Proposed Federal Law Targets Video Voyeurs

ByABC News via logo
April 15, 2002, 10:03 PM

W A S H I N G T O N, April 16 -- Susan Wilson's family went about their everyday business in their home believing they were alone. Meanwhile, a neighbor had been videotaping their most intimate moments.

The man who secretly videotaped the Wilsons violated their trust and created a private nightmare.

Now the invasion of privacy that the Wilson family experienced will become the subject of public scrutiny, as Congress looks at a bill that would make video voyeurism a federal crime.

The Wilsons, who were secretly videotaped in their Monroe, La., home, inspired the proposed legislation. Their story became the basis for a Lifetime TV movie that aired in January called Video Voyeur: the Susan Wilson Story.

Wilson told ABCNEWS' Good Morning America her family couldn't believe an established punishment didn't exist for those who videotaped others without their knowledge.

"Well, I was already feeling vulnerable and unprotected and then when I found there was no law against it, I felt even more so," she said.

Actress Angie Harmon played Susan Wilson in the TV movie and has joined Wilson and Sen. Mary Landrieu, a Democrat from Louisiana, in announcing the bill on Capitol Hill today.

"What's even creepier about it is that it's not just celebrities anymore that are victimized in this way, it's everyone," Harmon said on Good Morning America. The actress said privacy laws need to be developed to regulate the latest developments in technology, whether it relates to videotape or live feeds on the Internet.

Creepy Feeling Lingers

The federal bill targets anyone who uses a camera or similar recording device to record another person "either for a lewd or lascivious purpose without that person's consent," placing them in violation of the law. The penalty would be a fine or imprisonment up to three years. If a minor were the one recorded, the imprisonment would be up to 10 years, under the bill's provisions.

In a 1999 interview with ABCNEWS, Wilson said her image of her own home changed drastically after she found out a neighbor was spying on her with a video camera.