Justin Timberlake sues to block bodycam footage from his DWI arrest in Sag Harbor
Justin Timberlake is suing Sag Harbor village to prevent the release of bodycam footage from his arrest last year, arguing that the video would invade his privacy and cause him embarrassment. His attorneys, Edward Burke Jr. and Michael J. Del Piano, filed the petition in Suffolk County Supreme Court on Monday.
As reported by Komo News, the pop star was charged with driving while intoxicated on June 18, 2024, and later pleaded guilty in September 2024 to the lesser offense of "driving while ability impaired." He received community service and offered a public apology as part of his plea agreement.
Now he wants to make sure nobody sees what happened.
The Privacy Argument
According to the petition, per information obtained by Entertainment Weekly, Timberlake's legal team claims that releasing the footage would constitute "an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy" and would "serve primarily to invade privacy and cause unwarranted embarrassment." The petition further argues that disclosure would "cause economic and personal hardship and substantial injury" along with "public ridicule and harassment."
The filing asks that any materials related to his arrest be "redacted to the maximum extent permitted by law."
This comes after numerous requests under the Freedom of Information Law for the video of the interaction with the police, the arrest, and the time spent at a Sag Harbor police station. Someone, or multiple someones, clearly wants the public to see what the "SexyBack" singer looked like during his encounter with law enforcement. Timberlake clearly does not.
Accountability Is Not Harassment
There's something worth noting about the framing here. Timberlake pleaded guilty. He admitted to driving impaired. The legal system processed him, gave him community service, and moved on. That's the deal he struck. But now he wants to seal the evidence of his own conduct from public view, invoking privacy protections in a case that involved public roads, public safety, and a public police department.
Freedom of Information laws exist for a reason. They allow citizens to review how their government operates, including how police conduct arrests. Bodycam footage isn't gossip material; it's a transparency mechanism. When anyone, celebrity or not, is arrested by a public agency on a public road, the footage of that interaction carries legitimate public interest.
The petition's own language reveals the tension. It simultaneously argues that the footage would not "inform the public about governmental operations or the performance of official duties" while also asking for maximum redaction. If the footage is truly irrelevant to government accountability, why does it need to be suppressed rather than simply ignored?
Rules for Thee
Celebrity legal maneuvering like this deserves scrutiny because of what it implies about who gets to control public records. An ordinary person arrested for DWI in Sag Harbor wouldn't have the resources to file a petition in Suffolk County Supreme Court to block bodycam release. Their mugshot would circulate. Their footage, if requested, would likely be handed over without a multi-attorney legal fight.
Timberlake's booking photo from the arrest is already public. He's already pleaded guilty. The core facts are established and admitted. What the bodycam footage would add is context: how he behaved, how police responded, and whether the encounter raises any questions about the conduct of either party. That's exactly the kind of transparency FOIL requests are designed to produce.
Arguing that releasing the footage constitutes "harassment" sets a troubling precedent. If a guilty plea and a public booking photo aren't enough to establish that this matter is already in the public domain, then the privacy argument becomes less about protecting a person and more about managing a brand.
What Happens Next
Suffolk County Supreme Court will decide whether Timberlake's privacy interests outweigh the public's right to review police conduct. The outcome could signal how aggressively New York courts are willing to shield public arrest records when the subject has both deep pockets and a public relations incentive.
Timberlake got his plea deal. He got his reduced charge. He got his community service instead of harsher consequences. Now he wants the footage buried too.
At some point, accountability means accepting that the public gets to see what you did, not just the version of events your attorneys draft.




