Snapping a picture of a federal building from public property is every photographer鈥檚 right. Unfortunately, in recent years, pointing a camera at federal building seems to magnetically attract suspicion from federal security officers.
The New York Civil Liberties Union has encountered several cases of people who were unjustly harassed, detained and arrested by federal agents while photographing or videotaping federal buildings from public plazas and sidewalks.
Last year, we the U.S Department of Homeland Security in federal court to end this practice. In October, a judge signed a in which the government agreed that no federal statutes or regulations bar people from photographing the exterior of federal buildings. It also agreed to issue a directive to members of the Federal Protective Service (the agency responsible for all government buildings) on photographers鈥 rights.
The settlement did not require the feds to disclose the directive, but at our request they recently provided us with a .
The three-page document plainly states that 鈥渁bsent reasonable suspicion or probable cause鈥 security personnel must allow individuals to 鈥減hotograph the exterior of federally owned or leased facilities from publicly accessible spaces.鈥
While we鈥檙e pleased that the federal government circulated the memo, there is no guarantee that all federal security personnel have memorized it.
Therefore, we encourage anyone who is planning to photograph or film outside a federal building to carry a copy of the memo as a precaution. If approached by security, you can calmly educate them about your rights. Then take as many pictures as you like.
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