Daily Archives: October 3, 2025

HI: No REP in IP information

There is no Fourth Amendment protection in one’s subscriber information provided to a third-party internet service provider and its link to an IP address. State v. Brown, 2025 Haw. LEXIS 268 (Sep. 30, 2025).* The state contends defendant had no … Continue reading

Posted in Consent, Emergency / exigency, Franks doctrine, Reasonable expectation of privacy | Comments Off on HI: No REP in IP information

If a shooting is a seizure, what about blowing up a boat with people in it?

WSJ: Lawmakers From Both Sides Pressed Pentagon on Legal Basis for Drug Boat Strikes by Lara Seligman, Alexander Ward, and Siobhan Hughes (“Senators on both sides of the aisle pressed the Pentagon’s top lawyer in a closed-door meeting to provide … Continue reading

Posted in Seizure | Comments Off on If a shooting is a seizure, what about blowing up a boat with people in it?

C.D.Cal.: Handcuffing an inmate is not a 4A violation

“Plaintiff’s only purported basis for a Fourth Amendment claim is a vague assertion that ‘handcuff/restraints = false report.’ (Compl. at 6). Liberally construed, this appears to suggest that Plaintiff allegedly was seized without sufficient cause. In the prison context, however, … Continue reading

Posted in Consent, Prison and jail searches, Warrant papers | Comments Off on C.D.Cal.: Handcuffing an inmate is not a 4A violation

Substack: Breaking: Trump Used AI to Scan U.S. Generals’ Faces for Loyalty — and to Root Out Whistleblowers

Substack: Breaking: Trump Used AI to Scan U.S. Generals’ Faces for Loyalty — and to Root Out Whistleblowers by Lev Parnas. (Don’t know whether to credit this or not.)

Posted in Facial recognition | Comments Off on Substack: Breaking: Trump Used AI to Scan U.S. Generals’ Faces for Loyalty — and to Root Out Whistleblowers