Daily Archives: April 26, 2014

WaPo: Surveillance court rejected Verizon challenge to NSA calls program

WaPo: Surveillance court rejected Verizon challenge to NSA calls program by Ellen Nakashima: Verizon in January filed a legal challenge to the constitutionality of the National Security Agency’s program that collects billions of Americans’ call-detail records, but a surveillance court … Continue reading

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Journal-Advocate (CO): Protections for e-data clear Senate committee

Journal-Advocate (CO): Protections for e-data clear Senate committee by Marianne Goodland: A resolution to add “electronic data” to the Colorado constitution’s equivalent of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution got unanimous support this week from a Senate committee. The … Continue reading

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D.Mass.: Court doesn’t believe officer smelled marijuana; car search of computer and cell phone suppressed

The district judge disbelieves that the officer smelled marijuana, and suppresses the search of defendant’s car. The officer felt something was up but couldn’t articulate it. Inevitable discovery by inventory fails because there was no true inventory–no inventory was produced. … Continue reading

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OH8: Walking briskly away from the police in a high crime area isn’t reasonable suspicion

This anonymous tip providing nothing compared to the car stopped, which didn’t match the description. “Absent criminal, or at least suspicious, behavior on the part of the suspect, the mere presence of the suspect in a high crime area or … Continue reading

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New Law Review Article: Policing By the Numbers: Big Data and the Fourth Amendment

New Law Review Article: Elizabeth Joh, Policing By the Numbers: Big Data and the Fourth Amendment, 89 Wash. L. Rev. 35 (2014): The age of “big data” has come to policing. In Chicago, police officers are paying particular attention to … Continue reading

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N.D.W.Va.: When response to request for consent is ambiguous, failure to object is grant of consent

Defendant’s response to a request for consent was ambiguous. Then his failure to object is inferred to be consent. United States v. Merritt, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57886 (N.D. W.Va. March 26, 2014), adopted 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57887 (N.D. … Continue reading

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TechDirt: Unnamed Phone Company Challenges NSA’s Bulk Records Collection; FISC Says It’s Perfectly Legal

TechDirt: Unnamed Phone Company Challenges NSA’s Bulk Records Collection; FISC Says It’s Perfectly Legal: Late on Friday, the FISA Court unclassified a few documents, including a ruling on an until now secret attempt by a telco to challenge the latest … Continue reading

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SCOTUSblog: Argument preview: Police and cellphone privacy

SCOTUSblog: Argument preview: Police and cellphone privacy by Lyle Denniston: Next Tuesday morning, the Supreme Court will hold back-to-back, one-hour hearings on cases testing the authority of police to search the contents of cellphones they take from people they have … Continue reading

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