Daily Archives: October 19, 2016

WaPo: Volokh Conspiracy: Can warrants for digital evidence also require fingerprints to unlock phones?

WaPo: Volokh Conspiracy: Can warrants for digital evidence also require fingerprints to unlock phones? by Orin Kerr: There has been a lot of press coverage recently about a search warrant obtained in Los Angeles allowing the government to force people … Continue reading

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Grits for Breakfast Blog: Pop Quiz on Fourth Amendment and the criminalization of the normal

Grits for Breakfast Blog: Pop Quiz on Fourth Amendment and the criminalization of the normal Pop Quiz from the Texas Seventh Court of Appeals: Which of the following are NOT an indicia of drug trafficking under Texas law?

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NPR: Why What Facebook Knows About You Could Matter Offline

NPR: Why What Facebook Knows About You Could Matter Offline The investigative team at ProPublica wants you to know what Facebook knows about you. It’s more than you can imagine.

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Techdirt: Granted Warrant Allowed Feds To Force Everyone At Searched Residence To Unlock Devices With Their Fingerprints

Techdirt: Granted Warrant Allowed Feds To Force Everyone At Searched Residence To Unlock Devices With Their Fingerprints by Tim Cushing: This is the reality of what the government is seeking: law enforcement officers detaining suspects and non-suspects alike and forcing … Continue reading

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PA: Exemptions in State’s Right to Know Law are coextensive with state search and seizure provision

Exemptions under Pennsylvania’s Right to Know Law are at least coextensive with the state’s right to privacy under the constitutional search and seizure provision. Thus, public school teachers’ home addresses should, on balance, remain private and nondisclosable. Pa. State Educ. … Continue reading

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MO: RS of driving on a suspended DL requires real facts, not hearsay

When a police officer stops you and asks for your DL, any reasonable person would not think he’s free to leave. The officer’s claim that he knew two weeks earlier that defendant’s DL had been suspended had to be supported … Continue reading

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MO: Consent to enter house to check voices heard by a crazy man wasn’t unreasonable

Defendant had auditory hallucinations and believed that voices, including that of his cat, were telling him to stab himself in the heart. He called 911 and police arrived. He talked with him on the porch and he explained the voices. … Continue reading

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