This Article offers a defense of the Fourth Amendment\u27s third party doctrine, the controversial rule that information loses Fourth Amendment protection when it is knowingly revealed to a third party. Fourth Amendment scholars have repeatedly attacked the rule on the ground that it is unpersuasive on its face and gives the government too much power This Article responds that critics have overlooked the benefits of the rule and have overstated its weaknesses. The third-party doctrine serves two critical functions. First, the doctrine ensures the technological neutrality of the Fourth Amendment. It corrects for the substitution effect of third parties that would otherwise allow savvy criminals to substitute a hidden third-party exchange for...
This Article argues that the Court\u27s current interpretation of the Fourth Amendment, which sancti...
This Article examines the central role that knowledge plays in determining the Fourth Amendment’s sc...
According to the Third-Party Doctrine, a person has no reasonable expectation of privacy in informat...
The third party and public disclosure doctrines (together the “disclosure doctrines”) are long-stand...
Today, information is shared almost constantly. People share their DNA to track their ancestry or fo...
The Fourth Amendment protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, pape...
For at least thirty years the Supreme Court has adhered to its third-party doctrine in interpreting ...
In the past half-century, the Supreme Court has crafted a vein of jurisprudence virtually eliminatin...
(Excerpt) In Part I of this Article, I discuss the third-party doctrine, including its history, the ...
This Article offers a defense of the Fourth Amendment\u27s third party doctrine, the controversial r...
Fourth Amendment law is sorely in need of reform. To paraphrase Justice Sotomayor\u27s concurrence i...
For fifty years, courts have used a “reasonable expectation of privacy” standard to define “searches...
This Article argues that federal courts should seize the opportunity presented by the Snowden leaks ...
The third-party doctrine is a long-standing tenant of Fourth Amendment law that allows law enforceme...
The goal of this paper is to examine the future of the third-party doctrine with the proliferation o...
This Article argues that the Court\u27s current interpretation of the Fourth Amendment, which sancti...
This Article examines the central role that knowledge plays in determining the Fourth Amendment’s sc...
According to the Third-Party Doctrine, a person has no reasonable expectation of privacy in informat...
The third party and public disclosure doctrines (together the “disclosure doctrines”) are long-stand...
Today, information is shared almost constantly. People share their DNA to track their ancestry or fo...
The Fourth Amendment protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, pape...
For at least thirty years the Supreme Court has adhered to its third-party doctrine in interpreting ...
In the past half-century, the Supreme Court has crafted a vein of jurisprudence virtually eliminatin...
(Excerpt) In Part I of this Article, I discuss the third-party doctrine, including its history, the ...
This Article offers a defense of the Fourth Amendment\u27s third party doctrine, the controversial r...
Fourth Amendment law is sorely in need of reform. To paraphrase Justice Sotomayor\u27s concurrence i...
For fifty years, courts have used a “reasonable expectation of privacy” standard to define “searches...
This Article argues that federal courts should seize the opportunity presented by the Snowden leaks ...
The third-party doctrine is a long-standing tenant of Fourth Amendment law that allows law enforceme...
The goal of this paper is to examine the future of the third-party doctrine with the proliferation o...
This Article argues that the Court\u27s current interpretation of the Fourth Amendment, which sancti...
This Article examines the central role that knowledge plays in determining the Fourth Amendment’s sc...
According to the Third-Party Doctrine, a person has no reasonable expectation of privacy in informat...