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Q & A: Can a Condo Board Spy on Staff and Unit-Owners?

Aug. 28, 2023

Q: The board president at our Midtown East condo building has installed cameras above the doorman’s desk and in the passenger and commercial elevators. We suspect the cameras monitor conversations, as well as everyone’s comings and goings. But only the board president and our superintendent can see the video footage. The doormen go outside so they can talk to one another without fear that their conversations are being recorded. Can a condo board spy on unit-owners and staff like this?

A: Cameras that capture images in common areas of residential buildings for security purposes are lawful — though recording conversations, as you describe, is not, replies the Ask Real Estate column in The New York Times. Your first step should be to determine if the cameras were legitimately installed.

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When it comes to recording conversations, as you suspect is happening, state law comes into the picture. New York is a one-party consent state, meaning that one party must consent to the recording of a conversation. Violation of this law is a Class E felony.

You and your fellow unit-owners should read the governing documents to determine how to call a meeting and get some answers, says Adam Leitman Bailey, head of his eponymous law firm. “I recommend that the owner seek to call a special meeting using legal counsel,” he says, “and if not an option, without counsel, and try to undo this arrangement on privacy and safety concerns.”

Read the Full Habitat Article 

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