Slashdot Mirror


Supreme Court: Warrant Generally Needed To Track Cell Phone Location Data (cnn.com)

daveschroeder writes: The Supreme Court on Friday said the government generally needs a warrant if it wants to track an individual's location through cell phone records over an extended period of time. The ruling [PDF] is a major victory for advocates of increased privacy rights who argued more protections were needed when it comes to the government obtaining information from a third party such as a cell phone company. The 5-4 opinion was written by Chief Justice John Roberts siding with the four most liberal justices. It is a loss for the Justice Department, which had argued that an individual has diminished privacy rights when it comes to information that has been voluntarily shared with someone else.

12 of 195 comments (clear)

  1. Good news! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Now, what about things like license plate trackers that track where your car goes?

  2. Need a Simple Standard by crow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The question of what requires a warrant needs to have a simple answer that is easy to apply.

    My solution: If an unaffiliated private individual would be expected to be able, both technically and legally, to conduct the same operation, then no warrant is required. In these cases, there is no expectation of privacy, as anyone could gather the same evidence.

    Once you go beyond that standard, there is an expectation of privacy, so the government should require some checks on the power to violate that privacy. The standard check is a court-issued warrant.

  3. My Jury Duty Story Regarding Cell Phone Tracking by TomR+teh+Pirate · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A few years ago I had been drafted into jury duty for the 9th circuit in California. The case involved some sort of Medicare scam involving bogus sales of medical "devices" such as mobility scooters. During the jury selection process, prosecutors asked the pool whether any prospective jurors took issue with warrantless location tracking via cell phone towers. Apparently I was the only person who took issue with this, because the other 71 people in the room did not raise their hands. My public conversation with the court went something like this:

    Prosecutor: Why do you take exception to warrantless location tracking?
    Me: I believe the 3rd party doctrine is being abused in a manner that is unconstitutional and therefore illegal

    Judge: I will decide what is legal and illegal, and your job is to decide innocence or guilt
    Me: Richard Nixon once declared that "if the President does it, it's not illegal". We all know how that turned out. I will decide for myself whether the spirit of the Constitution is being violated

    Jurors were then adjourned while the judge, prosecutor, and defense attorney negotiated a jury pool. The pool was then welcomed back into the room, and I was thanked for my service, but then dismissed.

    It's nice to see the Supreme Court finally came to the same conclusion.

  4. Re:Never forget by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Gorsuch didn't like that the Roberts ruling was too vague and incomplete on addressing prior fourth amendment cases.

    Gorsuch voted in favor of the government's right to track your location without a warrant. You can spin that all you want, but it's in the record books now and you can't refute it.

    All the talk of "rights of the individual" and "The Constitution" are lip service. If he supported liberty over tyranny, he could have voted with the liberal majority and written a concurring opinion to clarify his position.

    Bootlickers gonna bootlick.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  5. Re:Never forget by EvilSS · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Also, the Obama and Trump Administrations argued that your freedom isn't as important as the right of the government to track you.

    Fixed that for ya. This case hit the supreme court petition list in 2016, with arguments in 2017. That means it started in the lower courts well before that time, and under the Obama administration, then continued under the Trump administration. Either could have dropped it, but they didn't.

    --
    I browse on +1 so AC's need not respond, I won't see it.
  6. Re:Never forget by SmokeyRobot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Then don't comment. His dissenting opinion is surprisingly knowledgeable and relevant to the current Information Age in which we live. Try reading. It is amazing.

  7. Re:Never forget by KixWooder · · Score: 4, Informative

    and strongly supported by Trump's justice department. Both sides wanted the opposite of this ruling.

    --
    I hate fat people.
  8. Re:Never forget by Mashiki · · Score: 4, Interesting

    including Trump's boy Gorsuch, voted that fuck your privacy rights,

    Did you even read his argument as to why he dissented? Obviously not, otherwise you'd know that he did because he felt that the other opinions were too vague in order to be in favor of it. Go on, read it. Dust off that annotated copy of rulings, and you'll figure it out. When you do, you'll also figure out why you look like an idiot to anyone who's studied law.

    --
    Om, nomnomnom...
  9. Re:Never forget by magzteel · · Score: 5, Informative

    The 5-4 opinion was written by Chief Justice John Roberts siding with the four most liberal justices. It is a loss for the Justice Department, which had argued that an individual has diminished privacy rights when it comes to information that has been voluntarily shared with someone else.

    So, the liberals on the court voted in favor of your right to privacy and the "conservatives", including Trump's boy Gorsuch, voted that fuck your privacy rights, the police need to track you without a warrant. Also, the Trump Administration argued that your freedom isn't as important as the right of the government to track you.

    Remember that the next time some Republican or Trumpist tells you that they're all about the rights of the individual and smaller government. Republicans will always be the party of authoritarianism and the elite.

    Did you read the ruling? It's very interesting. This is from the dissent:

    "The Court has twice held that individuals have no
    Fourth Amendment interests in business records which
    are possessed, owned, and controlled by a third party.
    United States v. Miller, 425 U. S. 435 (1976); Smith v.
    Maryland, 442 U. S. 735 (1979). This is true even when
    the records contain personal and sensitive information. So
    when the Government uses a subpoena to obtain, for
    example, bank records, telephone records, and credit card
    statements from the businesses that create and keep these
    records, the Government does not engage in a search of
    the business’s customers within the meaning of the Fourth
    Amendment.

    In this case petitioner challenges the Government’s
    right to use compulsory process to obtain a now-common
    kind of business record: cell-site records held by cell phone
    service providers. The Government acquired the records
    through an investigative process enacted by Congress.
    Upon approval by a neutral magistrate, and based on the
    Government’s duty to show reasonable necessity, it authorizes
    the disclosure of records and information that are
    under the control and ownership of the cell phone service
    provider, not its customer. Petitioner acknowledges that
    the Government may obtain a wide variety of business
    records using compulsory process, and he does not ask the
    Court to revisit its precedents. Yet he argues that, under
    those same precedents, the Government searched his
    records when it used court-approved compulsory process to
    obtain the cell-site information at issue here.

    Cell-site records, however, are no different from the
    many other kinds of business records the Government has
    a lawful right to obtain by compulsory process. Customers
    like petitioner do not own, possess, control, or use the
    records, and for that reason have no reasonable expectation
    that they cannot be disclosed pursuant to lawful
    compulsory process.

    The Court today disagrees. It holds for the first time
    that by using compulsory process to obtain records of a
    business entity, the Government has not just engaged in
    an impermissible action, but has conducted a search of the
    business’s customer. The Court further concludes that the
    search in this case was unreasonable and the Government
    needed to get a warrant to obtain more than six days of
    cell-site records. "

  10. Re:Never forget by Kernel+Kurtz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Did you even read his argument as to why he dissented? Obviously not, otherwise you'd know that he did because he felt that the other opinions were too vague in order to be in favor of it. Go on, read it. Dust off that annotated copy of rulings, and you'll figure it out. When you do, you'll also figure out why you look like an idiot to anyone who's studied law.

    So you are saying that rather than vote for it, even though he thought that it is not precise enough, he decided to vote against it and write that it is not precise enough.

    Still pretty obvious whose interests he is siding with then IMHO.

  11. Re:Never forget by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Did you read the ruling? It's very interesting. This is from the dissent:

    This is a long-standing American tradition that goes back to the Founding Fathers: Use the flowery language of Liberty, but when it comes right down to it, support Tyranny. That's what the dissenters did today.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  12. Re:Never forget by Dragonslicer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    including Trump's boy Gorsuch, voted that fuck your privacy rights,

    Did you even read his argument as to why he dissented? Obviously not, otherwise you'd know that he did because he felt that the other opinions were too vague in order to be in favor of it. Go on, read it. Dust off that annotated copy of rulings, and you'll figure it out. When you do, you'll also figure out why you look like an idiot to anyone who's studied law.

    If Gorsuch thought that a warrant is needed, he would have voted that way. If he did, but didn't like the reasoning that Roberts et al used, he could have written a concurring opinion. The fact that he voted that a warrant isn't necessary tells you that he thinks a warrant isn't necessary.