The phrase 'I am not interfering with your duties' preempts the one legal argument an officer actually has available. By stating you are not interfering, you force the officer to either agree or make the affirmative claim that you are interfering. If they claim interference, they must explain to a court how a person standing on a sidewalk 20 feet away is physically obstructing their conduct. This is a very difficult argument to make, and the officer knows it. This response makes the officer aware that you understand the legal framework and will not be bullied.
Deep Dive
Voraussetzung
- Keine Daten verfügbar.
Nächste Schritte
- Keine Daten verfügbar.
Deep Dive
Former LAWYER Say THIS "If Police Tell You to Stop Recording” SAY THIS WORDS IMMEDIATELYIndiziert:
🚨 Former Lawyer Reveals: If Police Tell You to Stop Recording — SAY THIS IMMEDIATELY ⚖️ A growing number of viral videos claim there’s a specific response that can protect your rights if police order you to stop recording. But what does the law actually say? In this video, we break down the legal reality behind recording police in public, what courts have ruled, and the common mistakes that can escalate encounters unnecessarily. 🔍 Here’s what we cover: Your rights when recording police in public When officers can legally restrict recording The exact legal misunderstandings spreading online What former attorneys and legal experts recommend How state laws may differ across the U.S. ⚠️ Social media clips often leave out critical details — we explain the facts, the limits of your rights, and what you should know before relying on viral advice. This video is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws regarding recording police, public interactions, and constitutional rights vary by jurisdiction and may change over time. Always consult official legal sources or a qualified attorney regarding your specific circumstances. This content does not encourage confrontation, interference with law enforcement, or unlawful activity. 👍 Like, Subscribe & Turn On Notifications 🔔 We cover legal rights, Supreme Court updates, police encounter laws, and major constitutional rulings affecting Americans nationwide. #LegalRights #SupremeCourt #BreakingNews #FirstAmendment #PoliceRights #ConstitutionalRights #USLaw #CourtRuling #StayInformed #LawNews
You are standing on the sidewalk. There is a traffic stop happening 20ft in front of you. You do not know exactly what is going on, but something feels off about how the officer is handling the situation. So, you do what millions of Americans do every single day. You pull out your phone and you start recording. And then the officer looks up. He sees you. He leaves what he is doing at that car, walks directly over to you, puts his finger in your face and says the four words that freeze most people solid. stop recording me now. And here is what happens to most people in that moment. Their thumb hovers over the stop button. They mumble, sorry. They put their phone away. Some people even delete the video they were already recording because they are terrified they broke the law and they think they are about to get in serious trouble. So they erase the evidence. They destroy the record. And they walk away believing they did the right thing. They did not do the right thing. They did the wrong thing. They gave up a constitutional right. They absolutely had destroyed evidence that may have been critically important and let an officer who was in the wrong walk away without accountability. And I am going to make sure that never happens to you. Because in over 22 years as a criminal defense attorney, I can tell you with complete certainty that when a police officer tells you to stop recording, it is not about anything you are doing wrong. It is almost always about something he is about to do that is wrong. and your phone is the only evidence in the entire chain of events that he cannot control, cannot edit, cannot delete, and cannot make disappear before it reaches a courtroom. I am Jeff Hampton, the people's lawyer, and in this video, I'm going to give you the exact words backed by federal case law that applies in every state in this country that you say to a police officer when he tries to shut down your recording. words that protect your recording, protect your rights, and make completely clear to that officer that you know exactly where the law stands, which is exactly where your phone is pointed. Subscribe before we go into this because this is the kind of legal education that could be the difference between an officer being held accountable for misconduct and that officer walking away with no record of what he did because you put your phone away when he told you to. Hit subscribe and let's get into it. Before I give you the exact words, you need to understand why officers tell you to stop recording because the reason is not what most people think it is. And understanding the real reason is what gives you the clarity to hold your ground when it matters. It is not about privacy. An officer performing their official duties in a public place has no expectation of privacy in those duties. The courts have been crystal clear about this across multiple circuits and across multiple decades of case law. When you are in public, your actions in public are visible to the public. And the Constitution does not create a privacy interest in conduct that is occurring openly on a public street. An officer who is arresting someone, writing a ticket, conducting a search, or having a conversation at a car window during a traffic stop is not doing any of those things in a private space. They are doing them in full public view. And recording what is visible in full public view is not a privacy violation. It is also not about safety. Your phone is not a weapon. Standing on a sidewalk 20ft from a traffic stop is not a threat to anyone. The argument that your recording creates a safety concern is not a serious legal argument and courts have consistently rejected it as a basis for restricting public recording of law enforcement. You are not close enough to interfere. You are not obstructing anything. You are a member of the public observing a public law enforcement action from a public space. That is your right. and it has been affirmed repeatedly by federal courts. What it is actually about is control and more specifically it is about evidence. Here is what you need to understand from the officer's perspective in that moment. He is in a traffic stop. He is supposed to be wearing a body camera but not all departments require that camera to be running at all times. Even when the body camera is running, the officer or the department has some degree of control over that footage. They control how it is stored, who has access to it, and what portions of it get reviewed or disclosed. But your phone, the one in your hand pointed at that stop from 20ft away, he cannot control that at all. He cannot control the angle. He cannot stop it from recording. He cannot touch the edit. He cannot determine whether it gets uploaded, shared, sent to an attorney, or posted publicly. Your recording is the one piece of evidence in the entire situation that has no chain of custody controlled by anyone with an interest in how that footage reflects on the officer. And that is exactly why he does not want it to exist. Here is the detail that I want you to carry with you from this video above everything else because it is the detail that changed how I approached excessive force cases throughout my career as a criminal defense attorney.
When an officer tells a bystander to stop recording, that instruction almost never appears in the police report, they do not write down, "I told the bystander to stop filming because writing that is an admission that they knew they were being recorded and that they took affirmative action to try to stop it."
The body camera might capture that interaction if it is running and pointed in the right direction, but the written record, the official account of what happened, pretends the whole thing never occurred. Which means that your recording, the one he told you to stop making, may be the only evidence that the officer even approached you, told you to stop, and tried to eliminate a record of his conduct. That recording is not just footage of the traffic stop. It is footage of the officer trying to suppress footage of the traffic stop.
That is powerful evidence, and it is exactly why you do not stop. Now, let me lay out the legal foundation that makes your right to record police in public one of the most clearly established rights in American constitutional law.
Because understanding the cases is what gives you the confidence to hold your position when the officer is standing right in front of you with his finger in your face. The landmark federal case on this question is Glick versus Kuniff, decided by the first circuit court of appeals in 2011. Simon Glick was standing on the Boston Common when he observed what appeared to be police officers using excessive force while arresting another man. He took out his phone and started recording. The officers told him to stop. He did not stop. They arrested him and charged him with wiretapping, disturbing the peace and aiding in the escape of a prisoner.
Every single charge was dropped. And then Glick sued the officers in the city of Boston for violating his First Amendment rights. The first circuit ruled in his favor in language that could not be more direct. The court said that gathering information about government officials in a form that can readily be disseminated to others serves a cardinal first amendment interest in protecting and promoting the free discussion of governmental affairs.
Recording police in public is not a gray area. It is not a privilege. It is a constitutionally protected first amendment right that federal courts have explicitly and unambiguously recognized.
But here is what makes this legal foundation even stronger than a single circuit court ruling. In 2017, the fifth circuit court of appeals, which is widely recognized as one of the most conservative federal appellet courts in the country, ruled in Turner versus Driver that the First Amendment protects the right to record police officers in public. This was not a liberal court making a politically motivated decision.
This was a conservative court applying the Constitution to a clear set of facts and reaching the same conclusion that the First Circuit had reached six years earlier. In that case, a man named Philip Turner was recording police officers in a public space when an officer told him to stop, physically detained him, handcuffed him, and put him in the back of a police cruiser for using his phone to record. The court ruled that this violated Turner's constitutional rights and the officer in that case was not just sued. He was criminally indicted, not suspended, not reprimanded, hauled into criminal court because he physically detained a citizen for exercising a first amendment right that the Constitution protects. Let those two cases settle in your mind for a moment. The first circuit and the fifth circuit courts on very different ends of the ideological spectrum have both explicitly ruled that you have a first amendment right to record police officers performing their official duties in public spaces. That right has been recognized by the seventh circuit, the 9th circuit, the 11th circuit and courts across the country. There is not a circuit in the United States that has ruled the other way on this fundamental question. When an officer says, "Stop recording me," he is telling you to stop doing something that federal courts across the country have said the Constitution protects. And if he physically forces you to stop, he is not just violating your rights. He is potentially committing a crime. Now, let me be precise about where the line actually is. Because officers are trained to exploit the gray zone between what is clearly protected and what you might think is protected, but is not.
And knowing exactly where that line falls is what keeps you on the right side of it. There are exactly two situations where an officer can legally restrict your recording and both of them are narrowly defined. The first is if you are physically interfering with a law enforcement operation and I want to be very specific about what interference actually means legally because officers will try to apply it far more broadly than the law allows. Interference means you are physically obstructing the officer's ability to do their job. You are in the way. You are preventing movement. You are actively impeding the physical conduct of law enforcement operations. Standing on a sidewalk is not interference. Standing across the street is not interference. Standing 20ft away from a traffic stop is not interference. Recording from a distance is not interference. The interference standard requires physical obstruction, not mere observation and not the officer's subjective discomfort with being watched. The second situation where restrictions on recording are legally permissible is if you are inside a lawfully established police perimeter at an active crime scene or emergency situation. When law enforcement establishes a formal perimeter to manage an active situation, that perimeter defines the space where civilian presence is restricted for legitimate safety reasons. Outside that perimeter, you have the same first amendment right to record that you have anywhere else in public. Inside the perimeter, officers can lawfully require you to move back.
But a perimeter has to actually exist and be clearly established. An officer who simply does not want to be recorded cannot invent a perimeter by pointing at a spot on the sidewalk and telling you to move to the other side of the street.
That is not establishing a lawful perimeter. That is using the language of law enforcement authority to suppress a constitutional right. Everything outside of those two specific narrowly defined exceptions is protected. And in the overwhelming majority of situations where an officer tells a bystander to stop recording, neither exception applies. The person is on a sidewalk.
The person is at a safe distance. The person is observing and recording without any physical contact with the law enforcement operation. And the officer's real motivation, whether he is aware of it consciously or not, is eliminating evidence that exists outside his control. So, here are the exact words you say, and I want you to hear each component of this response and understand why each part is there.
Because the words are constructed to do specific legal work in that moment. And understanding that work is what makes the words come naturally under pressure.
When the officer tells you to stop recording, you look at him calmly. You maintain your composure, and you say this, "Officer, I am legally recording police activity in a public space. This is protected by the First Amendment. I am not interfering with your duties. I will not stop recording." Let me break down why each piece of that response is constructed the way it is. I am legally recording police activity in a public space. This opening establishes immediately that you know why what you are doing is legal. You are not guessing. You are not hoping. You are in the right. You are stating a legal fact with the confidence of someone who has done the research and knows the answer.
The phrase police activity in a public space is deliberate because it directly invokes the constitutional framework that the courts have applied. You are recording official conduct in a public place which is the specific situation that Glick Turner and the circuit courts that have ruled on this question have protected. This is protected by the first amendment. You are citing the constitutional provision that applies.
You are not making an emotional appeal.
You are not asking for the officer's permission or agreement. You are informing him of the legal framework within which this interaction is occurring. An officer who has been properly trained knows exactly what First Amendment means in this context.
An officer who is trying to bully you into putting your phone away is now on notice that you know the legal framework and you are not going to be bullied. I am not interfering with your duties.
This preemptively addresses the one legal argument the officer actually has available, which is physical interference with law enforcement operations. By stating that you are not interfering, you are forcing him to either agree with that statement or make the affirmative claim that you are interfering. If he claims interference, he is going to have to explain to a court exactly how a person standing on a sidewalk 20 ft away is physically obstructing his conduct. That is a very difficult argument to make and he knows it. I will not stop recording. This is the most important line in the entire response, and it needs to be delivered calmly and clearly. Not aggressively, not loudly, not with attitude or confrontation, but with the same steady certainty you would use to state any other established fact. I will not stop recording. Not I am not going to stop, not I refuse, not you cannot make me, just the clear factual statement that this is not something you are going to do. Grounded in everything that came before it, in the response. Now, let me walk you through exactly what happens after you say those words because the officer's response to your assertion of your rights is going to fall into one of three patterns, and you need to be prepared for each one. The first pattern is that the officer backs down. He may not be happy about it. He may give you a long look. He may say something under his breath, but he returns to the traffic stop and you continue recording.
This is the most common outcome when the response is delivered calmly and confidently by someone who clearly knows what they are talking about. Officers who are testing to see if you know your rights often back down the moment it is clear that you do. The second pattern is that the officer tries to escalate the legal justification. He may claim that you are interfering even though you are clearly not. He may claim that you are in a restricted area even though no perimeter has been established. He may assert that he has the authority to restrict your recording under circumstances that are simply not the two legal exceptions that actually exist. If this happens, your responses to calmly and clearly repeat your position. Officer, I am on a public sidewalk and I am not physically interfering with your duties. I am exercising my First Amendment right to record. I will not stop. You do not argue with him about the law. You do not get into a debate about which of you is right. You simply restate your position calmly and clearly and you keep recording. The camera is capturing everything he is saying and everything you are saying. That footage is going to be far more valuable than any argument you can win on the side of the road. The third pattern, and this is the one where your response matters most, is that the officer attempts to physically stop you from recording or physically detains you for recording. If an officer physically grabs your phone, physically blocks your recording, or places you under arrest for recording in a public space, you must not physically resist. I want to be absolutely clear about this because the distinction is critical both for your safety and for your legal position. You verbally assert your rights clearly and on camera. Officer, you are arresting me for recording police in a public space.
I am asserting that this arrest violates my First Amendment rights. I do not consent to this detention. I am invoking my fifth amendment right to remain silent. I want an attorney. And then you comply physically with whatever instructions follow. Because physically resisting a law enforcement officer, even an officer who is clearly in the wrong, creates a separate legal problem that can overwhelm the constitutional violation the officer is committing.
Your fight happens in court where the footage of an officer arresting someone for exercising a First Amendment right is the kind of evidence that produces settlements, indictments, and accountability. Turner versus Driver proved that the officer was criminally indicted. The constitutional case was won, but it was won in court, not on the sidewalk. Let me also address the question of what to do with your recording immediately after the encounter because that footage is evidence and it needs to be treated like evidence from the moment the encounter ends. The first thing you do when you get to a safe location is back that footage up. Upload it to a cloud service. Send it to yourself by email.
Share it with someone you trust. Do not let it exist only on the device that was present during the encounter because devices can be lost, damaged, or seized.
The moment that footage exists in multiple locations, it becomes significantly more difficult for anyone to make it disappear. If the officer in your recording committed misconduct, if the traffic stop you are recording involved excessive force or an unlawful arrest, that footage needs to get to an attorney as quickly as possible. The footage is evidence in what may become a civil rights case. And civil rights attorneys who handle police misconduct cases work on contingency, meaning they do not charge upfront fees. If your footage shows what the cases show you, it might show an attorney will want to see it. Here's the bottom line on everything we covered. Your right to record police officers performing their official duties in public spaces is one of the most clearly established constitutional rights in American law.
It has been affirmed by federal courts across the ideological spectrum, including the conservative fifth circuit. It protects a First Amendment interest that the Supreme Court has recognized as fundamental to democratic accountability. When an officer says, "Stop recording me now, he is not citing law. He is trying to eliminate evidence." And the exact words I gave you today, officer, I am legally recording police activity in a public space. This is protected by the First Amendment. I am not interfering with your duties. I will not stop recording are the words that put the law directly between you and the officer's attempt to suppress your recording. Like this video so it reaches every person who has ever put their phone away when an officer told them to because they needed to hear this before that happened and now they can have it before it happens again.
Subscribe because next week I am covering the specific words you say when an officer tries to detain you for recording and the case law that makes the detention itself a civil rights violation. Drop a comment telling me about a time you witnessed something during a police encounter that you wish you had recorded because those stories are exactly why this right matters. Stay protected, stay recording, and I will see you in the next
Ähnliche Videos
MISTRIAL?! Judge Faces Jury Misconduct Bombshell Va. v Dr Ebony Parker
TAKEIT2TRIAL
110 views•2026-05-20
Former Spokane health officer Dr. Bob Lutz settles lawsuit against health district for $1.65 million
KREM2NewsSpokane
139 views•2026-05-16
Why The US Constitution Is Nearly IMPOSSIBLE to Amend
ConstitutionalSoundBites
393 views•2026-05-17
Suspect in UW student stabbing surrenders
KING5Seattle
244 views•2026-05-15
PRESS CONFERENCE: Buzbee Law Firm Press Conference on Ramón Ayala Lawsuit
KRIS6News
719 views•2026-05-15
NEVER Wait for the Insurance Company After a Crash (Do This First)
CEOLawyer
130 views•2026-05-19
Spirit Airlines faces lawsuit from former employees
ABCNews
53K views•2026-05-15
Joseph Duggar Wants UNSUPERVISED Access to His Kids Amid Abuse Charges
HiddenTrueCrime
140 views•2026-05-20











