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California Bill Would Protect People Who Record Police

SACRAMENTO (AP) — California's Assembly is advancing legislation meant to protect residents from retribution for recording police.

Lawmakers on Thursday approved SB411 on a 67-to-2 vote, sending it to Gov. Jerry Brown for his consideration.

The bill by Democratic Sen. Ricardo Lara of Bell Gardens says recording or photographing police in public areas isn't enough to charge people with obstructing officers. Civil liberties advocates say the practice is already legal, but the bill makes it explicit.

Advocates say cellphone video recordings are a valuable tool to expose police misconduct. Some officers have stopped people from recording their encounters with the public.

Residents who interfere with arrests or get in the way of police officers while recording still face punishment under Lara's bill.

Law enforcement groups did not officially oppose the bill.

(Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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