Daily Archives: April 29, 2025

techpolicy: Reverse Keyword Search Warrants and the Threat to Online Privacy

techpolicy: Reverse Keyword Search Warrants and the Threat to Online Privacy by Abigail Zislis (“Online privacy rights, already limited in the United States, face new threats from the advent of reverse keyword search warrants. In recent years, local and federal … Continue reading

Posted in Digital privacy, Surveillance technology | Comments Off on techpolicy: Reverse Keyword Search Warrants and the Threat to Online Privacy

MA: Extraterritorial citizen’s arrest power doesn’t permit seizures of cell phone and removal back home

Officers went to New Hampshire on a criminal investigation for a Massachusetts crime, and they ended up seizing defendant’s cell phone to preserve evidence, bringing it back to Massachusetts where it was searched. The common law power of citizen’s arrest … Continue reading

Posted in Arrest or entry on arrest, Cell phones, Common law, Conflict of laws, Particularity | Comments Off on MA: Extraterritorial citizen’s arrest power doesn’t permit seizures of cell phone and removal back home

CA4: SW affidavit not required to name an offender

A search warrant is about whether evidence would be found in the place to be searched, not whether there’s an offender. United States v. Johnson, 2025 U.S. App. LEXIS 10138 (4th Cir. Apr. 28, 2025). 2255 petitioner’s Franks ineffective assistance … Continue reading

Posted in Cell site location information, Curtilage, Dog sniff, Franks doctrine, Warrant papers | Comments Off on CA4: SW affidavit not required to name an offender

Reason: Justice Department Memo Claims Alien Enemies Act Allows Warrantless Home Searches and No Judicial Review

Reason: Justice Department Memo Claims Alien Enemies Act Allows Warrantless Home Searches and No Judicial Review by C.J. Ciaramella (“The memo says ‘Alien Enemies’ aren’t subject ‘to a judicial review of the removal in any court of the United States.’”):

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IL: Actual parole search agreement or waiver not required to be admitted into evidence

When relying on a parole search exception, the state does not have to put the specific document into evidence. Here, also, defendant was transferred on parole from Texas to Illinois. People v. Pyles, 2025 IL App (4th) 240220, 2025 Ill. … Continue reading

Posted in Mail and packages, Probation / Parole search, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on IL: Actual parole search agreement or waiver not required to be admitted into evidence

CNS: FTC calls AI detection company’s claim of 98% accuracy bogus

CNS: FTC calls AI detection company’s claim of 98% accuracy bogus by Joe Dodson (“The commission says Workado’s detection technology offers closer to 50% accuracy when analyzing whether non-academic content contains AI-generated text.”)

Posted in Surveillance technology | Comments Off on CNS: FTC calls AI detection company’s claim of 98% accuracy bogus

E.D.N.Y.: Re-search of email in 2024 on a 2022 SW was unreasonable and not protected by GFE

The government seized seven years of defendants’ email records in 2022 but the FBI’s computer somehow lost it. So they re-searched the data in 2024. “The Government asserts that it accessed the full return of data received pursuant to the … Continue reading

Posted in E-mail, Good faith exception, Inevitable discovery | Comments Off on E.D.N.Y.: Re-search of email in 2024 on a 2022 SW was unreasonable and not protected by GFE