Reason: The ACLU’s Response to My Post on the Fifth Circuit’s Smith Ruling—And My Reply to the ACLU

Reason: The ACLU’s Response to My Post on the Fifth Circuit’s Smith Ruling—And My Reply to the ACLU by Orin S. Kerr (“A debate on a very important Fourth Amendment ruling.”):

I recently posted a long critique of the Fifth Circuit’s ruling last week in United States v. Jamarr Smith, and specifically the court’s ruling that Google’s geolocation database is too big to search with a search warrant. It remains to be seen what might happen with the case. Just today, DOJ filed an unopposed motion asking for 60 days to file a petition for rehearing. Also, the court has withheld issuance of the mandate on the request of at least one judge.

With that pending, I’m delighted to feature a debate of sorts over the merits of the ruling. Jennifer Granick and Brett Max Kaufman, lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) who are both very active litigating in this area, wrote to me today with an ACLU response defending the Fifth Circuit’s ruling and asking if I might publish it here at the Volokh Conspiracy. Jennifer and Brett are both outstanding lawyers, and I’m delighted to host a debate on this question. With their permission, I am posting their response to my post, followed by my reply below that.

This entry was posted in geofence. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.