SteveSmith wrote:I have seen to many of my fellow drivers fall prey to the MTO, and those MTO inspection stations that you pull your trunk into, can tear up your world in no time.
Genuine curiousity here, what do you mean by this? And how would a recording change any of that?
SteveSmith wrote:My question here is if I have to go to court, how much weight does my audio-video footage hold, I know in some states it is illegal to video an officer while he is preforming his duty. Thx
In Canada we have what is referred to as "single party consent", that is you can record any conversation you are a party to. Where your recording might be illegal is if a private conversation took place in the cab of your truck while you were not present - in this case it might be considered "interception of a private communication".
As for the admissability of your video, this is where the "make shift" camera makes me nervous. You'd want to demonstrate the time and place of the recording (timestamp) and that the video had not been altered. It's a *EDIT* shoot. I might shop around on ebay, integrated multi camera dashcam units can be had for $70 or so, and will automatically date/time stamp the video and incorporate GPS coords.
Your recording equipment is unlikely to be seized unless it's evidence of an offence.