110OAG40

CourtMaryland Attorney General Reports
DecidedJuly 22, 2025
Docket110OAG040
StatusPublished

This text of 110OAG40 (110OAG40) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Maryland Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
110OAG40, (Md. 2025).

Opinion

40 [110 Op. Att’y

CRIMINAL LAW WIRETAP AND ELECTRONIC SURVEILLANCE – POLICE OFFICERS – EVIDENCE – WHEN BODY-WORN CAMERA RECORDINGS VIOLATE THE MARLAND WIRETAP ACT – WHETHER OFFICER CAN STILL TESTIFY AS TO INDEPENDENT OBSERVATIONS July 18, 2025

Colonel Roland L. Butler, Jr. Superintendent, Maryland State Police

You have asked a question involving police officers’ use of body-worn cameras and the exclusionary provision of Maryland’s wiretap statute, which generally requires the suppression of evidence derived from a recording that is illegal under the wiretap statute. Specifically, you ask: If a court suppresses a recording from a body-worn camera under the law’s exclusionary provision, may the officer who made the recording still testify about what the officer observed independently of the body-worn camera footage?

Before addressing this question, we first examine whether the Maryland wiretap statute applies to police officers’ use of body- worn cameras in the first place. As we explain below, it is our opinion that the law applies to a police officer’s use of a body-worn camera only when the officer purposely uses the device with the intent to record a private conversation. Moreover, the officer violates the wiretap statute only when the officer’s use of the body- worn camera does not satisfy each of five conditions in a statutory exception for the use of such devices and does not fall within any other exceptions in the wiretap statute.

Assuming that the wiretap statute applies to a specific instance of a police officer using a body-worn camera to record a private conversation, and that none of the statute’s exceptions permit the recording, a court must suppress the recording under the statute’s exclusionary provision. But that provision does not prohibit the officer from testifying about what the officer observed independently. Gen. 40] 41

I Background

A. Body-Worn Cameras

Body-worn cameras are small recording devices that can be attached to clothing, eyeglasses, or headwear. Jonathan Hayes & Lars Ericson, Nat’l Inst. of Justice, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, A Primer on Body-Worn Cameras for Law Enforcement 5-6 (Sept. 2012), https://permanent.fdlp.gov/gpo231473/239647.pdf. Police officers commonly wear these devices on their uniforms, attached to a shirt pocket or a badge. Id. at 5; Marc Jonathan Blitz, American Constitution Soc’y, Police Body-Worn Cameras: Evidentiary Benefits and Privacy Threats 3 (May 2015). Body- worn cameras can record both video and audio, producing footage similar to what a cell phone camera captures. Daniel Bernard Trimble, Body-Worn Cameras: The Implementation of Both the Police Department’s Rollout of Cameras and the State’s Attorney’s Office’s Processing of Data for Discovery, 47 U. Balt. L. Rev. 379, 384 (2018).

B. Maryland’s Wiretap Act

Maryland’s Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance Act (the “Wiretap Act” or “Act”) imposes certain restrictions on recording audio. The Act establishes a general prohibition on “willfully intercept[ing], endeavor[ing] to intercept, or procur[ing] any other person to intercept or endeavor to intercept[]” some types of communications. Md. Code Ann., Cts. & Jud. Proc. (“CJP”) § 10-402(a)(1). The Act then sets forth several exceptions to the general prohibition, such as when all parties to a communication consent to the interception.1

1 See CJP § 10-402(c)(3) (allowing “a person to intercept a wire, oral, or electronic communication where the person is a party to the communication and where all of the parties to the communication have given prior consent to the interception unless the communication is intercepted for the purpose of committing any criminal or tortious act”). This exception, commonly called the “two-party consent provision,” e.g., Mustafa v. State, 323 Md. 65, 70 (1991), distinguishes the Wiretap Act from its federal counterpart and the laws in most other states, which allow conversations to be recorded even if only one of the participants consents to the recording, Carol M. Bast, What’s Bugging You?: Inconsistencies and Irrationalities of the Law of Eavesdropping, 47 DePaul L. Rev. 837, 869 (1998); see also id. Appendix B (cataloging the federal act and various state wiretapping statutes). 42 [110 Op. Att’y

The Wiretap Act generally does not apply to video-only surveillance—that is, video recordings that do not capture audio. See, e.g., Deibler v. State, 365 Md. 185, 200 (2001); see also 85 Opinions of the Attorney General 225, 226 (2000) (“The Wiretap Act does not address video surveillance alone.”); Letter from Robert N. McDonald, Chief Counsel, Opinions & Advice, to Del. Samuel I. Rosenberg, at 2 (July 7, 2010) (“Rosenberg Letter”) (“[V]ideo recording alone, without the capture of an audio communication, is not regulated by the Wiretap Act.”).2 That is because of how the statute defines the relevant terms.

More specifically, the Act concerns only the willful interception of “wire, oral or electronic communications.” CJP § 10-402(a)(1). “Intercept” means “the aural or other acquisition of the contents of any wire, electronic, or oral communication through the use of any electronic, mechanical, or other device.” CJP § 10-401(10). “Wire communication[s],” which include landline telephone calls, see Fearnow v. Cheseapeake & Potomac Tel. Co. of Maryland, 104 Md. App. 1, 34 (1995), rev’d on other grounds, 342 Md. 363 (1996), are “aural transfer[s]” that depend on “wire, cable, or other like connection[s],” CJP § 10-401(18). “Electronic communications,” which include cell phone calls, see Davis v. State, 199 Md. App. 273, 286 (2011), more broadly encompass “transfer[s] of signs, signals, writing, images, sounds, data, or intelligence of any nature,” but only those that use “wire, radio, electromagnetic, photoelectronic, or photooptical system[s],” CJP § 10-401(5).3 Finally, “‘[o]ral communication’ 2 To be sure, other statutes impose restrictions on video surveillance. See Md. Code Ann., Crim. Law § 3-901(c) (prohibiting “visual surveillance,” defined to include surveillance by camera, “of an individual” in “a dressing room or restroom in a retail store” “without the consent of that individual”); id. § 3-902(c) (“A person may not with prurient intent conduct or procure another to conduct visual surveillance of: (1) an individual in a private place without the consent of that individual; or (2) the private area of an individual by use of a camera without the consent of the individual under circumstances in which a reasonable person would believe that the private area of the individual would not be visible to the public, regardless of whether the individual is in a public or private place.”); id. § 3-903(c) (“A person may not place or procure another to place a camera on real property where a private residence is located to conduct deliberate surreptitious observation of an individual inside the private residence.”). 3 A communication that meets the definition of “wire communication” cannot be an “electronic communication.” CJP § 10-401(5)(ii). Gen. 40] 43

means any conversation or words spoken to or by any person in private conversation.” CJP 10-401(13)(i).4

Under these definitions, a video recording does not intercept wire or electronic communications. See Deibler, 365 Md. at 199- 200. But it might intercept oral communications, if the recording captures audio. For purposes of the Wiretap Act, the interception of an oral communication contemplates “an aural interception— hearing the conversation directly or making a recording of it that can be listened to simultaneously or at a later time.” Id. at 200 (emphasis added). So the Act may apply to a video recording that also captures audio. See id.

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