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Eleventh Circuit, disagreeing with the Fifth, holds Fourth Amendment protects cell-site records

Posted on June 12, 2014 by pogowasright.org

Orin Kerr writes:

The Eleventh Circuit created a circuit split today on whether the Fourth Amendment protects historical cell-site information. Last year, the Fifth Circuit held that it doesn’t; today the Eleventh Circuit held that it does. The Eleventh Circuit’s opinion is premised on the idea that some facts are inherently private. If the government learns those facts, then a search occurs. Here, the court concludes that cell-site information reveals private facts about you such as whether you are “near the home of a lover, or a dispensary of medication, or a place of worship, or a house of ill repute.” Because those facts are by nature private, the court holds, the government violates a reasonable expectation of privacy when it learns those facts by collecting cell-site records from cellular phone providers.

Read more on WaPo The Volokh Conspiracy.

See also Jennifer Granick’s analysis on Just Security.

Category: CourtSurveillanceU.S.

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