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No. 10308423
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Project Veritas v. Michael Schmidt
No. 10308423 · Decided January 7, 2025
No. 10308423·Ninth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
January 7, 2025
Citation
No. 10308423
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
PROJECT VERITAS; PROJECT No. 22-35271
VERITAS ACTION FUND,
D.C. No. 3:20-cv-
Plaintiffs-Appellants, 01435-MO
v.
OPINION
MICHAEL SCHMIDT, in his official
capacity as Multnomah County
District Attorney; ELLEN
ROSENBLUM, in her official
capacity as Oregon Attorney General,
Defendants-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Oregon
Michael W. Mosman, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted En Banc June 25, 2024
Seattle, Washington
Filed January 7, 2025
Before: Mary H. Murguia, Chief Judge, and Kim McLane
Wardlaw, Morgan Christen, Mark J. Bennett, Daniel P.
Collins, Kenneth K. Lee, Jennifer Sung, Gabriel P.
2 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
Sanchez, Roopali H. Desai, Anthony D. Johnstone and Ana
de Alba, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Christen;
Concurrence by Judge Bennett;
Dissent by Judge Lee
SUMMARY *
First Amendment
The en banc court affirmed the district court’s dismissal
of a complaint brought by Project Veritas, a nonprofit media
organization engaged almost exclusively in undercover
journalism, alleging that Oregon’s conversational privacy
statute violates the First Amendment.
Oregon’s conversational privacy statute requires that
notice be given before oral conversations may be
recorded. The statute has several exceptions, including
(1) the felony exception, which allows a recording of a
conversation during a felony that endangers human life; and
(2) the law enforcement exception, which allows a recording
of a conversation in which a law enforcement officer is a
participant if certain conditions are met.
The en banc court construed the complaint as raising
both facial and as-applied challenges to the statute and
further held that the as-applied challenge was
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 3
constitutionally and prudentially ripe. Project Veritas
articulated a concrete intention to violate the statute and self-
censored to comply with the statute.
The en banc court held that Project Veritas’s recording
of conversations in connection with its newsgathering
activities is protected speech within the meaning of the First
Amendment. The conversational privacy statute, as applied
to Project Veritas, regulates that speech. Because Oregon’s
conversational privacy statute directly regulates Project
Veritas’s act of creating speech that falls within the core of
the First Amendment, it triggers First Amendment scrutiny.
The en banc court next held that the conversation privacy
statute is content-neutral because it does not discriminate on
the basis of viewpoint or restrict discussion of an entire
topic. Rather it places neutral, content-agnostic limits on the
circumstances under which an unannounced recording of a
conversation may be made. Neither the felony exception nor
the law enforcement is content-based within the meaning of
controlling First Amendment precedent. Accordingly,
intermediate scrutiny applied.
The conversation privacy statute survived intermediate
scrutiny as applied to Project Veritas. Oregon has a
significant government interest in ensuring that its residents
know when their conversations are recorded, the statute is
narrowly tailored to that interest, and the statute leaves open
ample alternative channels of communication for Project
Veritas to engage in investigative journalism and to
communicate its message.
Finally, the en banc court rejected Project Veritas’s
facial overbreadth challenge. Project Veritas fails to show
that any unconstitutional applications of the conversation
4 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
privacy statute substantially outweighed its constitutional
applications.
Concurring in the judgment, Judge Bennett wrote
separately because there is no historical or precedential
foundation to support the holding that the purely mechanical
act of pressing an audio record button in secret or without
announcement is always protected speech. Judge Bennett
would hold that such an act is not per se “speech” protected
by the First Amendment. With that understanding, Project
Veritas’s facial challenge fails. The as-applied challenge
fails for the reasons explained in the majority’s opinion.
Dissenting, Judge Lee, joined by Judge Collins, wrote
that even assuming intermediate scrutiny applies, Oregon’s
law, which bans the taping of conversations where there is
no reasonable expectation of privacy, is grossly overbroad
and not narrowly tailored to advance the state’s interest in
conversational privacy. Moreover, the law should be subject
to strict scrutiny, not intermediate scrutiny, because it is not
content-neutral—it carves out an exception for law
enforcement matters. The law cannot survive strict scrutiny
because it is not necessary to serve a compelling interest.
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 5
COUNSEL
Benjamin Barr (argued), Barr & Klein PLLC, Chicago,
Illinois; Stephen Klein, Barr & Klein PLLC, Washington,
D.C.; for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Benjamin N. Gutman (argued), Solicitor General; Philip M.
Thoennes, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Michael A.
Casper, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Ellen F.
Rosenblum, Attorney General; Oregon Department of
Justice, Salem, Oregon; for Defendants-Appellees.
Bert P. Krages II, Bert P. Krages Attorney at Law, Portland,
Oregon, for Amicus Curiae Bert P. Krages II.
Jacob H. Huebert, Liberty Justice Center, Chicago, Illinois,
for Amicus Curiae Liberty Justice Center.
Julian R. Ellis Jr. and Christoper O. Murray, First &
Fourteenth PLLC, Colorado Springs, Colorado; Chris
Carraway and Justin F. Marceau, University of Denver,
Sturm College of Law, Denver, Colorado; for Amici Curiae
Free Expression Scholars, People for the Ethical Treatment
of Animals, Animal Outlook, and Foundation for Individual
Rights.
6 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
OPINION
CHRISTEN, Circuit Judge:
Appellants Project Veritas and Project Veritas Action
Fund (collectively, “Project Veritas”) argue that an Oregon
statute prohibiting unannounced recordings of oral
conversations violates the First Amendment. Project Veritas
brings as-applied and facial challenges. It contends that the
statute is a content-based restriction on expression that is
subject to strict scrutiny and that the statute is facially invalid
as overbroad. Because Oregon’s statute does not
discriminate on the basis of viewpoint or restrict discussion
of an entire topic, we conclude it is content neutral, and that
it survives intermediate scrutiny. Because Project Veritas
fails to show that any unconstitutional applications of the
statute substantially outweigh its constitutional applications,
Project Veritas cannot establish facial invalidity.
Accordingly, we reject Project Veritas’s claims and affirm
the district court’s order dismissing the complaint.
I
Project Veritas is a nonprofit media organization that
engages almost exclusively in undercover journalism. It
employs both open and secret audiovisual recording to
investigate matters of public concern, sometimes—but not
always—in areas open to the public. Whether recording
openly or surreptitiously, Project Veritas does not expressly
inform individuals that their conversations are being
recorded. According to Project Veritas, an announcement
that a conversation is being recorded causes individuals to
refuse to talk or to distort their story, thereby compromising
the quality of Project Veritas’s journalism. Project Veritas
maintains that it does not engage in eavesdropping—i.e., the
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 7
interception, without prior consent, of wire or oral
communications to which a Project Veritas reporter is not a
party. See Or. Rev. Stat. § 165.543(1). Rather, Project
Veritas seeks to conduct undercover investigations in
Oregon, and it contends that Oregon’s conversational
privacy statute prevents it from doing so. See Or. Rev. Stat.
§ 165.540(1)(c).
Section 165.540(1)(c) of the Oregon Revised Statutes
requires that notice be given before oral conversations may
be recorded. Specifically, the statute provides that “a person
may not . . . [o]btain or attempt to obtain the whole or any
part of a conversation by means of any device, contrivance,
machine, or apparatus, . . . if not all participants in the
conversation are specifically informed that their
conversation is being obtained.” Id. 1 The statute does not
define “specifically informed,” and because prosecutions
pursuant to section 165.540(1)(c) are very infrequent,
caselaw on this point is sparse at best. 2 A “[c]onversation”
is defined as “the transmission between two or more persons
of an oral communication which is not a telecommunication
or a radio communication, and includes a communication
occurring through a video conferencing program.” Or. Rev.
1
A violation of section 165.540(1)(c) is punishable as a misdemeanor.
Or. Rev. Stat. § 165.540(9).
2
The dissent cites State v. Haase, 895 P.2d 813 (Or. Ct. App. 1995), for
the proposition that section 165.540(1)(c) “bans audiotaping even if the
speaker notices that someone has a recording device in her hand.” The
dissent misreads Haase. There, the Oregon Court of Appeals reversed
an order excluding audio recorded by a police officer’s wearable
microphone, concluding that the police officer did not violate section
165.540(1)(c) because the defendant was warned that he was being
monitored by audio means and this warning reasonably informed the
defendant that the conversation was being obtained. Id. at 815.
8 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
Stat. § 165.535(1). Thus, Oregon’s conversational privacy
statute prohibits unannounced audio-only recordings of oral
communications between two or more persons, and the
audio portion of audiovisual recordings of oral
communications. It does not address video-only recordings
or photographs.
Oregon’s strong interest in protecting conversational
privacy dates back to 1955. That year, the Oregon
legislature enacted section 165.540(1)(a), a statutory
provision that criminalized wiretapping. 3 In 1959, the
legislature expanded Oregon’s protection of conversational
privacy by adding what would become
section 165.540(1)(c)—the subsection at issue here—to
prohibit the secret “tape recording of face-to-face
conversations.” State v. Lissy, 747 P.2d 345, 350 (Or. 1987).
Oregon’s general prohibition on unannounced
recordings of face-to-face conversations has several
exceptions, but Project Veritas focuses its challenge on two
of them. The first, the felony exception, allows a person to
“record[] a conversation during a felony that endangers
human life.” See Or. Rev. Stat. § 165.540(5)(a). The
Oregon legislature enacted this exception in 1989, thirty
years after passing the general prohibition on unannounced
recordings of face-to-face conversations. Or. Rev. Stat.
§ 165.540(5)(a) (1989). This exception was enacted to
“eliminate the requirement that police officers obtain prior
court approval before using a ‘body wire’ where felony drug
offenses or life-endangering felonies are being committed.”
3
“The proponents of the bill were concerned about the increasing use of
wiretaps, and the bill was intended to stop the practice by making it a
criminal offense.” State v. Lissy, 747 P.2d 345, 350 (Or. 1987).
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 9
Or. H.R. Staff Measure Summary, H.B. 2252, 65th Assemb.,
Reg. Sess. (Or. 1989).
The second, the law enforcement exception, allows a
person to “record[] a conversation in which a law
enforcement officer is a participant” if certain conditions are
met. See Or. Rev. Stat. § 165.540(5)(b). The recording
must: (1) be “made while the officer is performing official
duties”; (2) be “made openly and in plain view of the
participants in the conversation”; (3) capture a conversation
that is “audible to the person by normal unaided hearing”;
and (4) be made from “a place where the person lawfully
may be.” Id. 4 The Oregon legislature passed the law
enforcement exception in 2015, over 25 years after enacting
the felony exception. Or. Rev. Stat. § 165.540(5)(b) (2015).
The intent of this exception was to “address[] the situation
where a private citizen is recording a police officer on the
street,” which most commonly occurs “when an individual
is recording an officer making an arrest.” Or. H.R. Staff
Measure Summary, H.B. 2704 A, 78th Assemb., Reg. Sess.
(Or. 2015).
In 2020, Project Veritas filed suit against the Multnomah
County District Attorney, Michael Schmidt, and the Oregon
Attorney General, Ellen Rosenblum (collectively,
“Oregon”), raising a First Amendment challenge to
section 165.540. The complaint alleges that but for
Oregon’s prohibition on unannounced audio recordings,
Project Veritas would investigate allegations of corruption at
4
It is uncontested that, as a matter of federal law, an officer performing
official duties in public may be recorded, Askins v. United States
Department of Homeland Security, 899 F.3d 1035, 1044 (9th Cir. 2018),
but without the law enforcement exception, the audio portion of such a
recording would be unlawful under Oregon law.
10 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
the offices of the Oregon Public Records Advocate and the
Public Records Advisory Council. It also avers that Project
Veritas would investigate the rise in violent protests in
Portland. These activities would involve Project Veritas
reporters secretly recording conversations in which they are
participants or openly recording without specifically
informing all participants in the conversation that they are
being recorded.
Project Veritas seeks to enjoin application of the statute
and to obtain a declaratory judgment that the law is
unconstitutional on its face and as applied to Project Veritas.
The complaint asserts that the statute violates free speech
and free press rights, and also unlawfully prohibits obtaining
or using recordings that are made in violation of the statute.
Oregon moved to dismiss the complaint. The district court
granted the motion in part, and the parties stipulated to
dismissal of the remaining claims. Project Veritas timely
appealed.
II
We review the district court’s dismissal de novo.
Skilstaf, Inc. v. CVS Caremark Corp., 669 F.3d 1005, 1014
(9th Cir. 2012).
III
A
We begin by addressing the scope of Project Veritas’s
constitutional claims. In particular, we consider whether
Project Veritas raises facial or as-applied challenges.
The distinction between a facial and an as-applied
challenge is important. Whether a challenge is classified “as
facial or as-applied affects the extent to which the invalidity
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 11
of the challenged law must be demonstrated and the
corresponding ‘breadth of the remedy.’” Bucklew v.
Precythe, 587 U.S. 119, 138 (2019) (citation omitted). “An
as-applied challenge contends that the law is
unconstitutional as applied to the litigant’s particular speech
activity, even though the law may be capable of valid
application to others.” Foti v. City of Menlo Park, 146 F.3d
629, 635 (9th Cir. 1998) (citing Members of the City Council
of L.A. v. Taxpayers for Vincent, 466 U.S. 789, 803 & n.22
(1984)). A facial challenge seeks to strike down a law in its
entirety and must therefore meet a more rigorous standard.
Moody v. NetChoice, LLC, 603 U.S. 707, 723 (2024). In the
First Amendment context, this standard requires a plaintiff
to show that “a substantial number of [the law’s]
applications are unconstitutional, judged in relation to the
statute’s plainly legitimate sweep.” Id. (alteration in
original) (quoting Ams. for Prosperity Found. v. Bonta, 594
U.S. 595, 615 (2021)).
“The line between facial and as-applied challenges can
sometimes prove ‘amorphous,’ . . . and ‘not so well
defined.’” Bucklew, 587 U.S. at 139 (citations omitted). But
“[t]he label is not what matters.” Doe v. Reed, 561 U.S. 186,
194 (2010). Instead, “[t]he important point” for identifying
the nature of a challenge is whether a plaintiff’s “claim and
the relief that would follow . . . reach beyond the particular
circumstances” of that plaintiff. Id.
Here, there is little doubt that Project Veritas’s complaint
includes a facial challenge to Oregon’s statute, with and
without its exceptions. Indeed, the parties agree on this
point; Project Veritas’s complaint plainly seeks a judgment
that section 165.540(1)(c) “is unconstitutional on its face.”
12 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
Project Veritas also challenges Oregon’s conversational
privacy statute on an as-applied basis. Its prayer for relief
seeks a judgment that section 165.540(1)(c) is
“unconstitutional as applied to PV and PVA,” and in
connection with each count, Project Veritas alleges the
statute is unconstitutional as applied to it. Although these
portions of the complaint do not expressly identify the
speech activity at issue, we understand the as-applied
challenge to pertain to the proposed conduct that Project
Veritas explicitly identifies elsewhere in the complaint:
(1) secret recordings of conversations between Project
Veritas and members of the offices of the Public Records
Advocate and the Public Records Advisory Council;
(2) secret recordings of conversations between Project
Veritas and police; (3) secret recordings of conversations
between Project Veritas and protesters; (4) secret recordings
of conversations arising from encounters between police and
protesters; (5) open recordings of conversations between
Project Veritas and protesters; and (6) open recordings of
conversations between Project Veritas and members of the
offices of the Public Records Advocate and the Public
Records Advisory Council. 5 Given these allegations, we
5
At oral argument, Oregon agreed that its conversational privacy statute
does not apply to the “open recordings” Project Veritas proposes in
categories (5) and (6). This is because the statutory scheme broadly
exempts recordings by “unconcealed recording device[s]” in “[p]ublic or
semipublic meetings,” and in “[p]rivate meetings” where other
participants “knew or reasonably should have known that the recording
was being made.” Or. Rev. Stat. § 165.540(6)(a); see also McCullen v.
Coakley, 573 U.S. 464, 485 n.4 (2014) (noting “a plaintiff generally
cannot prevail on an as-applied challenge without showing that the law
has in fact been (or is sufficiently likely to be) unconstitutionally applied
to him”); City of Lakewood v. Plain Dealer Publ’g Co., 486 U.S. 750,
770 n.11 (1988) (explaining that a court “will presume any narrowing
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 13
construe the complaint as raising both facial and as-applied
challenges. We address each in turn, beginning with the as-
applied challenge.
B
Oregon first argues that, to the extent Project Veritas
raises an as-applied challenge, it is not sufficiently ripe. We
disagree.
“The ripeness doctrine is ‘drawn both from Article III
limitations on judicial power and from prudential reasons for
refusing to exercise jurisdiction . . . .’” Nat’l Park Hosp.
Ass’n v. Dep’t of Interior, 538 U.S. 803, 808 (2003) (citation
omitted). “‘[T]hrough avoidance of premature
adjudication,’ the ripeness doctrine prevents courts from
becoming entangled in ‘abstract disagreements.’” Wolfson
v. Brammer, 616 F.3d 1045, 1057 (9th Cir. 2010) (alteration
in original) (citation omitted).
The ripeness doctrine has both constitutional and
prudential components. Thomas v. Anchorage Equal Rts.
Comm’n, 220 F.3d 1134, 1138 (9th Cir. 2000) (en banc).
The constitutional component overlaps with the analysis of
“injury in fact” for Article III standing and considers
whether “the issues presented are ‘definite and concrete, not
hypothetical or abstract.’” Wolfson, 616 F.3d at 1058
(quoting Thomas, 220 F.3d at 1138–39); see also Bishop
Paiute Tribe v. Inyo County, 863 F.3d 1144, 1153 (9th Cir.
2017). The prudential ripeness inquiry is “guided by two
overarching considerations: the fitness of the issues for
construction or practice to which [a] law is ‘fairly susceptible’” (citation
omitted)). Our analysis therefore addresses only Project Veritas’s
arguments concerning its intention to make secret recordings of oral
communications.
14 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
judicial decision and the hardship to the parties of
withholding court consideration.” Bishop Paiute Tribe, 863
F.3d at 1154 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting
Thomas, 220 F.3d at 1141).
We conclude that Project Veritas’s as-applied First
Amendment challenge satisfies constitutional ripeness
concerns. 6 Where a plaintiff seeks to challenge a statute
prior to enforcement, “there must be ‘a genuine threat of
imminent prosecution.’” Clark v. City of Seattle, 899 F.3d
802, 813 (9th Cir. 2018) (quoting Bishop Paiute Tribe, 863
F.3d at 1154). To determine whether a plaintiff has
established such a threat, we consider: “[1] whether the
plaintiffs have articulated a concrete plan to violate the law
in question, [2] whether the prosecuting authorities have
communicated a specific warning or threat to initiate
proceedings, and [3] the history of past prosecution or
enforcement under the challenged statute.” Id. (quoting
Bishop Paiute Tribe, 899 F.3d at 1154).
“Although the mere existence of a statute is insufficient
to create a ripe controversy, we have applied the
requirements of ripeness and standing less stringently in the
context of First Amendment claims.” Wolfson, 616 F.3d at
1058. “In an effort to avoid the chilling effect of sweeping
restrictions” on First Amendment speech, “the Supreme
Court has endorsed what might be called a ‘hold your tongue
6
Oregon does not contest prudential ripeness. Regardless, we are
convinced this appeal is prudentially ripe. Project Veritas’s claims are
fit for judicial decision because they are “primarily legal and do[] not
require substantial further factual development.” Wolfson, 616 F.3d at
1060. Withholding review would impose a hardship because Project
Veritas alleges it has engaged in “the constitutionally-recognized injury
of self-censorship” by foregoing its undercover journalism activities in
Oregon while section 165.540(1)(c) remains in effect. Id.
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 15
and challenge now’ approach rather than requiring litigants
to speak first and take their chances with the consequences.”
Ariz. Right to Life Pol. Action Comm. v. Bayless, 320 F.3d
1002, 1006 (9th Cir. 2003).
We first consider whether Project Veritas has articulated
a concrete intention to violate Oregon’s conversational
privacy statute. We are satisfied that it has. The complaint
alleges that Project Veritas has specific plans to make
unannounced recordings that are likely prohibited by
section 165.540(1)(c). See Wolfson, 616 F.3d at 1059;
Bayless, 320 F.3d at 1006–07; Cal. Pro-Life Council, Inc. v.
Getman, 328 F.3d 1088, 1095 (9th Cir. 2003). Second,
although Oregon has never threatened Project Veritas with
enforcement proceedings, Project Veritas alleges it has “self-
censored to comply with the [statute],” which is a
“constitutionally recognized injury.” Wolfson, 616 F.3d at
1059–60. Where protected speech is at issue, “a plaintiff
need not risk prosecution in order to challenge a statute.” Id.;
Bayless, 320 F.3d at 1006–07. Finally, we note that neither
party has argued there is any history of past prosecution or
enforcement that is relevant to our analysis. See Wolfson,
616 F.3d at 1060.
Oregon insists that Project Veritas’s as-applied
challenge is not fit for adjudication because Project Veritas
did not delineate the precise contours of its claims, relying
on the First Circuit’s decision in Project Veritas Action Fund
v. Rollins, 982 F.3d 813 (1st Cir. 2020). But Rollins is
distinguishable. There, Project Veritas raised an as-applied
First Amendment challenge to Massachusetts’s
conversational privacy statute “insofar as it bar[red] the
secret recording of ‘individuals who lack[ed] any reasonable
expectation of privacy’” and to the extent it barred
“nonconsensual audio recording of ‘government officials
16 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
discharging their duties in public spaces.’” Id. at 842–43.
Because these broad categories of relief were vague and ill-
defined, the First Circuit concluded there was a “disconnect”
between Project Veritas’s narrow “alleged intended
action[s]” and its sweeping requested relief. Id. at 842. That
disconnect rendered the dispute “hypothetical and abstract
rather than real and concrete,” and the court directed
dismissal of Project Veritas’s claims on ripeness grounds.
See id. at 843–44.
Here, by contrast, Project Veritas’s as-applied challenge
concerns six specific courses of intended conduct, and we
understand that Project Veritas’s request for relief is limited
to these particular activities. At least as to the four activities
that involve secret recordings, Project Veritas’s “plan [is]
congruent to [its] request for relief.” Rollins, 982 F.3d at
842; see also Am. Civ. Liberties Union of Ill. v. Alvarez, 679
F.3d 583, 593–94 (7th Cir. 2012) (concluding that, where a
statute prohibited the ACLU’s proposed audio recording
plans, the ACLU’s allegations were “easily sufficient to
establish a credible threat of prosecution”). The as-applied
claims are sufficiently ripe.
C
Another threshold question is whether Oregon’s
conversational privacy statute, as applied to Project Veritas,
regulates speech protected by the First Amendment. See
Recycle for Change v. City of Oakland, 856 F.3d 666, 669
(9th Cir. 2017). We conclude that it does.
It is well established that audio recordings and
audiovisual recordings are generally entitled to First
Amendment protection. Schad v. Borough of Mount
Ephraim, 452 U.S. 61, 65–66 (1981) (noting that “programs
broadcast by radio and television . . . fall within the First
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 17
Amendment guarantee”); Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson,
343 U.S. 495, 502 (1952) (recognizing free speech
protection for motion pictures). Here, however, we are
confronted with a statute that places restrictions not on the
distribution or presentation of a completed recording, but on
the act of making an audio-only recording. Applying
established First Amendment principles, we conclude that
Project Veritas’s recording of conversations in connection
with its newsgathering activities is protected speech within
the meaning of the First Amendment.
The Supreme Court has recognized that “[w]hether
government regulation applies to creating, distributing, or
consuming speech makes no difference.” Brown v. Ent.
Merchs. Ass’n, 564 U.S. 786, 792 n.1 (2011) (rejecting a
distinction that “would make permissible the prohibition of
printing or selling books,” but “not the writing of them”); see
also Citizens United v. FEC, 558 U.S. 310, 336 (2010)
(“Laws enacted to control or suppress speech may operate at
different points in the speech process.”); Sorrell v. IMS
Health Inc., 564 U.S. 552, 570 (2011) (noting that “the
creation and dissemination of information are speech”).
Moreover, the Supreme Court has expressly applied First
Amendment protections to speech-creation processes. For
instance, in Minneapolis Star & Tribune Co. v. Minnesota
Commissioner of Revenue, the Court addressed Minnesota’s
tax on paper and ink products used in the production of
publications. 460 U.S. 575, 577–79 (1983). The Supreme
Court held that the law, which targeted activities directed to
producing speech, violated the First Amendment because it
applied only to large publications and thereby singled out the
press for differential treatment. Id. at 583. In another case,
the Supreme Court concluded that New York’s Son of Sam
law—which required that an accused or convicted criminal’s
18 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
income derived from works describing his crime be made
available to victims and creditors—violated the First
Amendment because it created a financial disincentive both
to create and to publish written works that plainly constitute
protected speech. Simon & Schuster, Inc. v. Members of N.Y.
State Crime Victims Bd., 502 U.S. 105, 116–18 (1991).
If restrictions on speech-creation processes did not
implicate the First Amendment, governments “could
effectively control or suppress speech by the simple
expedient of restricting an early step in the speech process
rather than the end result.” Alvarez, 679 F.3d at 597; see
also W. Watersheds Project v. Michael, 869 F.3d 1189,
1195–96 (10th Cir. 2017) (“If the creation of speech did not
warrant protection under the First Amendment, the
government could bypass the Constitution by ‘simply
proceeding upstream and damming the source’ of speech.”
(alterations accepted) (quoting Buehrle v. City of Key W.,
813 F.3d 973, 977 (11th Cir. 2015))). Rather than limiting
the right to display a tattoo, the government could restrict the
right to create one. See Anderson v. City of Hermosa Beach,
621 F.3d 1051, 1062 (9th Cir. 2010) (noting that, “as with
writing or painting, the tattooing process is inextricably
intertwined with the purely expressive product (the tattoo)”).
Rather than banning the exhibition of a movie, the
government could ban the celluloid film used to create it.
The various links in the chain of speech creation present
opportunities for suppression: “Control any cog in the
machine, and you can halt the whole apparatus.” McConnell
v. FEC, 540 U.S. 93, 251 (2003) (Scalia, J., concurring in
part and dissenting in part), overruled by Citizens United,
558 U.S. at 310.
We do not suggest that any conduct related in some way
to speech creation, however attenuated, is necessarily
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 19
entitled to First Amendment protection. A law that regulates
logging may incidentally raise the price of paper used to
write a manuscript. 7 A law that regulates mining silica sand
may incidentally raise the price of microprocessors used to
facilitate the writing of an electronic article. It is certainly
not obvious that the First Amendment would invariably
provide protection for activities like these, where burdens on
speech are merely incidental. Cf. Cohen v. Cowles Media
Co., 501 U.S. 663, 669 (1991) (noting that “generally
applicable laws do not offend the First Amendment simply
because their enforcement . . . has incidental effects on [the]
ability to gather and report the news”); Arcara v. Cloud
Books, Inc., 478 U.S. 697, 706 n.3, 707 (1986) (affirming the
constitutionality of a public health regulation applied to an
adult bookstore engaged in prostitution because this
“‘nonspeech’ conduct subject to a general regulation [bore]
absolutely no connection to any expressive activity”).
To decide this appeal, we need not precisely delineate
the extent and contours of First Amendment protection for
each constituent act that comprises speech creation. The
question presented here is whether Oregon’s direct
regulation of Project Veritas’s act of recording is an
impermissible burden on Project Veritas’s First Amendment
rights. At the pleading stage, we accept Project Veritas’s
assertion that giving notice to conversation participants that
they are being recorded may alter the contents of
conversations in which Project Veritas’s reporters
participate. Accordingly, we accept that Oregon’s
conversational privacy statute burdens an act of speech
creation in which Project Veritas seeks to engage. Protection
7
See Ashutosh Bhagwat, Producing Speech, 56 Wm. & Mary L. Rev.
1029, 1054, 1059 (2015).
20 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
for this act of speech creation is implicit in any right Project
Veritas has to publish the resulting recording. See Alvarez,
679 F.3d at 595. “[N]either the Supreme Court nor our court
has ever drawn a distinction between the process of creating
a form of pure speech (such as writing or painting) and the
product of these processes (the essay or the artwork) in terms
of the First Amendment protection afforded.” Anderson,
621 F.3d at 1061; see also Brown, 564 U.S. at 792 n.1;
Alvarez, 679 F.3d at 595–97.
Project Veritas avers that it seeks to record newsworthy
conversations involving public officials, police, and
protesters. It asserts that it seeks to do so to educate and
inform the public about newsworthy topics of public
concern. The First Amendment “embraces at the least the
liberty to discuss publicly and truthfully all matters of public
concern without previous restraint or fear of subsequent
punishment.” First Nat’l Bank of Bos. v. Bellotti, 435 U.S.
765, 776 (1978) (quoting Thornhill v. Alabama, 310 U.S. 88,
101–02 (1940)). Put simply, “[s]peech on matters of public
concern is at the heart of the First Amendment’s protection.”
Snyder v. Phelps, 562 U.S. 443, 451–52 (2011) (alterations,
internal quotation marks, and citation omitted). This
protection “reflects our profound national commitment to
the principle that debate on public issues should be
uninhibited, robust, and wide-open.” Ariz. Free Enter.
Club’s Freedom Club PAC v. Bennett, 564 U.S. 721, 755
(2011) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Buckley
v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 14 (1976)); see also Connick v. Myers,
461 U.S. 138, 145 (1983) (affirming that “speech on public
issues occupies the ‘highest rung on the hierarchy of First
Amendment values’” (citation omitted)); Alvarez, 679 F.3d
at 599 (explaining that protection “for gathering information
about the affairs of government is consistent with the
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 21
historical understanding of the First Amendment”). Because
Oregon’s conversational privacy statute will directly
regulate Project Veritas’s act of creating speech that falls
within the core of the First Amendment, it triggers First
Amendment scrutiny.
This conclusion comports with our settled recognition—
embraced by every circuit to have addressed the question—
that the First Amendment protects the act of making at least
some recordings. In Fordyce v. City of Seattle, we
recognized that a man who created an audiovisual recording
of a public protest for a local television station had a “First
Amendment right to film matters of public interest.” 55 F.3d
436, 439 (9th Cir. 1995). In Askins v. United States
Department of Homeland Security, where plaintiffs sought
to photograph and record border officers carrying out their
duties, we again acknowledged that the “First Amendment
protects the right to photograph and record matters of public
interest.” 899 F.3d 1035, 1044 (9th Cir. 2018). 8
8
The First, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, Eighth, Tenth, Eleventh, and
D.C. Circuits have recognized that many acts of recording qualify as
speech and are entitled to First Amendment protection. See, e.g.,
Alvarez, 679 F.3d at 595–97 (“Audio recording is entitled to First
Amendment protection.”); Fields v. City of Philadelphia, 862 F.3d 353,
358 (3d Cir. 2017) (concluding that the First Amendment protects “the
act of creating” photos, videos, and recordings); People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals, Inc. v. N.C. Farm Bureau Fed’n, Inc., 60 F.4th
815, 836 (4th Cir. 2023) (concluding that visual “recording in the
employer’s nonpublic areas as part of newsgathering constitutes
protected speech”); W. Watersheds, 869 F.3d at 1195–96 (holding that
the “collection of resource data,” including photos, “constitutes the
protected creation of speech”); Turner v. Lieutenant Driver, 848 F.3d
678, 688–90 (5th Cir. 2017) (concluding that “the First Amendment
protects the act of making film”); Glik v. Cunniffe, 655 F.3d 78, 83 (1st
Cir. 2011) (concluding that “the First Amendment protects the filming
22 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
We have also affirmed protection for recording in the
context of so-called “ag-gag” laws. In Animal Legal Defense
Fund v. Wasden, 878 F.3d 1184 (9th Cir. 2018), we
addressed a statute prohibiting audio or video recordings of
the “conduct of an agricultural production facility’s
operations,” that Idaho’s legislature enacted in response to
the release of an undercover video depicting animal abuse at
a dairy farm. Id. at 1190–91. We held that the plaintiffs’
intended act of making an audio or video recording of an
agricultural production facility’s operations would be
protected speech. Id. at 1203. In the process of doing so,
Wasden stated that “[t]he act of recording” is “inherently
expressive” because “decisions about content, composition,
lighting, volume, and angles, among others, are expressive.”
Id. At least one court interpreted this aspect of Wasden as
an “expansive ruling,” People for the Ethical Treatment of
Animals, Inc. v. North Carolina Farm Bureau Federation,
Inc., 60 F.4th 815, 837 n.9 (4th Cir. 2023), but that view
overlooks that Wasden made its observation in the context
of rejecting Idaho’s argument that the intended act of
recording was merely non-expressive conduct, not speech
entitled to First Amendment protection. See Wasden, 878
F.3d at 1203. In other words, Idaho argued that the act of
recording a video could be disaggregated from the video
itself. See id. Against that backdrop, Wasden reasoned that
of government officials in public spaces”); Smith v. City of Cumming,
212 F.3d 1332, 1333 (11th Cir. 2000) (concluding that the First
Amendment protects the right to visually “record matters of public
interest”); Ness v. City of Bloomington, 11 F.4th 914, 923 (8th Cir. 2021)
(concluding that the “acts of taking photographs and recording videos
are entitled to First Amendment protection”); Price v. Garland, 45 F.4th
1059, 1071 (D.C. Cir. 2022) (noting that “prohibiting the recording of a
public official performing a public duty on public property is
unreasonable”).
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 23
it “defie[d] common sense to disaggregate the creation of the
video,” which may involve expressive decisions, “from the
video or audio recording itself,” because the video reflected
the products of those decisions. Id. Wasden’s statement that
the act of recording is “inherently expressive” is consistent
with the rule that First Amendment protection extends “only
to conduct that is inherently expressive,” such that it is
intended to be, and would reasonably be understood to be,
communicative. See Rumsfeld v. Forum for Acad. &
Institutional Rts., Inc., 547 U.S. 47, 66 (2006); Clark v.
Cmty. for Creative Non-Violence, 468 U.S. 288, 294 (1984).
Wasden did not conclude that every act of recording requires
expressive decisions, nor that every act of recording
implicates the First Amendment.
The different contexts in which recordings are made may
be relevant to the First Amendment analysis. For example,
although it is clear that Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space
Odyssey is the product of a recording process that was itself
expressive, it is far from obvious that the same could be said
of footage from a wall-mounted security camera in a retail
space that is scheduled for regular deletion. Indeed, scholars
have debated whether First Amendment protection is
contingent on the eventual dissemination of recorded
material, 9 or if protection might depend in part on whether
the recording occurs in public or touches on a matter of
9
See Seth F. Kreimer, Pervasive Image Capture and the First
Amendment: Memory, Disclosure, and the Right to Record, 159 U. Pa.
L. Rev. 335, 377 (2011) (“It is simply not the case . . . that an external
audience is or should be a necessary condition of First Amendment
protection.”); Ashutosh Bhagwat, Producing Speech, 56 Wm. & Mary
L. Rev. 1029, 1040, 1054, 1059 (2015) (arguing that “[s]peech requires
an audience”).
24 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
public concern. 10 We need not now grapple with the
challenges presented by hypothetical cases. To resolve this
appeal, we need only decide that because Project Veritas
seeks to make newsworthy audio recordings that
undoubtedly constitute protected expression, the act of
making those recordings is protected speech for purposes of
the First Amendment.
D
1
We next consider whether Oregon’s conversational
privacy statute is content based or content neutral. See
United States v. Swisher, 811 F.3d 299, 311 (9th Cir. 2016)
(en banc). The First Amendment “does not countenance
governmental control over the content of messages
expressed by private individuals.” Turner Broad. Sys., Inc.
v. FCC, 512 U.S. 622, 641 (1994). Thus, laws “that
suppress, disadvantage, or impose differential burdens upon
speech because of its content” are subject to strict scrutiny.
Id. at 642. A regulation that is content neutral, on the other
hand, must only satisfy intermediate scrutiny. Id.
Project Veritas argues that Oregon’s conversational
privacy statute is facially content based because one must
examine the content of an unannounced recording to
determine whether it is lawful or unlawful. For example,
Project Veritas reasons that to determine whether an audio
recording is an unlawful unannounced recording of a
10
E.g., Justin Marceau & Alan K. Chen, Free Speech and Democracy in
the Video Age, 116 Colum. L. Rev. 991, 997–98 (2016); Joel R.
Reidenberg, Privacy in Public, 69 U. Miami L. Rev. 141, 152 (2014);
Margot E. Kaminski, Privacy and the Right to Record, 97 B.U. L. Rev.
167, 232–43 (2017).
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 25
conversation in which a Public Records Advocate is a
participant, or a lawful unannounced recording of a
conversation involving a police officer performing his duties
in public, one must listen to the content of the recording. In
other words, Project Veritas contends that because the
statute imposes limits on what may be recorded, it is
necessarily content based. This rigid conception of the
content-neutrality inquiry is unsupported by precedent.
For decades, the Supreme Court routinely emphasized
that “[t]he government’s purpose” in regulating speech “is
the controlling consideration” in “determining content
neutrality.” Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 491 U.S. 781,
791–92 (1989) (finding content neutral a sound-
amplification regulation that applied to an outdoor urban
stage); see also Turner, 512 U.S. at 646 (finding content
neutral a regulation requiring cable television operators to
devote a portion of their channels to local broadcast stations
because Congress’s goal “was not to favor programming of
a particular subject matter, viewpoint, or format, but rather
to preserve access to free television programming”). Put
another way, “[t]he principal inquiry in determining content
neutrality . . . is whether the government has adopted a
regulation of speech because of disagreement with the
message it conveys.” Hill v. Colorado, 530 US. 703, 719
(2000) (quoting Ward, 491 U.S. at 791). Thus,
“[g]overnment regulation of expressive activity is content
neutral so long as it is ‘justified without reference to the
content of the regulated speech.’” Ward, 491 U.S. at 791
(quoting Clark, 468 U.S. at 293); see also R.A.V. v. City of
St. Paul, 505 U.S. 377, 390 (1992) (approving content
discrimination, where speech is proscribable, if “there is no
realistic possibility that official suppression of ideas is
afoot”).
26 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
Although the Supreme Court has acknowledged that “the
mere assertion of a content-neutral purpose” would not “be
enough to save a law which, on its face, discriminates based
on content,” Turner, 512 U.S. at 642–43, it has not adopted
a bright-line rule that any consideration of content mandates
strict scrutiny. The Court noted in Hill v. Colorado, a
decision issued in 2000, that it had “never held, or suggested,
that it is improper to look at the content of an oral or written
statement in order to determine whether a rule of law applies
to a course of conduct.” See 530 U.S. at 721–22 (rejecting
an argument that the examination of oral statements rendered
a law content based).
In 2015, the Supreme Court decided Reed v. Town of
Gilbert, a case concerning a sign code that imposed varying
restrictions on different types of signs—ideological signs,
political signs, and temporary directional signs. 576 U.S.
155, 159–60 (2015). The code imposed the most stringent
restrictions on temporary directional signs. Id. at 160. A
local church that had displayed temporary signs to direct
people to its upcoming services challenged the statute after
it was cited for violating the code’s restrictions. Id. at 161.
The Reed Court held that the Town of Gilbert’s sign code
was facially content based because the restrictions that
applied to a given sign “depend[ed] entirely on the
communicative content of the sign.” Id. at 164. “If a sign
informs its reader of the time and place a book club will
discuss John Locke’s Two Treatises of Government, that
sign will be treated differently from a sign expressing the
view that one should vote for one of Locke’s followers in an
upcoming election, and both signs will be treated differently
from a sign expressing an ideological view rooted in Locke’s
theory of government.” Id. Although the town may have
had a benign purpose in enacting the code, Reed stated that
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 27
courts must “consider[] whether a law is content neutral on
its face before turning to the law’s justification or purpose.”
Id. at 166. 11
We applied Reed in Animal Legal Defense Fund v.
Wasden, where we held that Idaho’s statute prohibiting
recordings of the “conduct of an agricultural production
facility’s operations” was content based. 878 F.3d at 1203.
Wasden concluded that the statute necessarily drew content-
based distinctions on its face because one could only “make
a determination about criminal liability” by “viewing the
recording” of an agricultural production facility’s
operations. Id. at 1204.
The Supreme Court subsequently undercut this
reasoning in City of Austin v. Reagan National Advertising
of Austin, LLC, 596 U.S. 61 (2022). In that clarifying
decision, the Court considered a First Amendment challenge
that centered on a distinction in Austin’s sign code between
off-premises signs (i.e., signs that advertise goods or
services available at a location separate from where the sign
was installed) and on-premises signs (i.e., signs that
advertise goods or services available at the location of the
sign). Id. at 66. Because the regulatory scheme drew
“distinctions based on the message a speaker convey[ed],”
Reed, 576 U.S. at 163–64, the plaintiff argued it was content
based. City of Austin, 596 U.S. at 69, 74. City of Austin
11
Several Courts of Appeals interpreted Reed’s emphasis on facial
neutrality as “a drastic change in First Amendment jurisprudence.” Free
Speech Coal., Inc. v. Att’y Gen. U.S., 825 F.3d 149, 160 n.7 (3d Cir.
2016); Reagan Nat’l Advert. of Austin, Inc. v. City of Austin, 972 F.3d
696, 702 (5th Cir. 2020) (describing Reed as a “sea change”), rev’d, 596
U.S. 61 (2022); see also, e.g., Cahaly v. LaRosa, 796 F.3d 399, 405 (4th
Cir. 2015); Norton v. City of Springfield, 806 F.3d 411, 412 (7th Cir.
2015).
28 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
firmly rejected the proposition that a “regulation cannot be
content neutral if it requires reading the sign at issue,” id. at
69, and emphasized “that restrictions on speech may require
some evaluation of the speech and nonetheless remain
content neutral,” id. at 72. Ultimately, City of Austin held
that Austin’s sign ordinance was content neutral because it
“require[d] an examination of speech only in service of
drawing neutral, location-based lines.” Id. at 69.
To further illustrate this controlling principle, City of
Austin relied on earlier Supreme Court cases addressing
restrictions on solicitation. “To identify whether speech
entails solicitation, one must read or hear it first,” but
Supreme Court precedent has long held that “restrictions on
solicitation are not content based and do not inherently
present ‘the potential for becoming a means of suppressing
a particular point of view,’ so long as they do not
discriminate based on topic, subject matter, or viewpoint.”
Id. at 72 (citation omitted).
City of Austin cited the Court’s prior decision in Heffron
v. International Society for Krishna Consciousness, Inc., 452
U.S. 640 (1981). See City of Austin, 596 U.S. at 72. There,
the Court confronted a Minnesota statute that limited sale,
distribution, and solicitation activities at the Minnesota State
Fair to a particular location within the fairgrounds. Heffron,
452 U.S. at 643–44. The case arose when Krishna
practitioners were prohibited from distributing religious
literature and soliciting donations outside the designated
location at the fair. Id. at 646, 655. The Court observed that
the statute was not “based upon either the content or subject
matter of speech,” noting that the statute applied
“evenhandedly to all who wish to distribute and sell written
materials or to solicit funds.” Id. at 648–49 (citation
omitted). Thus, although the statute implicated the content
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 29
of speech—in the sense that its application turned on
whether the speech could be characterized as
“solicitation”—it did so in a manner that was neutral with
respect to the message that individual speakers expressed.
Id.; see also City of Austin, 596 U.S. at 73–74 (rejecting the
view that examination of speech “inherently triggers
heightened First Amendment concern”). The Minnesota
statute did not evince an intent to favor or disfavor a
particular message or speaker.
Further illuminating this threshold principle, City of
Austin drew upon Members of City Council of Los Angeles
v. Taxpayers for Vincent. See 596 U.S. at 73. There, the
Court concluded that an ordinance prohibiting posting signs
on public property was content neutral, even though the law
included exemptions for, among other things, markers
commemorating “historical, cultural, or artistic event[s].”
Taxpayers for Vincent, 466 U.S. at 791 n.1, 804, 817. The
Court noted that the “general principle” forbidding a
government from “favor[ing] some viewpoints or ideas at
the expense of others” had “no application” because there
was “not even a hint of bias or censorship in the City’s
enactment or enforcement of” the ordinance at issue. Id. at
804; see also Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc., 475 U.S. 41,
43, 48 (1986) (concluding that a zoning ordinance that
placed restrictions on the location of movie theatres based
on whether they presented adult content was content neutral
because it was not aimed at “suppress[ing] the expression of
unpopular views”).
These precedents recognize that the “the rationale [for]
the general prohibition” on content-based regulations “is that
content discrimination raises the specter that the
Government may effectively drive certain ideas or
viewpoints from the marketplace.” Davenport v. Wash.
30 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
Educ. Ass’n, 551 U.S. 177, 188 (2007) (internal quotation
marks omitted) (quoting R.A.V., 505 U.S. at 387). This
concern is present not only when a regulation discriminates
on the basis of viewpoint, Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors
of Univ. of Va., 515 U.S. 819, 829 (1995), but also when a
regulation restricts “discussion of an entire topic,” Consol.
Edison Co. of N.Y. v. Pub. Comm’n of N.Y., 447 U.S. 530,
537 (1980). See Reed, 576 U.S. at 168–69; see also id. at
182 (Kagan, J., concurring in the judgment).
Critically, City of Austin reaffirmed that this concern is
not necessarily implicated by every regulation that depends
on the content of protected speech. See City of Austin, 596
U.S. at 73–74. Put another way, not every regulation that
turns on the content of speech in the loosest sense is content
based in the constitutional sense. A regulation may remain
content neutral despite touching on content to distinguish
between classes or types of speech—such as speech that
constitutes solicitation, Heffron, 452 U.S. at 649–50, or
speech that draws neutral, location-based distinctions, City
of Austin, 596 U.S. at 69—so long as it does not discriminate
on the basis of viewpoint or restrict discussion of an entire
topic. See City of Austin, 596 U.S. at 73–74; Reed, 576 U.S.
at 168–69. Thus, a regulation that restricts speech involving
solicitation, or involving a police officer, may be content
neutral. As the Supreme Court has plainly stated,
regulations that “confer benefits or impose burdens on
speech without reference to the ideas or views expressed are
in most instances content neutral.” Turner, 512 U.S. at 643
(emphasis added).
2
We conclude that section 165.540(1)(c) is content
neutral. It places neutral, content-agnostic limits on the
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 31
circumstances under which an unannounced recording of a
conversation may be made.
The rule that emerges from the Supreme Court’s caselaw
is that “[a] regulation of speech is facially content based . . .
if it ‘target[s] speech based on its communicative content’—
that is, if it ‘applies to particular speech because of the topic
discussed or the idea or message expressed.’” City of Austin,
596 U.S. at 69 (alteration in original) (quoting Reed, 576
U.S. at 163); see also Turner, 512 U.S. at 643 (stating that
“laws that by their terms distinguish favored speech from
disfavored speech on the basis of the ideas or views
expressed are content based”). Regulations of speech that
are facially neutral may nevertheless be content based in
their justification if they “cannot be ‘justified without
reference to the content of the regulated speech,’” or “were
adopted by the government ‘because of disagreement with
the message [the speech] conveys.’” Reed, 576 U.S. at 164
(alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted)
(quoting Ward, 491 U.S. at 791); see also Porter v. Martinez,
68 F.4th 429, 438–39 (9th Cir. 2023).
Project Veritas first argues that section 165.540(1)(c),
without consideration of its exceptions, is a content-based
regulation as applied to Project Veritas’s creation of audio
recordings. Project Veritas alleges that because the
announcement of a recording “itself alters the content of
what will be recorded,” the prohibition on unannounced
recordings is content based. For support, Project Veritas
relies on precedent addressing government-compelled
speech. See Nat’l Inst. of Fam. & Life Advocs. v. Becerra,
585 U.S. 755 (2018); Am. Beverage Ass’n v. City & County
of San Francisco, 916 F.3d 749 (9th Cir. 2019) (en banc).
This caselaw does not support Project Veritas’s position
because Oregon’s conversational privacy statute does not
32 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
“compel[] individuals to speak a particular message.”
Becerra, 585 U.S. at 766. Moreover, even though Oregon’s
statute limits the circumstances under which a conversation
may be recorded, it is facially neutral. That is, it does not
“draw[] distinctions based on the message a speaker
conveys,” Reed, 576 U.S. at 163, and it was not adopted
because of the government’s “disagreement with the
[speaker’s] message,” id. at 164 (quoting Ward, 491 U.S. at
791).
Project Veritas also argues the statute is content based
because it “establishes a general ban on speech, but
maintains exceptions for speech on certain subjects.” See
Glendale Assocs., Ltd. v. NLRB, 347 F.3d 1145, 1155–56
(9th Cir. 2003). These “certain subjects” are embodied,
according to Project Veritas, in the felony exception, Or.
Rev. Stat. § 165.540(5)(a), and law enforcement exception,
Or. Rev. Stat. § 165.540(5)(b).
We start with the felony exception, which applies when
a conversation is recorded “during a felony that endangers
human life.” § 165.540(5)(a). This exception does not
address the content of the audio recording. The plain
language of the statute dictates that its application turns on
when a recorded conversation occurs, and not the subject
matter of that conversation. The conversation need not relate
to the felony; indeed, it could encompass any content
whatsoever. See also State v. Copeland, 522 P.3d 909, 913
(Or. Ct. App. 2022) (“It makes no difference that the victim
also recorded a conversation that did not constitute a
felony.”). All that matters is whether a recording occurs
“during a felony that endangers human life.”
§ 165.540(5)(a).
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 33
We reach the same conclusion when considering the law
enforcement exception. This exception applies to recordings
of conversations “in which a law enforcement officer is a
participant,” provided certain other conditions are
satisfied. 12 § 165.540(5)(b). Like the felony exception, this
exception is not content based within the meaning of
controlling First Amendment precedent. Instead, as with
City of Austin’s sign code ordinance, the law enforcement
exception is “agnostic as to [the] content” of a recording.
596 U.S. at 69. It does not concern a “particular
viewpoint[]” or prohibit discussion of “an entire topic.”
Reed, 576 U.S. at 169 (quoting Consol. Edison, 447 U.S. at
530, 537). 13
The exception in section 165.540(5)(b) applies to
conversations that involve law enforcement officers,
regardless of what the conversation is about. Put another
12
As noted, the recording must: (1) be “made while the officer is
performing official duties”; (2) be “made openly and in plain view of the
participants in the conversation”; (3) capture a conversation that is
“audible to the person by normal unaided hearing”; and (4) be made from
“a place where the person lawfully may be.” § 165.540(5)(b).
13
In Consolidated Edison, the New York public utilities commission’s
decision to prohibit all utilities from using power bill inserts to discuss
political matters, “including the desirability of future development of
nuclear power,” was deemed content based because it removed an “entire
topic” from public discussion, even though it did “not favor either side
of a political controversy.” Id. at 532, 537; see also Simon & Schuster,
502 U.S. at 117. In contrast, the requirement in section 165.540(5)(b)
that a law enforcement officer be involved in the conversation does not
regulate a “topic” because the statute is unconcerned with the content of
the conversation in which an officer participates. Cf. Turner, 512 U.S.
at 643–45 (noting that although must-carry rules favored certain speakers
in the television market, they did so without regard to the messages
carried).
34 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
way, it draws a line based on the circumstances in which a
recording is made, not on the content of the conversation
recorded. See Porter, 68 F.4th at 441–43 (concluding that a
vehicle regulation prohibiting honking except when
reasonably necessary to ensure safe vehicle operation
permissibly drew a line that was not content based). Like
the permissible solicitation prohibition in Heffron, Oregon’s
exception allowing audio recordings of police officers in
public “applies evenhandedly” to any recording of an oral
communication involving a law enforcement officer (that
otherwise meets the requirements of the exception),
regardless of the subject matter of the conversation. 452
U.S. at 649; see also Hill, 530 U.S. at 722–23 (finding
content neutral a regulation that established a restriction on
a “broad category of communications,” but did not draw
distinctions based on the subject matter of messages). It
does “not inherently present ‘the potential for becoming a
means of suppressing a particular point of view.’” City of
Austin, 596 U.S. at 72 (quoting Heffron, 452 U.S. at 649). 14
14
There is another reason Project Veritas cannot rely on the law
enforcement exception to frame the conversational privacy statute as
content based. As Oregon points out, the law enforcement exception
only applies to recordings “made openly and in plain view of the
participants in the conversation,” when participants would have notice
of the recording anyway. § 165.540(5)(b)(B). Oregon agrees that the
statutory scheme generally permits the open recordings in which Project
Veritas seeks to engage. See Or. Rev. Stat. § 165.540(6)(a); see also
McCullen, 573 U.S. at 485 n.4 (noting that a plaintiff raising an as-
applied challenge must show that the law has been, or is sufficiently
likely to be, unconstitutionally applied to him). Thus, as applied to
Project Veritas, the relevant distinction is not between recordings that
involve law enforcement officers and recordings that do not, but between
secret and open recordings. This is a content-neutral distinction.
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 35
Having concluded that the felony exception and the law
enforcement exception are not facially content based, we
also reject any suggestion that these exceptions “cannot be
‘justified without reference to the content of the regulated
speech,’” or that they were “adopted by the government
‘because of disagreement with the message [the speech]
conveys.’” Reed, 576 U.S. at 164 (alteration in original)
(internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Ward, 491 U.S.
at 791). We see no indication that Oregon sought to
“proscrib[e] speech . . . because of disapproval of the ideas
expressed,” or that it legislated “based on hostility—or
favoritism—towards the underlying message expressed.”
R.A.V., 505 U.S. at 382, 386. Project Veritas does not argue
otherwise.
We conclude that Oregon’s conversational privacy
statute “confer[s] benefits or impose[s] burdens on speech
without reference to the ideas or views expressed.” Turner,
512 U.S. at 643. Both with and without its exceptions, the
statute is content neutral. See id.
E
To survive intermediate scrutiny, a content-neutral
regulation of speech must be “narrowly tailored to serve a
significant governmental interest, and . . . leave open ample
alternative channels for communication of the information.”
Ward, 491 U.S. at 791 (quoting Clark, 468 U.S. at 293). We
conclude that Oregon’s statute satisfies intermediate
scrutiny.
1
Oregon argues that it has an important interest in
ensuring that its residents know when their conversations are
36 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
being recorded. We easily conclude this is a significant
governmental interest.
The Supreme Court has expressly acknowledged that
“[p]rivacy of communication is an important interest.”
Bartnicki v. Vopper, 532 U.S. 514, 532 (2001); see also id.
at 518 (describing “fostering private speech” as an interest
“of the highest order”). It is also well recognized that
protecting this interest “encourage[s] the uninhibited
exchange of ideas and information among private parties,”
and that “the fear of public disclosure of private
conversations might well have a chilling effect on private
speech.” Id. at 532–33 (citation omitted); see also Alvarez,
679 F.3d at 605 (concluding that conversational privacy “is
easily an important governmental interest”).
Project Veritas does not dispute this point as a general
matter, but it insists that Oregon’s interest in conversational
privacy is effectively limited to preventing eavesdropping—
i.e., the situation where one, without consent, intercepts
communications to which it is not a party, Or. Rev. Stat.
§ 165.543(1). According to Project Veritas, if an undercover
reporter surreptitiously recording a conversation is a
participant in that conversation, the other parties to the
conversation have only a minimal privacy interest in not
being recorded. To support this assertion, Project Veritas
relies on the proposition that the secret recording of one’s
speech imposes no greater burden on privacy than having
one’s speech heard.
We cannot so easily discard Oregon’s interest in
conversational privacy. Where one “impart[s] information
to strangers, one inevitably risks its secondhand repetition,”
but “there is ‘a substantial distinction between the
secondhand repetition of the contents of a conversation and
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 37
its simultaneous dissemination to an unannounced second
auditor, whether that auditor be a person or a mechanical
device.’” Med. Lab’y Mgmt. Consultants v. Am. Broad.
Cos., 306 F.3d 806, 815 (9th Cir. 2002) (alteration omitted)
(quoting Sanders v. Am. Broad. Cos., 978 P.2d 67, 72 (Cal.
1999)). In a world where one knows that any conversation
can be secretly recorded at any time, and subsequently
disseminated, it is easy to imagine that there might be a
deleterious effect on the “uninhibited exchange of ideas,”
and a pervasive “chilling effect on private speech.”
Bartnicki, 532 U.S. at 532–33 (citation omitted). 15 As
Justice Harlan noted over half a century ago, “[a]uthority is
hardly required to support the proposition that words would
be measured a good deal more carefully and communication
inhibited if one suspected his conversations were being
transmitted and transcribed.” United States v. White, 401
U.S. 745, 787 (1971) (Harlan, J., dissenting). If all that is
heard may be recorded, such a regime “might well smother
that spontaneity—reflected in frivolous, impetuous,
sacrilegious, and defiant discourse—that liberates daily
life.” Id. Oregon professes an interest in avoiding such a
world, and the Supreme Court has identified it as an
important one. See Bartnicki, 532 U.S. at 532–33.
Acknowledging this distinction between being recorded
and merely being heard, other courts have endorsed—in the
context of privacy torts—an expectation of limited privacy
whereby “a person may reasonably expect privacy against
15
See also Margot E. Kaminski & Shane Witnov, The Conforming
Effect: First Amendment Implications of Surveillance, Beyond Chilling
Speech, 49 U. Rich. L. Rev. 465, 484 (2014) (“[P]rivacy may be
important for the development of new ideas, for challenges to the status
quo, for change, and for a vigorous democracy.”); M. Ryan Calo, The
Boundaries of Privacy Harm, 86 Ind. L. Rev. 1131, 1159 (2011).
38 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
the electronic recording of a communication, even though he
or she had no reasonable expectation as to the confidentiality
of the communication’s contents.” Sanders, 978 P.2d at 72
(concluding that although an individual’s voice may be
audible to some group of people, the individual may
nevertheless reasonably expect his voice to remain secluded
from the public at large). 16 These courts have reasoned that
privacy “is not a binary, all-or-nothing characteristic,” such
that the utterance of a statement to one party precludes any
expectation of privacy in that statement; rather, “[t]here are
degrees and nuances to societal recognition of our
expectations of privacy.” Id.
Contrary to Project Veritas’s position, our precedent has
long discerned a distinction between merely being heard and
being recorded. In our seminal case of Dietemann v. Time,
Inc., where reporters for Life Magazine secretly recorded the
plaintiff who practiced quack medicine in his home without
a license, we considered the plaintiff’s privacy interest in not
being secretly recorded. 449 F.2d 245, 249 (9th Cir. 1971)
(recognizing the viability of a privacy tort under California
law and that the First Amendment “is not a license . . . to
intrude by electronic means into the precincts of another’s
home or office”). We concluded that although “[o]ne who
invites another to his home or office takes a risk that the
visitor may not be what he seems, and that the visitor may
repeat all he hears and observes when he leaves,” one “does
not and should not be required to take the risk that what is
heard and seen will be transmitted by photograph or
16
See also, e.g., Jensen v. Sawyers, 130 P.3d 325, 340–41 (Utah 2005);
In re Marriage of Tigges, 758 N.W.2d 824, 828 (Iowa 2008); Huskey v.
Nat’l Broad. Co., 632 F. Supp. 1282, 1288–89 (N.D. Ill. 1986); but see
Med. Lab’y Mgmt. Consultants, 306 F.3d at 815 (concluding that
Arizona law would not recognize such a right).
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 39
recording . . . to the public at large.” Id.; see also Theofel v.
Farey-Jones, 359 F.3d 1066, 1073 (9th Cir. 2004). A
contrary rule, we reasoned, “could have a most pernicious
effect upon the dignity of man and it would surely lead to
guarded conversations and conduct where candor is most
valued.” Dietemann, 449 F.2d at 249.
We have no hesitation in concluding that secretly
recording a conversation presents privacy concerns that are
different in kind, and more corrosive, than merely having
one’s oral communications heard and repeated. Recordings
are uniquely reliable and powerful methods of preserving
and disseminating information, but they are also uniquely
reliable and powerful methods of invading privacy.
Recordings may be made easily, stored indefinitely,
disseminated widely, and played repeatedly. Recordings
also may be selectively edited, presented without context,
manipulated, and shared across the internet. Because an
audio recording device reliably captures the sound that it
detects, its usage may also create the illusion of objectivity,
even where the recording omits critical context due to
selective editing or recording. 17 Thus, the transmission of
an accurate recording may nevertheless obscure historical
truth. 18
17
See Nancy D. Zeronda, Street Shootings: Covert Photography and
Public Privacy, 63 Vand. L. Rev. 1131, 1137 (2010).
18
See also Jeffrey Rosen, The Unwanted Gaze: The Destruction of
Privacy in America, 8 (2000) (“Privacy protects us from being
misdefined and judged out of context in a world of short attention spans,
a world in which information can easily be confused with knowledge.”);
Richard A. Epstein, Privacy, Publication, and the First Amendment: The
Dangers of First Amendment Exceptionalism, 52 Stan. L. Rev. 1003,
1031 (2000) (“[T]he question of truth is not simply a matter of whether
certain isolated statements are true. The question is whether the truth
40 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
Moreover, with the rise of accessible artificial
intelligence technologies, anyone can use secret recordings
to create convincing audio “deepfakes” in which people
appear to say things that they never actually said. 19 With this
technology, “the only practical constraint on one’s ability to
produce a deepfake [is] access to training materials—that is,
audio and video of the person to be modeled.” 20
Oregon’s interest in conversational privacy also extends
to ensuring that its residents retain control of their own
speech. A party’s “secret monitoring denies the speaker an
important aspect of privacy of communication—the right to
control the nature and extent of the firsthand dissemination
of his statements.” Sanders, 978 P.2d at 72 (citation
omitted). A secret recording may enable a party to
disseminate another’s oral comments in a way the speaker
did not intend. Appropriating another’s speech implicates
what the Supreme Court has described as the “principle of
autonomy to control one’s own speech.” See Hurley v. Irish-
Am. Gay, Lesbian & Bisexual Grp. of Bos., 515 U.S. 557,
574 (1995). “The First Amendment securely protects the
freedom to make—or decline to make—one’s own speech,”
and “it bears less heavily when speakers assert the right to
make other people’s speeches.” Eldred v. Ashcroft, 537 U.S.
186, 221 (2003) (emphasis added) (rejecting a First
counts as a fair and accurate abridgment of the entire record.”); Daniel J.
Solove, The Virtues of Knowing Less: Justifying Privacy Protections
Against Disclosure, 53 Duke L.J. 967, 1038–39 (2003).
19
Robert Chesney & Danielle Citron, Deepfakes and the New
Disinformation War, Foreign Affs. (Dec. 11, 2018),
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/world/2018-12-11/deepfakes-
and-new-disinformation-war.
20
Id.
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 41
Amendment challenge to the Copyright Term Extension
Act); see also Wooley v. Maynard, 430 U.S. 705, 714 (1977)
(recognizing the “right to speak freely and the right to refrain
from speaking at all”). Oregon’s statute “directly enhance[s]
private speech” by allowing individuals to choose not to
speak, and thereby protects the “freedom not to speak
publicly.” Bartnicki, 532 U.S. at 537 (Breyer, J., concurring)
(quoting Harper & Row Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enters.,
471 U.S. 539, 559 (1985)).
Project Veritas asserts that most—but not all—of its
secret recordings will be made in public places such as cafes
and parks. But Oregon’s significant interest in protecting
private conversations includes private conversations that
occur in public or semi-public locations. There is little doubt
that “private talk in public places is common.” Alvarez, 679
F.3d at 606 (citation omitted). “Even in public spaces,
people do not expect that their sometimes-sensitive
discussions with friends and family members will be
available for anyone who wants to record them.” 21 Thus,
even if a conversation may be overheard in public, Oregon
maintains an interest in preventing its recording. Cf. Katz v.
United States, 389 U.S. 347, 351 (1967) (“But what he seeks
to preserve as private, even in an area accessible to the
public, may be constitutionally protected.”); Carpenter v.
United States, 585 U.S. 296, 310 (2018) (“A person does not
surrender all Fourth Amendment protection by venturing
into the public sphere.”).
Oregon’s brief on appeal identifies numerous examples
of events that it contends are open to and attended by
members of the public, but are still associated with an
21
Marc Jonathan Blitz et al., Regulating Drones Under the First and
Fourteenth Amendments, 57 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 49, 94 (2015).
42 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
expectation that attendees will not make secret recordings,
such as twelve-step groups, bible study, and religious
services. We agree. For these, and the other reasons
identified, we conclude that Oregon has a significant interest
in protecting conversational privacy.
2
The next step is deciding whether Oregon’s statute is
narrowly tailored to its significant interest. We conclude that
the statute is sufficiently narrow.
A regulation “need not be the least speech-restrictive
means of advancing” a governmental interest. Turner, 512
U.S. at 662; see also Ward, 491 U.S. at 798. To further its
interest in preserving conversational privacy, Oregon
adopted a relatively modest notice requirement. Absent an
applicable exception, Project Veritas must inform
participants in a conversation that they will be recorded
before initiating a recording. See Or. Rev. Stat.
§ 165.540(1)(c). Keeping the purpose of the statute in mind,
section 165.540(1)(c) is exceptionally well tailored to
protecting Oregonians’ private conversations. By requiring
that participants in a conversation be informed before an
audio recording begins, but not requiring that they consent
to the recording, the statute minimizes the infringement upon
Project Veritas’s journalistic efforts while still protecting the
interviewees’ right to knowingly participate in Project
Veritas’s speech—or not. Once a person is on notice that
she will be recorded, she may choose to speak or remain
silent. Either way, a noticed recording does not violate a
privacy interest. Moreover, consistent with Oregon’s
interest in conversational privacy, the statute does not sweep
in photography or video recordings; it applies only to
recordings of face-to-face oral communications.
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 43
Oregon’s statutory scheme is well tailored because it also
accounts for some settings in which people cannot
reasonably expect not to have their oral statements recorded.
The Oregon legislature crafted several exceptions to account
for those situations:
The prohibitions in subsection (1)(c) of this
section do not apply to persons who intercept
or attempt to intercept oral communications
that are part of any of the following
proceedings, if the person uses an
unconcealed recording device . . . :
(A) Public or semipublic meetings
such as hearings before governmental or
quasi-governmental bodies, trials, press
conferences, public speeches, rallies and
sporting or other events;
(B) Regularly scheduled classes
or similar educational activities in public
or private institutions; or
(C) Private meetings or
conferences if all others involved knew or
reasonably should have known that the
recording was being made.
Or. Rev. Stat. § 165.540(6)(a). These exceptions permit
open recordings at public gatherings, including protests, and
private meetings in which participants should reasonably
expect that they will be recorded.
Project Veritas and the dissent argue that these carveouts
do not render section 165.540(1)(c) perfectly tailored to
Oregon’s stated purpose because the law prohibits recording
44 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
in some situations where participants lack any expectation
that their conversation would not be recorded—for example,
a loud argument on the street, a political provocateur on a
crowded subway, or a drunk, hate-filled conversation in a
parking lot. 22 We are not persuaded. The limited question
before us is whether Oregon’s conversational privacy statute
is sufficiently tailored as a constitutional matter; it is not
whether we can conceive of applications of the statute that
may appear objectionable if viewed in isolation. Even if
fringe examples constitute “conversations” within the
meaning of section 165.540(1)(c) and Oregon’s notice
requirement is overbroad as applied to them, that does not
demonstrate that a “substantial portion of the burden on
speech does not serve to advance [Oregon’s] goals.” Ward,
491 U.S. at 799. Moreover, Project Veritas’s resort to these
niche examples reinforces the conclusion that the bulk of
Oregon’s protection against secret audio recording is
targeted at achieving Oregon’s significant interest. 23 Where,
22
Although we consider Project Veritas’s as-applied challenge, the
regulation “need not be judged solely by reference to the [conduct] at
hand.” Clark, 468 U.S. at 296–97; see also Ward, 491 U.S. at 801
(noting that the validity of a regulation “depends on the relation it bears
to the overall problem the government seeks to correct, not on the extent
to which it furthers the government’s interests in an individual case”).
23
The dissent erroneously posits that we assume Oregon’s
conversational privacy statute does not apply to any scenarios involving
“open recordings.” We do not. Rather, we have interpreted the
exception embodied in section 165.540(6)(a) to encompass certain open
recording activities in which Project Veritas seeks to engage. See supra
note 5. The Oregon Court of Appeals’s decision in State v. Bichsel, 790
P.2d 1142 (Or. Ct. App. 1990), cited by the dissent, is not to the contrary.
There, decades before Oregon adopted the law enforcement exception,
the court ruled that a police officer’s investigatory stop of the defendant
in an alley was not a “meeting” within the meaning of section
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 45
as here, a governmental interest “would be achieved less
effectively absent the regulation” and the regulation
achieves its aim “without . . . significantly restricting a
substantial quantity of speech that does not create the same
evils,” the regulation is sufficiently narrowly tailored. Id. at
799 & n.7 (citation omitted); see also Galvin v. Hay, 374
F.3d 739, 753 (9th Cir. 2004).
3
We are also persuaded that section 165.540(1)(c) leaves
open ample alternative channels of communication for
Project Veritas to engage in investigative journalism and to
communicate its message.
It is well established that an alternative channel need not
be ideal, but merely adequate. See Heffron, 452 U.S. at 654–
55. “[T]he First Amendment does not guarantee the right to
communicate one’s views at all times and places or in any
manner that may be desired.” Id. at 647. The Supreme Court
“generally will not strike down a governmental action for
failure to leave open ample alternative channels . . . unless
the government enactment will foreclose an entire medium
of public expression across the landscape of a particular
community or setting.” Menotti v. City of Seattle, 409 F.3d
1113, 1138 (9th Cir. 2005) (citation omitted).
A restriction runs afoul of the “alternative channels”
requirement if it eliminates the only method of
communication by which speakers can convey their message
to a particular audience. See, e.g., Bay Area Peace Navy v.
United States, 914 F.2d 1224, 1229–30 (9th Cir. 1990). But
a regulation does not fail intermediate scrutiny merely
165.540(6)(a) because it was a “mere encounter[].” Id. at 1143, 1144
n.3. Nothing in our opinion conflicts with Bichsel.
46 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
because the other available channels of communication
would convey the same message somewhat less
conveniently or effectively. See, e.g., Santa Monica Nativity
Scenes Comm. v. City of Santa Monica, 784 F.3d 1286,
1298–99 (9th Cir. 2015); One World One Fam. Now v. City
& County of Honolulu, 76 F.3d 1009, 1014 (9th Cir. 1996).
An alternative channel is adequate if it “permits the more
general dissemination of a message.” Frisby v. Schultz, 487
U.S. 474, 483 (1988).
We reject Project Veritas’s argument that it will be
unable to engage in investigative journalism to communicate
its message “across the landscape of a particular community
or setting,” Menotti, 409 F.3d at 1138 (citation omitted), or
to reach a particular audience, if it cannot secretly record
face-to-face conversations. Project Veritas retains numerous
alternative channels to engage in its journalistic speech
activities. It may employ all the traditional tools of
investigative reporting, including talking with sources,
reviewing records, taking photographs, recording videos
openly during public and semi-public meetings and events,
recording videos that do not capture oral conversations,
recording conversations after announcing it is doing so, and
making use of Oregon’s freedom-of-information laws. See,
e.g., Or. Rev. Stat. §§ 165.540(6)(a)(A), 192.311–.431,
192.610–.695.
Project Veritas may have its reporters go undercover and
report on what they have seen and heard—without secretly
recording its targets—as journalists have done for centuries.
Powerful exposés authored by people like Nellie Bly,24
24
Diane Bernard, She went undercover to expose an insane asylum’s
horrors. Now Nellie Bly is getting her due, Wash. Post (July 18, 2019),
https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2019/07/28/she-went-
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 47
Gloria Steinem, 25 and John Howard Griffin 26 clearly
demonstrate what our court has long recognized: “hidden
mechanical contrivances” are not “‘indispensable tools’ of
newsgathering.” Dietemann, 449 F.2d at 249 (rejecting the
argument that the First Amendment accorded journalists
immunity from invasion of privacy torts). These many
approaches to traditional investigative reporting remain
available to Project Veritas and they satisfy the alternative-
channels requirement.
F
Even if we agreed with Project Veritas that the statutory
exceptions it challenges are content based, the proper next
step would be to consider whether the exceptions may be
severed rather than striking down the entirety of Oregon’s
conversational privacy statute, as Project Veritas urges us to
do. 27
undercover-expose-an-insane-asylums-horrors-now-nellie-bly-is-
getting-her-due/.
25
Rachel Chang, Inside Gloria Steinem’s Month as an Undercover
Playboy Bunny, Biography.com (Mar. 23, 2020),
https://www.biography.com/authors-writers/gloria-steinem-undercover-
playboy-bunny.
26
Bruce Watson, Black Like Me, 50 Years Later, Smithsonian Mag. (Oct.
2011), https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/black-like-me-
50-years-later-74543463/.
27
If the exceptions were content based, strict scrutiny would apply.
Turner, 512 U.S. at 641–42. Under strict scrutiny, a regulation is
constitutional only if it “is necessary to serve a compelling state interest”
and “is narrowly drawn to achieve that end.” Perry Educ. Ass’n v. Perry
Local Educators Ass’n, 460 U.S. 37, 45 (1983). Oregon concedes that it
cannot satisfy strict scrutiny.
48 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
The severability of a state statute is a matter of state law.
Leavitt v. Jane L., 518 U.S. 137, 139 (1996) (per curiam).
Under Oregon law, “when one part of a statute is found
unconstitutional,” the court should “sever the offending part
and save the remainder of the statute, [1] unless the
legislature has directed otherwise, [2] unless the parts of the
statute are so interconnected that it appears likely that the
remaining parts would not have been enacted without the
unconstitutional part, or [3] unless the remaining parts are
incomplete and cannot be executed in accordance with
legislative intent.” Outdoor Media Dimensions, Inc. v. Dep’t
of Transp., 132 P.3d 5, 18 (Or. 2006) (applying Or. Rev.
Stat. § 174.040). 28 The “legislative preference for severing
the offending language and saving the remainder of the
statute is conditioned only upon [these] three
circumstances.” City Univ. v. State, 885 P.2d 701, 704 (Or.
1994).
None of Oregon’s three severability exceptions apply
here. The first circumstance identified in Outdoor Media is
plainly inapplicable because Oregon’s legislature has not
issued any specific direction negating its preference for
severability. See § 165.540. As for the second and third
Outdoor Media circumstances, there can be no question that
the felony exception and the law enforcement exception are
not so intertwined with the freestanding conversational
privacy statute that it could not survive on its own. In fact,
it did exist on its own for decades. Oregon established its
conversational privacy statute in 1959 and did not enact the
28
This is consistent with the Supreme Court’s longstanding recognition
of a “strong presumption of severability.” Barr v. Am. Ass’n of Pol.
Consultants, Inc., 591 U.S. 610, 625 (2020); see also Ayotte v. Planned
Parenthood of N. New Eng., 546 U.S. 320, 328–31 (2006).
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 49
felony exception and law enforcement exception until 1989
and 2015, respectively. Oregon’s general protection against
unannounced recordings was operational for thirty years
before the modern-day amendments were added to address
police officers’ concealed recording devices and over fifty
years before a consensus emerged in federal caselaw that the
First Amendment protects the right to film police officers in
public. See, e.g., Askins, 899 F.3d at 1044.
The dissent recognizes that we apply Oregon law to
determine severability, cites the correct test from Outdoor
Media, and then fails to apply it. Instead, the dissent insists
that it is “impossible to sever” the law enforcement
exception because, without that exception, the
conversational privacy statute would fail to account for the
First Amendment right to photograph and record matters of
public interest. Our dissenting colleagues’ unstated
assumption is that the conversional privacy statute is “so
essentially and inseparably connected with and dependent
upon the [law enforcement exception] that it is apparent that
[it] would not have been enacted without [that exception].”
§ 174.040(2). But there is no hint that the Oregon legislature
would have considered the law enforcement exception so
essential that it would have opted to repeal its conversational
privacy statute—which existed for over half a century and
for several decades after courts began to recognize a right to
record matters of public interest, see Fordyce, 55 F.3d at
439—rather than be without the exception. Moreover, the
dissent’s view would place Oregon in an insoluble dilemma:
If a legislature carves out an exception to accommodate
speech that is protected by the First Amendment, as Oregon
did here, the dissent would strike down the entire law as
unconstitutional; and if a legislature enacts a freestanding
prohibition on unannounced recordings, the dissent would
50 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
deem the law unconstitutional for failing to recognize First
Amendment rights.
Even if the exceptions to section 165.540(1)(c) did not
survive scrutiny, the appropriate next step would be to sever
them, leaving in place the general prohibition on concealed
recordings in the applications of section 165.540(1)(c)
challenged by Project Veritas. 29 See, e.g., State ex rel. Musa
v. Minear, 401 P.2d 36, 39 (Or. 1965) (concluding that an
amended statute was invalid and reverting it to its pre-
amendment form).
G
Having concluded that section 165.540(1)(c)—with and
without its exceptions—survives intermediate scrutiny as
applied to Project Veritas, we next consider Project Veritas’s
separate facial overbreadth challenge. In its complaint,
Project Veritas seeks a declaration that the statute is
29
Because “a ruling of unconstitutionality frustrates the intent of the
elected representatives of the people” and thereby undermines a state’s
sovereign interests, federal courts should be exceptionally cautious
before striking down a state statute as unconstitutional. Ayotte, 546 U.S.
at 329 (alteration accepted) (citation omitted). Accordingly, “the normal
rule” is that “partial, rather than facial, invalidation is the required
course.” Brockett v. Spokane Arcades, Inc., 472 U.S. 491, 504 (1985).
Project Veritas contends that Oregon did not brief severability in the
district court and relies on our prior decision in Comite de Jornaleros de
Redondo Beach v. City of Redondo Beach, 657 F.3d 936, 951 n.10 (9th
Cir. 2011) (en banc), to argue that we may not reach it. Even if some
part of Oregon’s conversational privacy statute were constitutionally
infirm, we doubt this would be the proper course. Indeed, the Supreme
Court has previously faulted our court for failing to consider severability
before invalidating an entire state statute. See Brockett, 472 U.S. at 507;
see also Ayotte, 546 U.S. at 328–31; New York v. United States, 505 U.S.
144, 186 (1992). Because we conclude that no portion of section
165.540(1)(c) is unconstitutional, we need not resolve this issue here.
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 51
unconstitutionally overbroad on its face. Because Project
Veritas pursues relief that “reach[es] beyond [its] particular
circumstances,” Doe, 561 U.S. at 194, Project Veritas must
satisfy the requirements for a facial challenge.
In most cases, “a plaintiff cannot succeed on a facial
challenge unless he ‘establish[es] that no set of
circumstances exists under which the [law] would be valid,’
or he shows that the law lacks a ‘plainly legitimate sweep.’”
Moody, 603 U.S. at 723 (alterations in original) (citations
omitted). Project Veritas acknowledges that it cannot carry
this burden, conceding that the statute may permissibly
apply where someone secretly records a private
conversation. For instance, in Project Veritas’s view,
section 165.540(1)(c) may legitimately apply to recording “a
hushed conversation in a secluded hallway, the musings of a
friend whispering his life’s woes to another friend, in
confidence, in a secluded office, or colleagues discussing
confidential medical options in a hospital visitation room.”
In our First Amendment analysis, we employ a more
lenient though still rigorous standard for facial overbreadth
challenges, where “[t]he question is whether ‘a substantial
number of [the law’s] applications are unconstitutional
judged in relation to the statute’s plainly legitimate sweep.’”
Moody, 603 U.S. at 723 (alterations in original) (citation
omitted). In other words, “the law’s unconstitutional
applications” must “substantially outweigh its constitutional
ones.” Id. at 724. “[I]nvalidation for overbreadth is strong
medicine that is not to be casually employed.” United States
v. Hansen, 599 U.S. 762, 770 (2023) (internal quotation
marks and citation omitted). “In the absence of a lopsided
ratio, courts must handle unconstitutional applications as
they usually do—case-by-case.” Id. The party asserting
substantial overbreadth bears the burden of establishing it.
52 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
Virginia v. Hicks, 539 U.S. 113, 122 (2003); see also
Hansen, 599 U.S. at 784.
“The first step in the proper facial analysis is to assess
the state laws’ scope.” Moody, 603 U.S. at 724; see also
Hansen, 599 U.S. at 770. This step is relatively
straightforward here. As we have explained, absent the
application of an exception, section 165.540(1)(c) requires
one to specifically inform participants in a conversation that
they are being recorded.
“The next order of business is to decide which of the
laws’ applications violate the First Amendment, and to
measure them against the rest.” Moody, 603 U.S. at 725. To
meet its burden, Project Veritas relies on applications of the
statute to its own speech. Throughout its complaint and
briefing, Project Veritas’s arguments about the
constitutionality of section 165.540(1)(c) focus on
conversations in which its reporters will be participants, or
oral communications of others that Project Veritas reporters
will hear. We do not confine our facial overbreadth analysis
to the “heartland applications” alleged by the parties;
instead, we must “address the full range of activities” that
the statute covers. Id at 724–26. Even putting aside that we
have already concluded the statute is constitutional as
applied to Project Veritas, these applications represent only
a sliver of the conversations to which section 165.540(1)(c)
may apply. Project Veritas fails to meet its burden because
it makes little effort to identify and weigh the conversational
privacy statute’s lawful and unlawful applications, and the
conversations it wishes to record are plainly a tiny fraction
of the whole.
Project Veritas makes passing references to other
applications it contends are unconstitutional—e.g.,
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 53
recording a loud argument on the street or a political
provocateur on a subway. The dissent does the same,
imagining a public official berating a Chipotle employee or
uttering a racial slur on a sidewalk. But even assuming that
these examples qualify as face-to-face conversations within
the meaning of section 165.540(1)(c) and that the statute is
unconstitutional as applied to them, “the ratio of unlawful-
to-lawful applications is not lopsided enough to justify the
‘strong medicine’ of facial invalidation for overbreadth.”
Hansen, 599 U.S. at 784 (citation omitted); see also Moody,
603 U.S. at 723. We therefore reject Project Veritas’s facial
overbreadth challenge and affirm the district court’s
judgment.
AFFIRMED.
BENNETT, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
In 2018, when evaluating the creation of audiovisual
recordings, we declared that “the recording process is itself
expressive,” meaning that “the creation of audiovisual
recordings is speech entitled to First Amendment protection
as purely expressive activity.” Animal Legal Def. Fund v.
Wasden, 878 F.3d 1184, 1204 (9th Cir. 2018). The breadth
of that statement is rooted neither in the history of the Free
Speech Clause of the First Amendment nor in any decisions
from the Supreme Court. The practical implications of our
untethered statement in Wasden are easily seen here. Using
Wasden as a jumping-off point, Project Veritas 1 contends
that the First Amendment categorically protects purely
mechanical activity: pressing an audio record button either
1
I refer to Plaintiffs-Appellants as “Project Veritas.”
54 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
in secret or without announcement to record all
conversations.
The majority holds that “Wasden did not conclude that
every act of recording requires expressive decisions, nor that
every act of recording implicates the First Amendment.”
Maj. at 23. But it stops short of holding that the act of
pressing an audio record button either secretly or without
announcing to record all conversations is not per se “speech”
protected by the First Amendment. For this reason, I write
separately. Because there is no historical or precedential
foundation to support that simply pressing record in secret
or without announcement is always protected speech, I
would hold that such an act is not per se “speech” protected
by the First Amendment. With that understanding, Project
Veritas’s facial challenge fails. 2
I.
Project Veritas brings a facial challenge to Oregon
Revised Statutes § 165.540, which, with some exceptions, 3
prohibits “[o]btain[ing] or attempt[ing] to obtain the whole
or any part of a conversation[ 4] by means of any device,
2
As the majority notes, Project Veritas also brings an as-applied
challenge. Maj. at 12. I concur in the majority’s holding that such
challenge is ripe. Maj. at 13. I also concur in the majority’s judgment
that the as-applied challenge fails for the reasons explained in the
majority’s opinion. Maj. at 24–50.
3
There are several exceptions, including for recording a conversation
during a felony that endangers human life and for recording
conversations with police officers performing their official duties. Or.
Rev. Stat. § 165.540(5)(a)–(b).
4
A “‘[c]onversation’ means the transmission between two or more
persons of an oral communication which is not a telecommunication or
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 55
contrivance, machine or apparatus . . . if not all participants
in the conversation are specifically informed that their
conversation is being obtained.” Or. Rev. Stat.
§ 165.540(1)(c). On its face, the provision regulates
conduct: a person pressing a record button secretly or openly
(but without announcing that he is recording) to record a
conversation. The provision applies only to audio
recordings, as it prohibits only the obtaining of
conversations. See id. § 165.535(1). While there are some
exceptions, the statute generally does not distinguish
between public and private conversations, and it generally
does not matter where the conversations occur. But the
statute still allows for audio recording, just not secret or
unannounced recording.
Project Veritas argues that § 165.540(1)(c) is facially
unconstitutional because there is a First Amendment right to
press record—secretly or openly without announcing—to
capture any conversation. A facial challenge requires us to
“determine a law’s full set of applications.” Moody v.
NetChoice, LLC, 144 S. Ct. 2383, 2394 (2024). Section
165.540(1)(c) generally prohibits a person from using a
recording device to eavesdrop on all private conversations in
both public and private locations. 5 This includes, for
example, preventing a person from leaving a recording
device in a public place to secretly record conversations
between others. Under the statute, a person also cannot
record in secret, or record without announcement,
conversations to which he is a party, unless an exception
a radio communication, and includes a communication occurring
through a video conferencing program.” Or. Rev. Stat. § 165.535(1).
5
Project Veritas clarified at oral argument that it does not challenge the
prohibition on eavesdropping. Oral Argument at 15:55–16:04.
56 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
applies. Nor may a person openly record all conversations
between others without announcing that he is recording,
unless, again, an exception applies.
A.
“The First Amendment, applicable to the States through
the Fourteenth Amendment, prohibits the enactment of laws
‘abridging the freedom of speech.’” Reed v. Town of
Gilbert, 576 U.S. 155, 163 (2015) (quoting U.S. Const.
amend. I). The Free Speech Clause went through several
iterations before its adoption as part of the First Amendment.
The initial version of the Free Speech Clause as drafted by
James Madison was much more specific: “The people shall
not be deprived or abridged of their right to speak, to write,
or to publish their sentiments; and the freedom of the press,
as one of the great bulwarks of liberty, shall be inviolable.”
1 Annals of Cong. 451 (1789) (Joseph Gales ed., 1834). A
special committee of the House of Representatives rewrote
the Free Speech Clause to read: “The freedom of speech and
of the press, and the right of the people peaceably to
assemble and consult for their common good, and to apply
to the Government for redress of grievances, shall not be
infringed.” Id. at 759. The Senate then finalized the
language of the First Amendment. Cong. Rsch. Serv., The
Constitution of the United States of America: Analysis and
Interpretation 1396 (2023).
The Free Speech Clause, however, received little debate
in the House and there is no record of debate over the clause
in the Senate. Id. at 1397 & n.5. Ultimately, the Founders
elected to enumerate “simple, acknowledged principles”
because “the ratification [of specific abstract propositions
would] meet with but little difficulty.” 1 Annals of Cong.
766 (1789). The freedom of the press “was everywhere a
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 57
grand topic for declaration, but the insistent demand for its
protection on parchment was not accompanied by a reasoned
analysis of what it meant, how far it extended, and under
what circumstances it might be limited.” Leonard W. Levy,
Legacy of Suppression 214–15 (1960). The lack of
specificity in the First Amendment almost immediately led
to controversies about what was and was not permitted by
the Free Speech Clause.
One such controversy followed Congress’s passage of
the Sedition Act of 1798, which made it a crime for “any
person [to] write, print, utter or publish . . . any false,
scandalous and malicious writing or writings against the
government of the United States, or either house of the
Congress . . . , or the President . . . , with intent to defame . . .
or to bring them . . . into contempt.” Ch. 74, 1 Stat. 596.
Even the Founders were divided on whether the law was
constitutional under the First Amendment, with Thomas
Jefferson condemning the Act and President John Adams
using it to prosecute his political opponents. Erwin
Chemerinsky, Constitutional Law: Principles and Policies
1006 (7th ed. 2023). The Sedition Act expired in 1801
before its constitutionality could be challenged in the
Supreme Court, 6 but the fact that even the drafters of the
Constitution debated the bounds of the Free Speech Clause
shows that the “simple, acknowledged principles”
underlying the Clause are not so easily put into practice.
The Supreme Court has made clear that it “reject[s] the
view that freedom of speech . . . , as protected by the First
6
In New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964), the Supreme
Court noted that “[a]lthough the Sedition Act was never tested in this
Court, the attack upon its validity has carried the day in the court of
history.” Id. at 276 & n.16 (footnote omitted).
58 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
and Fourteenth Amendments, are ‘absolutes.’” Konigsberg
v. State Bar of Cal., 366 U.S. 36, 49 (1961); see Stromberg
v. California, 283 U.S. 359, 368 (1931) (“The right [of free
speech] is not an absolute one, and the State in the exercise
of its police power may punish the abuse of this freedom.”).
“Line-drawing is inevitable as to what speech will be
protected under the First Amendment . . . . Lines also must
be drawn in defining what is speech.” Chemerinsky, supra,
at 1007. That line drawing is even more difficult when, as
here, what is sought to be protected is not speech in the
traditional sense but conduct.
“It is possible to find some kernel of expression in almost
every activity a person undertakes—for example, walking
down the street or meeting one’s friends at a shopping
mall—but such a kernel is not sufficient to bring the activity
within the protection of the First Amendment.” City of
Dallas v. Stanglin, 490 U.S. 19, 25 (1989). When an
individual does not express views through printed or spoken
words it is necessary “to determine whether his activity was
sufficiently imbued with elements of communication to fall
within the scope of the First and Fourteenth Amendments.”
Spence v. Washington, 418 U.S. 405, 409 (1974) (per
curiam). The Supreme Court asks whether non-speech
conduct carries elements of communication because the
Court “cannot accept the view that an apparently limitless
variety of conduct can be labeled ‘speech’ whenever the
person engaging in the conduct intends thereby to express an
idea.” United States v. O’Brien, 391 U.S. 367, 376 (1968).
That inquiry depends on “the nature of [the individual’s]
activity, combined with the factual context and environment
in which it was undertaken.” Spence, 418 U.S. at 409–10.
For instance, conduct that has involved forms of symbolism,
such as conduct involving flags, consistently has been found
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 59
to be expressive and protected by the First Amendment. See,
e.g., Stromberg, 283 U.S. at 369–70 (striking down a law
that prohibited the display of a flag as a symbol of opposition
to organized government, because that statute “embrac[ed]
conduct which the State could not constitutionally prohibit,”
such as “permit[ting] the punishment of the fair use of [an]
opportunity” to display a sign and protest the government);
W. Va. State Bd. of Educ. v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624, 632
(1943) (invalidating a law requiring students to salute the
American flag and noting “[s]ymbolism is a primitive but
effective way of communicating ideas”).
Additionally, the context “for purposes of expression is
important, for the context may give meaning to the symbol”
or conduct. Spence, 418 U.S. at 410. The wearing of black
armbands in school could convey a clear message about an
issue of public concern, like the Vietnam War, and be subject
to First Amendment protections. Tinker v. Des Moines
Indep. Cmty. Sch. Dist., 393 U.S. 503, 514 (1969). Affixing
a peace sign to an upside-down flag “at a time of national
turmoil,” such as after the killing of students at Kent State
University, also rises to the level of expressive conduct
amounting to speech under the First Amendment. Spence,
418 U.S. at 410, 414 n.10. In both instances, there was “[a]n
intent to convey a particularized message,” and “in the
surrounding circumstances the likelihood was great that the
message would be understood by those who viewed it.” Id.
at 410–11.
The text of the First Amendment is silent on what exactly
is meant by “speech.” The history of the Free Speech Clause
offers little guidance, and the Founders themselves had
different understandings of what was prohibited by the
Clause. But in drawing the bounds of “speech,” the Supreme
Court has differentiated between conduct intended to convey
60 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
a message and expressionless conduct. 7 Pressing a record
button, whether in secret or without announcement, is purely
mechanical. That conduct conveys no message. Thus, it is
not per se “speech” under the First Amendment. 8
B.
Even when conduct relates to speech, Supreme Court
cases counsel that that conduct may not be speech protected
by the First Amendment, particularly when the regulation of
such conduct still permits the speaker to express his desired
message and there are important countervailing interests.
For example, in Zemel v. Rusk, 381 U.S. 1 (1965), the
appellant claimed that the Secretary of State’s “refusal to
validate his passport for travel to Cuba,” because of the
United States’s breaking of diplomatic ties with Cuba and
implementation of a travel ban, “denie[d] him rights
guaranteed by the First Amendment.” Id. at 16. This was
allegedly so because the travel ban “direct[ly] interfere[d]
with the First Amendment rights of citizens to travel abroad
so that they might acquaint themselves at first hand with the
effects abroad of our Government’s policies, foreign and
domestic, and with conditions abroad which might affect
such policies.” Id. Although the Court acknowledged that
7
Even for expressive conduct, the Supreme Court has clarified that
conduct is not immune from government regulation simply because it
might communicate a message. O’Brien, 391 U.S. at 376 (“We cannot
accept the view that an apparently limitless variety of conduct can be
labeled ‘speech’ whenever the person engaging in the conduct intends
thereby to express an idea.”).
8
And as explained below, even if some button pushing could amount to
protected speech, Project Veritas’s facial challenge would still fail given
that the default should be that secret and unannounced recordings are not
per se protected under the First Amendment.
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 61
the ban did burden the free flow of information, it did not
implicate the First Amendment because the ban was
ultimately “an inhibition of action.” Id. The Court observed:
There are few restrictions on action which
could not be clothed by ingenious argument
in the garb of decreased data flow. For
example, the prohibition of unauthorized
entry into the White House diminishes the
citizen’s opportunities to gather information
he might find relevant to his opinion of the
way the country is being run, but that does
not make entry into the White House a First
Amendment right. The right to speak and
publish does not carry with it the
unrestrained right to gather information.
Id. at 16–17 (emphasis added).
In Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665 (1972), the Court
relied on Zemel and held that requiring journalists to testify
before grand juries did not violate the First Amendment—
even though “news gathering may be hampered” by the
requirement. Id. at 684; see also id. at 684 n.22 (quoting
Zemel’s proposition that there must be limits on the types of
conduct protected by the First Amendment). And though the
Court acknowledged that requiring journalists to testify
would burden some of their newsgathering, the Court
nevertheless found that the requirement imposed no burden
on their protected speech:
[T]hese cases involve no intrusions upon
speech or assembly, no prior restraint or
restriction on what the press may publish, and
62 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
no express or implied command that the press
publish what it prefers to withhold. No
exaction or tax for the privilege of
publishing, and no penalty, civil or criminal,
related to the content of published material is
at issue here. The use of confidential sources
by the press is not forbidden or restricted;
reporters remain free to seek news from any
source by means within the law. No attempt
is made to require the press to publish its
sources of information or indiscriminately to
disclose them on request.
Id. at 681–82.
The Branzburg Court explained that sometimes conduct,
even when it might further speech, must be regulated to
protect important countervailing interests:
Although stealing documents or private
wiretapping could provide newsworthy
information, neither reporter nor source is
immune from conviction for such conduct,
whatever the impact on the flow of news.
Neither is immune, on First Amendment
grounds, from testifying against the other,
before the grand jury or at a criminal trial.
The Amendment does not reach so far as to
override the interest of the public in ensuring
that neither reporter nor source is invading
the rights of other citizens through
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 63
reprehensible conduct forbidden to all other
persons.
Id. at 691–92.
Branzburg reiterated Zemel’s holding that there must be
limits on the types of conduct protected by the First
Amendment. It established that the regulation of some
conduct—even when it may impact speech—simply does
not implicate the First Amendment, particularly when the
speaker is still allowed to express his desired message and
the regulation is needed to protect important countervailing
interests.
In two cases following Branzburg, the Court again
confirmed that some speech-related conducted is not
protected by the First Amendment. In Pell v. Procunier, 417
U.S. 817 (1974), journalists challenged a California
Department of Corrections regulation that “prohibit[ed]
face-to-face interviews between press representatives and
individual inmates whom they specifically name and request
to interview.” Id. at 819. Even though this regulation
“clearly restrict[ed] one manner of communication,” id. at
823, the Court held that it did not violate the First
Amendment, id. at 835. The Court focused on
considerations similar to those identified in Branzburg: there
must be limits on protected conduct under the First
Amendment, id. at 834 n.9 (quoting Zemel, 381 U.S. at 16–
17); this was the “sole limitation on newsgathering in
California prisons,” id. at 831; and the regulation was
adopted to mitigate “disciplinary problems caused, in part,
by [the department’s prior] liberal posture with regard to
press interviews,” id. at 832.
64 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
Saxbe v. Washington Post Co., 417 U.S. 843 (1974),
involved a similar regulation that “prohibited any personal
interviews between newsmen and individually designated
federal prison inmates.” Id. at 844. The Saxbe Court found
the case “constitutionally indistinguishable” from Pell and
thus held that the regulation did not violate the First
Amendment. Id. at 850.
These cases support that all secret or unannounced audio
recordings cannot be per se protected speech under the First
Amendment, even if some of those acts of secret or
unannounced recording could be indirectly linked to speech.
First, we know that, even if the act of recording might be
related to speech, the act itself does not automatically qualify
as protected speech. There must be limits. See Zemel, 381
U.S. at 16–17. We have expressed this sentiment.
Dietemann v. Time, Inc., 449 F.2d 245, 249 (9th Cir. 1971)
(“The First Amendment is not a license to trespass, to steal,
or to intrude by electronic means into the precincts of
another’s home or office.”).
Second, a prohibition on secret and unannounced audio
recording permits a speaker to use other means of
“capturing” the audio contents of a conversation. He can
still record, so long as he announces that he is doing so. And,
without any announcement, he can still write or type notes
during the conversation; he can still write or type notes
immediately after the conversation; and he can still dictate
the contents of the conversation using a recording device
after the conversation. The prohibition on secret and
unannounced audio recording also does not restrict his
ability to communicate the information that he obtained from
the conversation.
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 65
Finally, there is a strong countervailing interest protected
by the regulation of secret or unannounced audio recording:
the interest in maintaining the privacy of communication.
“Privacy of communication is an important interest,” as it
“encourage[es] the uninhibited exchange of ideas and
information among private parties.” Bartnicki v. Vopper,
532 U.S. 514, 532 (2001) (citation omitted). Indeed, “[t]here
is necessarily, and within suitably defined areas, a
concomitant freedom not to speak publicly, one which
serves the same ultimate end as freedom of speech in its
affirmative aspect.” Id. at 532 n.20 (quoting Harper & Row,
Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enters., 471 U.S. 539, 559
(1985)). The Court has acknowledged:
In a democratic society privacy of
communication is essential if citizens are to
think and act creatively and constructively.
Fear or suspicion that one’s speech is being
monitored by a stranger, even without the
reality of such activity, can have a seriously
inhibiting effect upon the willingness to
voice critical and constructive ideas.
Id. at 533 (quoting President’s Comm’n on L. Enf’t &
Admin. of Just., The Challenge of Crime in a Free Society
202 (1967)). Permitting a person to audio record in secret or
record without announcing all conversations—word for
word—would inhibit the free exchange of ideas and
information, particularly given the reality that audio
recordings can be instantly broadcast to the world using the
internet.
Given these considerations, the secret or unannounced
audio recording of all conversations is not per se protected
66 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
speech under the First Amendment. Thus, neither the text or
the history of the First Amendment, nor Supreme Court
precedent interpreting the Free Speech Clause, supports that
the act of pressing an audio record button to record all
conversations—either in secret or without announcement—
is per se speech protected by the First Amendment. Our
precedent also offers no persuasive reason to conclude
otherwise.
C.
In Wasden, we stated that “the recording process is itself
expressive” and “the creation of audiovisual recordings is
speech entitled to First Amendment protection.” 878 F.3d at
1204. In making those broad statements, we primarily relied
on Anderson v. City of Hermosa Beach, 621 F.3d 1051 (9th
Cir. 2010). See Wasden, 878 F.3d at 1203–04. But
Anderson never addressed whether all recordings—let alone
secret and unannounced audio recordings—are protected
speech.
Anderson involved tattooing. 621 F.3d at 1055. There,
we held that “the process of tattooing is purely expressive
activity” protected by the First Amendment. Id. at 1061–62.
In reaching that conclusion, we likened the process of
tattooing to “the processes of writing words down on paper,
painting a picture, and playing an instrument,” which “are
purely expressive activities entitled to full First Amendment
protection.” Id. at 1062. And we emphasized that tattoos,
which could not be divorced from the process of tattooing
itself, involves “skill, artistry, and care”—expressive
elements. Id. at 1061. Tattooing, writing, painting, and
producing music by playing an instrument all convey
messages and are thus all forms of expressive conduct. Id.
at 1062. Anderson, however, never considered whether all
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 67
audio recordings, even those lacking expressive elements
because the recorder simply pushes a button and nothing
more, are speech protected by the First Amendment. And
pushing a record button is different from the activities
Anderson identifies as expressive: unlike painting or writing,
pressing a record button requires no such “skill, artistry, and
care.” Id. at 1061. Thus, Anderson does not support
Wasden’s broad statements.
Indeed, in addressing recordings, our sister circuits have
not gone so far as holding that all recordings are protected
speech. In People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, Inc.
v. North Carolina Farm Bureau Federation, Inc., 60 F.4th
815 (4th Cir. 2023) (“PETA”), the Fourth Circuit expressly
declined to adopt the view that all recordings are protected:
Our main point of disagreement centers
around the [district] court’s belief that all
“recording is protected speech.” We do not
think it wise to go that far where the case
itself does not call for a categorical
pronouncement and where the briefing is,
understandably, agnostic on the potential
implications of such an absolute decision.
Should posting a hidden camera in a CEO’s
office—or her home—per se constitute
protected expression? How about
photographing proprietary documents to tap
into trade secrets, with no intent of creating a
work of art? Recording private telephone
conversations?
Id. at 836 (citation omitted).
68 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
The Fourth Circuit explicitly declined to follow Wasden,
questioning Wasden’s “expansive ruling.” Id. at 837 n.9
(“Nor has the Ninth Circuit been able to stress-test the outer
limits of its expansive ruling—Wasden itself concerned only
recordings of ‘the conduct of an agricultural production
facility’s operations.’” (quoting Wasden, 878 F.3d at 1204)).
Instead, the PETA court followed other circuits that had
declined to hold that all recordings are protected. Id. at 836–
37. For example, PETA explained that the Third Circuit had
“prudently declined to ‘say that all recording is protected or
desirable.’” Id. at 836 (quoting Fields v. City of
Philadelphia, 862 F.3d 353, 360 (3d Cir. 2017)). PETA also
noted that the Tenth and Seventh Circuits had taken similar
“circumscribed” approaches. Id. at 836–37 (discussing W.
Watersheds Project v. Michael, 869 F.3d 1189 (10th Cir.
2017), and ACLU of Ill. v. Alvarez, 679 F.3d 583 (7th Cir.
2012)). Even the dissenting opinion by Judge Rushing
expressed that the PETA majority had “rightly reject[ed]”
Wasden because “the mere act of recording by itself is not
categorically protected speech.” Id. at 845 (Rushing, J.,
dissenting).
In short, our precedent provides no persuasive basis for
finding that all audio recordings, including secret and
unannounced ones, are categorically protected speech. 9 No
9
The majority discusses two other cases from our court that involved
recordings. Maj. at 21. But neither held that all audio recording,
including secret and unannounced audio recording, is per se speech. See
Fordyce v. City of Seattle, 55 F.3d 436, 439 (9th Cir. 1995) (recognizing
a “First Amendment right to film matters of public interest”); Askins v.
U.S. Dep’t of Homeland Sec., 899 F.3d 1035, 1044 (9th Cir. 2018)
(recognizing that the “First Amendment protects the right to photograph
and record matters of public interest”).
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 69
other circuit has come to that conclusion. 10 Beyond Wasden,
the parties point to no cases holding that the mere act of
pushing record is categorically protected speech. And, as
discussed above, while no Supreme Court case has dealt with
secret or unannounced audio recordings, Supreme Court
cases addressing the regulation of conduct do not support
finding that all such recordings are protected speech under
the First Amendment. The majority notes that it “do[es] not
10
The majority states that “[t]he First, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh,
Eighth, Tenth, Eleventh, and D.C. Circuits have recognized that many
acts of recording qualify as speech and are entitled to First Amendment
protection,” Maj. at 21 n.8, but none of the cited cases established a
categorical rule that all audio recording, including secret and
unannounced audio recording, is speech. See Alvarez, 679 F.3d at 586
(addressing only an as-applied challenge to the open “audiovisual
recordings of police officers performing their duties in public places and
speaking at a volume audible to bystanders”); Fields, 862 F.3d at 359–
60 (declining to find that the “act of recording” is “inherently expressive
conduct” like making art, id. at 359, and explaining that “[w]e do not say
that all recording is protected or desirable,” id. at 360); PETA, 60 F.4th
at 836 (declining to hold that “all ‘recording is protected speech’”
(citation omitted)); W. Watersheds, 869 F.3d at 1197 (“This is not to say
that all regulations incidentally restricting access to information trigger
First Amendment analysis.”); Turner v. Lieutenant Driver, 848 F.3d 678,
688–90 (5th Cir. 2017) (concluding that “the First Amendment protects
the act of making film”); Glik v. Cunniffe, 655 F.3d 78, 83–84 (1st Cir.
2011) (concluding that “the First Amendment protects the filming of
government officials in public spaces,” id. at 83, but “the right to film is
not without limitations,” id. at 84); Smith v. City of Cumming, 212 F.3d
1332, 1333 (11th Cir. 2000) (concluding that the First Amendment
protects the right to visually “record matters of public interest”); Ness v.
City of Bloomington, 11 F.4th 914, 923 (8th Cir. 2021) (concluding that
taking photographs and recording videos to document alleged
noncompliant uses of a public park are entitled to First Amendment
protection); Price v. Garland, 45 F.4th 1059, 1071 (D.C. Cir. 2022)
(“[P]rohibiting the recording of a public official performing a public duty
on public property is unreasonable . . . .”).
70 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
suggest that any conduct related in some way to speech
creation, however attenuated, is necessarily entitled to First
Amendment protection.” Maj. at 18–19. I do not disagree,
but I would go further and hold that, when the conduct is
purely mechanical, and by itself neither conveys nor
contains a message, it is categorically not speech. There
should be no general presumption that pushing a button is
itself speech.
* * *
Based on the above, I would hold that the act of pressing
a record button secretly or openly but without announcement
that one is recording is by itself not categorically protected
speech under the First Amendment. Under that premise,
Project Veritas’s facial challenge fails because, even
assuming that there might be some circumstances when
secret or unannounced audio recordings could be protected,
those unconstitutional applications do not substantially
outweigh the constitutional ones.
II.
In United States v. Hansen, 599 U.S. 762 (2023), the
Supreme Court set forth a demanding standard for evaluating
whether a statute is facially overbroad in violation of the
First Amendment. Id. at 769–70. Hansen had argued that a
federal law prohibiting “encourag[ing] or induc[ing]” illegal
immigration was facially overbroad under the First
Amendment. Id. at 766. To address Hansen’s argument, the
Court stated that “[t]o justify facial invalidation, a law’s
unconstitutional applications must be realistic, not fanciful,
and their number must be substantially disproportionate to
the statute’s lawful sweep.” Id. at 770 (emphasis added). “In
the absence of a lopsided ratio, courts must handle
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 71
unconstitutional applications as they usually do—case-by-
case.” Id. (emphasis added).
In applying that standard, the Court first determined
what conduct is covered by the statute, i.e., whether
“encourage” and “induce” as used in the statute refer to
“criminal solicitation and facilitation (thus capturing only a
narrow band of speech) or instead as those terms are used in
everyday conversation (thus encompassing a broader
swath).” Id. at 770–71. Because the Court held that the
statute “reaches no further than the purposeful solicitation
and facilitation of specific acts known to violate federal
law,” it “does not ‘prohibi[t] a substantial amount of
protected speech’ relative to its ‘plainly legitimate sweep.’”
Id. at 781 (alteration in original) (quoting United States v.
Williams, 553 U.S. 285, 292 (2008)). The Court then
compared the statute’s constitutional applications to its
unconstitutional ones. On the one hand, the statute
“encompasses a great deal of nonexpressive conduct—
which does not implicate the First Amendment at all.” Id. at
782 (citing as examples “smuggling noncitizens into the
country, providing counterfeit immigration documents, and
issuing fraudulent Social Security numbers to noncitizens”
(citations omitted)). On the other hand, “Hansen fail[ed] to
identify a single prosecution for ostensibly protected
expression in the 70 years since Congress enacted [the
statute]’s immediate predecessor.” Id.
Thus, the Court concluded that Hansen failed to show
that the statute’s overbreadth is “‘substantial . . . relative to
[its] plainly legitimate sweep.’” Id. at 784 (alterations in
original) (quoting Williams, 553 U.S. at 292). The Court
further reasoned that “[e]ven assuming that [the statute]
reaches some protected speech, and even assuming that its
application to all of that speech is unconstitutional, the ratio
72 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
of unlawful-to-lawful applications is not lopsided enough to
justify the ‘strong medicine’ of facial invalidation for
overbreadth.” Id. (quoting Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 413 U.S.
601, 613 (1973)).
As discussed, I would find that the act of recording
conversations, in secret or without announcement, is not per
se protected “speech” under the First Amendment. With this
understanding, and applying Hansen’s demanding test, I
agree with the majority that Project Veritas’s facial
challenge fails. Even assuming that Project Veritas has
identified some unlawful applications of § 165.540(1)(c),
such “applications represent only a sliver of the
conversations to which § 165.540(1)(c) may apply.” Maj. at
52. Indeed, they cannot be “substantially disproportionate
to the statute’s lawful sweep,” Hansen, 599 U.S. at 770,
given that the default should be that secret and unannounced
recordings are not per se protected under the First
Amendment. Thus, as in Hansen, “[e]ven assuming that
[§ 165.540(1)(c)] reaches some protected speech, and even
assuming that its application to all of that speech is
unconstitutional, the ratio of unlawful-to-lawful applications
is not lopsided enough to justify the ‘strong medicine’ of
facial invalidation for overbreadth.” Id. at 784 (quoting
Broadrick, 413 U.S. at 613). For this reason, Project
Veritas’s facial challenge fails.
III.
I concur that Project Veritas’s facial challenge fails. But
I believe that it fails because the act of pressing an audio
record button either in secret or without announcement to
record all conversations is not per se “speech” protected by
the First Amendment.
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 73
LEE, Circuit Judge, dissenting, with whom COLLINS,
Circuit Judge, joins.
Journalists, as well as regular citizens, routinely record
the powerful and the privileged behaving badly. Today’s
decision imperils the right to capture such abuses of power
and other newsworthy events.
Oregon does not just ban surreptitious recordings that
may implicate privacy concerns: It also criminalizes audio-
recording someone—even conversations in public with no
reasonable expectation of privacy—if “not all participants in
the conversation are specifically informed that their
conversation is being obtained.” Or. Rev. Stat.
§ 165.540(1)(c). So, for example, a citizen in Oregon cannot
lawfully audiotape a public official berating an employee at
a Chipotle or uttering a racial slur on a public sidewalk—
unless that citizen expressly tells that official he is being
recorded.
We have held that the First Amendment protects the act
of recording as an “inherently expressive” activity. Animal
Legal Def. Fund v. Wasden, 878 F.3d 1184, 1203 (9th Cir.
2018). The majority opinion, however, upholds the Oregon
law under intermediate scrutiny, ruling that the law is
narrowly tailored to further the government’s important
interest in conversational privacy.
I respectfully dissent because Oregon’s law is grossly
overbroad and not narrowly tailored to advance the state’s
interest in conversational privacy (even assuming
intermediate scrutiny applies). Oregon prevents citizens
from recording even in public areas if they do not announce
that they are audiotaping. Oregon thus tramples on people’s
ability to record and report on a large swath of public and
newsworthy events. And because the law bans the taping of
74 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
conversations where there is no reasonable expectation of
privacy, Oregon’s statute is not narrowly tailored to further
the state’s interest in conversational privacy.
In any event, Oregon’s law should be subject to strict
scrutiny, not intermediate scrutiny, because the statute is not
content-neutral. The statute has a law-enforcement
exception that allows citizens to legally record law
enforcement officials—but no one else—without
announcing that they are recording them. Oregon has
essentially carved out only law enforcement matters from its
ban on unannounced recording. Because this is a content-
based restriction, strict scrutiny applies—and Oregon’s law
must fall to the wayside.
* * * *
Under Oregon’s recording statute, a person may not
record a conversation unless “all participants in the
conversation are specifically informed” that they are being
recorded. Or. Rev. Stat. § 165.540(1)(c). “Conversations”
include any “transmission between two or more persons of
an oral communication which is not a telecommunication or
a radio communication, and includes a communication
occurring through a video conferencing program.” Id.
§ 165.535(1).
Because Oregon’s law even bans recording loud
conversations in public—where there is no expectation of
privacy—it is much broader than other states’ recording
laws. Project Veritas v. Schmidt, 72 F.4th 1043, 1050 n.1
(9th Cir. 2023), vacated 95 F.4th 1152 (9th Cir. 2024). As
one Oregon state court recognized, the law was intended to
“protect[]participants in conversations from being recorded
without their knowledge.” State v. Neff, 265 P.3d 62, 66 (Or.
Ct. App. 2011).
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 75
But despite its breadth, the law contains an exception for
taping law enforcement. It permits recording “a
conversation in which a law enforcement officer is a
participant, if (A) The recording is made while the officer is
performing official duties; (B) The recording is made openly
and in plain view of the participants in the conversation;
(C) The conversation being recorded is audible to the person
by normal unaided hearing; and (D) The person is in a place
where the person lawfully may be.” Or. Rev. Stat.
§ 165.540(5)(b). 1
* * * *
I. Even under intermediate scrutiny, Oregon’s law
cannot survive because it is not narrowly tailored to
further conversational privacy.
The First Amendment prohibits laws “abridging the
freedom of speech.” U.S. Constit. amend I. That right
includes the process of writing, drawing, and (in the modern
era) creating a video or audio recording. We have
recognized that the act of creating an expressive work—
whether writing, drawing, or recording—is itself a form of
protected speech. Anderson v. City of Hermosa Beach, 621
F.3d 1051, 1061-62 (9th Cir. 2010). And for good reason: If
the government can regulate or ban the process of creating
speech, then it wields the power to regulate or ban speech
itself. Id.
1
Oregon also exempts recording “a conversation during a felony that
endangers human life,” even if the recording begins before the felony.
Id. § 165.540(5)(a); State v. Copeland, 522 P.3d 909, 912-13 (Or. Ct.
App. 2022). This exception allows police officers who wear wires to
record “situation[s] [that] involve[] felon[ies] where drugs are involved
or human life is endangered.” H.B. 2252, 65th Assemb., Reg. Sess. 1
(Or. 1989).
76 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
As the majority recognizes, we held that this right to
record extends to surreptitious and non-consensual
recordings in Wasden, 878 F.3d at 1203 (holding
unconstitutional a state law that banned people “from
entering a private agricultural production facility and,
without express consent from the facility owner, making
audio or video recordings of the ‘conduct of an agricultural
production facility’s operations’”) (citing Idaho Code § 18-
7042(1)(d)).
Despite Wasden’s holding, the majority upholds
Oregon’s law, ruling that only intermediate scrutiny applies
because the law is content-neutral (more on that later—it is
not). But even assuming intermediate scrutiny applies,
Oregon’s law does not pass constitutional muster because it
is not narrowly tailored to further the state’s interest in
conversational privacy. The statute does not ban just secret
recordings in which someone believes that he or she is
having a private conversation with someone—only to
discover later that someone has been taping it. It also bans
taping most conversations—even loud ones that happen in
public or when there is no reasonable expectation of
privacy—if a citizen has not alerted the speaker that he is
being taped.
Oregon’s law thus not only bans undercover journalism,
it also might prohibit much of our modern-day news
reporting. If, say, an innocent passerby records a local
mayor loudly uttering a racial slur at someone on a public
street, that person has violated Oregon’s law unless she
announces to the mayor beforehand that she is recording it.
So, too, for a patron who tapes an elected official launching
a tirade against a Starbucks employee for failing to use
organic, fair-trade coffee beans in his latte. These recordings
are the types of newsworthy events that we would expect to
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 77
see on the evening news or trending on social media. Yet
Oregon, under the guise of advancing conversational
privacy, criminalizes citizens for taping these events. But
someone yelling on a public street or loudly causing a scene
at a coffee shop has no reasonable expectation of privacy.
Simply put, Oregon’s law is egregiously overbroad and is
not narrowly tailored to protect conversational privacy, as it
sweeps in all sorts of public and newsworthy events in which
no privacy interest is at stake. See Berger v. City of Seattle,
569 F.3d 1029, 1059 (9th Cir. 2009) (explaining that under
intermediate scrutiny “any regulation of speech” must be
“carefully calibrated to solve those problems”).
Indeed, Oregon’s law is so broad that it bans audiotaping
even if the speaker notices that someone has a recording
device in her hand. State v. Haase, 895 P.2d 813, 815 (Or.
Ct. App. 1995). 2 The speaker would understand that there is
no reasonable expectation of privacy when the other person
has a tape-recorder. Yet Oregon bans such recordings unless
the other person affirmatively announces that she is taping
the conversation, despite the lack of any privacy interest in
that situation.
The lack of narrow tailoring becomes even more
apparent when we see Oregon’s different and more
permissive treatment of taping phone calls. For telephone
calls, Oregon has adopted a single-party consent rule. It is
lawful to tape a phone conversation so long as one
2
The majority states that we misread Haase, noting that the state
appellate court had reversed an order excluding an audio-recording made
by a police officer’s wearable microphone. Maj. Op. 7, n.2. But the court
did so because the officer had announced before taping, “I need to tell
you before you start that this conversation is being monitored by camera
and by audio means.” Haase, 895 P.2d at 816.
78 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
participant in the call “consents” to taping it (i.e., one person
decides to tape the phone call). Or. Rev. Stat.
§ 165.540(1)(a). But Oregon’s single-party consent rule
violates the principle of conversational privacy that the state
invokes to justify the law here, as the other person on the
telephone call never consented to being taped. If anything,
people have a stronger privacy interest in a private phone call
than a loud conversation in the public or at a store. 3
Oregon’s different and illogical treatment between
telephone and in-person conversations highlights how
Oregon’s laws are badly misaligned with the state’s
conversational privacy interest—and how Section
165.540(1)(c) is not narrowly tailored to that interest.
It is no answer to say that a journalist or citizen can avoid
criminal liability by announcing that she is recording the
conversation or encounter. That government-mandated
intrusion into a conversation will almost certainly distort its
candid and authentic nature. We recognize this reality even
in our profession: One of our bedrock principles—the
attorney-client privilege—turns on the belief that people will
not speak candidly if they believe that someone else may
hear that conversation. Mohawk Indus., Inc. v. Carpenter,
558 U.S. 100, 108 (2009) (“assuring confidentiality . . .
encourages clients to make ‘full and frank’ disclosures to
their attorneys, who are then better able to provide candid
3
Oregon presumably justifies its single-party consent rule for telephone
calls on the basis that there is a difference between a recording made by
a participant in the call and a third-party (who is not involved in that
conversation). Maybe that is a reasonable distinction based on the state’s
weighing of privacy interests and news value of disclosing telephone
conversations. But Oregon oddly does not apply that same distinction to
in-person conversations, underscoring that the law is not narrowly
tailored.
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 79
advice. . . .”). So too here. The government will essentially
alter the content of a conversation if it requires someone
recording it to make an announcement that he or she is taping
the speakers. A recorded conversation after an
announcement may be as candid as a scripted reality
television show.
Nor is it sufficient to say, as the majority does, that a
citizen has “alternative channels to engage in journalistic
speech activities” by using “traditional tools of investigative
reporting” such as “talking with sources” and “reviewing
records.” Maj. Op. 46. Perhaps journalists can still manage
to report the news through other means, but Oregon is still
confiscating an arrow out of their quiver. The government
should not meddle in the methods of journalists and dictate
how they can do their job. Talking with self-interested
sources or reviewing records cannot substitute for rare
moments of candor that may be captured and revealed on
tape. Further, someone’s voice—the sound, tone, and
emphasis—can convey more meaning than mere written
words on a piece of paper. For example, the contempt (or
jocular nature) in someone’s tone can alter the meaning of a
statement. That is why recordings represent a “significant
medium for the communication of ideas.” See Wasden, 878
F.3d at 1203 (quoting Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson, 343
U.S. 495, 501 (1952)). An audiotape recording can also
carry more weight than just words on a piece of paper, as a
subject will find it harder to claim that he never said
something or that he was misquoted (or conversely the
audiotape may undercut the journalist’s characterization of a
conversation).
Faced with the prospect that Oregon’s law would impede
a large chunk of everyday news reporting, the majority
accepts the state’s unfounded assertion that its statute does
80 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
not apply to “open recording” scenarios, citing to Section
165.540(6)(a)’s exceptions. But those exceptions do not
broadly apply to any “open recordings.” Rather, the
exceptions to the ban are specifically limited to narrow
factual scenarios: (a) “[p]ublic or semipublic meetings such
as hearings before governmental or quasi-governmental
bodies, trials, press conferences, public speeches, rallies and
sporting or other events,” (b) “[r]egularly scheduled classes
or similar educational activities in public or private
institutions,” and (c) “[p]rivate meetings or conferences if all
others involved knew or reasonably should have known that
the recording was being made.” Or. Rev. St.
§ 165.540(6)(a)(A)-(C). Oregon courts have interpreted
those statutory terms under their ordinary and specific
meaning, holding that the word “meetings” does not include
“mere encounters.” State v. Bischel, 790 P.2d 1142, 1144
n.3 (Or. Ct. App. 1990) (“mere encounters are not ‘meetings’
within the meaning of [the statute]. Defendant’s argument
that her taping of the confrontation with police was exempt
either as a ‘public or semipublic meeting,’ or as a ‘private
meeting or conference,’ . . . is without merit.”).
Therefore, these “open recording” exceptions would not
apply to any of the examples mentioned earlier because all
of them are “mere encounters,” not “meetings” that are
exempt from the ban. Oregon citizens thus could not,
without an announcement, tape an elected official who
bullies a barista at a Starbucks, a mayor who screams racial
epithets on a public street, or a city council member who
makes a damaging admission to a constituent at a mall even
after seeing that the person has a tape-recorder in her hand.
Audiotapes capturing these newsworthy events would never
see the light of day under the majority opinion.
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 81
II. The recording statute is content-based because it
carves out an exception for law enforcement
matters.
A. The law-enforcement exceptions are not
content-neutral and fail under strict scrutiny.
As noted earlier, Oregon’s law cannot survive
intermediate scrutiny, even assuming that is the proper tier
of scrutiny. But we should be applying strict scrutiny here
because the law is content-based. Barr v. Am. Assoc. of Pol.
Consultants, Inc., 591 U.S. 610, 618 (2020). The First
Amendment prohibits the government from “restrict[ing]
expression because of its message, its ideas, its subject
matter, or its content.” Police Dept. of City of Chicago v.
Mosley, 408 U.S. 92, 95 (1972). Any law that “target[s]
speech” based on its message, ideas, subject matter, or
content is “presumptively unconstitutional.” Reed v. Town
of Gilbert, 576 U.S. 155, 163 (2015). A law is content-
based, and thus presumptively unconstitutional, if it “applies
to particular speech because of the topic discussed or the idea
or message expressed.” Id. To determine whether a law is
content-based, we look to whether the law “single[s] out any
topic or subject matter for differential treatment.” City of
Austin v. Reagan Nat’l Advert. of Austin, LLC, 596 U.S. 61,
71 (2022).
Oregon’s law-enforcement exceptions are necessarily
content-based because they “single out a[] topic or subject
matter”—law enforcement—“for differential treatment.” Id.
By its plain language, the statute allows citizens to record—
without making an announcement—a police officer
performing his or her official duties. Or. Rev. Stat.
§ 165.540(5)(b). No similar exception exists for any other
profession or field. It is unlawful for citizens to tape
82 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
(without an announcement) elected officials, schoolteachers,
public housing agency administrators, environmental
services employees, tax collectors, department of water and
power representatives, child welfare investigators, and
anyone else. But it is lawful to record law enforcement
officials—and only law enforcement officials—without any
announcement. 4
The majority argues that the statute is not content-based
because “the requirement in § 165.540(5)(b) that a law
enforcement officer be involved in the conversation does not
regulate a ‘topic’ because the statute is unconcerned with the
content of the conversation in which an officer participates.”
Maj. Op. 33, n.13. That assertion defies common sense and
the statutory language. That is like saying that a law that
bans Hollywood from featuring law enforcement officers—
or anti-police brutality activists—in its movies is not
content-based because it does not regulate a specific topic or
conversation in the movie. The whole point of the statutory
exception is to carve out law enforcement as a subject matter
by allowing citizens to tape officers during their official
duties without making an announcement.
Notably, the Oregon statute does not create a blanket
exception to tape anything that a law enforcement officer
may say at any time; it only applies to taping a law
enforcement officer “performing official duties.” Or. Rev.
4
Oregon’s law thus may not just be content-based but also viewpoint-
based, because critics of the police are given a speech tool that the statute
denies to critics of other officials. See Rosenberger v. Rector and
Visitors of Univ. of Virginia, 515 U.S. 819, 829 (1995) (“When the
government targets not subject matter, but particular views taken by
speakers on a subject, the violation of the First Amendment is all the
more blatant. Viewpoint discrimination is thus an egregious form of
content discrimination”) (internal citation omitted).
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 83
Stat. § 165.540(5)(b)(A). And if a police officer is
“performing official duties,” what else could he or she be
talking about other than law enforcement matters? Law
enforcement matters are thus the very “topic” or “content”
that the law targets. The majority’s contention that the law
“draws a line based on the circumstances in which a
recording is made, not on the content of the conversation
recorded” (Maj. Op. 34) is belied by the statute’s exception
for only “official duties.” Consider this example: It would
be illegal to audio-record a police officer at a coffee shop
countertop loudly talking about Portlandia (because the
officer is not “performing official duties”), but someone can
lawfully record that same police officer if he interrogates a
suspect at that same coffee shop (because he is performing
“official duties”). The only difference between the two
scenarios is that the officer is talking about a TV show in the
first example but about law enforcement matters in the
second example. In sum, recording a police officer
performing his or her official duties will necessarily be about
that officer’s law enforcement duties—and thus law
enforcement will be the “topic” or “content” that Oregon’s
law targets. That is a content-based restriction.
The content-based nature of Oregon’s law becomes even
clearer if we consider other analogous scenarios. Assume
Oregon enacts a similar carve-out for labor union officials—
it is lawful to record a labor union official while he or she is
“performing official duties” (but nobody else). It would be
obvious that the law is content-based, i.e., topics pertaining
to labor unions are treated differently from other topics. Or
assume that Oregon bans non-consensual audiotaping except
that citizens can lawfully record officials at the University of
Oregon’s Division of Equity and Inclusion who are
“performing their official duties.” Such a distinction would
84 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
be content-based, as it treats some topics differently from
others. We would not say such a law is not content-based
because “the statute is unconcerned with the content of the
conversation in which [a labor union official or DEI
personnel] participates.” Cf. Maj. Op. at 33, n. 13.
The majority also argues that the Oregon law does not
discriminate based on content, relying on City of Austin.
Maj. Op. at 33. But that case is easily distinguishable. The
Supreme Court held only that, when a “substantive message”
is “irrelevant to the application of” a law, the need to
consider the message itself does not necessarily make the
law content-based. City of Austin v. Reagan National
Advertising of Austin, LLC, 596 U.S. 61, 71 (2022). And
that makes sense: In City of Austin, a municipality had set
different rules for on-site and off-site business
advertisements. Id. A business argued that, because an
enforcer would need to read a sign to see whether it was
advertising an on-site or off-site business, the law was
content-based. Id. But the Supreme Court rejected this
argument because the content of the sign “matter[ed] only to
the extent” it matches the location of the sign. Id. In other
words, the City of Austin regulations were not targeting
content—they were regulating the placement of content. Id.
And the Supreme Court has long held that time, place, and
manner restrictions like those are content-neutral.
Oregon argues that, just as in City of Austin, its law turns
on a content-neutral distinction—the activity of recording.
But what “activity” does the law target? It is not the manner
of recording—the law applies equally to someone who wears
a wire, uses a tape recorder, live-streams on Instagram, or
takes out a tripod and professional camera. Cf. Bartnicki v.
Vopper, 532 U.S. 514, 526 (2001). Nor is it the way
someone acts while recording a conversation—the law
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 85
applies the same to someone who fails to announce that he
or she is recording a loud argument while standing on a
sidewalk as it does to someone who, while out to eat, secretly
records a nearby dinner table’s quiet conversation.
Because Oregon’s law imposes content-based
restrictions on speech, it is unconstitutional unless Oregon
shows that it can survive strict scrutiny. Reed, 576 U.S.
at 166. To do so, Oregon must show that the law is narrowly
tailored—meaning, necessary—to serve a compelling
interest. R.A.V. v. St. Paul, 505 U.S. 377, 395–96 (1992).
As noted earlier, Oregon’s law is not narrowly tailored. The
law covers conversations in which there is no privacy
interest or in which the privacy interest is outweighed by the
newsworthiness of the conversation. The law thus applies to
more speech than is necessary to serve its interest, and it
cannot survive strict scrutiny.
B. The law-enforcement exceptions are not
severable.
The majority concludes that, even if the law-enforcement
exceptions are content-based, they are severable and thus do
not require that we find the law unconstitutional. Maj. Op.
at 47-50. We look at state law to determine severability.
Leavitt v. Jane L., 518 U.S. 137, 139 (1996). And under
Oregon law, we look at whether “parts of the statute are so
interconnected that it appears likely that the remaining parts
would not have been enacted without the unconstitutional
part, or . . . [if] the remaining parts are incomplete and
cannot be executed in accordance with legislative intent.”
Outdoor Media Dimensions, Inc. v. Dep’t of Transp., 132
P.3d 5, 18 (Or. 2006). In our case, we must ask whether
Oregon would have enacted its ban on non-consensual
recording if it could not retain its exceptions for recording
86 PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT
law enforcement officers and acts of felony that endanger
human life.
It is impossible to sever those two content-based carve-
outs. We have held that citizens have a right to “record law
enforcement officers engaged in the exercise of their official
duties in public places.” Askins v. U.S. Dept. of Homeland
Sec., 899 F.3d 1035, 1044 (9th Cir. 2018). We held that this
right was “include[d]” within the broader First Amendment
“right to photograph and record matters of public interest.”
Id. Severing this law enforcement exception would thus
merely substitute one constitutional deficiency for another.
See id. There is no basis to conclude that the Oregon
Legislature would have enacted the much broader—and
constitutionally deficient—statute that would result from
severing this content-based exception.
The majority notes that Oregon enacted this ban on non-
consensual recording in 1959—and only much later did it
enact the two exceptions. Maj. Op. at 48. The majority thus
reasons that Oregon would enact this statute without the
exceptions (because it did so). But in 1959 we had not issued
a decision stating that there is a right to record law
enforcement officers performing their official duties.
Oregon later enacted the law enforcement exception because
it recognized that its broad law raised constitutional issues
under judicial precedent (but in doing so it created a different
problem of imposing a content-based restriction). Likewise,
severing the felony exception could not save the law, as the
law would still unconstitutionally prohibit “record[ing]
matters of public interest.” Id.
Finally, the majority argues that Oregon would be placed
in an “insoluble dilemma” under this dissent’s reasoning
because its law would be struck down as unconstitutional
PROJECT VERITAS V. SCHMIDT 87
either on content-based or broader First Amendment
grounds. Maj. Op. at 49. Not so. Oregon could have
enacted a narrowly tailored law that limited its audio-
recording ban to conversations where there is a reasonable
expectation of privacy. But it declined to do so. In any
event, under Oregon’s limited severability analysis, we only
look at whether the state would have enacted this statute
without the unconstitutional content-based carve-out. It
does not appear Oregon would have done so because it
would have then faced potential First Amendment problems
without such a carve-out. In short, this statute cannot be
saved by severability.
CONCLUSION
Oregon’s law violates the First Amendment by barring
unannounced taping of conversations that occur loudly in
public or in which no privacy interest is at stake. I fear that
it will hamper basic reporting of public and newsworthy
events. I thus respectfully dissent.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PROJECT VERITAS; PROJECT No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PROJECT VERITAS; PROJECT No.
02OPINION MICHAEL SCHMIDT, in his official capacity as Multnomah County District Attorney; ELLEN ROSENBLUM, in her official capacity as Oregon Attorney General, Defendants-Appellees.
03Mosman, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted En Banc June 25, 2024 Seattle, Washington Filed January 7, 2025 Before: Mary H.
04Murguia, Chief Judge, and Kim McLane Wardlaw, Morgan Christen, Mark J.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PROJECT VERITAS; PROJECT No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for Project Veritas v. Michael Schmidt in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on January 7, 2025.
Use the citation No. 10308423 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.