Andrea Noble reports:
A three-judge panel of the D.C. Court of Appeals grappled Tuesday with the limits of privacy expectations in a case involving the city police’s warrantless use of cellphone surveillance technology.
Metropolitan Police had used the technology to discover the location of a robbery and sexual assault suspect, and the judges are to decide whether the man’s privacy rights were less consequential because he was carrying stolen cellphones and was found on a public street.
Read more on Washington Times.