Yes, You Have the Right to Film ICE
Deeplinks 2025-02-12
Summary:
Across the United States, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has already begun increasing enforcement operations, including highly publicized raids. As immigrant communities, families, allies, and activists think about what can be done to shift policy and protect people, one thing is certain: similar to filming the police as they operate, you have the right to film ICE, as long as you are not obstructing official duties.
Filming ICE agents making an arrest or amassing in your town helps promote transparency and accountability for a system that often relies on intimidation and secrecy and obscures abuse and law-breaking.
While it is crucial for people to help aid in transparency and accountability, there are considerations and precautions you should take. For an in-depth guide by organizations on the frontlines of informing people who wish to record ICE’s interactions with the public, review these handy resources from the hard-working folks at WITNESS and NYCLU.
At EFF, here are our general guidelines when it comes to filming law enforcement, including ICE:
What to Know When Recording Law Enforcement
- You have the right to record law enforcement officers exercising their official duties in public.
- Stay calm and courteous.
- Do not interfere with law enforcement. If you are a bystander, stand at a safe distance from the scene that you are recording.
- You may take photos or record video and/or audio.
- Law enforcement cannot order you to move because you are recording, but they may order you to move for public safety reasons even if you are recording.
- Law enforcement may not search your cell phone or other device without a warrant based on probable cause from a judge, even if you are under arrest. Thus, you may refuse a request from an officer to review or delete what you recorded. You also may refuse to unlock your phone or provide your passcode.
- Despite reasonably exercising your First Amendment rights, law enforcement officers may illegally retaliate against you in a number of ways including with arrest, destruction of your device, and bodily harm. They may also try to retaliate by harming the person being arrested. We urge you to remain alert and mindful about this possibility.
- Consider the sensitive nature of recording in the context of an ICE arrest. The person being arrested or their loved ones may be concerned about exposing their immigration status, so think about obtaining consent or blurring out faces in any version you publish to focus on ICE’s conduct (while still retaining the original video).
Your First Amendment Right to Record Law Enforcement Officers Exercising Their Official Duties in Public
You have a First Amendment right to record law enforcement, which federal courts and the Justice Department have recognized and affirmed. Although the Supreme Court has not squarely ruled on the issue, there is a long line of First Amendment case law from the high court that supports the right to record law enforcement. And federal appellate courts in the First, Third,
Link:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/02/yes-you-have-right-film-iceFrom feeds:
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