1st Amendment Protects Activist Recordings of Factory Farms, Rules Federal Judge
While animal-rights activists still risk trespassing charges, the state of Iowa cannot make it illegal to record while trespassing on private property.

Iowa animal-rights groups are celebrating after a judge ruled that the state cannot criminalize unauthorized recordings of factory farms, slaughterhouses, puppy mills, and other livestock facilities.
On Monday, Judge Stephanie Rose of the U.S. District Court of the Southern District of Iowa ruled that a 2021 Iowa "ag-gag" law aimed at preventing undercover investigations of the state's agriculture facilities by animal rights activists presents an unconstitutional content-based restriction on speech. The law criminalizes making a video recording while committing the already-illegal act of trespassing on private property. Rose ruled that while the state of Iowa is free to continue punishing trespassing, it cannot try to stop individuals from making recordings while doing so. Thus, as much as the state may dislike undercover recordings of alleged animal abuse, such actions are nonetheless protected by the First Amendment.
Undercover investigations involving hidden cameras are a common and often effective tactic used by animal-rights activists. For example, investigations carried out by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) have resulted in "thousands of criminal charges filed, hundreds of U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) citations issued, and dozens of facilities shut down," wrote Katherine Sullivan, an author with PETA.
These investigations are troublesome for Iowa farmers who fear public backlash over the conditions inside their facilities or the methods used to slaughter animals. Iowa has passed four so-called "ag-gag" laws, attempting to target investigations into livestock farms. All four laws have faced legal challenges of varying success.
In 2021, the Iowa legislature passed its latest bill, which contained two additions to Iowa state law. One provision made it illegal for a person committing the already-illegal act of trespassing on private property to place or use "a camera or electronic surveillance device that transmits or records images or data while the device is on the trespassed property." The other provision, which has not been legally challenged, bans unauthorized sampling of soil, water, and animal body fluids or products on private property.
On August 10th, 2021, a collection of animal-rights organizations sued the state on First Amendment grounds. The organizations sought to block the enforcement of the state's ban on unauthorized recordings while trespassing, arguing that the statute "impermissibly restricts speech by making it a crime to place an electronic surveillance device on trespassed property." The state of Iowa argued that the law prohibits conduct, not speech, and thus is not subject to First Amendment oversight. Even if the law did regulate speech, the state claimed that it "is narrowly tailored to a significant governmental interest" and would thus be constitutional.
Judge Rose sided with the animal-rights organizations, arguing that the act of making a video recording is a form of protected speech. "Motion pictures and videos are included within the First Amendment's ambit," she wrote. "In addition to the doctrine regarding the creation of speech, the Eighth Circuit has found that recording, production, editing, and publication of videos is protected speech."
Rose continued, arguing that "It is true that the Act does not prohibit the editing, publication, or distribution of recordings or photographs on trespassed property. But it restricts the capture of such recordings or photographs, rendering the remaining steps in the protected video production process impossible. The act of recording is a necessary predicate to produce this protected speech and is protected under the First Amendment."
Further, Rose found the state's argument that the law was "narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest," namely, the governmental interest of preventing trespass and "[protecting] proprietary information or trade secrets" unconvincing. She agreed with the animal-rights groups, who argued that the vaguely-written law is likely to suppress speech that has nothing to do with their activism, such as "reporters who access railroad tracks or public utilities to document an accident; people who use their phones to record incidents at private businesses; whistleblowers using electronics to show unsafe conditions or other employment misconduct."
Rose concludes that "There is a dearth of evidence to support the stated purposes for the Act, despite the fact that the law regulates a constitutional right. It is certainly true that property rights and privacy are important governmental interest but there is next to nothing in the record to allow the Court to find that the State narrowed the Act appropriately."
While animal-rights activists still risk trespassing charges, in Iowa, they remain free to make video recordings of animal treatment they find unethical.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
While animal-rights activists still risk
trespassing chargesrock salt in their asses,I work from home providing various internet services for an hourly rate of $80 USD. I never thought it would be possible, but my trustworthy friend persuaded (emu-03) me to take the opportunity after telling me how she quickly earned 13,000 dollars in just four weeks while working on the greatest project. Go to this article for more information.
…..
——————————>>> https://smart.online100.workers.dev/
Making a recording of what you witness is simply recording a memory.
This is new constitutional territory as no enumerated right protects or puts limits on the aquiring of knowledge. The first only deals with the sharing of it.
We need a new enumerated inalienable right to record what we witness.
A right to record your violation of someone else's property and/or privacy rights?
Absolutely.
The crime is trespassing, not recording what you see.
I do think sharing what was seen in protected privacy should be a crime.
Unless a crime was witnessed and the recording is only shared with the authorities.
It’s not rocket science.
Is this good news for Project Veritas?
Local news that didn't happen, which is why reason pretty much ignored it
Isn't Daedelin still being prosecuted by california?
No. What PV does should be illegal because it doesn’t include trespassing AND it embarrasses progressives with their own words. See, it’s a perfectly clear position. And, it’s perfectly clear why Reason hasn't reported on PV lately. TOO Local!
I was going to ask too. Maybe this only applies to the woke. The asleep tell no tales.
Thats strange. Project Veritas just got hit with 150k in judgements for undercover filming.
Some animals are more equal than others.
PETA didn't engage in wiretapping or fraudulent misrepresentation.
https://int.nyt.com/data/documenttools/verdict-in-project-veritas-case/799e87b9a3e1ab3a/full.pdf
Lol. Never change shrike. Youre actually advocating for wiretapping now. Because no audio was recorded during the PETA filming. lol.
Do you ever say anything not retarded shrike?
And if you read the fucking PETA case they apply for employment often with no filming agreements retard.
You're such a cretin - how am I advocating for wiretapping?
By all means, if PETA fraudulently misrepresent and a civil suit results, then they should lose. But if they don't, the fact that you don't like PETA but lurv PV and favour Iowa agribiz, is enough to blind you to reality.
I guess you're a natural supporter of agribiz and opponent of PETA, what with your being a peasant and all.
In the case of fair oaks farm they told the workers if they didn't abuse the animals the Peta (it was an affiliate) people would report them to INS, so the workers abused the animals on film, then the animal rights group sued, and reported the workers to INS.
Peta also teaches kids how to make fire bombs and tells them places to target.
Peta also operated som of the largest kill shelters in the nation
Animal rights activists are evil sub human liers. If you take them at their word you should kill yourself.
Almost all of the videos PETA has of factory farms required fraudulent misrepresentations to get access to the facility to film.
Video isn’t speech… until it is.
How about an animal rights activist hunting season?
That's what the 'No Trespassing' sign is for.
Vegan, the other other white meat.
If a police officer breaks the law to obtain evidence against a criminal, that evidence is considered tainted and not allowable in a court of law. I'm no lawyer, but wouldn't the same legal principle apply here?
Also, isn't this the same legal principle the FBI used against PV for Ashley Biden's diary? It was "stolen", so PV couldn't keep it or even a copy of it. Sure seems like a reporter that works for a Libertarian website/magazine should be able to connect the dots here.
If a police officer breaks the law to obtain evidence against a criminal, that evidence is considered tainted and not allowable in a court of law. I’m no lawyer, but wouldn’t the same legal principle apply here?
Not quite. Applying the same legal principle would suggest to me that whatever the whistleblower recorded would not be admissible in court. But that's not what's in question. What's in question is the act of recording itself-- and then the use/distribution of that recording.
So... if I understand this correctly, I can sneak into your house, record your wife taking a shower, post it to a my website and that would be 100% ok, but I'd get in trouble for trespassing, not the recording or distribution of your wife in the shower.
I look forward to the shower videos industry that you are starting.
Ok, I understand your analogy. Then what legal ground did the FBI have for their actions against PV for "stolen" property?
DR(P), I think you are correct. It's tough to tell if Judge Rose is concerned with individual rights versus protecting activists from additional and deserved charges. It seems fairly clear that any video made while committing a crime is the product of that crime, unless illegal activities were documented. Illegal, not disliked by PETA and intended for use in their fund-raising. As such, the video would be deleted. I suspect this is not what Rose intends.
So… if I understand this correctly,
This is an
incorrectorthogonal misunderstanding. The core issue is that Iowa places the expectation of privacy below one-party consent. AFAICT, the judgement is correct according to IA law. Of note: the law has to have carve outs for nudity, otherwise someone who can consent filming someone who can't, however you want to conceptualize that, is legal.The (IMO equally unconstitutional) flip side of the civil situation, if the reporters had set up a camera on their own private property, hit record, and walked away, the video would be illegal as no one gave consent. Surprising to learn that every trail cam in the state of IA is recording illegally.
It's not a bad judgement, it's a bad law. 12 states are (mostly) two-party consent, IA isn't one of them.
If PETA were acting as an agent of the state, then the evidence wouldn't be admissible. But in general evidence from a private search is admissible assuming the evidence itself isn't otherwise contaminated.
This seems wrong. Or more precisely, if it is right then "no soliciting" signs are equally unenforceable.
Yes, the act of recording is protected speech. So is actual speech. But you don't have a legal right to trespass on my property to make your speech and you especially don't have the right to use my property to make speech that I find objectionable. Laws increasing the penalty for trespassing in violation of 'no soliciting' signs have been upheld. How is this law different?
Now, there is a strong argument that protecting whistleblowers is a competing government interest. And there are many laws written specifically to do that. The court's error in this case is in thinking it's their job to strike the balance between competing government interests. That is the Legislature's job.
Unfortunately, the escalation response is entirely predictable. Having been blocked from a tailored solution to the problem, Iowa will increase the penalty for trespassing to truly punitive levels. That new law will then be widely applied by aggressive prosecutors against kids cutting through backyards, homeless sleeping in doorsteps and other circumstances where the increased penalties are not warranted.
and you especially don’t have the right to use my property to make speech that I find objectionable.
Well, it's worse than that. The court has said that a trespasser can record the goings on in your private property, and the only problem is the trespass, not the recording. This may seem fine in the context of commercial activity where one might say there's a "public interest", but extend that to your bedroom.
Good point.
Almost anything a celebrity does is public interest, for example. Thus Paparazzi.
So pretty much anything is fair game and the whole "in public view" vs reasonable expectation of privacy argument would then seem moot.
Came to say same. The idea that you can risk trespass while still engaged in participating in a public forum seems pretty flatly wrong.
" but extend that to your basement clitocybe farm.
Or whatever you want kept private.
, the state of Iowa cannot make it illegal to record while trespassing on private property.
Hmm...
Think about the implications of that for a moment...
I guess I should've read one more comment lower.
Interesting judgement with regard to piracy.
Arrrrrr.
How does this square with say MDs recording laws, made famous by Linda Trip? It's illegal to record people's without their knowledge.
First, the recordings were of farm animals and facilities, not human conversations so the anti-wiretapping law wouldn't apply at all.
Second even if they did apply somehow, Maryland is a "two-party" state while Iowa is (like most others) a "one-party" state - which in this context means that so long as one party on a phone call consents, it's not wiretapping. In "two-party" states, all parties to the call must consent. Since the person making the recording presumably consents to it, the requirements of the Iowa law would be met even if they would not be for the same actions in MD.
It is going to be some fun watching the twists of logic to explain how this free speech right does not apply to abortion mills, Democrat Party Headquarters, BLM offices, etc.
Do members of PETA self identify as pigs - transforming the farms into public accommodations?
Yeah this isn't a great ruling.
Property rights should reign supreme here. If the property owner doesn't want a trespasser filming him, then the property owner has every right to tell the trespasser to stop filming. The violation of property rights here is not merely that the trespasser was temporarily occupying land that did not belong to him/her, it is also that the trespasser was not obeying the perfectly legitimate rules established by the rightful owner.
Exactly right.
All the rules you want to set for your private property come with the threat of being asked to leave, and if not, trespassing.
If I want to make a rule that no one will say Hillary Clinton’s name in my house damnit then I can, but if I ask the government to explicitly make it illegal to say her name when it’s not wanted by the owner with special fines and punishments, I’m violating the first amendment.
Why is that a 1A violation? More specifically, if your argument were correct, why wasn't that argument used when the laws increasing penalties for violating 'no soliciting' signs were upheld? How are laws defining specific penalties for carrying a weapon into a business with a posted 'no weapons' policy defensible?
The rule you are articulating violates many, many long-established precedents.
I was saying that it’s only a 1A issue when the law enforces a rule that restricts speech.
I’m actually surprised to discover that “no soliciting” signs are enforced with something as harsh as a legal penalty. I would think that’s a violation of free speech. What should happen is the solicitor would be asked to leave, and if not, they’re trespassing.
I am also surprised to discover that “no weapons” signs by private owners are enforceable with special punishments. Like the “no soliciting” sign, I thought that just a polite way to inform visitors of the rules that, if violated, will get them asked to leave, and if not, calling the cops for trespassing. I think further punishment than that violates the second amendment.
However, I’ve changed my mind. The law bans placement of surveillance devices while trespassing. That’s not fucking free speech.
This is going to get overturned.
It's not simply a bad ruling, it's a stupid ruling.
The notion that any sort of document someone obtains only due to trespassing against another is somehow protected is absurd.
Anything that is predicated upon violating the rights of another is not and never can be considered a right.
So basically, Watergate was protected by the first amendment? Who knew?