Can a convicted bank robber lay claim to a reasonable expectation of privacy?
Geofencing warrants round up the location data of everyone in a specific place and time, whether or not they had any ...
Police track down unidentified suspects through smartphone data. The Supreme Court will decide whether such 'groundbreaking' ...
The constitutionality of geofence warrants had the high court doing a balancing act between a useful investigative tool ...
When an investigation into a Virginia bank robbery went cold a few years back, local police turned to Google. Authorities ...
Geofence searches allow law enforcement to find suspects and witnesses by sweeping up location data from cellphone users near ...
The Supreme Court is debating whether police violated Fourth Amendment rights by using a geofence warrant to obtain Google location data from all cell phones near a 2019 Chesterfield bank robbery, ...
Some justices seemed to advocate for a relatively narrow ruling that would clarify what such warrants require, even if it ...
Supreme Court justices sounded likely to allow police to continue searching smartphone data for unidentified suspects in ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. It’s been a few years since the Supreme Court heard a major Fourth Amendment case. That will change next month when the justices ...
The Supreme Court will decide the constitutionality of broad search warrants that collect the location history of cellphone users to find people near crime scenes.