Man charged after videotaping police
By ANDREW WOLFE, Telegraph Staff
awolfe@nashuatelegraph.com
Published: Thursday, Jun. 29, 2006

Staff Photo by COREY PERRINE
Michael Gannon stands outside his house on Morgan Street where he
videotaped a detective who had come to his house investigating his
15-year-old son Tuesday in Nashua. Gannon said the detective was rude,
and brought a surveillance tape to the Nashua Police Station to file a
complaint. Instead, police arrested him, telling him he had violated
New Hampshire’s eavesdropping and wiretap laws. Order this photo
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NASHUA – A city man is charged with violating state wiretap laws by
recording a detective on his home security camera, while the detective
was investigating the man’s sons.
Michael
Gannon, 49, of 26 Morgan St., was arrested Tuesday night, after he
brought a video to the police station to try to file a complaint
against Detective Andrew Karlis, according to Gannon’s wife, Janet
Gannon, and police reports filed in Nashua District Court.
Police
instead arrested Gannon, charging him with two felony counts of
violating state eavesdropping and wiretap law by using an electronic
device to record Karlis without the detective’s consent.
The
Gannons’ son, Shawn Gannon, 18, is charged with resisting detention and
disorderly conduct, and his wife also was cited for disorderly conduct,
she said.
Janet Gannon said the family plans to hire a lawyer, and expects to sue the police department.
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Click here to read a copy of police reports filed in Nashua District Court. |
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The couple’s 15-year-old son also was arrested, charged as a juvenile
in an unrelated robbery case, according to police reports and Janet
Gannon.
The
Gannons installed a video and audio recording system at their home, a
four-unit building at 22-28 Morgan St., to monitor the front door and
parking areas, family members told police. They installed the cameras
about two years ago, buying the system at Wal-Mart, Janet Gannon told
the police, according to reports filed in court. The Gannons have owned
the property, which is assessed at $382,700, for the past three years,
city records show.
Janet Gannon spoke with The Telegraph by
phone Wednesday afternoon, before going to bail out her husband. She
said they installed the system in response to crime in the
neighborhood, and at their house.
“We’ve had two break-ins. One
guy came right up our stairs and started beating on my husband, and we
called the cops,” she said. Another time, after someone broke into a
camper on their property, Janet Gannon said an officer suggested they were “too rich” for the neighborhood, and should move.
The
security cameras record sound and audio directly to a videocassette
recorder inside the house, and the Gannons posted warnings about the
system, Janet Gannon said.
On Tuesday night, Michael Gannon
brought a videocassette to the police department, and asked to speak
with someone in “public relations,” his wife said and police reported.
Gannon
wanted to lodge a complaint against Karlis, who had come to the
family’s house while investigating their sons, Janet Gannon said. She
said Karlis showed up late at night, was rude, and refused to leave
when they asked him.
“He was just very smart-mouthed. He put his
foot in the door, and my husband said, ‘Excuse me, I did not invite you
in, please leave,’ and he wouldn’t,” Janet Gannon said. “We did not
invite him in, we asked him to leave, and he wouldn’t.”
After
the police arrested the Gannons’ sons, Janet Gannon said, they
“secured” the house, and told her and her sister-in-law they had to
stay out of it from around 8:45 p.m. Tuesday until about 4 a.m.
Wednesday.
Police said they were waiting to get a warrant to search the house, Janet Gannon said.
“They
were waiting for a warrant to seize the cameras and the tapes in my
house . . . because they said having these cameras was against the law.
They’re security cameras,” she said, adding, “They said they could do
that. They could seize my apartment.”
Karlis went to the
Gannons’ home at about 11:30 p.m. Friday night and again at about 7
p.m. Tuesday, police reported. Karlis was investigating the Gannons’
15-year-old son in connection with a June 21 mugging outside Margaritas
restaurant, for which two other teens already have been charged,
according to police reports. The boy also is charged with possessing a
handgun stolen three years ago in Vermont, and resisting detention,
police said.
The boy wasn’t home when Karlis went there, and the Gannons were “uncooperative” regarding his whereabouts, police reported.
The Gannons felt police were harassing the family, Janet Gannon said.
“There
were six cops in my yard,” the first time police came, she said. “My
husband was very upset. How many cops does it take to talk to a
15-year-old.”
Karlis didn’t know about the security camera until
his second visit, when Michael Gannon told him to “smile” for the
camera, police reported.
Janet Gannon said her husband explicitly warned officers of the camera, later adding “smile,” as a joke.
“I heard him say it,” she said. “He said, ‘Gentlemen, there’s a camera right there.’”
According
to police, however, Janet Gannon told officers she didn’t remember her
husband warning police about the security camera.
Police
reported that Gannon “has a history of being verbally abusive” toward
police, and that after his arrest, he remarked that the officers “were
a bunch of corrupt (expletives).”
Andrew Wolfe can be reached at 594-6410 or awolfe@nashuatelegraph.com.
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