Anonymous wrote:The point is that if you have it taped, and the school admin. tries to pull a fast one, you have proof of lying. And sometimes that's all it takes. I had one parochial school try to pull that on an SN kid. The resources person said she had said "X". I said "No, you said Y and I can prove it". She had no idea how I could prove it but she completely backed down because she knew she had been lying and we got what we wanted. The fact that it can't be introduced in a two-party state in evidence is almost a moot issue because these cases rarely go to trial.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A hint. We always quietly set up our Ipad to tape audio. It came in very handy when a private was on a witch-hunt and was trying to expel kids. When they started in after our kid I quietly made it known that I had "notes" proving the school had violated not only its own rules and regulations but the IDEA and we got a full refund. Even if illegal in your state (to tape someone without their knowledge - we don't live in a "two-party" consent state), that issue won't come up until it becomes an evidence issue at trial, which rarely happens in these cases. So next time, just ask "do you mind if I made an audio tape of this conversation" and set up your I phone eor Ipad to do so.
I am not sure this is legal under Maryland law. Md. Code Ann. § 10-402. It would depend on whether the meeting would be considered private. Here is a link to a web page from the Reporter's Committee, a very reputable organization. http://www.rcfp.org/reporters-recording-guide/state-state-guide/maryland
Anonymous wrote:A hint. We always quietly set up our Ipad to tape audio. It came in very handy when a private was on a witch-hunt and was trying to expel kids. When they started in after our kid I quietly made it known that I had "notes" proving the school had violated not only its own rules and regulations but the IDEA and we got a full refund. Even if illegal in your state (to tape someone without their knowledge - we don't live in a "two-party" consent state), that issue won't come up until it becomes an evidence issue at trial, which rarely happens in these cases. So next time, just ask "do you mind if I made an audio tape of this conversation" and set up your I phone eor Ipad to do so.
Anonymous wrote:A hint. We always quietly set up our Ipad to tape audio. It came in very handy when a private was on a witch-hunt and was trying to expel kids. When they started in after our kid I quietly made it known that I had "notes" proving the school had violated not only its own rules and regulations but the IDEA and we got a full refund. Even if illegal in your state (to tape someone without their knowledge - we don't live in a "two-party" consent state), that issue won't come up until it becomes an evidence issue at trial, which rarely happens in these cases. So next time, just ask "do you mind if I made an audio tape of this conversation" and set up your I phone eor Ipad to do so.