D.D.C.: Jones on remand: no suppression of GPS because good faith exception applies

Antoine Jones won his landmark case holding GPS tracking requires a warrant, but he loses on remand to the good faith exception. United States v. Jones, 908 F. Supp. 2d 203 (D. D.C. 2012):

Defendant, with the support of an amici curiae brief filed by Electronic Frontier Foundation and Center for Democracy & Technology (Brief Amici Curiae in Support of Defendant Jones’ Motion to Suppress, Aug. 13, 2012 [ECF No. 644] (“Amicus Br.”)), argues that under the Fourth Amendment, the government was required to obtain a warrant based on probable cause prior to tracking Jones’ location based on cell-site data provided by a third party provider for a four-month period of time. The Court, however, need not resolve this vexing question of Fourth Amendment jurisprudence, since it concludes that the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule applies.

Such is the nature of Fourth Amendment litigation in the modern era. Get used to it.

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