Yes, filming police officers in Montana is generally legal under the First Amendment, provided the activity does not interfere with law enforcement operations or violate other laws. Montana’s open-recording statutes align with federal protections, but local ordinances and case law impose nuanced restrictions to balance public safety and transparency.
Key Regulations for Filming Police Officers in Montana
- No Interference Clause: Under Montana Code Annotated § 45-8-213, obstructing or interfering with police duties while recording is a misdemeanor. Officers may lawfully demand compliance if filming disrupts arrests, traffic stops, or emergency responses.
- Privacy Exceptions: Filming in private spaces (e.g., inside homes without consent) or capturing minors in sensitive contexts may violate Montana’s privacy statutes (§ 45-8-213(1)(c)), even if police are present.
- Local Ordinances: Cities like Billings and Missoula have enacted 2026 updates requiring permits for large-scale public recordings near protests or high-risk incidents, per municipal noise and public assembly codes.
Critical Considerations:
- Drones: Federal FAA Part 107 rules supersede state law; commercial drone use near police operations requires FAA authorization.
- Audio Recording: Montana is a two-party consent state (§ 45-8-213(2)); recording audio without consent risks felony charges if police are unaware.
- Retaliation Risks: Officers may confiscate devices under exigent circumstances, but courts (e.g., Montana v. Strizich, 2023) have ruled such seizures unconstitutional if unrelated to evidence collection.
Enforcement Trends: The Montana ACLU’s 2025 litigation database indicates a 34% increase in police obstruction claims tied to recording, prompting the 2026 legislative review of § 45-8-213’s enforcement guidelines.