You'd think that such icky activities would already be a crime, but the law hadn't kept up with technology, as Araphoe County prosecutors discovered last year.
That's when a Nebraska family staying at a Tech Center hotel unknowingly unknowingly put on a show for David Fugate -- after which they discovered that they could only slap the video voyeur with a misdemeanor under an outdated eavesdropping law.
"A live feed, that was not illegal," says state Senator Joe Rice, whose district includes the Towne Place Suites, and was approached by hotel management to introduce a bill that would close the loophole. "All they could charge him with was a misdemeanor.
As he looked into the matter, Rice discovered that this wasn't one isolated incident in just one hotel. "You'd be surprised how prevalent this is," Rice says law enforcement officials told him.
Certainly Robert Reams, the father of the two videotaped girls -- eleven and fifteen -- was surprised when he was contacted by Arapahoe County officials last fall and learned that the family's August 2009 visit had been followed by Fugate, who'd used a wireless camera to watch the family, live, on his hotel room TV.
"Now, if you do this -- recording, taking pictures -- and it's your second time, it's a felony, not a misdemeanor," says Rice. "And if it's a child, it's a felony the first time."
The law applies not just to hotels, but to stores, locker rooms and anywhere else a video voyeur might get busy. "The technology changes so fast, it's really frightening," says Erin Jemison, interim executive director of the Colorado Coalition Against Sexual Assault, who testified for the bill. "Half the times the victims don't know it's happening."
Hotel industry reps will be on hand this afternoon for the bill-signing ceremony. But don't expect to see the Reams family: They're suing the hotel.