Juris.org: Why Police May Still Have Free Reign to Search an Arrestee’s Cell Phone Despite a Warrant

Juris.org: Why Police May Still Have Free Reign to Search an Arrestee’s Cell Phone Despite a Warrant by Veronica Reyes of St. John’s University School of Law, Class of 2016:

The Riley v. California decision is a slight victory for privacy rights advocates like myself who believe individuals should be protected from unreasonable searches of personal information. In Riley, the Supreme Court held that police officers must “get a warrant” before searching the contents of an arrestee’s cell phone. Nonetheless while the court’s ruling thoroughly discussed the privacy risks posed by warrantless cell phone searches, I am not confident the decision went far enough in protecting cell phone privacy rights.

The Riley holding is disconcerting because it does not provide law enforcement officials with suitable instructions for implementing cell phone search warrants. A warrant must describe with reasonable precision the places to be searched and items to be seized. However by declining to define particular requirements for what can and cannot be searched on a cell phone, the court’s ruling left police officers with considerable free reign to still search through private information on an arrestee’s cell phone.

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