NLJ: Justices Hang Up on Call for Cellphone Location Protection

NLJ: Justices Hang Up on Call for Cellphone Location Protection by Marcia Coyle:

Supreme Court denies petition that said authorities should get a warrant to obtain cell tower info.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused to decide whether law enforcement officers must have a warrant to obtain cellphone location information.

In Davis v. United States, a divided en banc U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held that Quartavius Davis had no reasonable expectation of privacy in cellphone location records held by his service provider. And even if a Fourth Amendment search had taken place, the court said, the government’s use of a court order obtained under the federal Stored Communications Act rather than a warrant was reasonable because the privacy intrusion was minor and the government had a compelling interest in investigating crimes.

The high court’s decision to deny review was not surprising because a split among the federal appellate courts on the Fourth Amendment privacy issue disappeared when the full Fourth Circuit last month agreed to rehear United States v. Graham. The full court, granting a petition from the government, vacated a panel’s ruling contrary to Davis.

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