Yet Another Court Says Illinois 'Eavesdropping' Law That Criminalizes Recording Police Is Unconstitutional

from the free-speech dept

We’ve covered in great detail the ridiculous law in Illinois that makes it a crime to record police, even while they’re on duty, without their knowledge. This seems crazy to us, and it appears the courts are agreeing. Last fall, we noted that a state court had ruled the law was unconstitutional, and now (as pointed out by reader John Katos) another local court has done the same.

Judge Stanley Sacks, who is assigned to the Criminal Courts Building, found the eavesdropping law unconstitutional because it potentially criminalizes “wholly innocent conduct.”

Last we’d heard, Illinois prosecutors were appealing the first ruling, and I imagine they won’t be too happy about this ruling either. But, at some point, it seems they have to recognize the ridiculousness of making it a crime to record police on the job.

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Comments on “Yet Another Court Says Illinois 'Eavesdropping' Law That Criminalizes Recording Police Is Unconstitutional”

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45 Comments
silverscarcat says:

It’s only a crime if you show them doing stuff that could be potentially dangerous to their image, like beating minorities, pepper spraying non-violent protesters, using a taser on a 13-year-old girl, and pulling guns on people who are on motorcycles and unarmed.

If you record them while they’re getting donuts or something, no one cares.

Really? (profile) says:

Re: Illinois Eavsdropping law

It really sucks that we have this law in Illinois. My boyfriend is in jail right now awaiting his next court date.
He’s being charged with Aggravated battery to a government official, meaning hes being accused of spitting on a cop.. Anyways i have it recorded on my cell that he is being accused of it, but it didnt happen, the recording clearly captures two cops speaking and my bf, the first cop says “wheres the spit?” the second cop says to my bf Lenard ” You ALMOST hit me with your spit” then you hear my boyfriend say “IM SORRY”. And theres nothing i can do.. If i play it for the judge i face up to 15 years in prison myself. Now i cant understand why its ok for an officer to record arrests on a dashboard cam without our concent and its ok, but god for bid we get a cop on tape LIEING! Illinois sucks i agree, if i had the means to get my family out of here i would.. But till then were stuck with my boyfriend going to jail being innocent. and not to mention he faces 6 years in prison for being innocent all thanks to a cop that really loves his job of slamming innocent people.

Anonymous Coward says:

Here is an idea lets track the police.

Youtube: Is Your Girlfriend Cheating? Here’s one way to find out!

Spend $25 bucks and keep a tab on the cops.

Also I can see some uses that are not privacy related but security related, your security.

If you are walking somewhere that is dangerous, that could be good if anybody gets worried.

If you go to a protest and get arrested others will find you.

If you get arrested and is ok at the time but when you show up at the PD you are all bruised you can show where it happened and for how long it did go on.

If you get murdered people could find out where you were dumped, think of your loved ones.

wizened (profile) says:

Re:

You don’t know how right you are. I live in the NW burbs of Chicago and I’ve seen a lot of BS. You can’t point a camera at a cop and not record something illegal INCLUDING getting donuts. I was there several years back when the police used the police helicopter to land in the parking lot of the Dunkin Donuts to pick up some tasty food to take along. I’ve been asked for money. I’ve been asked for sex and I was once stopped so that the cop could check out my new car. This is a fine state to live in and I fully understand why they don’t want anyone pointing a camera at them.

Anonymous Coward says:

I visit Chicago on a regular basis and travel throughout the country. There is a culture there and in a few other cities I visit, mostly on the east coast that is strange. The citizens expect the cops to act like they rule the streets, the cops expect it, and laws, all laws, simply do not apply to them. The defense and prosecuting attorneys hash out the cases before they go to trial to make each others careers a success and everyone is a friend of everyone else.

Believe or not there are areas in the country (most actually) where the cops obey the same laws they enforce- they drive under the speed limit, obey traffic lights, work a full shift under the careful eye of the public or risk losing their jobs. If they do not then the media will expose them on local television and they will be fired. If this is a surprise to you then you do not live there where most of us do and hold our politicians and public servants to a higher standard than you.

Then there is Chicago…a reality unto itself where everyone is on the take and getting a job in the city or government is the same as winning the lottery where you split the pot from the tax paying suckers. Video threatens this arrangement and the system they grew up understanding would be theirs to control someday.

Thomas (profile) says:

Cops...

are always saying “if you have nothing to hide you have nothing to worry about”, but they don’t want it to go the other way around. The cops in Illinois just want to be able to beat the crap out of anyone they feel like and get away with it. I would much rather encounter a mugger than a cop. Give the mugger your phone and money and they leave you alone. Annoy a cop and you get a nasty beating on the spot, a criminal record, and probably more beatings and worse in their crappy jails, plus a huge bill to defend yourself from bogus charges. I avoid Illinois – it is not a safe state to visit. The prosecutors feel the cops can do no wrong and want to keep it that way.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

You think they aren’t serving the public? Those government lawyers are working to defend a law passed by the legislators that the people elected. That’s their job, and I’m not going to fault the lawyers for doing their job. (And if the case isn’t properly argued, it’s not going to set a good precedent anyway.)

If you want the government to serve the public, you need to elect people who want to serve the public. It would be preferable to stop these laws by repealing them or having them not be passed in the first place. But if the laws are on the books, we might as well have them fight it out so we can say once and for all that the law is unconstitutional, instead of having the law sit there so people think filming the police IS illegal even though the law is unenforceable.

awbMaven (profile) says:

Taking a dump

“Last we’d heard, Illinois prosecutors were appealing the first ruling, and I imagine they won’t be too happy about this ruling either. But, at some point, it seems they have to recognize the ridiculousness of making it a crime to record police on the job.”

In the UK, when someone is ‘on the job”, they are taking a dump on the crapper, ie, having a shit on the toilet.

abc gum says:

Re:

I agree – it is a stupid law put in place for nefarious purpose and should be stricken. Getting it removed by those who put it there is like herding cats. This particular attempt at over reach has been hashed out in many courts across the country and IIRC all ruling have said it is total bunk – and yet these bozos continue to appeal. This is more than simply doing ones job.

The common rational which makes use of blaming voters for their representative government is a cheap shot. Not all states allow recall of their representatives – most of which lied about their intentions during the campaign and therefore do not represent the will of the people who put them there, much less those who voted for other candidates.

So the question remains, at what point does the continuous appealing of court decisions become egregious abuse of position? In this case the Illinois supreme court said no, think SCOTUS will take up this case? If so, why? They seem to have already ruled in this area.

amorro (profile) says:

Battle Not Over Yet

The Illinois Eavesdropping?s battle isn?t over yet. On March 15th, 2012, Melongo will argue her motion to dismiss. She recorded Pamela Taylor, a Cook County Court Manager, for an alleged tampered court transcript. She?s challenging this controversial law on First and Fourteenth Amendments grounds.
Melongo’s motion : http://tinyurl.com/6nqv2se
State’s response: http://tinyurl.com/73fwecf

amorro (profile) says:

Not Over Yet

The Illinois Eavesdropping?s battle isn?t over yet. On March 15th, 2012, Melongo will argue her motion to dismiss. She recorded Pamela Taylor, a Cook County Court Manager, for an alleged tampered court transcript. She?s challenging this controversial law on First and Fourteenth Amendments grounds.
Melongo’s motion : http://tinyurl.com/6nqv2se
State’s response: http://tinyurl.com/73fwecf

amorro (profile) says:

It's Not Over

The Illinois Eavesdropping?s battle isn?t over yet. On March 15th, 2012, Melongo will argue her motion to dismiss. She recorded Pamela Taylor, a Cook County Court Manager, for an alleged tampered court transcript. She?s challenging this controversial law on First and Fourteenth Amendments grounds.
Melongo’s motion : http://tinyurl.com/6nqv2se
State’s response: http://tinyurl.com/73fwecf

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