
Maine Recording Laws (2026): One-Party Consent, § 710 and § 511
Maine is a one-party consent state under 15 M.R.S. § 710, with an all-party rule for private places under § 511. Learn the penalties, police-recording rights, and 2025 AI updates.
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Maine is a one-party consent state under 15 M.R.S. § 710, with an all-party rule for private places under § 511. Learn the penalties, police-recording rights, and 2025 AI updates.

New York is a one-party consent state under Penal Law section 250.05. Learn the consent rule, criminal penalties, hidden-camera law, and the Right to Record Act.

D.C. is a one-party consent jurisdiction under D.C. Code section 23-542(b)(3). Illegal recording is a felony: up to 5 years, $12,500 fine. Civil remedy includes punitives and attorney fees.

All 50 states have lemon laws. Learn what qualifies a car as a lemon, the repair attempt thresholds, refund vs. replacement remedies, and federal Magnuson-Moss protections.

New Mexico's Motor Vehicle Quality Assurance Act: 4 repair attempts or 30 business days out of service triggers lemon status. Learn your rights, remedies, and deadlines.

Illinois lemon law (815 ILCS 380) gives you a refund or replacement after 4 failed repairs or 30 days out of service within 12 months/12,000 miles.

Connecticut's lemon law covers new vehicles with 4+ repair attempts or 30+ days out of service within 2 years/24,000 miles. Learn how to file and get a refund.

Texas is a one-party consent state under Tex. Penal Code § 16.02. Recording without consent is a second-degree felony. Civil damages start at $10,000 per occurrence.

South Dakota is a one-party consent state under SDCL 23A-35A-20. Illegal recording is a Class 5 felony (5 years, $10,000). Learn the rules, penalties, and police-recording limits.

Alaska's lemon law (AS 45.45.300) covers new 4-wheeled vehicles. Presumption: 3 repair attempts or 30 business days out of service. Consumer chooses refund or replacement. Learn how to file.

Wyoming lemon law covers new vehicles under 10,000 lbs. Presumption after 3+ repairs or 30 business days out of service within 1 year. Manufacturer chooses replacement or refund.

North Carolina's lemon law gives buyers and lessees of new vehicles up to 24 months or 24,000 miles to demand a refund or replacement after 4 failed repairs or 20 business days out of service.