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Google News: The Court and the Fourth Amendment
[The National Law Journal] - The Supreme Court ruled, 9-0, that placing the GPS device on Antoine Jones' car and tracking its movements for 28 days without a warrant violated the Fourth Amendment. But the Court's approach was remarkably unhelpful in dealing with issues of
Google News: Supreme Court Says No GPS Tracking? How About Cell Phone Tracking?
[Fleet GPS News (press release)] - Jones, ruling unanimously that when the DC police and the FBI attached a GPS tracking device to Antoine Jones's car and tracked him for 28 days, they violated the Fourth Amendment. But now the government — instead of fixing the way it conducts this
Supreme Court has shown unity, but little guidance
www.washingtonpost.com
[Washington Post] - The Supreme Court's decision last week regarding GPS tracking of criminal suspects was a very big deal for Antoine Jones, a DC nightclub owner and convicted drug dealer who saw his conviction overturned. What it means for the rest of us is not so clear
GPS and the Right to Privacy
www.nytimes.com
[New York Times] - The Supreme Court ruled unanimously on Monday that the police violated the Constitution when they hid a Global Positioning System tracking device on the car of Antoine Jones and monitored his movements for 28 days. It put law enforcement on notice that
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