In a 6-3 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that police conduct a Fourth Amendment search when they obtain a person’s detailed cellphone location history from a tech company, even when the data covers only a short period. Here’s what that means.
A bit of context
In 2019, Virginia police used a geofence warrant to obtain Google location data from Android phones near the scene of a robbery, ultimately leading investigators to a suspect.
Initially, Google provided anonymized location data for 19 devices, which investigators narrowed to 9 and ultimately to 3 identified users.
That, in turn, led investigators to Okello Chatrie, who was later indicted by a federal grand jury on robbery and firearms charges. Chatrie moved to suppress the Google location data, arguing that police had obtained it through an unconstitutional search.
The district court agreed that the warrant violated the Fourth Amendment but declined to suppress the evidence under the good-faith exception. Chatrie’s legal challenge then made its way to the Supreme Court.
Today’s ruling
Today, the Supreme Court issued its ruling (via AppleInsider), deciding that police conduct a Fourth Amendment search when they obtain a person’s detailed cellphone location history from a tech company.
As a result, even when the data covers only a brief period or is held by a third-party company, it remains protected by the Fourth Amendment. Under today’s ruling, because obtaining the data counts as a search, police generally must secure a warrant supported by probable cause and describing the scope of the search with sufficient particularity before accessing it.
The Court did not, however, decide whether the geofence warrant used in Chatrie’s case was valid. Instead, it sent the case back to the appeals court to determine whether each stage of the warrant was supported by probable cause and sufficiently particularized.
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