CA4 (en banc): Geofence warrant was in good faith; no decision on merits

The Fourth Circuit dodges deciding the merits of geofence warrants by going with good faith in a per curiam virtually summary affirmance with 124 pages of concurring and dissenting opinions. Having heard the excellent, spirited oral argument, this was where it was going. It’s always easier to decide good faith than the merits, and the law remains murky. The question has to be decided sometime, or was that the point of Leon? United States v. Chatrie, 2025 U.S. App. LEXIS 10418 (4th Cir. Apr. 30, 2025) (en banc).

CNS: Fourth Circuit kicks can on constitutionality of geofence warrants by Joe Dodson (“Some of the circuit judges expressed frustration with the en banc panel’s unwillingness to address whether accessing location history through Google violates a person’s right to privacy.”)

Reason: The Fourth Circuit’s Geofencing Case Ends Not With a Bang But A Whimper by Orin S. Kerr (“Fifteen judges produce eight separate opinions—but no view gets a majority.”)

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