Muckymuck wrote:Perhaps I can shed some light on the law in the UK. Basically there's no criminal offence at risk of being committed if you take a camera somewhere it says "no cameras" (unless it's government property.)
There are two things at play here.
If you enter a concert or other organised event with an entry ticket, the ticket usually makes it a condition of entry that you don't bring certain equipment...often video cameras.
The organisers of said event have the legal right to refuse you entry or eject you if you break their conditions of entry if there is a clause along the lines of "it is a condition of entry that..." or "by purchasing this ticket you enter into a contract with the promoter that..."
Having said that I have seen people openly using video cameras at concerts where the tickets state very clearly that they must not.
You're not strictly breaking the law by taking a camera, but they have a legal right to insist you don't....its part of the contract you make when you purchase your ticket.
Now....you *are* breaking the law if you refuse to comply with *reasonable* requests, such as "please stop using that camcorder" or "please leave that here with security, you can pick it up on the way out here's a reciept". Note that the ticket conditions don't give them the right to prise the camera out of your hands, it is still your camera - if they touch it then *they* are committing trespass against property...but they can remove you and your camera together from the premises.
The owner can decide randomly and arbitrarily that they don't want pictures taken, and if you don't comply there and then, that's trespass and you can be removed.
Well the situation is that the owner of private property can insist *anyone* leave for any reason....it is, after all, their property. The same law that protects you from unwanted people in your home (and incidentally allows you to tell salesmen, missionaries, police and bailifs to bugger off) also protects any privately owned tourist attraction you may visit.
I don't think any of this is actually written down in statute. In England we have this funny concept called the "common law" which is unwritten and is just stated by judges on a case-by-case basis. That's where these rules are found as far as I know.
I'm not sure common law actually exists any more in the UK, I remember reading an article last year about how most people believe it does...certainly common-law marriages don't actually exist.
But....if you wanted to argue the legal toss....if a ticket prohibits "video cameras"...you could contend that your super 8 is NOT a video camera....now...those who gabble about "I see"...go look up "video camera" in the OED.....and remember lawyers and legalaities are based around a pedantic system...