Supreme Court to hear two cases on warentless searches of phones of arrestees

Jan 25, 2014 16:18

This is interesting. One case involve an appeal from a man convicted of involvement of a gang shooting. He was pulled over for expired tags on his car, and a field search of his phone found pix of him posing in front of a car used in a shooting. The other is the case of a convicted drug dealer whose phone tied him to his house, where drugs were ( Read more... )

privacy, scotus, 4th amendment

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Comments 5

silveradept January 26 2014, 05:23:24 UTC
Phones contain things that would be something covered by the Fourth. This shouldn't be a hard decision on that, the question is how much exemption they're going to give the police about it.

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thewayne January 26 2014, 23:01:31 UTC
I would imagine that they can conflate 'National Security or Emergency' with their current exemptions or actually codify it, which means if they arrest you for suspected possession of drugs and search your phone without a warrant, that you can probably sue them for violating your privacy if you're innocent, but have fun in court and afterwards when you're on every cop's shit list.

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silveradept January 26 2014, 23:15:25 UTC
Ah, so basically no real thing, then.

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chirssly January 26 2014, 22:55:26 UTC
Smartphones are computers, but getting a court to catch up to that reality is probably going to take a while. That, or the privacy afforded us by computers will be reduced to match smartphones...

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thewayne January 26 2014, 22:58:41 UTC
For the most part, if your smart phone has a password lock and you turn it off before you are detained, they must get a court order to examine it. But that doesn't mean that they won't try.

It would royally suck if 4th amendment protections were stripped from privately owned computers.

The law moves very slowly, but it does move. Unfortunately sometimes that movement is retrograde.

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