The Sentinel-Record

In era of transparen­cy, new Arizona law limits how public can film police

- TERRY TANG

PHOENIX — Arizona’s governor has signed a law that restricts how the public can video police at a time when there’s growing pressure across the U.S. for greater law enforcemen­t transparen­cy.

Civil rights and media groups opposed the measure that Republican Gov. Doug Ducey signed Thursday. The law makes it illegal in Arizona to knowingly video police officers 8 feet (2.5 meters) or closer without an officer’s permission.

Someone on private property with the owner’s consent can also be ordered to stop recording if a police officer finds they are interferin­g or the area is not safe. The penalty is a misdemeano­r that would likely incur a fine without jail time.

There needs to be a law that protects officers from people who “either have very poor judgment or sinister motives,” said Republican Rep. John Kavanagh, the bill’s sponsor.

“I’m pleased that a very reasonable law that promotes the safety of police officers and those involved in police stops and bystanders has been signed into law,” Kavanagh said Friday. “It promotes everybody’s safety yet still allows people to reasonably videotape police activity as is their right.”

The move comes nearly a year after the U.S. Department of Justice launched a widespread probe into the police force in Phoenix to examine whether officers have been using excessive force and abusing people experienci­ng homelessne­ss. It’s similar to other investigat­ions opened in recent months in Minneapoli­s and Louisville.

The Phoenix Police Department, which oversees the nation’s fifth-largest city, has been criticized in recent years for its use of force, which disproport­ionately affects Black and Native American residents.

The law has left opponents like K.M. Bell, staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona, incredulou­s.

Federal appellate courts already have ruled that recording police is “a clearly establishe­d right,” according to Bell.

The law won’t work in real-life scenarios.

“We’re talking about people being in public and a place they have a right to be. We’re not talking about, like somebody breaking into the (National Security Agency),” Bell said.

Kavanagh, who was a police officer for 20 years, amended the legislatio­n so it applies to certain types of police actions, including questionin­g of suspects and encounters involving mental or behavioral health issues.

The law also makes exceptions for people who are the direct subject of police interactio­n. They can film as long as they are not being arrested or searched. Someone who is in a car stopped by police or is being questioned can also film the encounter.

“Those exceptions were based upon input from all sorts of people, including the ACLU,” he said.

Rumblings two years ago about anti-police groups who deliberate­ly approach officers while filming inspired draft legislatio­n. There was a risk of an officer being injured or a suspect escaping or ditching evidence, Kavanagh said.

The Rev. Jarret Maupin, a Phoenix activist, has represente­d victims of excessive force by police. Some of the cases received more publicity because video captured by bystanders was posted online.

In one case, a Black couple had police officers point guns at them in front of their children in May 2019 after their young daughter took a doll from a store without their knowledge. They received a $475,000 settlement from the city.

Maupin believes the law is a tactic to help police avoid responsibi­lity.

“Proximity is not a luxury in terms of documentin­g the actions of officers who engage in acts of brutality,” Maupin said. Sometimes the victims and the bystanders have no choice but to be within the proximity that the bill now prohibits.”

Bell said it’s unlikely that other states might follow suit to limit police recording directly given questions about constituti­onality.

The new law doesn’t make exceptions for the press.

Media groups including The Associated Press said the measure raises serious constituti­onal issues. They signed onto a letter from the National Press Photograph­ers Associatio­n, or NPPA, in opposition to the bill.

Setting one-size-fits-all conditions like “arbitrary distances” of 8 feet (2.5 meters) for filming police just doesn’t work, said Mickey Osterreich­er, attorney for the NPPA. It’s also unclear if someone is breaking the law if an officer approaches them within a few feet.

“What happens when you’re in situations like we saw during all of the protests for the past couple of years, where you have multiple people with cameras? We’re not just talking about journalist­s,” Osterreich­er said. “And you’ve got multiple police officers. Is everybody going to be running around with a ruler?”

Cellphone cameras have transforme­d policing with one of the biggest examples being the 2020 killing of George Floyd, but Kavanagh said a law like Arizona’s wouldn’t have made an impact since the video in that case was taken from a greater distance away.

Osterreich­er argued a police officer could invoke the law even if the person filming is far enough away.

But that didn’t happen in the Floyd case.

“Fortunatel­y, those officers out of all the wrong things that they did, the one thing they didn’t do was tell her to turn off the camera or try to interfere with her recording,” Osterreich­er said.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ■ Phoenix Police officers watch protesters rally on June 2, 2020, in Phoenix during demonstrat­ions over the death of George Floyd. Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey has signed into law a measure that makes it illegal to knowingly record video of police officers within 8 feet or closer without an officer’s permission, spurring concerns among civil rights and media groups about transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.
The Associated Press ■ Phoenix Police officers watch protesters rally on June 2, 2020, in Phoenix during demonstrat­ions over the death of George Floyd. Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey has signed into law a measure that makes it illegal to knowingly record video of police officers within 8 feet or closer without an officer’s permission, spurring concerns among civil rights and media groups about transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.

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