Indiana Audio Recording Order

State:
Indiana
Control #:
IN-AO-436
Format:
PDF
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Description

Audio Recording Order

Indiana Audio Recording Order is an order issued by the Indiana Supreme Court that requires individuals to record all conversations and audio interactions in the state of Indiana. This order applies to recordings of conversations that take place in public or private places, and is intended to help protect the rights of individuals to privacy and free speech. There are two types of Indiana Audio Recording Order: the Court Order and the Consent Order. The Court Order requires the individual to record all audio interactions in the presence of a court official, while the Consent Order allows individuals to record conversations with the consent of all parties involved. Both types of orders are designed to ensure that individuals are able to exercise their rights to privacy and free speech in the state of Indiana.

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FAQ

Indiana Wiretapping Law Indiana's wiretapping law is a "one-party consent" law. Indiana makes it a crime to record a telephone conversation unless one party to the conversation consents.

Eleven states require two-party consent, however. In other words, everyone involved in a conversation must agree to be recorded. Those states are California, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, and Washington. (Don't let the phrase ?two-party? throw you.

As long as the person hitting ?record? is aware and part of the conversation, recording conversations is legal under Federal law as well as Indiana law. The reason one-party consent is legal is because sometimes the other person being aware of the recording would change their conduct or statements.

Summary. Indiana bars the recording or interception of any telephonic or electronic communication without the consent of at least one party to the conversation. It is not clear whether a journalist also needs at least one party's consent before recording in-person conversations.

Can I Be Punished for Recording a Conversation in Indiana? Audio recording a conversation you are part of is always legal in Indiana. Many private businesses like doctor's offices, retailers, or other organizations may post signs asking that visitors on the property do not record conversations.

In regard to audio recordings, Indiana is a one-party consent state. If you are a participant in a conversation, and both parties are in the State of Indiana, you have the right to record the audio of the conversation.

Indiana bars the recording or interception of any telephonic or electronic communication without the consent of at least one party to the conversation.

Thirty-eight states of the US and the district of Columbia have adopted single-party consent: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, D.C., Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New-Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, South

Indiana bars the recording or interception of any telephonic or electronic communication without the consent of at least one party to the conversation.

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Indiana Audio Recording Order