Ars Technica: Is a lifetime of involuntary GPS monitoring constitutional?

Ars Technica: Is a lifetime of involuntary GPS monitoring constitutional? by David Kravets:

When the Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that affixing GPS devices to vehicles to track their every move without court warrants was an unconstitutional trespass, the outcome was seen as one of the biggest high court decisions in the digital age.

That precedent, which paved the way for the disabling of thousands of GPS devices clandestinely tacked onto vehicles by the authorities, is now being invoked to question the involuntary placement of GPS devices onto human beings.

The Supreme Court was considering that issue at its private conference Friday, and could announce as early as Monday whether it will review a petition from a 36-year-old North Carolina sex offender. After serving three years for “indecent liberties with a child,” Torrey Grady was ordered to wear a GPS anklet for life, an order that came down in 2013, four years after his 2009 prison release.

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