Ring, Blink, Nest, and other doorbell cameras are everywhere in DFW. But who owns that footage and when can police access it?
Your rights:
- You own your footage. Period. It's your property, recorded from your property.
- Police need your consent OR a warrant. Under the 4th Amendment and Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 18.02, law enforcement cannot compel you to hand over your footage without a warrant.
The Ring/Amazon controversy:
- Ring previously had a program where police could request footage through the Ring app (Neighbors Public Safety Service). After public backlash, Ring ended this program in 2024.
- Current policy: Police must contact you directly or obtain a warrant.
When you SHOULD share footage:
- If a crime occurred on or near your property and you want to help the investigation
- If police ask nicely and you agree (entirely voluntary)
- If your neighbor was victimized and requests it
When you can say NO:
- Any time police don't have a warrant
- You're never required to share voluntarily
- You don't need to explain why
Texas-specific recording laws:
- Texas is a one-party consent state for audio recording (Texas Penal Code 16.02)
- You CAN record audio on your own property without notifying anyone
- Recording a public area (sidewalk, street) from your private property is legal
Sources:
- 4th Amendment, U.S. Constitution
- Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, Article 18.02
- Texas Penal Code 16.02 — wiretapping/recording
- Ring Privacy Policy (updated 2024)
- EFF — doorbell camera surveillance analysis
Know your rights before you answer the door.
Drop your take below.
The one-party consent law in Texas means your doorbell cam audio recording from your own property is fully legal. Important distinction.