New Arizona Law Will Make it Illegal to Film Within 8 Feet of Police
Civil liberties groups oppose the law, saying it will impede First Amendment–protected activity and protect bad cops.

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, signed a bill into law Wednesday that will make it illegal to film the police within eight feet.
The legislation, H.B. 2319, makes it a misdemeanor offense to continue filming police activity from within eight feet of an officer after receiving a verbal warning. The bill originally restricted filming the police from no closer than 15 feet away, but it was amended after criticisms.
There are also exceptions for filming the police in a private residence, during a traffic stop, and for the subject of a police encounter. But the law qualifies those exceptions, saying they apply only if the person recording is "not interfering with lawful police actions," or "unless a law enforcement officer determines that the person is interfering in the law enforcement activity or that it is not safe to be in the area and orders the person to leave the area."
Interfering with police, or obstruction of justice, is one of the most frequently cited justifications for frivolous and retaliatory arrests.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Arizona opposed the legislation, saying it "lacks specificity and gives officers too much discretion—making it the bill more apt to protect bad cops who want to hide misconduct than those who are doing their job properly with a bystander recording nearby."
The bill's sponsor, state Rep. John Kavanagh (R–Fountain Hills), wrote in a March op-ed that he introduced it "because there are groups hostile to the police that follow them around to videotape police incidents, and they get dangerously close to potentially violent encounters."
"I can think of no reason why any responsible person would need to come closer than 8 feet to a police officer engaged in a hostile or potentially hostile encounter," Kavanagh wrote. "Such an approach is unreasonable, unnecessary and unsafe, and should be made illegal.
T. Greg Doucette, a criminal defense attorney who also specializes in free speech law, told Reason in February that there are constitutional problems with the law.
"Can you be arrested for standing still while wearing a GoPro under this statute?" Doucette asked. "It seems the answer here is yes, which would violate the First Amendment (since standing still isn't interfering with an officer's duties)."
The First Amendment right to film the police has been upheld by several federal appeals courts, as Reason's Billy Binion has reported:
The right to film government officials in public has been at the center of a slew of legal challenges over the last few decades. And several federal appeals courts—including the 1st, 3rd, 5th, 7th, and 11th Circuits—have ruled that it is indeed an activity protected by the First Amendment.
It was also established in the 9th Circuit—where Arizona is located—almost 30 years ago, in a 1995 decision where the court ruled that a cop violated the Constitution when he physically sought to stop a man from videotaping a public protest in 1990.
The National Press Photographers Association, joined by numerous media outlets and press freedom groups, issued a letter in February opposing the bill. They declared that the legislation "violates not only the free speech and press clauses of the First Amendment, but also runs counter to the 'clearly established right' to photograph and record police officers performing their official duties in a public place."
While civil liberties groups say recording the police is both protected and crucial for government accountability, lawmakers in some states have been trying to make it harder for citizens to do it. In addition to Arizona, the South Carolina and Florida legislatures have also introduced bills over the past two years to restrict the ability to film the police.
State legislators should be less concerned with cops' feelings and more concerned about citizens' right to document how armed government agents go about their business. Giving officers another discretionary offense to slap on someone who annoys them will lead only to more confusion and more censorship.
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You faggots have no credibility on policing. Your support for America's gestapo disqualifies you from commenting.
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Stupid fuckers interfering in dangerous situations only make it more dangerous.
awww are you mad they attack your pathetic political party
I'm mad they have no credibility yet try to trot this bullshit outrage point out to distract from the malicious totalitarianism of literal cancer like you.
There aren't many people with less respect for cops than me, outside BLM circles, but 8 feet? Criminy, if you have to be closer to show cop malfeasance, you're doing it wrong.
And this --
-- doesn't make much sense either. Is "8 feet" not specific enough for you? Pray tell, how would you make it more specific?
Oops, I left off this part of the quote ...
Not to harsh your buzz too much, CJ, but did you screw up a copy and paste, or did the ACLU screw up their press release? Doesn't exactly lend a lot of credence to the quote or the article.
unless a law enforcement officer determines that the person is interfering in the law enforcement activity
Citizen is 10 ft away, filming. Cop walks over: “You’re closer than 8 ft, on the ground, scumbag!”
How is that any worse than today, with no objective distance to argue over?
Because it's not illegal today. As proven by multiple federal courts, you are allowed to film police.
The 8 foot rule allows a police officer to approach and criminalize someone who is otherwise standing still. Without this law, a person doing nothing other than wearing a go-pro and standing there is in violation of no constitutional law, and that doesn't change just because a cop approaches him.
I agree the law is worse than no law. But the ACLU claims it is not specific enough. What could they possibly do to make it more specific?
That, I cannot say. The ACLU pretty much doesn't have to have a point anymore, they just have to stick their nose in where their progressive donors tell them to.
Hven't read the actual bill, but it would appear the intent is to provide space for the coppers to DO their job without being threatened or interfered with. If I'm standing still recording, and some copper walks over to me, HE has moved, not ME. If I keep the cemara trained on the action I was recording, Im not filming the DUmbGuy who's trying to make a scene.
I've worked as a professional phptographer and videographer, and cannot imagine even WANTING to get closer to potential violent action than the prescribed eight feet. Use the equipment you have correctly, and you'll most likley be fifteen feet at least. I would NEVER want my rather dear equipment to be closer than eight feet, and far more likley fifteen or more. Long lenses are amazing tools. LEARN how to use them.
I'd be scared the guy fussing with the coppers might see me, get a rage on, and spring himself loose trying to come at me. Even if he doesn't tag me,
A cop can arbitrarily shorten the distance and generate an infraction.
Citizens should have a right to record unless the cops can prove they materially interfere with legitimate police actions. The onus should be on the cops. They must be outfitted with working recording devices - both audio and video recorded - and an absence of such evidence should overturn any arrest AND potentially put the cop in legal trouble for rights violations.
I'd wager the issue with "8 feet" is that people are notoriously bad at estimating almost anything whether it's distance, speed, time, etc. Then there are cops who are more than happy to lie and claim that even if you're on the other side of the street they'll say it was much less than 8 feet.
That said, my gut feeling is that the law is less about filming and more about recording what's said. Perhaps the folks that make phones should concentrate on the microphone in addition to the camera. I'd think it fairly trivial to put an array of high quality directional mics around the seeming standard of three or more lenses.
Ahhh, had not considered the audio aspect. Solid point.
Definitely feels like this one is coming from a bad place. Not quick to bite on snowball theory generally, but this is an overstep.
A definite and unnecessary tightening of the noose.
Who’s going to measure the 8ft?
Cop says you were at 7ft 11in, (when in fact you were 9ft away) and it’s a “lawful” arrest.
It’s another “I smell me some marjiuwwanna” law.
People cannot judge 6 feet accurately for the purpose of reducing disease so businesses had to put stickers on the ground to denote the distance. I don't see how cops are going to know the difference between 7 and 9 feet, especially if all they need to do is move a couple feet in one directly to arrest someone with a camera. This is very likely to happen. Arizonans will get to debate how far from the copy they were in court and guess who'll probably win that argument every time? The cop.
During the BLM protests, when news cameras wearing press credentials standing on public rights-of-way at a distance from cops and the protesters were harassed by police, how many of the cops that harassed and arrested them faced any kind of punishment?
8 feet? Someone is going to get killed or not get the attention needed by letting a mob of people get within 8 feet of an 'incident'. Rule of thumb for safety from being stabbed with a knife is 21 feet. I'm still waiting for someone to print the 8 was a typo and they meant to type 18.
The issue isn't the reasonableness (or not) of the 8 feet. The issue is the power this gives police to prevent videoing them at all. If an officer notices someone with a camera standing roughly 8 feet away, they can decide arbitrarily that it is less than 8 feet and force them to leave. Or, if it's closer to 12 feet away, two strides towards the person with the camera places them less than 8 feet away and now they can be sent away.
When is 8 feet not 8 feet? When the cop feels like it.
So, if you are 8 feet away and the cop comes to you do have to continually back up to maintain 8 feet? And then do you risk being shot for fleeing?
No problem. The cop union will produce a throwdown forensics report saying you were dead of a non-psychedelic overdose before being shot by over-zealous enforcement. It worked for Derek Chauvin, didn't it?
So when filming a mostly peaceful protest and there are cops all over the place, how do you maintain 8 feet?
Has anyone used "film" in the last 20 years? Checked and the statue indicates video recording, which would include film as well as digital means of capturing video.
"1 Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Arizona:
2 Section 1. Title 13, chapter 37, Arizona Revised Statutes, is
3 amended by adding section 13-3732, to read:
4 13-3732. Unlawful video recording of law enforcement
5 activity; classification; definition
6 A. IT IS UNLAWFUL FOR A PERSON TO KNOWINGLY MAKE A VIDEO RECORDING
7 OF LAW ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITY IF THE PERSON MAKING THE VIDEO RECORDING IS
8 WITHIN EIGHT FEET OF WHERE THE PERSON KNOWS OR REASONABLY SHOULD KNOW THAT
9 LAW ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITY IS OCCURRING, EITHER RECEIVES OR HAS PREVIOUSLY
10 RECEIVED A VERBAL WARNING FROM A LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICER THAT THE PERSON
11 IS PROHIBITED FROM MAKING A VIDEO RECORDING OF A LAW ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITY
12 WITHIN EIGHT FEET OF THE ACTIVITY AND CONTINUES TO MAKE A VIDEO RECORDING
13 OF THE LAW ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITY WITHIN EIGHT FEET OF THE ACTIVITY. IF THE
14 LAW ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITY IS OCCURRING IN AN ENCLOSED STRUCTURE THAT IS ON
15 PRIVATE PROPERTY, A PERSON WHO IS AUTHORIZED TO BE ON THE PRIVATE PROPERTY
16 MAY MAKE A VIDEO RECORDING OF THE ACTIVITY FROM AN ADJACENT ROOM OR AREA
17 THAT IS LESS THAN EIGHT FEET AWAY FROM WHERE THE ACTIVITY IS OCCURRING,
18 UNLESS A LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICER DETERMINES THAT THE PERSON IS INTERFERING
19 IN THE LAW ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITY OR THAT IT IS NOT SAFE TO BE IN THE AREA
20 AND ORDERS THE PERSON TO LEAVE THE AREA.
21 B. NOTWITHSTANDING SUBSECTION A OF THIS SECTION, A PERSON WHO IS
22 THE SUBJECT OF POLICE CONTACT MAY RECORD THE ENCOUNTER IF THE PERSON IS
23 NOT INTERFERING WITH LAWFUL POLICE ACTIONS, INCLUDING SEARCHING,
24 HANDCUFFING OR ADMINISTERING A FIELD SOBRIETY TEST. THE OCCUPANTS OF A
25 VEHICLE THAT IS THE SUBJECT OF A POLICE STOP MAY RECORD THE ENCOUNTER IF
26 THE OCCUPANTS ARE NOT INTERFERING WITH LAWFUL POLICE ACTIONS.
27 C. THIS SECTION DOES NOT ESTABLISH A RIGHT OR AUTHORIZE ANY PERSON
28 TO MAKE A VIDEO RECORDING OF LAW ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITY.
29 D. A VIOLATION OF THIS SECTION IS A CLASS 3 MISDEMEANOR.
30 E. FOR THE PURPOSES OF THIS SECTION, "LAW ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITY"
31 MEANS ANY OF THE FOLLOWING:
32 1. QUESTIONING A SUSPICIOUS PERSON.
33 2. CONDUCTING AN ARREST, ISSUING A SUMMONS OR ENFORCING THE LAW.
34 3. HANDLING AN EMOTIONALLY DISTURBED OR DISORDERLY PERSON WHO IS
35 EXHIBITING ABNORMAL BEHAVIOR. "
A PERSON WHO IS
22 THE SUBJECT OF POLICE CONTACT MAY RECORD THE ENCOUNTER IF THE PERSON IS
23 NOT INTERFERING WITH LAWFUL POLICE ACTIONS, INCLUDING SEARCHING,
24 HANDCUFFING OR ADMINISTERING A FIELD SOBRIETY TEST.
It’s easy to handle your phone while being handcuffed. Done it many times….not.
I use film all the time for still photography. Has a bit of cache with the younger set these days, so folks occasionally pay me for film portraits and publicity shots, even. I don't understand why, but whatever. If they pay for the film I'll shoot it.
A significant number of movies and TV shows are still shot on film, as well. Many directors prefer certain characteristics of film stock over digital cameras. I don't think the Cohen brothers went digial until 2 or 3 years ago, Spielberg prefers film, Wes Anderson, Christopher Nolan... One of the TV shows on streaming recently was shot on positive film (Fuji Portra if I recall) and there was a big article about it earlier in the year.
More fuck-tardary from Arizona.
But give them a break. They are trying not to turn into East California.
One more reason why I'm glad I don't live in that corrupt toilet of a state...and one more reason why I'll never set foot in it.
Just ignore this comment. I have no idea what I was thinking when I posted it. Maybe the law made me think of California, because that's exactly what kind of crap they would pass over there.
LMAO find a way to attack California over an Arizona bill. Classic.
ALL States are corrupt fuckery.
Uh, no. California would not pass this sort of BS, anti-first amendment law. Interfering with a police officer is already illegal in California. There's no need to try and weaken the federally recognized right to film police in order to hold them accountable unless the state in question wants to strengthen the police state at the expense of civil rights. And that, folks, is Arizona (and Florida) to a "T".
WHAT BS. THIS IS SO ASININE!
The police have always had the authority to order people out of their area of operation or to "stay back" and to charge them failure to obey a lawful order when they hinder police regardless of whether they have a camera or not.
28-622. Failure to comply with police officer; classification
A. A person shall not wilfully fail or refuse to comply with any lawful order or direction of a police officer invested by law with authority to direct, control or regulate traffic.
B. A person who violates this section is guilty of a class 2 misdemeanor.
(apparently this often applies to non-traffic situations like any type of stop and demonstrations too - but it certainly does not say that).
13-2402. Obstructing governmental operations; classification
A. A person commits obstructing governmental operations if, by using or threatening to use violence or physical force, such person knowingly obstructs, impairs or hinders:
1. The performance of a governmental function by a public servant acting under color of his official authority; or
2. The enforcement of the penal law or the preservation of the peace by a peace officer acting under color of his official authority.
B. This section does not apply to the obstruction, impairment or hinderance of the making of an arrest.
C. Obstructing governmental operations is a class 1 misdemeanor.
However, now that they got so specific, then by default, a person who is without a camera is okay to be closer in these same situations, right?
(according to a couple of AZ attorney websites I read, physical force is by any means in which they physically obstructing)
If they were really just concerned with people shooting video interfering with police officers, and they wanted to ensure clarity, all they had to do was insert a phrase stating that videographers are not exempt from laws of interference or obstruction - THAT WERE ALREADY ON THE BOOKS.
LIARS? IDIOTS? BOTH?
Charge piling. Now when people get arrested for POP (Pissing Off the Police) the D.A. will have yet another charge with which to bully the innocent person into waiving their right to a jury trial.
Just play Disney music as the Santa Ana police do.
That's when you just say you're collecting evidence on behalf of the copyright holder of the police violating the DMCA with the public performance of the music.
Tech tip:
You can turn off your microphone and still record video.
After publishing several comparisons of Republican v. National Socialist platforms and enactments, this bald introduction of Kristallnacht Lite is a most satisfying vindication. Republican prohibition and asset forfeiture looting sprees cause economic collapse undreamt-of by the most totalitarian of commie Dems. Remember that at election time.
There is an unintended consequence here that is going to tick off a lot of cops. If you watch the various videos on YouTube that deal with this subject you will see a many cops try to force the citizens back to 30, 40 or even 50 feet. Often times they get away with it, because who wants to go to jail to prove a point. Now, however, once you cross that magic 8 foot away point the cop loses all authority on your videoing them. No more demanding the citizen be across the street and down the block.
Yes. So write the law as “No LEO shall interfere with a citizen’s recording of their actions when that citizen is 8 or more ft from the scene they are recording.” Put the onus on the cops.
All the laws in the world won't make a difference because the law does not apply to the police. They literally do whatever they want because no one will stop them. And unless their unlawful actions cause a race riot, they will be rewarded instead of punished.
Except that cops lie about everything and are always believed by the court. So the cops will arrest anyone who pisses them off regardless of distance, put into the report that they were within 8 feet, and the prosecutor will bully the innocent person into taking a plea because the alternative will be risking a decade in prison.
The cops in my neighborhood, if you want to film them from closer than 8 feet away - you better have a wide angle lens.
If the true purpose of this bill was to keep people from interfering with legitimate police activity, it wouldn't specify filming.
A citizen who enters the eight-foot radius and films a cop's activity with a functioning phone is subject to the penalties of the law. A citizen who goes through exactly the same motions, but with a dead phone or one whose camera's been taped over, would not be in violation of the law, since no actual filming would be taking place.
Given this, it's pretty clear that the purpose of the law is to limit the power of citizens to acquire evidence of police misconduct, rather than to prevent their impeding legitimate law-enforcement activity or to keep them from becoming collateral damage.
it's pretty clear that the purpose of the law is to limit the power of citizens to acquire evidence of police misconduct
Hey now! Lawsuits are expensive, and it's difficult to find people with the dearth of ethics and moral character required to be a police officer. They need protection.
Cool!
So I can buy ring doorbell, and the cops can't come within 8 feet of my door?
"Cops" and "can't" don't go in the same sentence unless it's something moral or ethical.
No, now they can arrest you for filming if you are doing so while they are breaking down your door.
“ A PERSON WHO IS
22 THE SUBJECT OF POLICE CONTACT MAY RECORD THE ENCOUNTER IF THE PERSON IS
23 NOT INTERFERING WITH LAWFUL POLICE ACTIONS, INCLUDING SEARCHING,
24 HANDCUFFING OR ADMINISTERING A FIELD SOBRIETY TEST.”
So then, if you’re 5ft away and the cop tells you to stop recording, you’re now a subject of police contact and are lawfully allowed to record.
They penned their own catch 22.
8 feet is not a great distance and police need room to do their job. Yet I can see it being abused, arresting anyone over 8 feet filming the police and claiming they were within the 8 foot limit. Police seldom obey the law, and never when know they are doing something wrong.
They have to be allowed within inches of police action for freedom or something.
How is this a bad bill? Arrests are not perfectly safe. 8 feet is your couch to the television for most people.
Is this to complain just to complain?
Good thing cops are stationary objects and can't just walk up to you if they decide they don't want you filming
It sure seems like it. The ACAB crowd is all over this.
I was all ready to be upset, but then I read the details. It's not perfect but honestly, it's not bad. Not nearly the end of democracy that many people are wailing about. 8 feet is reasonable and objective. The bill also qualifies when the 8 foot rule applies. Mainly when police are arresting or questioning someone.
So keep on recording police everyone. No, Sgt Hardass isn't going to stop beating that black guy to walk 10 feet over to you and arrest you.
You do know how these laws work right? We have had to deal with laws regarding distances such as with restraining orders for decades.
Keep your idiocy to yourself.
So a cop sees a guy recording him from 10 ft away as he repeatedly tasers a kid and then walks over to the guy (closer than the magic 8 ft) and arrests him and destroys the camera.
You OK with that?
Or do you think that cops would never stoop so low?
You mean the cop whose body cam ‘just happened to be broken’?
Additionally, with the way it's phrased, the police have to give a specific warning that you need to back away.
Assault an LEO? That’s years in prison.
Only if you're white. Non-white people will be lucky to arrive alive at the hospital.
As in, yelling out some words?