Lawmakers may restrict access to police video and mugshots in Georgia 

Georgia state Sen. Brian Strickland, a McDonough Republican, sitting next to Dallas Republican state Rep. Joseph Gullett, takes questions from members of the House Public Safety and Homeland Security committee on March 26, 2026, at the state Capitol in Atlanta. (Alander Rocha/Georgia Recorder)

A bill making its way through the Georgia Legislature in the final days of the session aims to protect the innocent and victims of tragedies, but free speech advocates say it could disadvantage some news outlets.

The goal of Senate Bill 482 is to prevent businesses lawmakers characterize as exploitative – like websites that publish booking photos or shock sites that show gruesome crime scenes or police shooting videos – from making money off of the tragedy of others.

“We are going to hopefully start the process of recognizing in our state that body camera footage and mug shots are not entertainment,” said the bill’s sponsor, McDonough Republican Sen. Brian Strickland. “They’re news. They’re something that we should preserve for open records, but not preserve for entertainment and for making money in our state.”