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Drone On: Court Recognizes First Amendment Right to Use Drones for Newsgathering, Voids Texas Restrictions
In yesterday's National Press Photographers Ass'n v. McCraw (W.D. Tex.), Judge Robert Pitman held that Texas statutes limiting drone photography were unconstitutional. A brief summary of the statutes:
Section 423.003 imposes criminal and civil penalties by declaring it unlawful to use "an unmanned aircraft to capture an image of an individual or privately owned real property … with the intent to conduct surveillance on the individual or property captured in the image." Section 423.002 exempts certain uses of UAVs from liability under the Surveillance Provisions but does not exempt newsgathering. Exemptions include "professional or scholarly research and development or … on behalf of an institution of higher education." …
Texas Government Code Sections 423.0045 and 423.0046 (together "No-Fly Provisions") impose criminal penalties by making it unlawful to fly UAVs over a "Correctional Facility, Detention Facility, or Critical Infrastructure Facility" or "Sports Venue" at less than 400 feet. Critical infrastructure facilities are defined to include oil and gas pipelines, petroleum and alumina refineries, water treatment facilities, and natural gas fractionation and chemical manufacturing plants. In 2017, critical infrastructure was expanded though legislative amendments to include animal feeding operations, oil and gas drilling sites, and chemical production facilities, among others. The 2017 amendments also defined a "sports venue" to include any arena, stadium, automobile racetrack, coliseum, or any other facility that has seating capacity of more than 30,000 people and is "primarily used" for one or more professional or amateur sport or athletics events. Plaintiffs contend that when combined with Federal Aviation Administration ("FAA") regulations, which require UAVs to fly below 400 feet, the No-Fly Provisions effectively ban UAVs at the listed locations. The No-Fly Provisions exempt certain UAV users, including those with a "commercial purpose."
The court concluded that drone photography was covered by the First Amendment:
In the analogous context of filmmaking, the Fifth Circuit has noted that "the First Amendment protects the act of making film, as 'there is no fixed First Amendment line between the act of creating speech and the speech itself.'" Furthermore, courts have never recognized a "distinction between the process of creating a form of pure speech (such as writing or painting) and the product of these processes (the essay or the artwork) in terms of the First Amendment protection afforded.
Here, Plaintiffs have established that Chapter 423 restricts their use of drones to record the news, necessarily constraining their ability to disseminate the news. It is uncontested that budgetary and other constraints may make drones the only option for recording certain events. Defendants assert that other options—namely expensive helicopters—can fill the same role in facilitating news production. Yet they cannot dispute the extreme price and safety differences between these technologies. Furthermore, Pappalardo and the organizational plaintiffs' members have stated that drones are central to their journalistic pursuits, claims which Defendants do not refute.
The court concluded that the restrictions were content-based and thus subject to strict scrutiny:
The Surveillance and No-Fly Provisions are both content-based restrictions that regulate based on the subject of the expression. The Surveillance Provisions require the enforcing official to inquire into the contents of the image to determine whether it is prohibited. Specifically, the provisions apply to images of individuals and private real property only. Drone photography is permitted when the subject is public property, but when the subject is an individual or private property, the possession, disclosure, display, or distribution of the image is prohibited. In effect, the statute "identifies various categories" of images based on their content, "then subjects each category to different restrictions." An official must first ascertain the subject matter of the drone image to determine whether it is permissible under the statute. Therefore, it is the content of the image that determines its permissibility—the definition of a content-based restriction.
The No-Fly Provisions are also subject to strict scrutiny by conditioning the legality of images based on their purpose. "Whether laws define regulated speech by particular subject matter or by its function or purpose, they are subject to strict scrutiny." Under the No-Fly Provisions, expression that would otherwise be prohibited is permissible if "used for a commercial purpose." Indeed, Calzada and Wade both note that, as journalists, they cannot take drone images of Nelson Wolff Stadium and Globe Life Park, respectively. But Wade was hired by the Rangers to take the very same images of Globe Life Park "for their own public relations purposes"—that he was "not permitted to share … with members of the news media." Here too, then, the purpose determines the legality of the speech. For both the Surveillance and No-Fly Provisions, the subject or purpose of the drone-captured image is the key to its applicability. Thus, both constitute content-based restrictions and trigger strict scrutiny under the First Amendment.
The Surveillance Provisions are separately subject to strict scrutiny as they discriminate based on the identity of the speaker. A regulation may also constitute a content-based restriction if it discriminates between speakers in a way that "disfavors" certain speakers in exercising their First Amendment rights. The Supreme Court has admonished that "[s]peech restrictions based on the identity of the speaker are all too often simply a means to control content." Section 423.003 provides an extensive list of individuals whose use of drones is not proscribed. Professors, students, employees of insurance companies, and real estate brokers all appear on this list; journalists do not. As Plaintiffs note, the same drone image taken legally by a professor would constitute a misdemeanor if captured by a journalist….
And the court concluded that the law failed strict scrutiny:
Here, Defendants cannot carry their burden to establish that Chapter 423 is "actually necessary" to protect any identified interests. In enacting the law, state legislators claimed the law would protect private property, individual privacy, and the safety of critical infrastructure facilities.
However, Defendants have failed to establish that alternative means are insufficient to sufficiently protect these interests. Plaintiffs note that "Defendants have a variety of tools to protect the privacy and private property of Texans from overly intrusive or dangerous drone use without Chapter 423." The Texas criminal trespass statute, recording and voyeurism statutes, and tort claims including intrusion upon seclusion all have been or could be used to protect the privacy of individuals from UAV recordings. As to safety of critical facilities, it is already a felony under Texas law to knowingly damage, impair, or interrupt a critical infrastructure facilities. Having failed to identify any interest that is unprotected absent Chapter 423, Defendants cannot establish that this provision is "actually necessary." Indeed, "[m]ere speculation of harm does not constitute a compelling state interest." …
The Surveillance and No-Fly Provisions are [also] overinclusive and thus overbroad because they "unnecessarily circumscribe[s] protected expression." Plaintiffs have established that Chapter 423 effectively outlaws the use of UAVs for newsgathering on private property—constituting 95 percent of the state. As Plaintiffs note, the Surveillance Provisions "prevent[] journalists from using drones to record many scenes that could be recorded from a helicopter, or that anyone standing on public property could easily see and record." Wade explains that "even if I am physically over public property, I am violating the law by documenting private real property or a person on that property." Similarly, the No- Fly Provisions proscribe use of drones even when they "indisputably do[] not pose the risks that the State claims." In particular, restrictions on recording empty stadiums seem to belie explanation, and Defendants have done nothing to alter this impression….
The Surveillance and No-Fly Provisions are also underinclusive based on their carve-outs for uses of UAVs that pose the same risks as would drone journalism. If the interests in privacy and safety were indeed sufficient to uphold the law, the exceptions included in Chapter 423 would "leav[e] appreciable damage to [the government's] interest unprohibited." The Surveillance Provisions exclude 21 uses of drones, none of which obviate the purported privacy concerns of newsgathering. As such, the exceptions "raise[] serious doubts about whether the government is in fact pursuing the interest it invokes, rather than disfavoring a particular speaker or viewpoint." As to the No-Fly Provisions, the exemption of drone photography for "commercial purposes" appears divorced from any asserted interest in safety or privacy….
The Court also held that the terms "surveillance" and "commercial purposes" were unconstitutionally vague:
Chapter 423 does not provide a definition of "surveillance," nor do Defendants put forth a single definition. ("Surveillance can involve 'close observation or listening of a person or place in the hope of gathering evidence.' Or it might be as broad as the 'act of observing or the condition of being observed.' Either might include journalism.").
Defendants further provide that surveillance may mean "the careful watching of a person or place, especially by the police or army, because of a crime that has happened or is expected"; "a watch kept over a person, group, etc., especially over a suspect, prisoner, or the like[;] … continuous observation of a place, person, group, or ongoing activity in order to gather information"; or "the process of carefully watching a person or place that may be involved in a criminal activity." None of these definitions conclusively includes or excludes journalism, and none is found within the statute.
Defendants themselves double down on their refusal to define the term and its applicability to journalism, stating that "'journalism' … may or may not constitute 'surveillance,' … depend[ing] on factual determinations by a jury." Defendants claim that "surveillance" is distinct from "observation," because it "involves prolonged time periods and/or some degree of surreptitiousness or invasion of one's expectation that they are not being watched. But this contention only highlights the vagueness in the word's meaning, for it in no way clarifies whether journalism is covered….
The statute [also] does not define the term "commercial," and dictionary definitions do not provide conclusive guidance as to whether photojournalism is included in the definition. [Details omitted. -EV]
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Sure, why not? Who needs privacy anyway?
The statute at issue here reached far more broadly than privacy. It bars drone photography in many public places. For example, you could not photograph someone in a sports stadium, even if he were sitting there with 30,000 other people.
Whether a much narrower ban on drone photography that invades privacy (e.g,, over a private home or property) would survive First Amendment scrutiny is another issue.
Then strike down that part.
Then have the legislature write a narrowly-tailored law?
Seriously - were I on the legislature, I would vote for such a law, it seems like a good idea. But that's not what the TX legislature wrote!
I see no difference between using a helicopter to gather news, or a drone. In 2013 my home burned down quite spectacularly. A local news station had a chopper overhead. If it were today I'm quite certain they'd have shown up with a drone instead.
Agreed. Neither one should be allowed to fly (low) over your house without your permission, or even stalk you from (just) outside your property.
Perhaps you can't read. There can be restrictions, but it has to allow for news gathering.
Your faux-concern for privacy is ludicrous in view of your love of government surveillance.
What love of government surveillance might that be?
How does this comport with the idea that the right to a free press is an individual right to publish? An exception for news gathering is actually a content based restriction that only allows a privileged few to exercise that right.
Mike45, the notion that 1A press freedom does not protect institutional publishing activity is preposterous. Note that it is the activity which is protected, not some specially privileged class of persons.
If you find yourself envious of people who practice institutional publishing, and benefit by the protections that activity enjoys, simply join in and enjoy those protections yourself. No one will stop you.
Sign on with an institutional publisher, or found your own publishing company. You could get rich doing it. But you must not suppose that if you do not choose to do that, it means no one else can practice that kind of constitutionally protected activity.
"Mike45, the notion that 1A press freedom does not protect institutional publishing activity is preposterous. "
For once we are in agreement. The 1A protects publishing. It's like Oprah giving gifts - you get to publish, I get to publish, everyone gets to publish!
I'm not sure why you think the government should get to permit some speech as 'institutional' while forbidding the same speech to others. The likelihood of abuse seems pretty obvious.
Which is why citizens United was correctly decided, the idea that one corporation, the NY Times would have 1st amendment rights to publish while another, like Exxon Mobile wouldn't doesn't pass constitutional muster.
Indeed.
Absaroka, you misinterpret what I think. I think certain activities practiced by institutional publishers, and protected by the 1A, are rarely if ever practiced individually. It is only to the extent that those individuals choose not to do protected activities that they differ from those who do practice them. (By the way, I have been saying that in one way or another, time-and-again, without seeming to get any of my critics to understand it. So you get an opportunity here to show yourself less obtuse than the others.)
On the flip side, it is easy to see that many individuals commenting here do not see that issue likewise. Many are outspoken opponents of institutional publishing, and would, if they could, deny to institutional publishers 1A protected press activities. For example, individuals, notably including EV himself, critique a publisher's freedom to decide whether to publish or reject contributions from authors.
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If you can't film it on your feet, why should you be able to film it using a drone? Trespassing is trespassing. In Texas, like in Loudon, expect someone to shoot the drone down.
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2016/08/65-year-old-woman-takes-out-drone-over-her-virginia-property-with-one-shot/
They pointed out it did bar the same photography that could be done on your feet, namely, filming from public land onto private.
There could be something there to take care for. After all, flyover of your land was intended for sky roads, and not surveillance. But that's not how it developed. This law had 21 exceptions for things not journalism, and apparently you always had helicopters you could use, just not drones.
I wish private drones had never been thought of. I wish they were outlawed, with exceptions, maybe, for emergency use. Given that nobody supported that, I can't disagree with the opinion.
They have their uses for people with consideration. My wife and I are amateur fossil hunters. There is a very high hill very near my property that is described in a 1905 account as having a thick band of fossiliferous limestone known as Ames Limestone. Ames is full of shells, early bony jawed fish, crinoids, etc. I'd really like to fly one up there to see if that layer is still visible before I broke my neck climbing up. A lot can change in 120 years. I have no desire to look into anyone's windows or back yard.
Currentsitguy, do you happen to live in West Virginia? What you describe sounds exactly like what I found 65 years ago during a Boy Scout camping trip to West Virginia. The fossils were profuse, and wonderfully detailed. Dark, hard, fine-grained stone which looked for all the world like a sea-shell covered expanse of bottom in shallow water. There was barely any of the substrate which was not figured with fossil shells. I still think of them as among the nicest fossils I have ever seen.
The spot we camped in was not hard to access. It was a farmers field atop a ridge. We drove to it, up a dirt road. Based on what I saw, I'm pretty sure outcrops like that are widespread, and probably still visible right where the local geology suggests you should expect them. Good luck!
I just wish it would be legal to shoot them down over private property.
Because a scale model of a naval Phalanx CIWS firing 8000 paintballs/min would be ridiculously cool!
The First Amendment does not create a fundamental comstitutional right to operate a vehicle. Nor does it create a fundamental constitutional right to snoop on other people or their property.
Try reading. This judgment is not about operating a vehicle or trespassing.
A drone is most definitely a vehicle.
Yes a drone is a vehicle but the statute and the ruling were about photographing from, not operating a drone.
Nor is it about trespassing. Its about photographing.
You own air rights to your property. How far up has yet to be clearly defined- but I'd say any drone flying below the height of your chimney or roof peak is fair game. One at 1,000 feet? Not so much.
Something akin to air rights also apply to sightlines and sun exposure. If you have a well set up photovoltaic display and your neighbor wants to put up a structure that blocks the sun from shining on it, in many places, that's enough to keep them from getting that building permit.
Most photo drones are pretty small. If it's close enough for you to see without binoculars or a telescopic sight, and it's hovering in place over your property- it's close enough to be fair game.
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Iirc, at least part of the impetus for 423 was to prohibit people from getting evidence of abusive/illegal farming and livestock practices. That is, the “public interest” was, at least in part, a specific private interest.
When I saw the list of prohibited places I thought of Wyoming's "data trespass" law which was intended to keep environmentalists from snooping around.
There are FAA and State regulations on aircraft altitude. Over a populated area the minimum altitude is 3,000 feet. Why should a drone be any different? There are regulations against flying over venues like stadiums, parades and other large gatherings of people.
Currentsitguy, unless that helicopter was at 3,000 feet, the pilot was breaking the law. Nobody's going to call him on it because it's the MEDIA. When medical helicopters started landing at local hospitals, their approaches had to be planned out and recognized by the State and the FAA. I know because I helped plan the approaches. Why is the MEDIA exempt from the regulations? I've personally seen news helicopters almost collide while covering an event. In any other case, the pilots would have been cautioned of fined. Now you have the "media" allowed to fly drones at low altitude over private property at will, yet there's no hard definition of who the "media" is. So when your 15 year old daughter is sunbathing in her yard, behind a fence, the creep photographing her, is allowed to by law because he has a website named "Local Young Stuff", therefore he's a member of the "media".
"There are FAA and State regulations on aircraft altitude. Over a populated area the minimum altitude is 3,000 feet. Why should a drone be any different?"
Because there are different FAA and state regulations on drones.
They are pretty much the same. I have an FAA drone pilot's license.
Your comments would indicate that you didn't pay attention to any of the training.
For one thing, having drones flying at the same altitude as airplanes would be a pretty serious safety issue.
Not really. The only place where that might be the case is in "controlled airspace" The airspace around airports and there are already restrictions in place for that. From reading this, the media would be justified in flying a drone into controlled airspace if there was something "newsworthy" going on. That would be a safety hazard.
Do you literally invent numbers in addition to resume items as you post?
91.119 Minimum safe altitudes; general
Except when necessary for takeoff or landing, no person may operate an aircraft below the following altitudes:
(a) Anywhere – An altitude allowing, if a power unit fails, an emergency landing without undue hazard to persons or property on the surface.
(b) Over congested areas – Over any congested area of a city, town, or settlement, or over any open-air assembly of persons, an altitude of 1,000 feet above the highest obstacle within a horizontal radius of 2,000 feet of the aircraft.
(c) Over other than congested areas – An altitude of 500 feet above the surface except over open water or sparsely populated areas. In that case, the aircraft may not be operated closer than 500 feet to any person, vessel, vehicle, or structure.
(d) Helicopters – Helicopters may be operated at less than the minimums prescribed In paragraph (b) or (c) of this section if the operation is conducted without hazard to persons or property on the surface. In addition, each person operating a helicopter shall comply with routes or altitudes specifically prescribed for helicopters by the Administrator.
"None of these definitions conclusively includes or excludes journalism, and none is found within the statute."
I wonder what the Texan definition of 'journalism' is.
We're well into the 21st century and, with social media, 'journalism' can no longer be easily defined.
Applause for the tenacious law professor keeping us informed about the triumphant march of 1A across a vast banana republic. FS even gets respect in Texas, such a surprise!
Given the number of oil and gas pipelines in Texas, this law would have closed off huge chunks of airspace.
It might be justified. I was working on the design of a drone to be used for oil and gas pipelines. Several years ago I worked on the design of a backpack sensor that is used to inspect natural gas pipe lines for leaks. I got the idea of putting the sensor in a drone and having it fly along a pipeline looking for leaks and recording the location of any leaks. My idea got scrapped, not because it didn't work, but, because I couldn't find any intrinsically safe motors for the drone. The sealed motors I tried would overheat. An unsafe motor could find a leak, the hard way (KABOOM!), so the idea was scrapped. That alone is a good reason to restrict drones around pipelines.
The Alaska pipeline sees to disagree; they either are or are working towards using drones for pipeline inspection. Oil companies are using them for various oil field inspections.
Given that helicopters are currently used for these inspections, and your average helicopter isn't intrinsically safe, why are drones worse?
Interesting factoid:
Vin Scully's son died in a helicopter crash while inspecting pipelines for ARCO following the Northridge Earthquake.
I seem to recall an old sign that supposedly hung in some helicopter cockpits- "If your helicopter hasn't crashed yet, don't worry. It will."
Quad, or better yet, octocopter (or greater) drones seem much safer.
Natural gas has a flammability range of approximately 5 to 15 percent. That means that any mixture containing less than 5 percent or greater than 15 percent natural gas to air would not support combustion."
Unlike propane, NG doesn't sink down towards low areas, it dissipates in open air. If a pipeline is leaking enough gas to bring the air above it to 5-15% concentration, the leak has been detected and the pipeline is shutdown. If you're worried about drone motors setting off an explosion, you're worrying too much. Easy fix if you are worried- hang the gas sensor 20 feet or more below the drone. Concentration drops off rapidly with distance.
See this thread from Prof. Margot Kaminski.
https://twitter.com/MargotKaminski/status/1509185319094079493
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