Article H3HY Cops: We "Expected Privacy" Because We Tried to Smash All the Cameras

Cops: We "Expected Privacy" Because We Tried to Smash All the Cameras

by
Kevin
from Lowering the Bar on (#H3HY)

As you can probably guess, they didn't get all of them.

6a00d83451bd4469e201b8d14786df970c-400wiWhen it's ok for a masked man to steal your TV

About a week ago (ars technica, Orange County Register), some of the officers who raided a medical-marijuana shop in California asked a judge to suppress a video of their actions on the grounds that they didn't know they were being recorded. California is one of the states in which it is illegal to eavesdrop on or record a "confidential communication" unless all parties consent. (It doesn't apply to law enforcement, of course, or, you'll be glad to know, to hearing aids.) What is a "confidential communication," exactly? I'm glad you asked:

The term "confidential communication" includes any communication carried on in circumstances as may reasonably indicate that any party to the communication desires it to be confined to the parties thereto, but excludes a communication made in a public gathering or in any legislative, judicial, executive or administrative proceeding open to the public, or in any other circumstance in which the parties to the communication may reasonably expect that the communication may be overheard or recorded.

The law authorizes a civil lawsuit against the recording party, and also says that any illegal recording is inadmissible.

6a00d83451bd4469e201b7c7bdacbc970b-120wiThe apparently novel argument here is that although the officers were fully aware that the shop had a surveillance system-in fact, it was required to have one by law-they claim they had a "reasonable expectation of privacy" in the shop once they thought they had successfully destroyed the system. They did, but they missed the backup surveillance system of hidden cameras, probably designed to catch people who try to destroy the visible ones. Oh dear.

Because the resulting video appears to show the officers engaged in questionable conduct like insulting disabled customers, playing darts during the raid, and possibly even eating a pot brownie, they would like the video suppressed so that it can't be used against them in the department's investigation of their conduct. They filed this request for a TRO, arguing that they might suffer "irreparable harm" because they might get fired or demoted based on the evidence of what they did. The business has sued the department based in part on the same evidence. (As the video itself states, it has been edited by the business's attorneys, who have also added some commentary. We don't yet know what's missing, but judge for yourself what it shows.)

A judge heard argument on this last week but deferred a decision (another hearing is set for Thursday). He did express some reservations, though, saying "I'm troubled by the fundamental request of halting an investigation based on the theory that the recording that's triggered this investigation is illegal." Right, because it seems troubling that police could suppress evidence of their wrongdoing by trying really hard to destroy that evidence or prevent it from being gathered in the first place. That's what he's saying, right? I hope that's what's troubling him.

The business's lawyer cites a case called People v. Nazary, in which a defendant tried to argue that a video should be excluded from his embezzlement trial for similar reasons. The court noted that he was clearly aware that the business owner had installed cameras, partly because he had "plaster[ed] over them as soon as he knew of their existence," so it wasn't "objectively reasonable" to expect later conversations there to be private.

In other words, the court did not reason that, because he thought he had successfully plastered over all the cameras, he could reasonably expect privacy there in the future. Sorry-you have to take the risk that you may have missed one, which should be the problem for the cops here, too.

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