Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Bodycam Laws: The 60-Day Request Rule Explained

Pennsylvania does not process police bodycam requests under its Right-to-Know Law at all. Act 22 of 2017 removed these recordings from that law entirely and built a separate, tighter process: a written request delivered in person or by certified mail within 60 days of the recording date, or access is effectively gone.
This guide is part of our Police Bodycam Laws by State series. It covers whether Pennsylvania departments must use bodycams, how the Act 22 request process works, and why press-access advocates consider it one of the more restrictive frameworks in the country.
Jurisdiction scope: This article addresses Pennsylvania law governing police body-worn cameras under Act 22 of 2017, codified at 42 Pa.C.S. Chapter 67A: mandate status, the request process, denial grounds, and appeals. It does not address a civilian's own right to record an on-duty officer, a different question covered in our guide on recording someone without their consent.
Does Pennsylvania Require Police to Use Body Cameras?
No. Act 22 of 2017, signed by Governor Tom Wolf on July 7, 2017, authorizes Pennsylvania law enforcement agencies to use body cameras and regulates how they must do it, but it does not order any department to buy or issue them. Adoption remains a local decision made by each municipal department, county sheriff's office, or the Pennsylvania State Police on its own budget and timeline. An agency that adopts bodycams must publish a written policy addressing officer training, camera and data maintenance, activation and deactivation standards, retention schedules, and consequences for policy violations, as required by 42 Pa.C.S. Section 67A02.
Act 22 also solved a real legal problem for departments that wanted to use bodycams in the first place. Pennsylvania's Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance Control Act, 18 Pa.C.S. Chapter 57, generally requires the consent of every party to a private conversation before it can be recorded, including conversations inside a home. Before Act 22 took effect on September 5, 2017, an officer's body camera could arguably violate that law simply by recording inside a residence during a lawful response. Act 22 added an exception letting officers record with a body-worn camera without every occupant's consent, closing what commentators at the time called a loophole exposing officers to potential criminal liability for using equipment their own department issued them.

When Must a Pennsylvania Officer's Camera Be Recording?
Pennsylvania has no single statewide activation trigger written into Act 22 comparable to the continuous-recording rules some other states use. Section 67A02 instead requires each agency's own written policy to set activation and deactivation standards, so the specific triggers for turning a camera on, whether a traffic stop, an arrest, or any public contact, vary from one department's policy to the next. A resident who wants the exact rule for their local department should check that department's published bodycam policy directly.
The 60-Day Filing Window: Pennsylvania's Outlier Rule
This is the single most consequential feature of Pennsylvania's bodycam law, and it is a genuine outlier nationally. Under 42 Pa.C.S. Section 67A03, a person who wants a copy of a law enforcement recording must submit a written request, delivered personally or by certified mail, to the recording agency's open records officer within 60 days of the recording date; the request is not considered received until hand-delivered or marked delivered. It must specify the date, time, and location of the incident and the requester's relationship to it; a residence recording additionally requires identifying everyone present, to the extent known.
The clock starts on the date of the recording itself, not on the date a requester first learns the recording exists or first has a reason to want it. That distinction is what makes the rule unusually harsh in practice. A person hospitalized after a police encounter, a relative piecing together what happened, or a journalist following up on a tip weeks later can all lose access before they even know enough to ask for it specifically. Gunita Singh, a staff attorney with the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, has put the problem directly: requesters are often seeking records precisely because "they don't have all the information at the outset," yet Act 22 demands that same missing information inside a 60-day window.
What Can Get a Request Denied
Once a request is properly filed, the agency has 30 days to respond, an interval the parties can extend by agreement. Under Section 67A05, an agency may deny the request if the recording contains potential evidence in a criminal matter, active-investigation information, a confidential source's identity, or material that would jeopardize a victim's safety or endanger someone's life, and reasonable redaction cannot protect those interests. If the agency does not respond within 30 days, the request is deemed denied by operation of law, so silence functions the same as an explicit refusal.
| Pennsylvania bodycam fact | Rule |
|---|---|
| Statewide mandate | None; agency discretionary under Act 22 |
| Governing framework | 42 Pa.C.S. Chapter 67A (Act 22 of 2017), outside the Right-to-Know Law |
| Request deadline | 60 days from the date of the recording, hand-delivered or certified mail |
| Agency response deadline | 30 days, or the request is deemed denied |
| Appeal | Petition to the Court of Common Pleas within 30 days; $125 filing fee |
| Appeal standard | Relief only if denial was arbitrary and capricious and public interest outweighs nondisclosure interests |
Appeals: A Steep Path to Court
Unlike the Right-to-Know Law, which routes most denials to a no-cost administrative appeal before the Office of Open Records, Act 22 denials bypass that office entirely. A requester who is denied must petition the Court of Common Pleas within 30 days and pay a filing fee, commonly cited at $125. The court can grant relief only if it finds the denial was arbitrary and capricious and that the public interest in disclosure outweighs the interests in confidentiality, a standard that gives courts wide room to defer to the agency. ACLU of Pennsylvania policy counsel Elizabeth Randol has summarized the risk this creates: "What's really dangerous about this is you could have those records denied forever, there's no time limit."
How Restrictive Is This in Practice?
The numbers bear out the criticism. Reporting by Spotlight PA, later corroborated by Axios Philadelphia, found that Philadelphia, Bethlehem, Erie, and Allentown together released bodycam footage in response to only 44 of 178 Act 22 requests filed over a six-year period, roughly 25 percent. A separate 2018 investigation by The Morning Call found the Pennsylvania State Police granted just 2 of 16 requests. The Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association has argued Act 22 "was not written with transparency in mind" and has pushed for amendment, while state representative Dan Miller has introduced legislation moving bodycam recordings back under the Right-to-Know Law's presumption of access. Neither effort had passed as of this writing, so the 60-day, agency-controlled process remains the operative law statewide.
Recording Police Versus Police Recording You
This article addresses the opposite question from most of the recording-law content on this site. Pennsylvania is a two-party, or all-party, consent state for recording private conversations, and Act 22's own wiretap-law fix exists because that consent requirement once created real legal risk for officers using bodycams inside a home. None of this affects a bystander's separate right to record police performing public duties in public. For that question, see our guide on whether it's illegal to record someone without their consent.
Frequently asked questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Pennsylvania police required to use body cameras?
No. Act 22 of 2017 authorizes and regulates bodycam use for agencies that choose to adopt them, but no Pennsylvania statute mandates that every department use body cameras.
How do I request Pennsylvania police bodycam footage?
Deliver a written request in person or by certified mail to the recording agency's open records officer within 60 days of the date the recording was made, under 42 Pa.C.S. Section 67A03. The request must state the date, time, and location of the incident and your relationship to it.
Is Pennsylvania bodycam footage covered by the Right-to-Know Law?
No. Act 22 removed law enforcement audio and video recordings from the Right-to-Know Law entirely and substituted the separate process in 42 Pa.C.S. Chapter 67A, with its own request rules, denial grounds, and appeal path. Missing the 60-day filing window generally means losing practical access, since there is no general-records fallback.
On what grounds can a Pennsylvania agency deny a bodycam footage request?
Under 42 Pa.C.S. Section 67A05, an agency can deny a request if the recording contains potential criminal evidence, active-investigation information, a confidential source's identity, or information that would endanger someone's safety, and reasonable redaction cannot resolve the concern.
How do I appeal a denied Act 22 request in Pennsylvania?
You must petition the Court of Common Pleas within 30 days of the denial and pay a filing fee. The court can order release only if it finds the denial was arbitrary and capricious and that the public interest in disclosure outweighs the interests in keeping the recording confidential.
Do Pennsylvania police need consent to record inside someone's home with a bodycam?
No, not from the occupant. Act 22 amended Pennsylvania's Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance Control Act to let officers record audio with a body camera inside a residence without every occupant's consent, closing a gap under the state's two-party consent wiretap law.
Sources and References
- 42 Pa.C.S. Chapter 67A (Recordings by Law Enforcement Officers, added by Act 22 of 2017)(legis.state.pa.us).gov
- Act No. 22 of 2017, The Official Website of the Pennsylvania General Assembly(legis.state.pa.us).gov
- Pennsylvania Office of Open Records, "Requesting Police Recordings" (Act 22 guidance)(openrecords.pa.gov).gov
- "Red tape, lack of funding limit public's oversight of Pa. police through body cameras," Spotlight PA(spotlightpa.org)
- "Philly lags Pennsylvania cities in releasing bodycam footage," Axios Philadelphia(axios.com)
- "Inside RCFP attorneys' fight for police transparency in Pennsylvania," Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press(rcfp.org)
- "Legal Hotline: Right-To-Know Police Dash and Body Cameras," Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association(panewsmedia.org)