This article examines group-focused police investigation techniques - for instance, roadblocks, drug testing programs, area or industry-wide health and safety inspections, data mining, and camera surveillance - a phenomenon referred to as "government dragnets" because these general searches and seizures attempt to cull out bad actors through ensnaring a much larger number of individuals who are innocent of any wrongdoing. The courts have imposed few limitations on dragnets. Recent commentary has either advocated an even more laissez-faire attitude toward these group search and seizures or, at the other end of the spectrum, proposed schemes that would make most of them impossible. This article proposes an intermediate ground, relying on poli...
In recent years, a seemingly endless stream of headlines have alerted people to the steady and relen...
This symposium article is the second of two on regulation of government efforts to obtain recorded i...
The government\u27s ability to obtain and analyze recorded information about its citizens through th...
This article examines group-focused police investigation techniques - for instance, roadblocks, drug...
DNA dragnets—the mass warrantless DNA testing of individuals whom authorities have neither probable ...
Anyone who has been stopped at a sobriety checkpoint, screened at an international border, scanned b...
Everyone who has been screened at an international border, scanned by an airport metal detector, or ...
This Article examines the constitutional status of suspicionless searches and seizures of groups—an ...
Jon Gould and Stephen Mastrofski document astonishingly high rates of unconstitutional police search...
[abstract] In most countries, government surveillance of activities that take place in public is not...
Databases are full of personal information that law enforcement might find useful. Government access...
The article examines the government\u27s growing appetite for collecting personal data. Often just...
The legal and social issues that have emerged out of the doctrine that people in America have a righ...
This chapter addresses the morality of two types of national security electronic surveilla...
In a covert government seizure, police secretly enter a home when no one is present and seize contra...
In recent years, a seemingly endless stream of headlines have alerted people to the steady and relen...
This symposium article is the second of two on regulation of government efforts to obtain recorded i...
The government\u27s ability to obtain and analyze recorded information about its citizens through th...
This article examines group-focused police investigation techniques - for instance, roadblocks, drug...
DNA dragnets—the mass warrantless DNA testing of individuals whom authorities have neither probable ...
Anyone who has been stopped at a sobriety checkpoint, screened at an international border, scanned b...
Everyone who has been screened at an international border, scanned by an airport metal detector, or ...
This Article examines the constitutional status of suspicionless searches and seizures of groups—an ...
Jon Gould and Stephen Mastrofski document astonishingly high rates of unconstitutional police search...
[abstract] In most countries, government surveillance of activities that take place in public is not...
Databases are full of personal information that law enforcement might find useful. Government access...
The article examines the government\u27s growing appetite for collecting personal data. Often just...
The legal and social issues that have emerged out of the doctrine that people in America have a righ...
This chapter addresses the morality of two types of national security electronic surveilla...
In a covert government seizure, police secretly enter a home when no one is present and seize contra...
In recent years, a seemingly endless stream of headlines have alerted people to the steady and relen...
This symposium article is the second of two on regulation of government efforts to obtain recorded i...
The government\u27s ability to obtain and analyze recorded information about its citizens through th...