A federal appeals court ruled Wednesday that police need a warrant to acquire cell phone location data, concluding such records are protected by the Fourth Amendment’s prohibitions on unreasonable searches and seizures.
“While committing a crime is certainly not within a legitimate expectation of privacy, if the cell site location data could place him near those scenes, it could place him near any other scene,” wrote Judge David Bryan Sentelle in an opinion for the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals. “There is a reasonable privacy interest in being near the home of a lover, or a dispensary of medication, or a place of worship, or a house of ill repute.”
Civil libertarians have long argued that the laws governing the state’s access to so-called business records have been outpaced by advances in technology that put Americans’ most personal data in the hands of third parties. A 1978 Supreme Court case, Smith v. Maryland, established a concept known as “third-party doctrine.” That doctrine holds that records held by a third party, such as the call records held by a phone company, are not covered by the Fourth Amendment. The court determined yesterday that unlike dialing phone numbers, individuals may not know they are transmitting location information when their phone links up to a nearby cell tower to make a call.
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“What the court here realized is that your location isn’t like that. You didn’t dial your location in and send it to the phone company, that’s something your phone registers automatically without any action on your part,” said Julian Sanchez, an analyst with the Cato Institute. “The importance of this beyond location is that, frankly if you have a smartphone you probably have no idea how often that phone is sending information to someone else.”









