The U.S. Supreme Court recently decided the case of Carpenter v United States? In short, the Court found that the government's acquisition of historical cell phone location records violated the right to privacy. This decision is significant as (a) the Court recognised the intrusiveness of accessing historical location data held by cell phone companies and (b) established an important precedent that a search warrant is required to access such records. Although the scope of the Carpenter decision was narrow, the case has been celebrated as a ground-breaking victory for the digital age, and other commentators have analysed how the reasoning of the Court has potentially broader implications for privacy in the U.S? In the context of protection o...
We finally have a federal ‘test case.’ In Carpenter v. United States, the Supreme Court is poised to...
This brief invited response to Professor Matthew Tokson’s Foulston-Siefkin lecture on the Supreme Co...
One of the most significant challenges confronting courts and legal scholars in the twenty-first cen...
In deciding Carpenter, a majority of United States Supreme Court Justices recognized that, at a fund...
In Carpenter v United States, the Supreme Court struggled to modernize twentieth-century search and ...
This past June, the Supreme Court decided the case Carpenter v. United States, which some may call o...
Is the location of a cell phone something that is private and protected from warrantless search by t...
Fall 2017 saw a major privacy case with international implications reach the U.S. Supreme Court this...
In Carpenter v. United States, the Supreme Court will decide whether the government’s acquisition of...
Since the 1800s, the United States Supreme Court has struggled to define the limits of the Fourth Am...
Privacy rights are under assault, but the Supreme Court’s judicial intervention into the issue, star...
Amici curiae are forty-two scholars engaged in significant research and/or teaching on criminal proc...
The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States prohibits unreasonable searches and se...
A Right to Privacy for Modern Discovery Recently, the Supreme Court found that a person has a Fourth...
The Supreme Court granted certiorari in Carpenter v United States, a case that offers the Court anot...
We finally have a federal ‘test case.’ In Carpenter v. United States, the Supreme Court is poised to...
This brief invited response to Professor Matthew Tokson’s Foulston-Siefkin lecture on the Supreme Co...
One of the most significant challenges confronting courts and legal scholars in the twenty-first cen...
In deciding Carpenter, a majority of United States Supreme Court Justices recognized that, at a fund...
In Carpenter v United States, the Supreme Court struggled to modernize twentieth-century search and ...
This past June, the Supreme Court decided the case Carpenter v. United States, which some may call o...
Is the location of a cell phone something that is private and protected from warrantless search by t...
Fall 2017 saw a major privacy case with international implications reach the U.S. Supreme Court this...
In Carpenter v. United States, the Supreme Court will decide whether the government’s acquisition of...
Since the 1800s, the United States Supreme Court has struggled to define the limits of the Fourth Am...
Privacy rights are under assault, but the Supreme Court’s judicial intervention into the issue, star...
Amici curiae are forty-two scholars engaged in significant research and/or teaching on criminal proc...
The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States prohibits unreasonable searches and se...
A Right to Privacy for Modern Discovery Recently, the Supreme Court found that a person has a Fourth...
The Supreme Court granted certiorari in Carpenter v United States, a case that offers the Court anot...
We finally have a federal ‘test case.’ In Carpenter v. United States, the Supreme Court is poised to...
This brief invited response to Professor Matthew Tokson’s Foulston-Siefkin lecture on the Supreme Co...
One of the most significant challenges confronting courts and legal scholars in the twenty-first cen...