TechDirt: Defendants Counter Government’s Arguments That Appeals Court Should Treat Cellphones As ‘Personal Homing Beacons’

TechDirt: Defendants Counter Government’s Arguments That Appeals Court Should Treat Cellphones As ‘Personal Homing Beacons’ by Tim Cushing.

A couple of weeks ago, the government petitioned the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals for an en banc rehearing of its decision finding that the acquisition of historical cell site location information (CSLI) requires a warrant. The government used many of the arguments the dissenting opinions did — mainly that CSLI should still be considered a “business record” under the Third Party Doctrine.

I think that SCOTUS knew when it decided Jones this was coming, and it presaged CSLI in Jones. Don’t forget that privacy protections in “persons” is a “core value” of the Fourth Amendment. Period. End of discussion. Tracking a person’s every moves is far more intrusive than tracking that person’s car.

This entry was posted in Cell site location information. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.