Where Have You Been for the Past 127 Days? SCOTUS to Decide on Warrantless Search of Cell Phone Locations in Carpenter v. United States

In October, the Supreme Court will decide whether the warrantless search of historical cellphone records revealing the location and movements of a cell phone user over the course of 127 days is permitted by the Fourth Amendment. After Riley v. California in 2014, the Fourth Amendment requires a warrant to search the contents of a cell phone. Carpenter v. United States will take this analysis a step further to decide whether the FBI needed a warrant based on probable cause to obtain transactional records, such as dates, times and locations where calls were made, from Carpenter’s provider under the “third-party doctrine.” … Read More Where Have You Been for the Past 127 Days? SCOTUS to Decide on Warrantless Search of Cell Phone Locations in Carpenter v. United States