The Audio-visual Law no 2025

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Penal Law 250.45(5). The hidden camera law considers a person to have a reasonable expectation of privacy if, at the time and place of the recording, a person would reasonably believe that he or she could fully disrobe in private. N.Y. Penal Law 250.40.
Technology has made cameras in the courtroom less intrusive, and 47 States allow television cameras in trial and/or appellate courts; only Indiana, Mississippi, South Dakota, and the District of Columbia ban cameras in the courtroom.
New York remains one of the only U.S. jurisdictions that bans the use of cameras during trials. The recent trials in New York courtrooms involving former President Donald Trumpone civil, one criminalhave accelerated a re-interest in evaluating New Yorks long-standing ban on televising court proceedings.
Civil Rights Law 52 provides, in pertinent part: No person, firm, association or corporation shall televise, broadcast, take motion pictures or arrange for the televising, broadcasting, or taking of motion pictures within this state of proceedings, in which the testimony of witnesses by subpoena or other compulsory
New York State has limited cameras and other audio-visual technologies in courtrooms. The attached document identifies the laws and court rules on audio-visual coverage of trials.
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The prohibition of cameras and recording devices in courtrooms is primarily rooted in several key concerns: Fair Trial Rights: The presence of cameras can influence the behavior of witnesses, jurors, and even judges, potentially impacting the fairness of the trial.

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