Cell phones are a way of life in our society. While most people readily use their cell phones, they don\u27t realize that cell phones also provide signals to track their location. This manner of cell phone tracking may be a violation of the Fourth Amendment right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures. Under the test developed in Katz and its progeny, depending on a number of factors, cell phone tracking may qualify as a reasonable search. However, because cell phone tracking appears to implicate a number of core Fourth Amendment doctrines, it appears to constitute an unreasonable search
The past fifty years has witnessed an evolution in technology advancement in police surveillance. To...
Surveillance technology has raced ahead of the Fourth Amendment, forcing courts to confront high-tec...
Can the Fourth Amendment protect an individual’s right privacy by preventing the disclosure of her l...
Cell phones are a way of life in our society. While most people readily use their cell phones, they ...
With the help of technological advancements, law enforcement can now hijack a targeted individual’s ...
Courts are divided as to whether law enforcement can collect cell phone location information in real...
In Carpenter v. United States, the Supreme Court found that a warrant was required to obtain histori...
Police surveillance ability and information gathering capacity have a dynamic relationship with tech...
In a significant ruling in the fall of 2010, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the governm...
Police use of technology to locate and track criminal suspects has drawn increasing attention from c...
The ubiquity of cell phones has transformed police investigations. Tracking a suspect\u27s movements...
The rights secured to us by the Fourth Amendment were the driving force behind the American Revoluti...
The Fourth Amendment, which affords individuals protection from unreasonable searches and seizures, ...
The Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution protects individuals from unreasonable searches and seiz...
In the essay, Professor Bedi discusses a prominent issue in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence: whether ...
The past fifty years has witnessed an evolution in technology advancement in police surveillance. To...
Surveillance technology has raced ahead of the Fourth Amendment, forcing courts to confront high-tec...
Can the Fourth Amendment protect an individual’s right privacy by preventing the disclosure of her l...
Cell phones are a way of life in our society. While most people readily use their cell phones, they ...
With the help of technological advancements, law enforcement can now hijack a targeted individual’s ...
Courts are divided as to whether law enforcement can collect cell phone location information in real...
In Carpenter v. United States, the Supreme Court found that a warrant was required to obtain histori...
Police surveillance ability and information gathering capacity have a dynamic relationship with tech...
In a significant ruling in the fall of 2010, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the governm...
Police use of technology to locate and track criminal suspects has drawn increasing attention from c...
The ubiquity of cell phones has transformed police investigations. Tracking a suspect\u27s movements...
The rights secured to us by the Fourth Amendment were the driving force behind the American Revoluti...
The Fourth Amendment, which affords individuals protection from unreasonable searches and seizures, ...
The Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution protects individuals from unreasonable searches and seiz...
In the essay, Professor Bedi discusses a prominent issue in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence: whether ...
The past fifty years has witnessed an evolution in technology advancement in police surveillance. To...
Surveillance technology has raced ahead of the Fourth Amendment, forcing courts to confront high-tec...
Can the Fourth Amendment protect an individual’s right privacy by preventing the disclosure of her l...