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General Information about Hidden Camera Laws

With the size of cameras declining so that they can be effectively hidden almost anywhere, it is not surprising that many businesses and even private individuals use them to have some form of surveillance of their premises.  In other cases, these kinds of cameras have been used for the shameless purposes of spying on other people, such as neighbors, spouses, or in-home employees. While in the days of old Hollywood this kind of behavior was actually common knowledge, in modern days there is an outcry against such actions, and if you find yourself on the spying end, you may also find yourself on the receiving end of a summons for lawsuit.  Here is a little general information about hidden camera laws – are you breaking the law?

Businesses

If you are a business, you are free to have cameras on your premises with the exception of areas where customers and employees can reasonable expect physical privacy. Such areas include restrooms, changing rooms, showers, locker rooms, and bedrooms. Employees furthermore may expect privacy in areas such as the employee lounge, the smoking room, the break room, or any other place away from the areas of business where they may congregate to eat lunch, take their breaks, and await the beginning of their shifts.

If you are an employer of union-represented personnel, you will need to ensure that your current union contract permits the installation of hidden cameras. While this usually is not a problem, you will run into difficulties if you seek to dismiss employees who have been caught on camera doing things they are not permitted to do, yet if they did them in an area where they could have been reasonably safe from hidden camera surveillance.

Individuals

If you are a private individual and would like to listen in on your nanny or just check up on your pool guy, it is important to realize that if you reside in the states of Alabama, Arkansas, California, Delaware, Georgia, Hawaii, Kansas, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, South Dakota, and Utah you will be in violation of the law if you install a camera in a private place.  Since your home will have numerous private places, you may find that a nanny or the pool boy may sue you for unauthorized surveillance if they can claim that they were in a location within your home that should have been considered private and therefore off limits.

Installers

If you are an installer of small hidden cameras, you will need to understand that in the states of Alabama, Delaware, Georgia, Hawaii, Kansas, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, South Dakota, and Utah you will be held personally liable if you enter a private residence to install a small hidden camera if you do not have the express consent of all parties who reside there.  Thus, if you make your bread and butter as someone who works for parties to a divorce action and you are thinking of installing hidden cameras to prove infidelities, it may be wise to think again.

Please note that these injunctions do not simply pertain to the installation of cameras, but also the installation of sound recording devices.

Private Rooms

Sometimes the states not aforementioned will require you to show good evidence that you were recording via a hidden camera for purposes other than seeing a person in the state of partial or complete undress. If you have a camera installed in your bathroom at home to supervise your plumber as he completes the repair on your bathroom, you may very likely get sued since he can reasonably be expected to use the bathroom facilities at some point during his work day, and a hidden camera will catch him in a state of partial undress in a room that should be expected to be private.

If you are still insistent on placing a small hidden camera on your property somewhere, it is wise to consult with a seasoned private investigator that should be well versed about the dos and don’ts of hidden camera surveillance.  Similarly, an attorney will also be able to answer your questions. If you do not want to incur the expense of spending an hour of your attorney’s time in a question and answer session, consider if there is another method of gaining the information you are seeking that is less controversial.

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