Atlantic: Why Isn’t the Fourth Amendment Classified as Top Secret?

Atlantic: Why Isn’t the Fourth Amendment Classified as Top Secret? by Conor Friedersdorf:

Think how much useful information its text and the case law surrounding it tell America’s enemies.

The Framers are usually considered patriots. Yet they gave traitors and criminals in their midst such powerful knowledge about concealing evidence of skullduggery! Today every terrorist with access to a pocket Constitution is privy to the same text. And thanks to the Supreme Court’s practice of publishing its opinions, al-Qaeda need only have an Internet connection to gain a very nuanced, specific understanding of how the Fourth Amendment is applied in individual cases, how it constrains law enforcement, and how to exploit those limits.

Such were my thoughts Friday at UCLA Law School, where Stewart Baker, an attorney who worked in the Department of Homeland Security during the Bush Administration, participated in a debate about Edward Snowden. Some of his remarks focused on the NSA whistleblower’s professed desire to trigger a debate among Americans, many of whom think it’s their right to weigh in on all policy controversies.

Baker disagrees.

Come on: Even wily criminals don’t get a pass under the Fourth Amendment. This is a good story for those who don’t know how easy it is for the police to comply with the Fourth Amendment with minimal planning and the slightest respect for privacy. Reality is different.

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