Police track down unidentified suspects through smartphone data. The Supreme Court will decide whether such 'groundbreaking' ...
With geofence warrants, police do not have a suspect, only a location where a crime took place. They work in reverse to identify people who were in the area.
Geofence searches allow law enforcement to find suspects and witnesses by sweeping up location data from cellphone users near ...
The technique allows police to tap into giant tech-firm databases to find out who was near the scene of a crime and may have ...
Police in Virginia used a technique called geofencing to tap into Google's databases to find out who was near the scene of a ...
Legal analyst Brian Buckmire explains what is at stake for Fourth Amendment protections in a case that aims to reshape how ...
Houston Police reinstated its ICE detainer policy after weeks of political debate. The ACLU says the directive violates ...
A convicted felon wants the Justices to bar ‘geofence’ warrants of the kind that let police catch him in Chatrie v. U.S.
Some justices seemed to advocate for a relatively narrow ruling that would clarify what such warrants require, even if it ...
At stake is how private your location data — and any other information you store with a large tech company — actually is.
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Monday in a case with potentially major implications for how law enforcement ...
The US Supreme Court is gearing up to grapple with the extent to which smartphone users surrender their Fourth Amendment rights when they transmit their locations to digital service providers.