PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Warrantless Cell Phone Tracking Common Among Law Enforcement Agencies

According to evidence compiled by the American Civil Liberties Union from more than 200 police departments across the country, cell phone tracking has also become commonplace and is used by nearly all law enforcement agencies,

Warrantless Cell Phone Tracking Common Among Law Enforcement Agencies
2013-03-03
CRANFORD, NJ, March 03, 2013 (Press-News.org) Cell phone location tracking has become an increasingly important law enforcement tool in recent years, allowing police to find suspects or victims in emergencies and complementing more traditional surveillance techniques during routine investigations.

According to evidence compiled by the American Civil Liberties Union from more than 200 police departments across the country, cell phone tracking has also become commonplace and is used by nearly all law enforcement agencies, large and small. However, the ACLU also found that most cell phone tracking data is collected without search warrants based on probable cause, which raises significant concerns about privacy and government overreaching.

When is a Warrant Required?

Cellular service providers control a great deal of personal information, including location data, records of text messages, and calling patterns. Service providers are not legally required to share this information with law enforcement agencies, but the ACLU found that many service providers sell this type of personal data to police departments on a regular basis, often without requiring a court order.

Compounding the situation, the legal requirements regarding the standards and procedures that police must follow before using tracking data tend to be confusing and inconsistent, with regulations varying from state to state and city to city. Only a small number of agencies require warrants based on probable cause, the ACLU found, while others use less searching subpoena standards or require only a determination that the data is relevant to an ongoing investigation.

Despite these findings regarding the lack of oversight over cell phone tracking, the ACLU's records did not suggest that law enforcement agencies have conducted warrantless wiretaps on cell phone users. Wiretaps, which allow police to listen in on conversations as opposed to simply tracing their locations, must comply with warrant requirements specified under federal law.

Warrantless Cell Phone Tracking and the Fourth Amendment

Although the U.S. Supreme Court ruled earlier this year in U.S. v. Jones that police violated a defendant's Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures by installing a GPS monitoring device on his car without first obtaining a warrant, the decision focused on the physical trespass of the monitoring device and did not address cell phone tracking specifically. As a result, the decision left in place earlier cases that upheld warrantless electronic tracking of suspects' movements along highways and through other public places where there is no reasonable expectation of privacy. The decision raised significant questions, however, about how such privacy expectations should be affected by technological innovations such as smart phones and ubiquitous GPS signaling. As a result, the law remains murky on the Fourth Amendment issues implicated by warrantless cell phone tracking

Looking Ahead

The ACLU's findings regarding warrantless cell phone tracking highlight a lack of adequate standards, procedures, and oversight, and suggest that stricter safeguards are needed to protect individuals' privacy and prevent unreasonable government surveillance practices. Responding to the need for clearer regulations, Congress and about a dozen states have proposed legislation that would restrict the use of warrantless cell phone tracking. Cell phone tracing and location data, however, will probably continue to raise difficult legal issues as new technologies create opportunities for new forms of surveillance.

Sources
Amy Gahran,: "ACLU: Most police track phones' locations without warrants," CNN Tech, Apr. 3, 2012
Eric Lichtblau, "Police Are Using Phone Tracking as a Routine Tool," New York Times, Mar. 31, 2012
Press Release, "ACLU Releases Cell Phone Tracking Documents From Some 200 Police Departments Nationwide," Apr. 2, 2012
United States v. Jones, No. 10-1259, U.S. Supreme Court, Jan. 23, 2012

Article provided by Anthony N. Palumbo, a partner at the law firm of Palumbo & Renaud and a New Jersey Criminal Defense Law Firm with more than 35 years of trial experience. As a former county and municipal prosecutor and a longtime New Jersey Criminal Defense Lawyer, I know what to expect from the local judges, prosecutors and police.

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Warrantless Cell Phone Tracking Common Among Law Enforcement Agencies

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Launch Party and Signing Walking Down Awen's Path The Third Book By Author David P. Smith To Be Held At Familiar Spirits 790 Washington Street Suite 2, Coventry, Rhode Island 02816 On March 16, 2013

Launch Party and Signing Walking Down Awens Path The Third Book By Author David P. Smith To Be Held At Familiar Spirits 790 Washington Street Suite 2, Coventry, Rhode Island 02816 On March 16, 2013
2013-03-03
Familiar Spirits is happy to invite you to join us as we celebrate the release of David's third book on March 16, 2013 4-7 PM, "Walking Down Awen's Path" we will have copies of this new gem as well as David's first two books on hand for purchase and signing. There will be FREE soda and pizza for all our guest and friends. And if that wasn't enough to get you here we will be giving away a free copy of the new book signed by both David and the 17 year old artist who designed the chapter illustrations, Ivy Basley! Both the Author and illustrator will be in attendance. ...

Velvet Ice Cream's Ye Olde Mill Readies for Opening Day

Velvet Ice Creams Ye Olde Mill Readies for Opening Day
2013-03-03
The much-anticipated opening of Velvet Ice Cream's Ye Olde Mill will commence on May 1 with a special offering of 99-cent opening-day ice cream cones. The Mill kicks off its 2013 travel season offering individual travelers, school field trips, motor coach and other groups and at 11 a.m. on May 1 with the popular experiences that draw more than 150,000 people to the Velvet Ice Cream headquarters every year. In addition to enjoying a scoop of famous Velvet Ice Cream at 1970s-era pricing, guests can enjoy the following: - Free Velvet Ice Cream tours - Watching ice cream ...

How do bacteria clog medical devices? Very quickly

How do bacteria clog medical devices? Very quickly
2013-03-02
A new study has exam­ined how bac­te­ria clog med­ical devices, and the result isn't pretty. The microbes join to cre­ate slimy rib­bons that tan­gle and trap other pass­ing bac­te­ria, cre­at­ing a full block­age in a star­tlingly short period of time. The find­ing could help shape strate­gies for pre­vent­ing clog­ging of devices such as stents — which are implanted in the body to keep open blood ves­sels and pas­sages — as well as water fil­ters and other items that are sus­cep­ti­ble to con­t­a­m­i­na­tion. The research was pub­lished in Pro­ceed­ings of the National ...

Postmenopausal women who smoked are more likely to lose teeth due to periodontal disease

2013-03-02
BUFFALO, N.Y. – Postmenopausal women who have smoked are at much higher risk of losing their teeth than women who never smoked, according to a new study published and featured on the cover of the Journal of the American Dental Association by researchers at the University at Buffalo. The study involved 1,106 women who participated in the Buffalo OsteoPerio Study, an offshoot of the Women's Health Initiative, (WHI), the largest clinical trial and observational study ever undertaken in the U.S., involving more than 162,000 women across the nation, including nearly 4,000 ...

Turn trash into cash... and save energy

Turn trash into cash... and save energy
2013-03-02
Suppose you could replace "Made in China" with "Made in my garage." Suppose also that every time you polished off a jug of two percent, you would be stocking up on raw material to make anything from a cell phone case and golf tees to a toy castle and a garlic press. And, you could give yourself a gold medal for being a bona fide, recycling, polar-bear-saving rock star. Michigan Technological University's Joshua Pearce is working on it. His main tool is open-source 3D printing, which he uses to save thousands of dollars by making everything from his lab equipment to his ...

Short algorithm, long-range consequences

2013-03-02
CAMBRIGDE, MA -- In the last decade, theoretical computer science has seen remarkable progress on the problem of solving graph Laplacians — the esoteric name for a calculation with hordes of familiar applications in scheduling, image processing, online product recommendation, network analysis, and scientific computing, to name just a few. Only in 2004 did researchers first propose an algorithm that solved graph Laplacians in "nearly linear time," meaning that the algorithm's running time didn't increase exponentially with the size of the problem. At this year's ACM Symposium ...

Misplaced molecules: New insights into the causes of dementia

2013-03-02
This press release is available in German. A shortage of a protein called TDP-43 caused muscle wasting and stunted nerve cells. This finding supports the idea that malfunction of this protein plays a decisive role in ALS and FTD. The study is published in the "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA" (PNAS). ALS is an incurable neurological disease which manifests as rapidly progressing muscle wasting. Both limbs and respiratory muscles are affected. This leads to impaired mobility and breathing problems. Patients commonly die within a few years after ...

Improved synchronicity: Preventive care for the power grid

2013-03-02
President Obama in this year's State of the Union address talked about the future of energy and mentioned "self-healing power grids" -- a grid that is able to keep itself stable during normal conditions and also to self-recover in the event of a disturbance caused, for example, by severe weather. But as the national power-grid network becomes larger and more complex achieving reliability across the network is increasingly difficult. Now Northwestern University scientists have identified conditions and properties that power companies can consider using to keep power generators ...

Distracted driving: It's more than just your eyes

2013-03-02
Distracted driving: It's more than just your eyes Article provided by Carter & Fulton, P.S. Visit us at http://www.carterfultonlaw.com Sending or receiving a text message takes a driver's eyes away from the road for an average of 4.6 seconds -- long enough to cover a football field at freeway speed, according to researchers at the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute. As startling as this statistic may be, what many people do not realize is that texting while driving is about more than a driver's failure to keep his or her eyes on the road. While watching ...

Bicycle riders need to use good judgment

2013-03-02
Bicycle riders need to use good judgment Article provided by Frederick & Hagle Visit us at http://www.frederickandhagle.com/ Running a red light is generally not a good idea for any vehicle, no matter how many wheels it may have. But a new Illinois law gives its blessing to bicyclists and other two-wheeled vehicle riders to proceed through an intersection on red--sometimes. This law may seem contrary to what law enforcement officials have always told bicycle riders. Sound advice from the Illinois State Police These are some of the practices the Illinois ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Antarctica’s only native insect’s unique survival mechanism

How Earth's early cycles shaped the chemistry of life

Ukraine war forces planes to take longer routes, raising CO2

Negative refraction of light using atoms instead of metamaterials

High BP may develop at different ages and paces in East & South Asian adults in the UK

Meet the newly discovered brain cell that allows you to remember objects

Engineered animals show new way to fight mercury pollution

The 3,000-year coral reef shutdown: a mysterious pause and a remarkable recovery

Worm surface chemistry reveals secrets to their development and survival

Splicing twins: unravelling the secrets of the minor spliceosome complex

500-year-old Transylvanian diaries show how the Little Ice Age completely changed life and death in the region

Overcoming nicotine withdrawal: Clues found in neural mechanisms of the brain

Survey: Women prefer female doctors, but finding one for heart health can be difficult

Leaf color mysteries unveiled: the role of BoYgl-2 in cabbage

NUS Medicine study: Inability of cells to recycle fats can spell disease

D2-GCN: a graph convolutional network with dynamic disentanglement for node classification

Female hoverflies beat males on long-distance migrations

Study finds consumer openness to smoke-impacted wines, offering new market opportunities

Why we need to expand the search for climate-friendly microalgae

Fewer forest fires burn in North America today than in the past—and that's a bad thing

Older people in England are happier now than before the COVID pandemic, new national study suggests

Texas A&M chemist wins NSF CAREER Award

Micro-nano plastics make other pollutants more dangerous to plants and intestinal cells

Study of female genital tract reveals key findings

Pitt Engineering Professor Fang Peng elected to National Academy of Engineering

Short-course radiation therapy effective for endometrial cancer patients

Breast cancer treatment advances with light-activated ‘smart bomb’

JSCAI article at THT 2025 sets the standard for training pathways in interventional heart failure

Engineering biological reaction crucibles to rapidly produce proteins

Minecraft: a gamechanger for children’s learning

[Press-News.org] Warrantless Cell Phone Tracking Common Among Law Enforcement Agencies
According to evidence compiled by the American Civil Liberties Union from more than 200 police departments across the country, cell phone tracking has also become commonplace and is used by nearly all law enforcement agencies,