“Illinois 13-year-old charged with eavesdropping felony for recording meeting with principal”

“For years, [Illinois] cops used the state’s eavesdropping laws to arrest citizens who attempted to record them. This practice finally stopped when three consecutive courts — including a federal appeals court — ruled the law was unconstitutional when applied to target citizens recording public servants.” But the law is “still being used by government officials to punish people they don’t like. Illinois Policy reports a 13-year-old student is facing felony charges for recording a meeting between him and two school administrators.” [Tim Cushing, TechDirt; Austin Berg, Illinois Policy, related]

“Illinois 13-year-old charged with eavesdropping felony for recording meeting with principal” is a post from Overlawyered - Chronicling the high cost of our legal system


“Illinois 13-year-old charged with eavesdropping felony for recording meeting with principal” curated from Overlawyered

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Commentary, Media Hits, and Events (March 5 – May 30)

Crime and punishment roundup

Constitutional law roundup