Daily Archives: December 18, 2015

The Intercept: Stingrays–A Secret Catalogue of Government Gear for Spying on Your Cellphone

The Intercept: Stingrays-A Secret Catalogue of Government Gear for Spying on Your Cellphone by Jeremy Scahill & Margot Williams: THE INTERCEPT HAS OBTAINED a secret, internal U.S. government catalogue of dozens of cellphone surveillance devices used by the military and … Continue reading

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WaPo: Radley Balko’s ‘The Watch’ Blog: When the ‘reasonable police officer’ standard isn’t reasonable at all

WaPo: Radley Balko’s ‘The Watch’ Blog: When the ‘reasonable police officer’ standard isn’t reasonable at all: Accountability shouldn’t be the only tool for changing the more troubling aspects of police culture, but it’s an important one.

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The Hill: Court won’t reconsider ruling upholding NSA spying

The Hill: Court won’t reconsider ruling upholding NSA spying by Julian Hattem: A federal appeals court on Friday declined to take up a lower court’s decision upholding National Security Agency surveillance, in a blow to privacy advocates who have called … Continue reading

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Washington Lawyer: Data Privacy and Your Wearable Fitness Device

Data Privacy and Your Wearable Fitness Device: Sarah Kellogg, Every Breath You Take, 30 Wash. Law. 22 (No. 4, Dec. 2015).

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OH11: Conflict of laws: Recording of def in CA which violated CA law but not Fourth Amendment nor OH law was admissible in OH prosecution

Where a recording of defendant was made in California in violation of California law but being used in a prosecution in Ohio, the exclusionary rule would not be applied. The recording violated neither the Fourth Amendment nor Ohio law, and … Continue reading

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W.D.Okla.: Rare successful Franks challenge on reckless statements of fact

Defendant made a successful Franks challenge in his drug case. The officer affiant was reckless in overstating facts that were critical to the finding of probable cause and the warrant was suppressed because a Franks violation means no good faith … Continue reading

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Katz and the “reasonable expectation of privacy” is 48 today

Dec. 18, 1967: Katz v. United States, and the reasonable expectation of privacy decided

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TX: Jardines applies to apartments

“In this case, we are asked to decide whether it constitutes a search within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment for law-enforcement officers to bring a trained drug-detection dog directly up to the front door of an apartment-home for the … Continue reading

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