Does the 4th Amendment's ban on unreasonable searches extend to your smartphone and its tracking data?
ScotusCrim is a recurring series by Rory Little focusing on intersections between the Supreme Court and criminal law. It’s ...
United States (2018), the U.S. Supreme Court held that warrantless government tracking of cellphone users via their cellphone ...
Immigration agents have intensified raids on construction sites across the country as the Trump administration pursues mass deportations. The raids often involve federal agents entering worksites ...
The FBI has admitted to purchasing commercially available data to track Americans' movements and location histories, and ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Naomi Schalit: Okay, I’m going to read the Fourth Amendment – and then you’re going to explain it to us, please! Here goes: “The ...
In September, the Supreme Court rendered obsolete the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on suspicionless seizures by the police. When the court stayed the district court’s decision in Noem v. Vasquez ...
EDITOR’S NOTE: Jennifer Granick is a leading civil liberties lawyer and scholar. For over eight years, she served as ...
The Federalist Society produced a webinar recently that I found fascinating, not only because I was a panelist. There was a marked divergence of opinion on Fourth Amendment law. I believe I know where ...
The Democratic midterm campaign ads will write themselves. If voters were appalled at images of immigrants flooding the southern border, they are just as appalled, maybe more so, at ongoing images of ...