If the court upholds such digital searches without an identified suspect, legal experts say the strategy could expand to pry ...
The Fourth Amendment’s protection against unreasonable searches places limits on how police can conduct checkpoints.
A convicted felon wants the Justices to bar ‘geofence’ warrants of the kind that let police catch him in Chatrie v. U.S.
The Constitution contains an important safeguard that has been ignored for far too long. Mendenhall v. City of Denver is ...
Some justices seemed to advocate for a relatively narrow ruling that would clarify what such warrants require, even if it does not ultimately resolve all of the thorny issues potentially raised by the ...
The U.S. Supreme Court is hearing a case dealing with geofence warrants, also called reverse warrants — and more aptly so ...
The Fourth Amendment protects all persons from warrantless government searches and seizures of their persons, houses, papers and effects. It requires that warrants be supported by ...
I'm very pleased to say that the Kindle version of my new book, The Digital Fourth Amendment: Privacy and Policing in Our Online World, is now available for sale. The ...