Daily Archives: September 23, 2018

NYTimes: Just Don’t Call It Privacy

NYTimes: Just Don’t Call It Privacy by Natasha Singer: Amazon, Google and Twitter executives are heading to Congress. Should legislators give consumers control over the data companies have on them?

Posted in Surveillance technology | Comments Off on NYTimes: Just Don’t Call It Privacy

PA: Emergency aid entry into home doesn’t permit reentry for accurate recordkeeping

A warrantless entry into a house under the emergency aid exception does not permit a reentry for administrative tasks. Accurate record keeping can’t be a justification for a warrantless entry. Commonwealth v. Wilmer, 2018 Pa. LEXIS 4917 (Sep. 21, 2018) … Continue reading

Posted in Emergency / exigency | Comments Off on PA: Emergency aid entry into home doesn’t permit reentry for accurate recordkeeping

CA2: On GVR after Carpenter, Second Circuit also holds GFE applies to 2011 SCA order

Defendant’s CSLI case was GVR’d by SCOTUS after Carpenter. His SCA order was issued in 2011. “Prior to Carpenter, all six courts of appeal to have considered the question had held that the government acquisition of electronic data from third … Continue reading

Posted in Cell site location information, Good faith exception | Comments Off on CA2: On GVR after Carpenter, Second Circuit also holds GFE applies to 2011 SCA order

CA3: Govt agreed that SW materials could be released in terrorism case, but not plea agreement; no abuse of discretion in keeping plea papers sealed

In a terrorism case, the government agreed that search warrant materials could be unsealed, but resisted disclosure of plea agreements and plea related materials. They were presumptively open records at common law and the First Amendment, but the government made … Continue reading

Posted in Ineffective assistance | Comments Off on CA3: Govt agreed that SW materials could be released in terrorism case, but not plea agreement; no abuse of discretion in keeping plea papers sealed