I started to say... "That's the *way it is now*. (the police can observe)"
Not under the Boxley situation, however. There, he's saying the police can only observe ONCE a warrant has been issued. Since they can't observe to get a warrant...... Then how can they get one? (Bill's not explained the difference between a cop, undercover cop, and a camera. So if you restrict the actions of one, you restrict them all. (per current law)).
This is Bill's hypothesis - that a warrent is needed for police attention. Of course that's silly - but its *what he said*. Talk to him about the silliness, I"m just pointing it out.
But then it hit me - Wait. No its not.
Police can use what they hear as testimony, yet cannot record without a warrant.
That's not true. Notice the police cruiser cameras? No warrant needed for sound and video for them.
So, no, that's not right at all. Because what they're taping and recording is *public*. Not private.
So no, they *don't* need a warrent for taping public events.
Addison