FlyerTalk Forums - View Single Post - Delta Calls Police on Customer Seeking Lost Baggage
Old Sep 21, 2018 | 7:25 am
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FlyingUnderTheRadar
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Originally Posted by flyerslc
Without taking sides here, you have to be careful about recording. Some states have very broad prohibitions against secret recording - so-called two-party states. Exceptions for public meetings, police, are quite limited. However, if you upfront state you are recording, you can proceed and it is up to the other party to stop talking or leave.

Massachusetts's wiretapping law often referred to is a "two-party consent" law. More accurately, Massachusetts makes it a crime to secretly record a conversation, whether the conversation is in-person or taking place by telephone or another medium. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 272, § 99. Accordingly, if you are operating in Massachusetts, you should always inform all parties to a telephone call or conversation that you are recording, unless it is absolutely clear to everyone involved that you are recording (i.e., the recording is not "secret"). Under Massachusetts's wiretapping law, if a party to a conversation is aware that you are recording and does not want to be recorded, it is up to that person to leave the conversation.
Airports are in general considered to be public spaces and as such there is no expectation of privacy. What you are referencing applies when one is in a private space where there is an expectation of privacy. One could try to argue the baggage office is a private space but that would probably be an uphill battle given the greater context of it being part of the public baggage claim area.

Last edited by FlyingUnderTheRadar; Sep 21, 2018 at 7:32 am
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