Harvard L. Rev.: Comment: Long Lake Township v. Maxon

Comment: Long Lake Township v. Maxon, 138 Harv. L. Rev. 1941 (2025):

While technology advances, do Fourth Amendment rights keep pace to preserve privacy? Or do they get left behind? Regardless of the answer, it would be helpful to at least know how courts view the matter. Yet since 2005, when the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) began certifying drones and our skies began to darken if only by the slightest shade, courts have remained rather quiet about whether government drone surveillance constitutes an unreasonable search. And when squarely confronted with that question, the Michigan Supreme Court ducked. In Long Lake Township v. Maxon, Michigan’s high court short-circuited its Fourth Amendment analysis of drone surveillance by concluding that, even if the municipality did conduct an unreasonable search, the exclusionary rule was inapplicable. As Americans grow increasingly concerned with drones, so much so that Saturday Night Live’s Bowen Yang took to the Weekend Update desk dressed as a drone himself, courts should be offering answers on whether drone surveillance constitutes an unreasonable search. While the answer to that question may be beyond the scope of this comment, it should not have been beyond the scope of the Michigan Supreme Court.

This entry was posted in Drones. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.