Mugshot Ban Leg Memo 2019.03.27 (FINAL)
Mugshot Ban Leg Memo 2019.03.27 (FINAL)
Mugshot Ban Leg Memo 2019.03.27 (FINAL)
Position: OPPOSE
Arrest photos can affect one’s personal life, job prospects, educational
opportunities, housing options, and career advancement – and companies should
not have free reign to profit off of this black market in privacy. However, the
Executive Budget’s proposed legislative ban on the release of all “booking
information” is simultaneously much broader than needed to address these privacy
concerns, and far too narrow to offer those arrested any meaningful measure of
privacy.
The NYCLU opposes this measure, and urges lawmakers and the Governor to
omit it from final state budget legislation.
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1
photos – colloquially known as mugshots – and “booking information” in response to
FOIL requests from the public, unless the release serves a “specific law enforcement
purpose.”
What’s more, the measure asserts that protected information may be released
only for “specific law enforcement purpose[s],” but leaves that phrase undefined as
well. This is improper for several reasons. The phrase’s ambiguity means that, in
practice, a “specific law enforcement purpose” is likely to be whatever law
enforcement says it is, and nothing else. But more importantly, the phrase defeats
the public purpose of FOIL: to shed light on government activity and keep the
public informed about how the government is doing its job. Booking photos and
arrest information can serve important research and oversight purposes. They can
reveal racial, cultural, or other biases in arrest patterns, illustrate trends in
enforcement of questionable criminal laws, and even serve as evidence of how an
arrestee was treated while in police custody. But absent a specific law enforcement
purpose, these other entirely legitimate public purposes appear to be foreclosed.
2
The standard for evaluating privacy concerns in the context of FOIL should
remain as it is now: whether an individual’s privacy interest in the data being
requested outweighs the public’s interest in seeing it. That standard is sufficient to
keep humiliating information out of the hands of those who would exploit it
commercially, while allowing legitimate inquiry into government activity.
Preventing public access to arrest data via the FOIL process does nothing to
address the government’s own everyday use and release of that data. This proposal
would allow the government to assert privacy grounds in order to deny FOIL
requests – written requests by third parties, potentially including exploitative
websites, for arrest photos and booking data. But it does nothing to curb the
government’s own voluntary disclosure of booking photos and data pursuant to
fugitive alerts, news releases, or even intentional public shaming. That sort of
publication is governed by a different legal standard, under which a person’s arrest
records are generally afforded very little privacy protection.
Lastly, New York’s courts have already begun to address the “pay-to-remove”
business model. Under current FOIL law – that is, without the amendment offered
here – an agency may refuse to release information that violates an individual’s
personal privacy, so long as that privacy interest outweighs the public’s right to
know about government activity. Mug shots and arrest information historically
have been considered public records that receive little privacy protection, but even
so, New York’s appellate courts have repeatedly ruled that the “pay-to-remove”
business model – essentially online shaming for profit – serves no public interest
and that FOIL requests for such purposes can be denied outright.
Conclusion