I never said I knew who the people were. Why would she be driving down that street and concerned about a stranger fishing somewhere she doesn’t belong?
I found the information about invasion of privacy oat http://www.findlaw.com/injury/torts-and-personal-injuries/invasion-of-privacy.html
A ring doorbell is far different from someone pointing a camera at your face in order to ridicule you online and call you a racist. That’s actionable.
“Why would she be driving down that street and concerned about a stranger fishing somewhere she doesn’t belong?”
So, in your view, it would have been appropriate for the fisherman, to see the woman driving down the street, view her as a stranger, interrupt her and check to see if she belonged in the neighborhood?
If not, why not?
For some reason, neither she nor the fisherman would answer questions about where they lived, and that places them not simply similarly situated, but equally situated.
Neither the woman or the fisherman had any obligation to provide any information to the other.
Sure the woman can sue, she can take the stand in a civil trial but she will not win.