SECURITYGEORGIA RECORDER
US Supreme Court in Virginia case says police need warrants for cellphone location data
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that law enforcement requires warrants to access cellphone location history data under the Fourth Amendment. The decision centered on a 2019 Virginia credit union robbery case, where police obtained location data from a third-party tech company. The ruling leaves unresolved when such searches are deemed reasonable, with civil liberties advocates and states debating the implications of geofence warrants.
Mentioned
U.S. Supreme CourtorganizationFourth AmendmenttopicVirginiaplaceElena KaganpersonJohn RobertspersonSonia SotomayorpersonBrett KavanaughpersonKetanji Brown JacksonpersonNeil GorsuchpersonSamuel AlitopersonClarence ThomaspersonAmy Coney BarrettpersonOkello Chatriepersongeofence warrantstopicMidlothian credit unionplace
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- US Supreme Court in Virginia case says police need warrants for cellphone location data
- US Supreme Court in Virginia case says police need warrants for cellphone location data
- US Supreme Court in Virginia case says police need warrants for cellphone location data
- US Supreme Court says police need warrants for cellphone location data