Recorder: “Search Case Highlights Courts’ Trouble with Tech” re People v. Diaz

Recorder.com: Search Case Highlights Courts’ Trouble with Tech by Kate Moser:

When Gov. Jerry Brown earlier this month vetoed Senate Bill 914 — which would have overturned a California Supreme Court decision giving police the power to search arrestees’ cellphones without a warrant — he said courts are “better suited” to draw such lines.

Not everybody’s so sure.

“I think Gov. Brown has it exactly backwards,” wrote George Washington University law professor Orin Kerr, a privacy rights expert, on The Volokh Conspiracy blog. “It is very difficult for courts to decide Fourth Amendment cases involving developing technologies like cellphones.”

As emerging technologies upend societal expectations of privacy, some legal experts point to People v. Diaz as the latest example that courts are ill-equipped to adapt to that reality. (hyperlinks added)

The oral argument in Quon in SCOTUS proved that courts are not tech-savvy at all.

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