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Supreme Court, search warrants

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 · 1d · on MSN
Supreme Court sounds likely to allow police to continue search smartphone data
WASHINGTON – Supreme Court justices sounded likely to allow police to continue sifting through smartphone data to locate unidentified suspects in crimes, but explored out several options for setting l...

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 · 1d · on MSN
Supreme Court signals support for police geofence warrants
 · 1d · on MSN
Supreme Court debates police use of cell phone location data
 · 1d
Justices appear mixed on whether geofence warrant violated the Fourth Amendment
The Supreme Court on Monday grappled in Chatrie v. United States with a Virginia man’s challenge to the use of a “geofence warrant” – a warrant that directed Google to provide location data for cellph...

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 · 1d
US supreme court hears whether smartphone location data warrants infringe users’ privacy
 · 1d
Supreme Court wary of barring police from phone searches to find crime suspects
 · 1d
Supreme Court grapples with use of ‘geofence warrants’ by law enforcement
The justices will weigh whether geofence warrants — an investigatory tool that compels companies to disclose data from cellphones and other devices at a specific place and time — violate the Fourth Am...

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 · 1d
Supreme Court Wrangles With Police Use of Cell Location Data to Find Suspects
 · 1d
The Supreme Court seems a bit nervous about letting the police track you with your phone
Opinion
37mon MSNOpinion

A SCOTUS case exposes the dangers of 2 misguided Fourth Amendment doctrines

Seven years ago, police in Midlothian, Virginia, sought to identify a bank robber by asking Google to search the records of more than 500 million people who used the company's "location history" feature.
2don MSN

Bringing a smartphone to a bank robbery? 4th Amendment issue hits Supreme Court

Police track down unidentified suspects through smartphone data. The Supreme Court will decide whether such 'groundbreaking' tech is constitutional
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