NLJ.com: “High court’s GPS ruling may have minimal impact because cellphone tracking is legal”

NLJ.com: High court’s GPS ruling may have minimal impact because cellphone tracking is legal by Richard Q. Hark:

The U.S. Supreme Court recently held in U.S. v. Jones that the warrantless use of a government-placed GPS tracking device on a defendant’s vehicle constitutes a trespass, requiring suppression of all evidence generated there from. Some thought Jones could become a significant step in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence protecting defendants’ rights. However, in 2010, Congress amended the Stored Communications Act (SCA), 18 U.S.C. 2701, severely curtailing Jones’ importance. This is because a vast majority of people in the United States voluntarily carry a GPS tracking device — their cellular telephone — to which the 2010 SCA amendments gave the government almost unfettered access.

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