WaPo: Volokh: Woman jailed two weeks for recording Chicago P.D.’s internal affairs officers can sue for a Fourth Amendment violation

WaPo: Volokh: Woman jailed two weeks for recording Chicago P.D.’s internal affairs officers can sue for a Fourth Amendment violation by Eugene Volokh:

From Moore v. City of Chicago (N.D. Ill. Apr. 28, 2014) — it’s a long excerpt, but it’s hard for a summary to do justice to the allegations (and the uncontested facts). Cases like this make me enthusiastic about Glenn Reynolds’s and John Steakley’s argument for “A Due Process Right to Record the Police”, though I think there’s a First Amendment right to do so, too. Have a look, and you’ll see what I mean (some paragraph breaks added, emphasis added) …

. . .

Why? Because ‘A reasonable jury could … find that … the officers took a substantial step toward thwarting a criminal investigation,’ and thus themselves committed a crime.

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