'First Amendment Auditor' Sues NYPD Over Right To Record in Police Stations
SeanPaul Reyes has been arrested and threatened by NYPD for filming in public places, including inside police precincts. He says that's a violation of his First Amendment rights.

In May, Reason wrote about the trend of "First Amendment auditors," activists who film in government buildings in order to test the limits of what is and is not allowed. One in particular, SeanPaul Reyes, films with a GoPro and posts the videos on his YouTube account. Reyes has been arrested multiple times for filming in public places, including inside New York City police stations.
Today, Reyes filed a federal lawsuit against the NYPD in conjunction with LatinoJustice PRLDEF, a New York–based legal defense fund that focuses on police abuse. LatinoJustice attorney Andrew Case announced the suit at a press conference Monday afternoon.
The NYPD Patrol Guide states that while recording the police is generally allowed, "Members of the public are not allowed to photograph and/or record police activity within Department facilities," and officers are authorized to ask the person to stop filming and to arrest them if they don't. A department spokesperson told Gothamist that recording inside a police station "undermines the privacy of people who interact with the criminal justice system and compromises the integrity of ongoing investigations."
Case says the NYPD is correct—up to a point. He tells Reason that while parts of the police station are certainly off limits, "publicly accessible lobbies" are a different story. "The NYPD says it needs this policy to protect the identity of those waiting in line in a precinct's public lobby," Case noted in the Monday press conference. "But precincts have plenty of private space. Sensitive witnesses do not come in through the front door and wait for a detective before a crowd of strangers."
"The First Amendment is obviously not absolute," Case tells Reason. "There are some places—for example, courtrooms—where there are rules about when you can and cannot record. And these have been developed, and these have been tailored, and these have been examined under the First Amendment."
"Our contention is [the NYPD's] rule, and the way this rule was written, and the way this rule is implemented, since it's an absolute ban, is not narrowly tailored and, therefore, will violate the First Amendment."
In addition to court costs and attorney fees, Reyes seeks an injunction against the NYPD preventing officers from arresting anyone for simply filming in publicly accessible areas.
Reyes has run afoul of government officials across the country through his activism: Earlier this year, he was found guilty of simple trespass in Danbury, Connecticut, for filming inside City Hall. In May 2021, Reyes was arrested for obstruction after filming a traffic stop conducted by a sheriff's deputy in Harford County, Maryland; he later agreed to community service and a written apology to the deputy in exchange for prosecutors dropping the charge.
But Reyes's activism has also born results: Police in Rahway, New Jersey, launched an internal investigation over officers' treatment of Reyes. Reyes' trespassing arrest in Danbury prompted neighboring towns to reevaluate and reassess their own public filming policies, and a Danbury officer was docked five days' pay for using an anti-gay slur during the arrest.
Case charges that the NYPD forbids recording in precincts "so that it can control what video comes out of the precincts." Ideally, the presence of police-worn body cameras would obviate much of the need for citizens to do their own filming. But New York City has dragged its feet in recent years on complying with requests for body camera footage. A 2019 Gotham Gazette report noted that the city had provided 140,000 body camera videos to the Brooklyn district attorney during the previous year, even as it was "delayed or completely delinquent" in filling about one-third of citizen requests for footage.
Citizen recording offers an extra layer of accountability that cities may be unwilling, or hesitant, to provide.
Nationally, the legal climate for allowing citizens to film police is growing more tolerant as well. Arizona passed a law last summer that would ban filming within 8 feet of police. On Friday, Judge John Tuchi of the U.S. District Court of Arizona ruled the law unconstitutional and blocked its enforcement. Citing other state laws that protect police from interference, Tuchi wrote that the law "prohibits or chills a substantial amount of First Amendment protected activity and is unnecessary to prevent interference with police officers."
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"Latino Justice"?
I don't get it.
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Some of these auditors ostensibly make six figures from their YT revenue and the settlements.
I was going to say something similar.
Not sure which is worse. The fact that this is how some people earn a living, or that police departments consider it a cost of doing business.
The real question is how can a public lobby o a public building be considered protected when the private lobbies of private property have been designated as accessible for even political purposes by individuals.
All malls in the USA are OPEN to anyone filming, anyone wanting to pass out politics data, etc in accordance with court rulings. The fact that the POLICE in a PUBLIC building in a PUBLIC lobby attempt to control filming is unconscionable and frankly unlawful altogether.
Btw, I believe that anyone arrested by any officer and then later found that the officer violated their CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS should have immunity REVOKED and the harmed person should be able to sue the OFFICER and the Department and the city involved for damages. Those damages should be extreme as well.
If the police didn't harass them, no YT views and no settlements. I wonder, therefore, what solution might simultaneously resolve the 1A issues and limit the ability of these auditors to monetise their actions.
Many cases the police dint go out of their way to harass them, the "auditor" would either provoke the officer or, in most cases, stalk a private citizen until they call the police.
I call BS on you entirely. Almost every actual "auditor" creates an exact set of rules and responses that are predetermined based upon law and existing court actions. They usually FILM and are FILMED by others that are with them.
There may be people that call themselves auditors that are new to it and or do not understand what an auditor actually does. Those are not auditors at all. Their might be a LOT more of them than actual trained and educated real auditors. just because someone says they are an electrician does not mean that they can install a substation or a transformer.
I watch SeanPaul Reyes regularly - Long Island Audit on YT. He is doing a service for everyone and richly deserves whatever income he generates. Sean is always respectful, follows the law and advocates for our rights in a calm manner.
New York City, mayor Eric Adams (D)
There's no glamour in being a Youtuber in Jackson, TN.
The two auditors I watched a year or two ago would travel all over the place. For large metropolitan areas that violate individual rights, perhaps a decent wage can be maintained within.
Yeah, 'cause jurisdiction with (R) administrations would never-never-ever dream of violating citizens' rights.
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Remember, post 9/11, when we were supposed to notify the police, etc., when someone suspicious was videoing inside public buildings, etc.? Didn't take long for the loonies to get that changed around to where weird people are now heroes for filming inside government buildings.
Weirdo’s are still better than cops.
If you see something, say something.
... but that was a stupid idea to begin with. What idiot thought it would be a good idea to call the cops on every person with a video camera?
Rule #1: Don't trust the cops.
Rule #2: Don't trust the legal system.
Rule #3: Don't trust government either.
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Perhaps this dude is one of the better ones, but so many of these "auditors" stalk and harass random members of the public, then when they inevitably call the police, do everything within their power to provoke the officer so they can later claim "abuse." Even when its on public property, they would spy into private dwellings from a public sidewalk, and the homeowner would make a report. And this dude seems to set up random cameras in a police station, which, yeah I'd have a problem with if my case is sensitive.
Video showed up in my feed where a bunch of randoms burst into an office in a police station, they were asked to leave, they refused, then shouted racist things at a black officer, and even then everyone kept calm until the dudes started filming paperwork on the officers desk, at which point they were kicked out, and they selectively uploaded a video of them getting kicked out claiming harassment.
I have zero sympathy for these idiots. Yes police abuse is a problem to deal with but if you deliberately provoke someone or harass and invade other people's privacy you deserve whats coming to you.
But that's not what happened with SeanPaul Reyes. He simply walked into the lobby of a police station while recording and was assaulted by cops then arrested for trespassing in a public lobby. There's an uncut video of the entire event on YouTube - Long Island Audit. You could have watched it in less time than you spent typing that summary of unrelated things you saw other people do.
If they're filming potentially sensitive documents, then fine, slam 'em. But this story was about a guy in a public lobby where any rando off the street can casually wander in. If you can't see the difference, I don't think anyone can help you.
Maybe the public servants should protect sensitive documents from being seen? The law is if you can see it you can film it. You can’t tresspass the eye.
There’s actually a municipal law that allows filming in the precincts and the cops ignore it. Sean had a laminated copy of the law and the cops wouldn't look at it.