Court rules GPS tracking without warrant is ok
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http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/08/27/oregon.gps.surveillance/index.html
TLDR version: the government went on a suspected drug grower's private property (his driveway, to be exact) without a warrant and installed a GPS tracking device on his car. As a result, prosecutors were able to show that this man drove to places where marijuana was found growing. The dude appealed on the grounds that sneaking onto a person's driveway and secretly placing a tracking device on his car violates a person's reasonable expectation of privacy, but the judge ruled against him.
How is this constitutional? You cannot, I repeat, cannot go onto a person's private property and collect evidence without a warrant unless there is a crime in progress. A car sitting in the driveway is not a crime in progress. Another court in DC actually ruled--correctly, I believe--the opposite: that to place a GPS tracker on someone's car, you need a warrant.
What do you guys think?
Spoiler:
TLDR version: the government went on a suspected drug grower's private property (his driveway, to be exact) without a warrant and installed a GPS tracking device on his car. As a result, prosecutors were able to show that this man drove to places where marijuana was found growing. The dude appealed on the grounds that sneaking onto a person's driveway and secretly placing a tracking device on his car violates a person's reasonable expectation of privacy, but the judge ruled against him.
How is this constitutional? You cannot, I repeat, cannot go onto a person's private property and collect evidence without a warrant unless there is a crime in progress. A car sitting in the driveway is not a crime in progress. Another court in DC actually ruled--correctly, I believe--the opposite: that to place a GPS tracker on someone's car, you need a warrant.
What do you guys think?
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Takerial
Lovable Teddy Bear
Meh, it's just the same as tailing, but without having to use the resources of an actual cop team.
Oh, and he won't spot the tail.
Oh, and he won't spot the tail.
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I'll have to agree with you on that, it can't be too difficult to get a warrant on a suspected drug cartel member (If that is the reason). Only reason I'd find unease in it being legal with out a warrant is that I might have something to hide. But there are ways to get what you want through various loopholes and what-not. So getting a warrant doesn't sound difficult, though I'm not too sure how it goes to be honest.
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How is this constitutional? You cannot, I repeat, cannot go onto a person's private property and collect evidence without a warrant unless there is a crime in progress.
The driveway has been ruled as a place where you cannot reasonably expect privacy, and therefore the police can do surveillance there, and that includes attaching a GPS unit.
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2013150,00.html?hpt=T2
This doesn't violate your Fourth Amendment rights, because you do not have any reasonable expectation of privacy in your own driveway — and no reasonable expectation that the government isn't tracking your movements.
driveway = can't expect privacy
can't expect privacy/not private = no warrant needed
Whether or not this will hold up to the supreme court is another matter, but as of now, that's how it goes.
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Takerial
Lovable Teddy Bear
Like I said. This doesn't provide any other information that a tail wouldn't provide and it saves on resources of having to follow them around and also frees up the police for other useful tasks.