PA Supreme Court: Nanny Cams Do Not Violate the Pennsylvania Wiretap Act
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has decided the case of Commonwealth v. Mason, holding that “nanny cams” do not violate the Pennsylvania Wiretap Act (“Wiretap Act”). This decision is significant because so many parents utilize these cameras when they employ caretakers to watch their children. Therefore, these caretakers should be mindful of this and understand that they will not be able to rely on the stringent protections of the Wiretap Act to protect them if they are subsequently prosecuted for crimes arising out of secret recordings made while they are working.
Commonwealth v. Mason
The defendant was hired as a nanny for a parent who lived in Franklin County, PA. During the hiring process, the parent told the defendant that she could not use corporal punishment on her children. Approximately one month after the defendant was hired, the parent’s three-year-old son told him that the defendant was “thumbing” him in the face and hitting his twin two-year-old sisters. The parent had previously noticed that his son had marks on his face and that one of the twins had a “busted lip.” When asked about his daughter’s injured lip, the defendant initially offered no explanation. However, the defendant later suggested that she may have injured herself while attempting to climb out of her playpen. The parent also asked why his son accused the defendant of “thumbing” him and striking the twins, and the defendant stated she did not know why such allegations were being made.
In response to these allegations, the parent placed a secret camera in his children’s bedroom which was capable of capturing sound and video of its surroundings. Notably, the parent did not tell the defendant that he placed the camera in the bedrooms. At some point, the camera recorded the defendant yelling at one of the children before she forcefully placed the child in their crib. Audio portions of the recording suggested that the defendant may have struck the child several times. The parent then gave the recordings to the police.
The defendant was subsequently charged with aggravated assault, simple assault, and endangering the welfare of a child. The defendant filed a habeas corpus petition to dismiss the aggravated assault charge, which was granted. She then filed an omnibus pretrial motion to suppress the audio and video recordings captured by the hidden cameras. In support of her motion, the defendant invoked the Wiretap Act, arguing that the parent had illegally intercepted her electronic and oral communications. A hearing was held to determine whether to grant the defendant’s motion. At the hearing, the parent was the sole witness called who testified to the above facts. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court granted the defendant’s motion. The Commonwealth then filed a timely interlocutory appeal arguing that the trial court’s decision would substantially handicap its case.
The Superior Court’s Opinion
A divided Superior Court affirmed in part and reversed in part the trial court’s suppression order. The lead opinion held that the verbal utterances captured by the cameras were to be excluded because there had been no judicial authorization or applicable exception to the Wiretap Act to permit their use at trial. Further, the lead opinion held that the defendant had no reason to believe her statements would be recorded and thus had a “justified expectation that she would not be audio recorded.” The Superior Court did reverse the trial court and held that the video, sans audio, could be used by the Commonwealth in its trial. The Commonwealth then filed a petition for allowance of appeal to have the Pennsylvania Supreme Court hear the case. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court agreed to take the case, and on appeal it addressed two issues: whether a babysitter has a reasonable expectation of privacy in the bedroom of a child she is caring for and whether the sounds coming from a child constitute oral communications under the Wiretap Statute.
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s Decision
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court reversed the lower courts’ decisions and held that the Commonwealth could use the recordings (both audio and visual) against the defendant at her trial. According to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, in order to succeed in her claim that these recordings should be deemed inadmissible at her trial, the defendant would have had to establish that she possessed a justifiable expectation that her oral communications would not have been intercepted. Based on its review of the record, the Court determined that the defendant did not meet her burden. Specifically, the Court held that the use of these cameras is so widespread that they even have a name (nanny cams) and thus no reasonable nanny should assume that they are not being recorded while performing their duties. As such, the Commonwealth will be able to use these recordings in their trial against the defendant.
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