eff.org: State Courts Join State Lawmakers in Demanding Warrants for Location Information

eff.org: State Courts Join State Lawmakers in Demanding Warrants for Location Information by Hanni Fakhoury:

We’ve all heard a lot in the last month about the government’s flimsy excuse for the NSA’s massive collection of telephone and Internet metadata: that this sensitive information is somehow just “business records” that don’t require a warrant for government access. That same argument has been used by the government to also justify the warrantless collection of cell site data — the mobile company’s record of which tower your phone connects to — despite the fact that these records can reveal enormous amounts of information about where you go and with whom.

Thankfully, we’re seeing some significant strides to put this dangerous idea to rest.

The New Jersey Supreme Court ruled this week that under the state’s constitution police need a search warrant before tracking a person’s location through their cell phone. This follows on the heels of a Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decision in June that found the state’s constitution prohibited extensive GPS monitoring of an individual — regardless of whether they are the driver or passenger of a car — unless police obtained a search warrant. State legislatures are acting too; Montana recently became the first state to require police get a search warrant by statute before tracking a person’s location (California had a chance to be the first state but Governor Jerry Brown vetoed the location privacy bill we sponsored last year). Massachusetts is considering similar legislation, and we submitted a support letter (PDF) encouraging them to do so. Maine recently passed a similar bill after the legislature overrode the governor’s veto. And the New York Times reports over a dozen states are considering various electronic privacy bills.

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