In era of transparency, Arizona law limits filming police 
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PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona’s governor has signed a law that restricts how the 
public can video police at a time when there’s growing pressure across the U.S. 
for greater law enforcement transparency.

Civil rights and media groups opposed the measure that Republican Gov. Doug 
Ducey signed Thursday. The law makes it illegal in Arizona to knowingly video 
police officers 8 feet (2.5 meters) or closer without an officer’s 
permission.Someone on private property with the owner’s consent can also be 
ordered to stop recording if a police officer finds they are interfering or the 
area is not safe. The penalty is a misdemeanor that would likely incur a fine 
without jail time.

There needs to be a law that protects officers from people who “either have 
very poor judgment or sinister motives,” said Republican Rep. John Kavanagh, 
the bill’s sponsor.

“I’m pleased that a very reasonable law that promotes the safety of police 
officers and those involved in police stops and bystanders has been signed into 
law,” Kavanagh said Friday. “It promotes everybody’s safety yet still allows 
people to reasonably videotape police activity as is their right.”

The move comes nearly a year after the U.S. Department of Justice launched a 
widespread probe into the police force in Phoenix to examine whether officers 
have been using excessive force and abusing people experiencing homelessness. 
It’s similar to other investigations opened in recent months in Minneapolis and 
Louisville.

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