The Supreme Court is about to decide how far geofence warrants can go

The Supreme Court is about to decide how far geofence warrants can go
The Supreme Court will hear Chatrie v. The United States to decide whether geofence warrants that collect bulk location data from companies with a single warrant violate the Fourth Amendment. The case could redefine privacy protections for remotely stored digital records like Google Location History and determine how courts apply the good-faith exception. #Chatrie #GeofenceWarrant

Keypoints

  • The Court will address whether geofence warrants that compel broad location data sweeps are constitutional.
  • Okello Chatrie was convicted after police used a geofence warrant to obtain Google data from a one-hour, 17.5-acre window.
  • Civil liberties groups and some technology advocates argue such warrants threaten privacy, while the government relies on third-party doctrine and consent arguments.
  • Lower courts are split, and some allowed evidence under a β€œgood faith” exception even when finding warrants insufficiently specific.
  • A Supreme Court ruling could affect protections for Google Location History and other remotely stored digital records nationwide.

Read More: https://cyberscoop.com/supreme-court-geofence-warrants-chatrie-case/