No, border computer searches did not start with Obama

No, dear readers, the Obama Administration did not start border computer searches. It started early in the middle of the Bush Administration. Then it became policy. The first reported cases were right after 9/11. See Treatise § 35.19 n.1; see e.g., United States v. Ickes, 393 F.3d 501 (4th Cir. 2005).

This keeps coming up, even today, and it’s just wrong. It’s been going on for more than a decade. Keep up. One headline doesn’t mean that it’s new.

The law review articles in § 35.19 n.1 are: See, e.g., Christine A. Coletta, Note, Laptop Searches at the United States Borders and the Border Search Exception to the Fourth Amendment, 48 B.C. L. Rev. 971 (2007); Rasha Alzahabi, Note, Should You Leave Your Laptop at Home When Traveling Abroad?: The Fourth Amendment and Border Searches of Laptop Computers, 41 Ind. L. Rev. 161 (2008); Harvey Rishikof, Symposium: The Fourth Amendment at the International Border: Combating Terrorism in the Digital Age: a Clash of Doctrines: The Frontier of Sovereignty–National Security and Citizenship–The Fourth Amendment–Technology and Shifting Legal Borders, 78 MISS. L.J. 381 (2008); Robert M. Bloom, Symposium: The Fourth Amendment at the International Border: Border Searches in the Age of Terrorism, 78 Miss. L.J. 295 (2008).

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