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Eighth Circuit Upholds Iowa Law Increasing Trespass Penalties When Trespasser Uses Recording Device
From today's opinion in Animal Legal Defense Fund v. Reynolds by Judge Grasz, joined by Judges Colloton and Kobes:
Iowa enacted a trespass-surveillance law penalizing anyone who, while trespassing, "knowingly places or uses a camera or electronic surveillance device that transmits or records images or data while the device is on the trespassed property[.]" …
The Act applies only when there has first been a "trespass" as defined in Iowa Code § 716.7(2). When a general trespass does not involve injury to a person or property damage over $300, Iowa punishes the offense as a "simple misdemeanor," with a fine between $105 and $855 and up to thirty days of imprisonment. The Act, however, punishes a first offense of trespass-surveillance as an "aggravated misdemeanor," with a fine between $855 and $8,540 and up to two years of imprisonment. The State argues these steeper penalties are, in part, meant to deter would-be trespassers from placing or using recording devices, in addition to protecting the privacy interests of Iowans on their private property….
Because freedom of speech includes expression through the making and sharing of videos, we assume without deciding that the use of a camera while trespassing implicates the First Amendment as protected activity. We must then review the statute by applying the appropriate level of scrutiny. As the district court correctly assumed, Plaintiffs' facial challenge to the Act should be reviewed under intermediate scrutiny because the Act represents a content-neutral time, place, and manner restriction.
Because we assume the Act regulates a constitutional right, the Act must be narrowly tailored to serve the State's significant governmental interests, and "it must not 'burden substantially more speech than is necessary to further the government's legitimate interests.'"
The State cited its interests as protecting the privacy interests of individuals on their property, preventing the theft of trade secrets and proprietary information, and deterring trespassers from wrongfully alighting onto a property to make a recording…. "[P]roperty rights and privacy are important governmental interest[s]." …
"Although a valid time, place, or manner regulation 'need not be the least restrictive or least intrusive' means of serving the government's interest, it may not restrict 'substantially more speech than is necessary.'" … Given the significance of the State's interests in stymieing surveillance-trespass, the Act does not restrict more speech than necessary to achieve its ends. The State seeks to protect property rights by penalizing that subset of trespassers who—by using a camera while trespassing—cause further injury to privacy and property rights. The State need not heighten the penalties for general trespass when its interest is in preventing trespass-surveillance specifically.
Nor do other Iowa laws cited by the district court [in invalidating the law] criminalize the same conduct the Act does. For instance, Iowa's "peeping tom" law prohibits filming without consent "another person through the window or any other aperture of a dwelling … if the person being viewed, photographed, or filmed has a reasonable expectation of privacy[.]"The peeping tom law is limited in scope: it only protects persons in their homes from being recorded by someone outside the home and filming through a window. Likewise, the cited invasion of privacy law only prohibits a person from filming, without consent, "another person, for the purpose of arousing or gratifying the sexual desire of any person," if the person being filmed "has a reasonable expectation of privacy while in a state of full or partial nudity." That law is limited to instances when a voyeur tries to film a nude person to satisfy sexual desires. As the State points out, these two laws protect privacy and property rights in a limited set of circumstances….
The Act completely bans the use of a camera while trespassing, but even "[a] complete ban can be narrowly tailored … if each activity within the proscription's scope is an appropriately targeted evil." … Without a doubt, trespassing is a legally cognizable injury because it harms the privacy and property interests of property owners and other lawfully-present persons. Trespassers exacerbate that harm when they use a camera while committing their crime. The Act is tailored to target that harm and redress that evil. Because the Act's restrictions on the use of a camera only apply to situations when there has first been an unlawful trespass, the Act does not burden substantially more speech than is necessary to further the State's legitimate interests….
Whatever Plaintiffs' First Amendment interests may be, we cannot "go beyond [the Act's] facial requirements and speculate about 'hypothetical' or 'imaginary' cases." … [B]ecause the Act does not prohibit a substantial amount of protected speech relative to its plainly legitimate sweep, we hold that it is not unconstitutionally overbroad.
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Three-clinger panel exhibits sympathy for a backwater jurisdiction's (check educational attainment across the Eighth Circuit) old-timey, redneck law (these law are known as Ag-Gag laws among college graduates and modern citizens). Bonus for right-wingers: The trial judge not only seems to have been a Democratic nominee but also may be the first woman to serve on the relevant bench.
“Three-clinger panel exhibits sympathy for a backwater jurisdiction’s (check educational attainment across the Eighth Circuit) old-timey, redneck law”
The peeping-Tom law?
Clearly the 8th circuit didn't want to let the 5th have all the fun of burning the Constitution.
Would this apply to law enforcement putting cameras on people's property? Or does the open fields doctrine mean that law enforcement can never trespass?
I'd need to know how the state defines "trespassing" to know whether this is legitimate. If it's used by California, for example, to ensnare pro-life people pointing out the murderous ideology of Planned Parenthood, then it's illegitimate
The relevant definition of trepass is in Iowa Code 716.7(2). As relevant here, it includes principally two types of acts. One is traditional trespass, entering or remaining on property contrary to the demand of the person in charge. The other, in common language, is entering without permission with intent to cause trouble.
For full details and the list of acts that I distilled down to "cause trouble" see https://www.legis.iowa.gov/docs/code/2021/716.7.pdf
Related to the camera topic, "Peeping Tom" offenses are considered trespass under Iowa law.
I think the law is legitimate then. My issue is when states deem it "trespassing" to enter under false pretenses. In my opinion, it's not trespassing unless you clearly enter a door or fence that says "Do not enter" or if you remain after being asked to leave.
ok, the law as written is probably MOSTLY fine, but I can think of a few exceptions...
let's say that i dispute that I am, in fact trespassing. I'm fighting a surveying battle with my neighbor over which one of us owns a certain pond or something. Do I have the right to film myself being arrested, or my neighbor threatening to have me arrested? What If I promise to provide the video record to a court-approved neutral third party, and ONLY use it as evidence in forthcoming legal disputes?
Alternately, let's say that I really am trespassing, and I'm clearly guilty as sin, and I admit it.... but my 'only' motive was just minor nuisance. I wanted to swim in my neighbor's pool without permission or something. but WHILE I was trespassing, I saw a murder being committed, so I pulled out my cell-phone to record it, and then turned myself and my cell-phone in to the police, because I'm not a MONSTER. We're talking MURDER EVIDENCE here. In that case, the trespassing charge would still be fair, but "using a recording video device while trespassing" is really missing the point....
In Massachusetts, the trespassing law excepts licensed land surveyors engaged in a legitimate survey.
And who would ever know you were the person who gave the cops the tape? Sure it would be a public record if it went to trial, you'd have to testify, but with evidence this damning, my guess is that there would be a quiet plea bargain.
The DA doesn't have to prosecute, no more than she has to prosecute a woman who pulls a fire alarm to avoid being raped.
In a state like Massachusetts with private criminal complaints, no one has to tell your neighbor that it was you who shot the video -- why would anyone want to? And the judge may seal that information, much like victim statements are often sealed.
Wait.... does my cellphone automatically recording it's current GPS location, and uploading that to the cloud, count as an "electronic surveillance device that transmits or records images or data while the device is on the trespassed property"
What about fitbit watches, or life-alert bracelets, or other forms of really trivial and personal data, that has no relevance to the ground I actually happen to be standing on?
In terms of curtilage and open fields, this is either already moot or soon will be. Forget drones, there is enough high resolution satellite photography available to show manure pits and anything else people want to complain about. Inside of buildings is a different story, but outdoor privacy is a thing of the past.