Daily Archives: November 18, 2014

EFF Fights Government’s Effort to Get Cell Location Records Without a Warrant

EFF Fights Government’s Effort to Get Cell Location Records Without a Warrant by Hanni Fakhoury and Jennifer Lynch: Once again, a federal court will decide whether police can track your movements over an extended period of time without a search … Continue reading

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CNN: Can cell phones stop police brutality?

CNN: Can cell phones stop police brutality? by Laura Ly: Millions of people have now seen the video. Eric Garner, standing on a sidewalk, asks the NYPD officers surrounding him, “What did I do? What did I do?” Garner, 43, … Continue reading

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Baltimore Sun: Judge threatens detective with contempt for declining to reveal cellphone tracking methods

Baltimore Sun: Judge threatens detective with contempt for declining to reveal cellphone tracking methods by Justin Fenton: Baltimore prosecutors withdrew key evidence in a robbery case Monday rather than reveal details of the cellphone tracking technology police used to gather … Continue reading

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Washington Times: D.C. rethinks rules that let police seize, keep suspects’ cash, property

Washington Times: D.C. rethinks rules that let police seize, keep suspects’ cash, property by Andrea Noble: Civil asset forfeiture policies facing increasing scrutiny nationwide D.C. lawmakers are pushing forward with legislation to reform policies allowing police to seize property from … Continue reading

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NYTimes Editorial: A Crucial Vote on the Surveillance Bill

NYTimes Editorial: A Crucial Vote on the Surveillance Bill: The Republican Party is so badly fractured that it is impossible to tell what steps it will take on domestic surveillance once it assumes control of Congress in January. Its rising … Continue reading

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OH12: Living with a probationer is not a complete waiver of a reasonable expectation of privacy, except as to common areas

By living with a probationer, one’s reasonable expectation of privacy is not completely lost and the entire house is not open to a probation search. The probationer can only consent to search of common areas. Here, the probationer let the … Continue reading

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D.Minn.: There is no reasonable expectation of privacy in goods in a box opened for sale in a store

In a counterfeit sports jersey case, the defendant had no reasonable expectation of privacy in a box he opened and put on the counter of a store to sell. United States v. Gore, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 160497 (D. Minn. … Continue reading

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GA: With rental car stops, looking at rental agreement is permitted

When a rental car is stopped for a traffic offense, the officer is permitted to inquire into whether the person driving is an authorized driver. In this case, from stop to finding cocaine with a drug dog because of vague … Continue reading

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D.N.M.: Flexibility permitted in computer file searches because of ease of hiding things

A computer search warrant isn’t overbroad because it doesn’t specify the files to be searched with complete particularity. It isn’t feasible or reasonable to require it because file names and dates can be changed to hide things. United States v. … Continue reading

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ACLU: Americans’ Confidence in Privacy of Electronic Communications is Very Low

ACLU: Americans’ Confidence in Privacy of Electronic Communications is Very Low by Jay Stanley: Pew has a new poll out on Americans’ attitudes toward privacy, and it is full of interesting findings. A New York Times blog piece on the … Continue reading

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D.S.D.: Community caretaking entry must be objectively reasonable and still be wrong

Officers’ legitimate concerns that a person inside a house was in danger or restrained, although wrong, were reasonable, and that authorized an entry under the community caretaking function. The fact they were wrong doesn’t matter if their belief was reasonable. … Continue reading

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