral communications" with a reasonable expectation of privacy. Police conducting duties in public have no such expectation. Be aware: secretly recording a private phone call in PA without all-party consent is still a serious felony, even if you're a party to the call.

📰 2024-2025 Updates

Recent Changes to
Recording Laws

Recording laws are evolving. Here are the most significant legislative and judicial changes from 2024-2025 that affect your right to record.

SCOTUS Watch 2024-2025 Term

Supreme Court May Finally Rule on Recording Rights

Despite every circuit court ruling in favor of recording rights, the Supreme Court has never directly addressed the issue. Several petitions for certiorari are working their way through the system. A definitive SCOTUS ruling would settle the question nationally and eliminate any remaining ambiguity in circuits that haven't explicitly ruled. Legal experts widely expect any SCOTUS decision to affirm the right — the question is when, not if.

New Restriction Arizona

Arizona's 8-Foot Recording Ban (HB 2319)

Arizona enacted HB 2319 in 2022, making it a misdemeanor to knowingly make a video recording of law enforcement activity within 8 feet of where the activity is occurring. This is the first state law to set a minimum distance for recording police. Critics argue the law is unconstitutionally vague (what counts as "law enforcement activity"?) and chills First Amendment rights. The ACLU has challenged the law, and a federal court has partially blocked enforcement. The case is ongoing.

New Protection Colorado

Colorado's Enhanced Police Accountability Act

Colorado's SB 20-217 (enhanced in 2024) is one of the strongest police accountability laws in the country. It explicitly protects the right to record police, requires mandatory body camera activation, creates an adverse inference for missing footage, eliminates qualified immunity for state law claims, and requires officers to intervene when they witness excessive force. Colorado is now considered a model state for recording rights protection.

Circuit Expansion Ninth Circuit (2023)

Ninth Circuit Confirms Recording Rights in Fordyce v. Seattle

The Ninth Circuit's 2023 ruling extended explicit recording protections to the largest federal circuit, covering 9 states and 20% of the US population. The court rejected the city's argument that active protest conditions eliminate recording rights, holding that "the pervasive presence of combative conditions does not eliminate the right to record." Officers who interfere can now be held personally liable in AK, AZ, CA, HI, ID, MT, NV, OR, and WA.

📍

CopDefender Knows Your State's Laws

CopDefender automatically detects your state using GPS and warns you about two-party consent requirements. Cross a state line? The app updates your rights in real-time. Never be caught unaware of your recording rights again.

Know Your State's Laws Before You Need Them

Don't wait until you're pulled over to learn your recording rights. Download CopDefender now and let the app handle the legal details while you focus on staying safe.

Download on the App Store Get it on Google Play