In re Telephone Info (Koh)
A federal magistrate judge in San Jose, California denied a government request for historical cell site records, ordering the government to seek a search warrant for the information. The government appealed this order to U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh who requested the Federal Public Defender argue why the Fourth Amendment would require law enforcement use a search warrant to obtain this information. EFF filed an amicus brief supporting the Federal Public Defender and explaining as an increasing number of state courts and legislatures adopt a warrant requirement for cell site records, the expectation that these records remain private is necessarily reasonable. Our brief also explained the warrant requirement is particularly important in California where the state Supreme Court rejected the so-called “third party doctrine,” the idea that you lose an expectation of privacy over records shared with a third party, more than thirty years ago. Instead, the state constitution protects telephone records with an expectation of privacy.
In July 2015, Judge Koh agreed with us and found the Fourth Amendment protected historical cell site records and required law enforcement use a warrant to obtain these records.
Updates
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The U.S. Supreme Court’s 1979 decision of Smith v. Maryland turned 35 years old last week. Since it was decided, Smith has stood for the idea that people have no expectation of privacy in information they expose to others. Labeled the third party “doctrine” (even by EFF ...
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When courts issue new decisions about how law enforcement can obtain records and data from companies, it's not just the police who have to follow the new rules. The companies that turn over the data have a big role to play in ensuring that the law is followed. A...
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Massachusetts police must now get a search warrant before they can track a person's past movements through their cell phone in an important new decision that has implications beyond just cell tracking in the Bay State.
In Commonwealth v. Augustine, state police relied on federal law to...
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As the highest court in Massachusetts considers whether cell-site data is private in the context of the Fourth Amendment, we filed an amicus brief arguing that when the police want to be able to recreate your every step—figuring out your patterns of movement, where you've been and with...
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A Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling this week will make it easier for police to track your movements through your cell phone after the court decided police aren't required to obtain a search warrant to track you.
The case involved a 2010 law enforcement request to obtain...
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