Surveillance technology has raced ahead of the Fourth Amendment, forcing courts to confront high-tech intrusions with rusty jurisprudence. The Dirtbox, an airborne cell-site simulator, allows the government to sweep entire cities and intercept individuals’ cell phone location information without relying on cooperative intermediaries. This Note argues that the government’s use of the Dirtbox and other cell-site simulators amounts to a Fourth Amendment search because it may pinpoint individuals within a constitutionally protected space. Although the Department of Justice issued policy guidelines requiring its agents to obtain a search warrant before using this device, this narrow and unenforceable protocol fails to adequately regulate the ris...
In the fall of 2010, a college student in Santa Clara, California, found a peculiar object on the un...
The near ubiquity of smart phones in American society raises a multitude of issues as courts attempt...
In 2012, federal juries convicted two men of armed robbery based in part on historical cell site loc...
Surveillance technology has raced ahead of the Fourth Amendment, forcing courts to confront high-tec...
The rights secured to us by the Fourth Amendment were the driving force behind the American Revoluti...
Only a small fraction of law enforcement agencies in the United States obtain a warrant before track...
Police use of technology to locate and track criminal suspects has drawn increasing attention from c...
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...
Cell phones are a way of life in our society. While most people readily use their cell phones, they ...
In a significant ruling in the fall of 2010, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the governm...
In modern society, the cell phone has become a virtual extension of most Americans, managing all kin...
In Carpenter v United States, the Supreme Court struggled to modernize twentieth-century search and ...
The past fifty years has witnessed an evolution in technology advancement in police surveillance. To...
Police surveillance ability and information gathering capacity have a dynamic relationship with tech...
In the fall of 2010, a college student in Santa Clara, California, found a peculiar object on the un...
The near ubiquity of smart phones in American society raises a multitude of issues as courts attempt...
In 2012, federal juries convicted two men of armed robbery based in part on historical cell site loc...
Surveillance technology has raced ahead of the Fourth Amendment, forcing courts to confront high-tec...
The rights secured to us by the Fourth Amendment were the driving force behind the American Revoluti...
Only a small fraction of law enforcement agencies in the United States obtain a warrant before track...
Police use of technology to locate and track criminal suspects has drawn increasing attention from c...
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...
Cell phones are a way of life in our society. While most people readily use their cell phones, they ...
In a significant ruling in the fall of 2010, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the governm...
In modern society, the cell phone has become a virtual extension of most Americans, managing all kin...
In Carpenter v United States, the Supreme Court struggled to modernize twentieth-century search and ...
The past fifty years has witnessed an evolution in technology advancement in police surveillance. To...
Police surveillance ability and information gathering capacity have a dynamic relationship with tech...
In the fall of 2010, a college student in Santa Clara, California, found a peculiar object on the un...
The near ubiquity of smart phones in American society raises a multitude of issues as courts attempt...
In 2012, federal juries convicted two men of armed robbery based in part on historical cell site loc...