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With Carpenter, Supreme Court Could Change the Privacy Landscape

Woman searching on phone

On June 5th, the Supreme Court to review a case that will have incredible impact on Americans鈥 privacy rights. That case is , which questions whether the protects against warrantless searches of historical cell-site location information (CSLI). In considering this case, the Court will have to decide whether Carpenter鈥檚 claim meets the standard established in 听for when the government听is required to obtain听a warrant before conducting a searchpursuant to the听4th amendment right to privacy: whether Carpenter has a 鈥渞easonable expectation of privacy鈥 in his CSLI.

Timothy Carpenter was for a series of armed robberies that occurred between December 2010 and March 2011 in Michigan and Ohio. In an effort to place Carpenter in close proximity to the robberies, the government obtained his historical CSLI without obtaining a warrant from a judge based on probable cause. The government received 127 days of Carpenter鈥檚 cell phone records which it used as evidence against him. Those records were instrumental in obtaining against Carpenter for committing six robberies.

The argued that Carpenter鈥檚 CSLI was subject to the controversial , which holds that when one voluntarily gives up their personal information to a third party like a bank or phone company, that information is protected by 听a reasonable expectation of privacy. The held that while communications content is protected under the 4th amendment, Carpenter had no reasonable expectation of privacy regarding routing information, such as CSLI, because anyone using a phone knowingly 鈥溾榚xposes鈥 [the phone鈥檚] location to the nearest cell tower and thus to the company that operates the tower.鈥

Carpenter鈥檚 lawyer that the third party doctrine did not apply, that government access to CSLI requires a search warrant, and that without a warrant, any obtained CSLI records must be suppressed. Furthermore, Carpenter argued that the government failed to show reasonable grounds for believing the requested CSLI records were relevant to an ongoing criminal investigation as required under the .

Here, like in the Supreme Court case, , which dealt with the issue of whether a warrant is required for real-time location tracking, a core question is being avoided: Is an individual鈥檚 physical location protected by the 4th amendment? In Carpenter, the issue hinges on whether that interest exists for CSLI metadata, and in Jones, the Supreme Court held that the government鈥檚 location tracking required a warrant because the act of placing the tracker in the target鈥檚 car constitutes a trespass. 听

In ,JusticeAlitoissued听a separate听that, like听the majority,听held that a warrant听was required, but on different grounds听Heargued that sustainedreal-time location trackingrequired a warrant, explaining that 鈥渓onger term GPS monitoring in investigations of most offenses impinges on expectations of privacy,鈥 thus triggering the requirement for a search warrant. The , , and others signed on as amicus in support of Carpenter.

In , as in, the government collected enough information, over an extended period of time, to create a story of the petitioner鈥檚 life that went beyond revealing details that were relevant to the alleged crime. This type of search must require a warrant. According to Justice Sotomayor in , 鈥淸i]t may be necessary to reconsider the premise that an individual has no reasonable expectation of privacy in information voluntarily disclosed to third parties…This approach is ill suited to the digital age, in which people reveal a great deal of information about themselves to third parties in the course of carrying out mundane tasks.鈥 OTI wholeheartedly agrees.

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Maria Little
Maria Little

Google Public Policy Fellow, Open Technology Institute

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With Carpenter, Supreme Court Could Change the Privacy Landscape