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To: L.A.Justice

Well there is a difference between legal, illegal and admissible. I am sure there are many loopholes with respect to expectation of privacy; i.e. bathroom and bedroom vs putting a camera in your OWN family room. Then you have to consider things like nanny-cams when it comes to protection of children. Then you start talking about recording adults and considering what the state says the age of consent is. It all gets kinda murky. If it had been my house: Camera in the bedroom to confirm my suspicions. Once confirmed, destroy that (or save it for a private divorce settlement later). Then install hidden camera in a community-use parts of the house..i.e. kitchen, den, TV room. Patiently wait and capture a series of still pics, no audio and provide those to the police....but that’s just me.


39 posted on 05/24/2020 11:04:08 AM PDT by LibertyF0RAll
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To: LibertyF0RAll

Well there is a difference between legal, illegal and admissible. I am sure there are many loopholes with respect to expectation of privacy; i.e. bathroom and bedroom vs putting a camera in your OWN family room. Then you have to consider things like nanny-cams when it comes to protection of children.

________________________________________

Husband put the cameras in the common area...The article did not state if they were obvious or not...

Husband also put the recording device in the basement where the kid’s bedroom was located...

https://www.wjfw.com/storydetails/20200518120803/rhinelander_teacher_accused_of_mental_harm_and_sexual_assault_to_a_child

I guess cameras are OK since they are in the common area...
But, the recording device near the kid’s bedroom?


45 posted on 05/25/2020 12:34:45 AM PDT by L.A.Justice
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