English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Am i allowed to have taped the conversation without the permission of the other party?

I would also appreciate very much a reference to the law which controls this.

Thanks!

2007-03-13 07:24:03 · 10 answers · asked by Bill 2 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

10 answers

I don't believe you have that right. Well, let me resay that. You have the right to record anyone at anytime. You are not allowed to let anyone else listen to that recording.. including a court. I'll go find it and show you. I'll edit this when I find it.

I was wrong.. as long as your intent is not to do harm or for blackmail then you can under the wiretapping claim.
read this page...

http://www.rcfp.org/taping/

only one party of the conversation has to agree and that would be you... cool huh..

humm it seems to go by state laws. . on that site there is a state by state list you can look at.

2007-03-13 07:28:38 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The legality varies by location. Lookup your location here, and then you will know.

In CA, where I live, recording a conversation without the consent of all parties is prohibited, whether this is in person or over a communications device. Case law precedent permits the covert recording of conversations that occur where there can be no real expectation of privacy (ie: on a bus near other passengers, in line at a theater, etc.)

Cal. Penal Code §§ 631, 632

The answer below from Caicos Turkey is limited to the UK - wiretapping offices in California would be illegal, unless that taping was made known to people that use and visit the offices.

2007-03-13 07:32:57 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You attended a meeting. This implies to me two things: first, that there were several people in the meeting, and it was therefore public, and second, that you were invited or otherwise allowed to be there.

This tells me that you should be allowed to tape record the even, as it is a public forum, or (at the very least) an open meeting.

As far as who you can play it for, that may depend on the confidentiality agreement within your company. Perhaps you should take it to your organization's legal department if you feel you have been slandered within your workplace. Failing that, take the matter to an executive above the person who made the statements, along with proof that the accusations are false (if you have such on hand).

Once you go outside your company (to a lawyer, etc.) you may have problems with the above mentioned confidentiality agreement. However, if you feel the need to do so, take it to a lawyer, and they can advise you on how to proceed.

2007-03-13 07:38:09 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The majority of the respondants in this forum have guided you with information concerning taped TELEPHONE calls. There are about 11 states which require both parties of the conversation to be aware of the recording. The remaining states require only ONE person be aware of the recording. When one is calling from a state requiring only one, in to a state requiring both parties to be informed, you must adhere to the state with the higher standard.

In your case, however, you are talking about a meeting in person not over a telephone system where the laws of "wiretapping" are not concerned.

There are no legal restrictions when you use a tape recorder upon your own body to record activities not associated with telecommunications!

Best wishes!

2007-03-13 07:58:30 · answer #4 · answered by KC V ™ 7 · 0 1

While recording telephone conversations without permission can fall foul of the Data Protection Act, there is nothing to prohibit the recording of a conversation in an office. http://www.out-law.com/page-7363

2007-03-13 07:42:50 · answer #5 · answered by Doethineb 7 · 0 0

i'm sorry to assert that frequently old college is a thank you to pass with infants. i be attentive to there will be many that disagree with what i'm approximately to indicate. If the youngster is appearing available could be a rationalization for his no longer keen to accomplish in college. possibly he would not get carry of adequate compliment while he's doing properly. If he's not being raised by ability of his father (bio) there could be a difficulty with who he sees as his male place type. i'm hoping that isn't the case. once you are the only one elevating him, you will be able to ought to motel to corporal punishment. that's merely a final motel. i could compliment him while he does sturdy and discourage the undesirable habit with take aways first then groundings. while he does properly advantages him and tell him thank you to pass! do no longer belittle him while he's not appearing properly, you ought to tell him possibly we ought to start up doing our homework at the same time. sturdy success! Oh, yeah you ought to seek for suggestion from with the counselor and leap techniques off him/her. do no longer pass in with a bad ideas-set reason you will deliver a pink flag to the directors.

2016-12-14 18:06:25 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I was told by a lawyer that I could tape anything as long as one other person knew that it was being taped and it didn't have to be someone in that room. This was in NC.

2007-03-13 07:46:49 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you can record a conversation, and let others listen to it, but the tape is not admissable in court. which means that you won't violate any laws by doing so it just means that you can not use it unless they agree.

2007-03-13 08:35:36 · answer #8 · answered by Butch 1 · 0 1

Just buy yourself a digital dictaphone/voice recorder from Argos, and stick it in your bag, or something else to take in with you. Practise with it first, you`d be amazed! No one else will know you`re doing it, because they don`t make any sound or noise.

2007-03-13 07:33:38 · answer #9 · answered by The BudMiester 6 · 0 0

dont know if youre in a union,if not you can get 20 minutes free advice from most solicitors,sounds like theyre well out of order

2007-03-13 07:36:00 · answer #10 · answered by rebel 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers