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Supreme Court Divided on Geofencing Privacy Case Involving Google Data
En desarrollo
Política·27.04.2026Resumen IA

Supreme Court Divided on Geofencing Privacy Case Involving Google Data

The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case examining whether police can obtain cell phone location data from Google without violating Fourth Amendment rights. The case stems from a bank robbery investigation where police used geofencing to identify suspects. Both conservative and liberal justices expressed concerns about the implications for privacy, with Justice Barrett noting users likely don't understand how their data is stored.

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NPR News
Supreme Court Hears Arguments on Geofencing Warrants and Fourth Amendment Privacy
En desarrollo
Law·27.04.2026Resumen IA

Supreme Court Hears Arguments on Geofencing Warrants and Fourth Amendment Privacy

The Supreme Court heard arguments on whether geofencing warrants—allowing police to demand Google identify all users within a crime scene area—are constitutional. The case stems from a 2019 Virginia bank robbery where police obtained a warrant for location data on roughly three football fields around the bank, ultimately identifying Okello Chatrie. The government argues users who opted into Google's location history waived privacy expectations, while defense contends this amounts to a dragnet search violating the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches.

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NPR Business
Supreme Court Weighs Constitutionality of Geofencing Warrants in Virginia Bank Robbery Case
En desarrollo
Law·26.04.2026Resumen IA

Supreme Court Weighs Constitutionality of Geofencing Warrants in Virginia Bank Robbery Case

Police in Virginia used geofencing—drawing a virtual perimeter around a bank robbery scene and demanding Google identify any users within it—to solve a $195,000 heist in Midlothian. The technique is now before the U.S. Supreme Court, which must decide whether this warrantless-style data search violates the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches.

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NPR News