Katz v. United States is the king of Supreme Court surveillance cases. Written in 1967, it struck down the earlier regime of property rules, declaring that the Fourth Amendment protects people, not places. The concurrence by Justice Harlan announced the new regime - court-issued warrants are required where there is an infringement on a person\u27s reasonable expectation of privacy. Together with the companion case Berger v. New York, Katz has stood for a grand conception of the Fourth Amendment as a bulwark against wiretaps and other emerging forms of surveillance. Professor Orin Kerr, in his excellent article, shows that this view of Katz fits badly with how courts now apply the Fourth Amendment to electronic surveillance and other new...
While there are a great many cases and commentaries treating fourth amendment rights, little attenti...
What would life be like if it became impossible to keep a secret? We may find out with the advent of...
With each passing day, new technologies push the horizons of official government investigative and s...
Katz v. United States is the king of Supreme Court surveillance cases. Written in 1967, it struck do...
In 1967, the Supreme Court decided the landmark case of United States v. Katz, which engineered a pa...
The Fourth Amendment is broken into two clauses which protect freedom within the home and impose war...
This Article takes the opportunity of the fortieth anniversary of Katz v. U.S. to assess whether the...
Technology has transformed government surveillance and opened traditionally private information to o...
In a world in which Americans are tracked on the Internet, tracked through their cell phones, tracke...
This Article explains why the government’s physical surveillance can reach a point in terms of durat...
For nearly forty-four years, the Supreme Court has adhered to the same test for its Fourth Amendment...
In 2013, the Supreme Court tacitly conceded that the expectations-of-privacy test used since 1967 to...
Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347 (1967), is a United States Supreme Court case discussing the nat...
Emerging surveillance technologies now allow operators to collect information located within the bra...
In sum, the Court has in recent years balanced the degree of government intrusion of the individual ...
While there are a great many cases and commentaries treating fourth amendment rights, little attenti...
What would life be like if it became impossible to keep a secret? We may find out with the advent of...
With each passing day, new technologies push the horizons of official government investigative and s...
Katz v. United States is the king of Supreme Court surveillance cases. Written in 1967, it struck do...
In 1967, the Supreme Court decided the landmark case of United States v. Katz, which engineered a pa...
The Fourth Amendment is broken into two clauses which protect freedom within the home and impose war...
This Article takes the opportunity of the fortieth anniversary of Katz v. U.S. to assess whether the...
Technology has transformed government surveillance and opened traditionally private information to o...
In a world in which Americans are tracked on the Internet, tracked through their cell phones, tracke...
This Article explains why the government’s physical surveillance can reach a point in terms of durat...
For nearly forty-four years, the Supreme Court has adhered to the same test for its Fourth Amendment...
In 2013, the Supreme Court tacitly conceded that the expectations-of-privacy test used since 1967 to...
Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347 (1967), is a United States Supreme Court case discussing the nat...
Emerging surveillance technologies now allow operators to collect information located within the bra...
In sum, the Court has in recent years balanced the degree of government intrusion of the individual ...
While there are a great many cases and commentaries treating fourth amendment rights, little attenti...
What would life be like if it became impossible to keep a secret? We may find out with the advent of...
With each passing day, new technologies push the horizons of official government investigative and s...