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The Watercooler
Picking your brains...what would YOU do?
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<blockquote data-quote="InsaneCdn" data-source="post: 562295" data-attributes="member: 11791"><p>I'm wondering if there is a difference, though, depending on what she intends to do with it?</p><p></p><p>It may be legal to record for your own purposes - for example, to record an IEP meeting, so you can go over it in detail and take better notes later etc. - without notification. In which case she doesn't have to tell him she is recording the conversation.</p><p> </p><p>But would that recording be accepted in <em>court </em>as evidence? i.e. can she actually use that against him?</p><p></p><p>I was aware of a situation here where video was taken without the intended target's permission (done by homeowner for reasonable cause)... the video could not be used in court against this person, but it did provide enough evidence for police to go through the right channels and get a court-approved video of their own (i.e. the homeowner showed it to police, and based on homeowners complaint + "police assessment of situation" with no mention of seeing the video... police acted).</p><p></p><p>If she's baiting him on the calls - that will show up on the call as well. She may be revealing more about herself than she wants to let a court know. It may be more for psychological blackmail... in which case, avoidance is probably a good thing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="InsaneCdn, post: 562295, member: 11791"] I'm wondering if there is a difference, though, depending on what she intends to do with it? It may be legal to record for your own purposes - for example, to record an IEP meeting, so you can go over it in detail and take better notes later etc. - without notification. In which case she doesn't have to tell him she is recording the conversation. But would that recording be accepted in [I]court [/I]as evidence? i.e. can she actually use that against him? I was aware of a situation here where video was taken without the intended target's permission (done by homeowner for reasonable cause)... the video could not be used in court against this person, but it did provide enough evidence for police to go through the right channels and get a court-approved video of their own (i.e. the homeowner showed it to police, and based on homeowners complaint + "police assessment of situation" with no mention of seeing the video... police acted). If she's baiting him on the calls - that will show up on the call as well. She may be revealing more about herself than she wants to let a court know. It may be more for psychological blackmail... in which case, avoidance is probably a good thing. [/QUOTE]
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Picking your brains...what would YOU do?
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