Daily Archives: April 28, 2014

Blacklisted.com: Police Mag: Fourth Amendment Is a “Hassle”

Blacklisted.com: Police Mag: Fourth Amendment Is a “Hassle” You have to reign in your natural hunter’s instinct and take the time to get a search warrant. There’s the affidavit of probable cause to compose, the warrant form to fill out, … Continue reading

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New Law Review Article: The Forgotten Right to Be Secure

The Forgotten Right to Be Secure, Luke M. Milligan, 65 Hastings L.J. 713 (2014). Abstract: Surveillance methods in the United States operate under the general principle that “use precedes regulation.” While the general principle of “use precedes regulation” is widely … Continue reading

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LATimes: Scalia set to play key role in Supreme Court smartphone case

LATimes: Scalia set to play key role in Supreme Court smartphone case by David G. Savage: WASHINGTON — Justice Antonin Scalia, the Supreme Court’s new champion of the 4th Amendment, is likely to play a crucial role Tuesday when the … Continue reading

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WaPo: Volokh: Courts grapple with the mosaic theory of the Fourth Amendment

WaPo: Volokh: Courts grapple with the mosaic theory of the Fourth Amendment by Orin Kerr: This post updates readers on the current status of the mosaic theory of the Fourth Amendment. As regular readers know, that’s the novel approach to … Continue reading

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New Law Review Article: District of Columbia Jones and the Mosaic Theory – In Search of a Public Right of Privacy: The Equilibrium Effect of the Mosaic Theory

District of Columbia Jones and the Mosaic Theory — In Search of a Public Right of Privacy: The Equilibrium Effect of the Mosaic Theory, Jace C. Gatewood, 92 Neb. L. Rev. 504 (2014). Abstract: The “mosaic theory” refers to a … Continue reading

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KY: Search incident to arrest could precede the arrest

The CI here was getting calls from the defendant about defendant selling him drugs, so he called the police to set him up. He was wired and took marked money. The seizure of the pill bottle off defendant was with … Continue reading

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N.D.Ga.: On the totality, nexus was reasonably inferred by the issuing USMJ

Nexus to defendant’s property for a search warrant was shown by GPS data and physical surveillance putting co-conspirators at his house before and after drug deals and wiretaps referring to “the office” which officers finally, and reasonably, interpreted to be … Continue reading

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NYT Editorial: Smartphones and the 4th Amendment [commenting on Wurie and Riley]

NYT Editorial: Smartphones and the 4th Amendment: More than 90 percent of American adults own a mobile phone, and more than half of the devices are smartphones. But “smartphone” is a misnomer. They are personal computers that happen to include … Continue reading

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