With facial recognition, palm vein-scanning, and a fingerprint reader, it could be hard to get locked out with a SwitchBot ...
The U.S. top court is expected to rule on whether to allow police to identify criminal suspects by dragnet searching the databases of tech giants.
Some justices seemed to advocate for a relatively narrow ruling that would clarify what such warrants require, even if it ...
The Supreme Court will hear oral argument next week in Chatrie v. United States, which concerns a Virginia man who was convicted of bank robbery. Okello Chatrie contended in the lower courts that the ...
The justices’ decision on whether police can use location history data to track suspects may redefine Fourth Amendment protections in the digital age. While the court battle between Elon Musk and ...
The justices are considering whether police can use "geofence" warrants, which cover everyone who was in a certain place at a certain time.
SCOTUS appeared inclined Monday to allow police use of geofence warrants, with Justice Sotomayor pushing back on critics.
The conservative justices appeared divided on what the Constitution requires for law enforcement to access location data.
The Supreme Court seems inclined to rule that police could use geofence warrants that collect the location history of cellphone users to find people near crime scenes ...
The Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of a key law enforcement tool that has grown in significance in recent years alongside the growth of location-enabled devices: geofence warrants.
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Monday in a case with potentially major implications for how law enforcement investigates crimes in the digital age. The justices will weigh whether geofence ...