The above is a quote from GK Chesterton (see short video HERE).
Bottom line on the parameters for what constitutes a 4th Amendment search of "persons."
"...Thus, a Fourth Amendment search occurs when the government infringes on either a property interest, or a reasonable expectation of privacy...."
This quote comes from the "cert petition" for an upcoming Supreme Court case on the legality of a "geofence" search warrant. I was not aware of such a thing before, but the case is very interesting.
Do you have (1) a "property interest" in the location data that Google et al collect from your phone, and (2) do you have an "expectation of privacy" in/from the "third party" use of certain cell phone data?
The case is "Chatrie vs US," and the question presented that the Supreme Court will address is:
"Whether the execution of the geofence warrant violated the Fourth Amendment."
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