CantonRep.com: Fourth Amendment: No unreasonable searches

CantonRep.com: Fourth Amendment: No unreasonable searches by Tim Botos:

How much do I track thee? Let me count the ways.

With a GPS-equipped smart phone in your pocket, you drive to work in downtown Canton; click. You zip by a traffic camera along I-77; click. You exit the highway, and pass a city crime control camera; click. You fill up at a gas station, where a security camera catches you paying with a credit card at the pump; click and click. Then, a quick stop at the ATM; click. You arrive in the office parking lot, where a security camera records you; click. You swipe a key card to enter the building; click.

Finally, out of the public eye.

Until that is, you log on to your computer.

. . .

Hall, the defense lawyer, and a former president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, said it’s long overdue.

“All those old farts on the Supreme Court don’t even understand how a cellphone works,” he said, referring to the 2010 Ontario v. Quon case. “When you read [the oral argument], it’s clear that (Justice) Roberts didn’t understand that cellphones don’t talk directly to each other … they go to towers first.”

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