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    Warrant needed for GPS tracking, high court says

    WASHINGTON (AP) — In a rare defeat for law enforcement, the Supreme Court unanimously agreed on Monday to bar police from installing GPS technology to track suspects without first getting a judge's approval. The justices made clear it wouldn't be their final word on increasingly advanced high-tech surveillance of Americans.

    Indicating they will be monitoring the growing use of such technology, five justices said they could see constitutional and privacy problems with police using many kinds of electronic surveillance for long-term tracking of citizens' movements without warrants.

    While the justices differed on legal rationales, their unanimous outcome was an unusual setback for government and police agencies grown accustomed to being given leeway in investigations in post-Sept. 11 America, including by the Supreme Court. The views of at least the five justices raised the possibility of new hurdles down the road for police who want to use high-tech surveillance of suspects, including various types of GPS technology.

    "The Supreme Court's decision is an important one because it sends a message that technological advances cannot outpace the American Constitution," said Donald Tibbs, a professor at the Earle Mack School of Law at Drexel University. "The people will retain certain rights even when technology changes how the police are able to conduct their investigations."

    A GPS device installed by police on Washington, D.C., nightclub owner Antoine Jones' Jeep and tracked for four weeks helped link him to a suburban house used to stash money and drugs. He was sentenced to life in prison before an appeals court overturned his conviction.

    It's not clear how much difficulty police agencies would have with warrant requirements in this area; historically they are rarely denied warrants they request. But the Obama administration argued that getting one could be cumbersome, perhaps impossible in the early stages of an investigation. In the Jones case, police got a warrant but did not install the GPS device until after the warrant had expired and then in a jurisdiction that wasn't covered by the document.

    Justice Antonin Scalia said the government's installation of the device, and its use of the GPS to monitor the vehicle's movements, constituted a search, meaning a warrant was required. "Officers encroached on a protected area," Scalia wrote.

    Relying on a centuries-old legal principle, he concluded that the police action without a warrant was a trespass and therefore an illegal search. He was joined in his opinion by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas and Sonia Sotomayor.

    All nine justices agreed that the GPS monitoring on the Jeep violated the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable search and seizure, a decision the American Civil Liberties Union said was an "important victory for privacy."

    But there was a major division between Scalia, the court's conservative leader, and Justice Samuel Alito, a former federal prosecutor and usually a Scalia ally, over how much further the court should go beyond just saying that police can't put a GPS device on something used by a suspect without a warrant.

    Alito wrote, in a concurring opinion, that the trespass was not as important as the suspect's expectation of privacy and the duration of the surveillance.

    "The use of longer-term GPS monitoring in investigations of most offenses impinges on expectations of privacy," Alito wrote in an opinion joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer and Elena Kagan. Sotomayor in her concurring opinion specifically said she agreed with Alito on this conclusion.

    No justice embraced the government's argument that the surveillance of Jones was acceptable because he had no expectation of privacy for the Jeep's location on public roads.

    Alito added, "We need not identify with precision the point at which the tracking of this vehicle became a search, for the line was surely crossed before the four-week mark."

    Regarding the issue of duration, Scalia wrote that "we may have to grapple" with those issues in the future, "but there is no reason for rushing forward to resolve them here."

    Sotomayor, in her separate opinion, wrote that it may be time to rethink all police use of tracking technology, not just long-term GPS.

    "GPS monitoring generates a precise, comprehensive record of a person's public movement that reflects a wealth of detail about her familial, political, religious and sexual associations," Sotomayor said. "The government can store such records and efficiently mine them for information for years to come."

    Alito also said the court and Congress should address how expectations of privacy affect whether warrants are required for remote surveillance using electronic methods that do not require the police to install equipment, such as GPS tracking of mobile telephones. Alito noted, for example, that more than 322 million cellphones have installed equipment that allows wireless carriers to track the phones' locations.

    "If long-term monitoring can be accomplished without committing a technical trespass — suppose for example, that the federal government required or persuaded auto manufacturers to include a GPS tracking device in every car — the court's theory would provide no protection," Alito said.

    Sotomayor agreed. "It may be necessary to reconsider the premise that an individual has no reasonable expectation of privacy in information voluntarily disclosed to their parties," she said.

    Washington lawyer Andy Pincus called the decision "a landmark ruling in applying the Fourth Amendment's protections to advances in surveillance technology." Pincus has argued 22 cases before the Supreme Court and filed a brief in the current case on behalf of the Center for Democracy and Technology, a civil liberties group with expertise in law, technology and policy.

    Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said the court's decision was "a victory for privacy rights and for civil liberties in the digital age." He said the ruling highlighted many new privacy threats posed by new technologies. Leahy has introduced legislation to update the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, a 1986 law that specifies standards for government monitoring of cellphone conversations and Internet communications.

    The lower appellate court that threw out Jones' conviction also objected to the duration of the surveillance.

    The case is U.S. v. Jones, 10-1259.

     
    • lonestar5915  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  4 mths ago
      Chalk one up for the right of privacy in this country.
    • los lobos  •  4 mths ago
      line up folks get your chip
      • Gee 4 mths ago
        :shudders:
    • KickingAss  •  4 mths ago
      Where the heck do these judges think they are (?), America?
    • Lee  •  San Jose, California  •  4 mths ago
      There IS a gps device on almost EVERY new car in america.....onstar is one of the best. your everyday movements have been tracked for years. there is another tracking device you willingly carry with you EVERYWHERE...it's called your cell phone....ask your kids they'll show you how to use it.
      • Mike N 4 mths ago
        your paranoid.
      • Jai 4 mths ago
        Those are devices we know about, consent to, and can deactivate when we want privacy.
      • Gee 4 mths ago
        Lee is very corrrect. And Alito said, "If long-term monitoring can be accomplished without committing a technical trespass — suppose for example, that the federal government required or persuaded auto manufacturers to include a GPS tracking device in every car — the court's theory would provide no protection,". How much u bet the GOV won't be pressing Onstar for some GPS input....
    • glenn  •  Springfield, Illinois  •  4 mths ago
      This was a valid decision. One point to consider. Manufacturers can install such devices, but must give the consumer the option to turn it off.
    • The Central Scrutinizer  •  Norwalk, Ohio  •  4 mths ago
      Thank God...Finally some common sense from the SCOTUS. Considering how power-hungry and opportunistic cops and prosecutors are these days, if the court had allowed this, the authorities would have run wild with it, using it for all manner of unauthorized activities.The police and prosecutorsaren't happy with an inch: They want the whole mile. A classic example: RICO. When this act was instituted years ago, it was used first on the Mafia, then the drug cartels. Now you have prosecutors claiming that because one individual rolled a joint, and passed to another, that the 2 parties involved comprise a conspiracy, and therefore a criminal organization, which gives them the authority to prosecute using RICO. (which also involves asset seizure as well) You may say that it would never happen, but it is possible to stretch the meaning of the RICO Act to this ludicrous length, as well as many other laws that were written deliberately with broad meaning and vague restrictions expressly to be misused in this way by "Law Enforcement"...
      • Manuel 4 mths ago
        You wouldn't be that concerned if the devices were used on "illegal immigrants"
      • Michael 4 mths ago
        Manuel i would be more so... Quite frankly if we were going through the effort to track every illegal immigrant out there then why not skip the whole constant tracking of movement and deport them all. After all if we can tag them surely we know where they live already...
    • Heidi  •  4 mths ago
      They got it right this time. They actually looked out for the American Citizen for once.
      • Milo Talon 4 mths ago
        Only because they are skeered shitless that the people will drag them out of the court and string em up.
      • Heidi 4 mths ago
        I don't care why Milo, I'm just glad and thankful they did!
    • J  •  St Paul, Minnesota  •  4 mths ago
      What a change of events in the last decade. After 9/11 so many people ran around talking about "I have nothing to hide, if it gets the terrorists or criminals good!" I am glad we are back to our senses. The biggest threat to your freedom is not some ragtag band of jihadi Muslims. It is the people who hold power in this country. The super rich who tilt the tax laws in their favors. It is the police officers and law enforcement officials who over step their power day after day and night after night. Its the media moguls and advertising companies who do everything in their power to take every cent from you.
      • No islam 4 mths ago
        so 7 million mooslime terrorists spawning in usa is ok with you?
      • A Yahoo! User 4 mths ago
        Those "nothing to hide" folks should volunteer for an orifice search too, since they have nothing to hide.
      • blotto 4 mths ago
        "so 7 million mooslime terrorists spawning in usa is ok with you?"

        So deport 'em. Why were they let in in the first place, and more importantly, why do WE need to give up OUR RIGHTS if we already know who the "enemy" is?
    • Robert  •  Middletown, New York  •  4 mths ago
      yet big brother can monitor e-mails, phone calls and library preferences...how about repealing the patriot act?
    • ROCCO  •  Shreveport, Louisiana  •  4 mths ago
      Who tracks the trackers?
    • Jim  •  Racine, Ohio  •  4 mths ago
      Wow hope they now quit harrasing me over the one I found on my car because my friend was transporting drugs without my knowledge. I discarded it into a barge headed to NewOrleans and they had the nerve to tell me they wanted it back because they were on a budget and those things are expensive,I told them to pick a better spot to hide their toys if they wanted to keep them I had done nothing wrong, and a far as I was concerned they could have intercourse with themselves I did not know it was theirs and figured it was placed there by the ex wifes investigator,and they were as dumb as that #$%$ if they thought I was paying them
    • joe b  •  4 mths ago
      Wow, the Supreme Court actually came down on the side of the people for a change.
    • MASTERofTRUTH  •  4 mths ago
      What most miss here is: the FACT today law enforcement and courts have levels of actual "enforcement" of laws ..... they ignore laws that are "unpopular" with higher levels of government or against the wealthy or against the famous or against actual foreign nationals, BUT rapibly enforce ALL laws ( even making some up) against the common u.s. LEGAL Citizen !!!! Try just driving WITHOUT all sorts of legal documents.... IE: license....insurance papers...title etc....as a common LEGAL Citizen ..... you will soon be in JAIL facing huge fines etc.... Do the same as an ILLEGAL invader ..... obama on down will shout about your "right's" not to have "undue stress" by needing legal documents !!!! DESPITE the FACT the u.s. Constitution specifically DENIES any illegal invader ANY "right's" in the u.s. !!! How about steal a $25,000 neckalce ..... a common legal Citizen = straight to JAIL fer YEARS..... do as a celebrity = many chances at "probation" with as little as a few HOURS in JAIL !!! Just a couple of examples that PROVE justice in the u.s. is bought and sold at every level !!!!!
    • Justin  •  Madison, Wisconsin  •  4 mths ago
      I can't believe it is even being discussed. It only makes sense that if your investigating someone, you have a warrant.
    • Esko  •  4 mths ago
      Great! Now get rid of the Patriot Act & National Defense Authorization Act! Do not use FEAR to pray on our rights!
    • ADAM'S SON  •  4 mths ago
      They will follow you for no reason.
      They will stop you for no reason.
      They will search you for no reason.
      They will handcuff you for no reason.
      They will sit , lay you on the ground for no reason.
      They will tease you in the snow , in the cold for no reason....
    • TheDuke  •  4 mths ago
      Good, cause I do not trust the police.
    • Upyours Government  •  4 mths ago
      Are the justices starting to open their eyes and see what is happening in America. I hope so. I'll also bet Obama and lots of Congressmen are butthurt about this decision. The end of the unconstitutional power grab is on the way, hopefully.
    • Milo Talon  •  Omaha, Nebraska  •  4 mths ago
      Repeal the patriot act. All it's good for is creating division and mistrust in the American population. If i need protection i got several rifles and hand guns to rely on and some good old fashion American Courage and guts to back it up.
    • ۞ KC ۞  •  4 mths ago
      Wow! Finally some sensible, independent opinions from the SC! Can this be a glimmer of hope that all is not lost? In my cynicism at the incredible erosion of our rights, these last several years, I had assumed ALL the branches of government had been completely overtaken by the dark side. ...I'm having a hard time computing these apparently rational decisions.
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