The Caesars Superdome is seen during sunset on July 2, 2023 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) โ€” Critics of a new Louisiana law, which makes it a crime to approach within 25 feet (7.6 meters) of a police officer under certain circumstances, fear that the measure could hinder the publicโ€™s ability to film officers โ€” a tool that has increasingly been used to hold police accountable.

Under the law, anyone who is convicted of โ€œknowingly or intentionallyโ€ approaching an officer, who is โ€œlawfully engaged in the execution of his official duties,โ€ and after being ordered to โ€œstop approaching or retreatโ€ faces up to a $500 fine, up to 60 days in jail or both. The law was signed by Gov. Jeff Landry, a Republican, Tuesday and goes into effect Aug. 1.

While the legislationโ€™s language does not specifically mention filming, critics say that by default it would limit how close a person can be to observe police. Opponents have also gone further to question the lawโ€™s constitutionality, saying it could impede on a personโ€™s First Amendment rights.

Proponents argue the new law will create a buffer-zone to help ensure the safety of officers and that bystanders would still be close enough to film police interactions.

Bystander cellphone videosย are largely credited with revealing police misconduct โ€” such as with theย 2020 killing of George Floydย at the hands of Minneapolis officers โ€” and reshaping the conversation around police transparency.

An attempt to establish a specific range at which onlookers can record officers actively engaged in law enforcement duties has occurred elsewhere.

In 2022, lawmakers in Arizona passed a law that would have made it illegal to knowingly film police officers 8 feet (2.5 meters) or closer if the officer tells the person to stop. A coalition of media groups and the American Civil Liberties Unionย successfully sued to block Arizonaโ€™s law, with a federal judge ruling it unconstitutional, citing infringement against a clearly established right to film police doing their jobs.

In similar cases, half of the U.S. appeals courts across the nation have ruled on the side of allowing people to record police without restriction.

The Louisiana measureโ€™s author, state Rep. Bryan Fontenot, said the legislation was drafted to provide officers โ€œpeace of mind and safe distance to do their job.โ€

โ€œAt 25 feet, that person canโ€™t spit in my face when Iโ€™m making an arrest,โ€ Fontenot said while presenting his bill in a committee earlier this year. โ€œThe chances of him hitting me in the back of the head with a beer bottle at 25 feet โ€” it sure is a lot more difficult than if heโ€™s sitting right here.โ€

A nearly identical bill wasย vetoed last yearย by then-Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat. Edwards called the measure โ€œunnecessaryโ€ and said it could be used โ€œto chill exercise of First Amendment rights.โ€

โ€œEach of us has a constitutional right to freely observe public servants as they function in public and within the course and scope of their official duties,โ€ Edwards, who served in the U.S. Army and was the son of a sheriff, said in last yearโ€™s veto message. โ€œObservations of law enforcement, whether by witnesses to an incident with officers, individuals interacting with officers, or members of the press, are invaluable in promoting transparency.โ€

However, with a new conservative governor in office and the GOP continuing to hold a supermajority in the Louisiana Legislature, the bill had a clear path forward.

Language in the measure appears to put in some safety nets, stating that an acceptable โ€œdefense to this crimeโ€ includes establishing that the โ€œlawful order or command was neither received nor understood by the defendant.โ€