Feds Won't Challenge Ruling That Says It Needs A Warrant To Put GPS Devices On Cars… For Now

from the but-we'll-see-if-that-stays dept

Back in October, we wrote about the Third Circuit appeals court ruling that attaching a GPS device to someone’s car required a warrant. While the Justice Department is now challenging the part of that decision which said that the evidence obtained via the warrantless GPS use must be sustained (the government is arguing for a “good faith exception” to let it use the information under the belief that it was collected legally — basically saying if they knew it required a warrant they would have gotten one), it has decided to not challenge the larger point that a warrant is needed to attach a GPS device to a car. That’s good news, but it’s only a little bit of good news.

The government does say that it “respectfully disagrees with the Court’s requirement of a warrant to install and use a GPS device” but isn’t seeking a review of that ruling. That, most likely, means that it’s just waiting for another court to rule on the matter in a different circuit (and hoping for a better outcome) and can pit those two circuits against each other in a Supreme Court review. So, basically, it’s just avoiding the issue for the time being.

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Comments on “Feds Won't Challenge Ruling That Says It Needs A Warrant To Put GPS Devices On Cars… For Now”

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16 Comments
That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re:

‘Requires a warrant for GPS tracking’…

Hmm, I wonder wherever they would manage to find a court that approves almost every single surveillance request put in front of them, plays fast and loose with legal wording to allow far more than any sane person would think is reasonable, and is used to making decisions based entirely on what little data they are handed?

Anonymous Coward says:

No big deal

they will just get a warrant ‘ex post facto’ despite any contrary laws to that and a judge will roll over anyways. Or the will just wash all of the data and say it came from phone company or street cameras or some little green leprechaun recently gang-pressed into employment, none of which will be rejected by the court.

btrussell (profile) says:

“That, most likely, means that it’s just waiting for another court to rule on the matter in a different circuit (and hoping for a better outcome) and can pit those two circuits against each other in a Supreme Court review. So, basically, it’s just avoiding the issue for the time being.”

Are there other cases pending? Or are they just going to ignore this ruling and wait until they are caught again for the next case? That isn’t avoiding. It is ignoring.

Chris Brand says:

Good faith

The assumptions behind this idea are backwards. It comes from the assumption that anything is fair game without a warrant unless there’s some law or precedent requiring one. It should be the other way round – if there’s no law or precedent saying you *don’t* need a warrant to get at the information, assume you need one. That’s the only way to keep us safe because technology evolves far faster than the law.
If some molecular sniffer thing is developed that can track you from the traces of scent you leave behind as you travel, we shouldn’t have a period of time when law enforcement considers it fair game until Congress and the courts actually look at it and saw “you need a warrant for that”.

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