WASHINGTON – Carrying a smartphone to a bank robbery wasn’t such a smart move for Okello Chatrie. Now the Supreme Court must decide whether the "groundbreaking" and "previously unimaginable" way ...
3don MSNOpinion
Your Fourth Amendment rights now depend on your ZIP code
The Fourth Amendment doesn’t ask how you feel. It asks what a reasonable person would perceive. That’s not a technicality — ...
In a unanimous decision, the Ohio Supreme Court said location information voluntarily given to cell phone applications is not protected by the 4th Amendment.
A recent New York court case upheld a murder conviction despite claims that DNA evidence used violated the defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights. The case highlights ongoing legal questions about ...
The Supreme Court will decide if using broad “geofence warrants” to collect cell phone location data without suspicion violates the Fourth Amendment. In a 2019 case, law enforcement used such a ...
When an investigation into a Virginia bank robbery went cold a few years back, local police turned to Google.Authorities served the tech giant with a “geofence warrant,” which required the company to ...
On October 15, the Supreme Court heard nearly 2.5 hours of oral argument in the Voting Rights Act Case. Without even taking a break, the Court heard the second case, fittingly titled Case v. Montana.
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