LearRigh
Active Member
Not an attorney or LEO here, just a curious person who knows enough to get myself in more trouble.Attorney here checking in. Absolutely could subpoena them. In my civil cases I request or subpoena dash camera footage from each vehicle I’ve identified to be at or near the scene.
Does inherent right to privacy, or right to not self incriminate, not protect recordings that are personal property? Is this only regarding civil court vs. criminal court? Would it be different if the recordings were password protected?
Again, not saying I know better, just curious. I know there are privacy issues subpoenaing cell phone contents and I would think this is similar.
I'm basically in the same situation now as I was then: no way to prove I was or was not speeding. Without going into the details (not the time or place), from my perspective the officer changed his story when I pointed out that there was no way I went from a dead-stop to 50MPH through a busy intersection.So it sounds like you were speeding BEFORE the light not after stopping at it. So did he lie or did you just misunderstand where he said you were speeding? Obviously I don't know though, because I wasn't there.