Warrantless Cellphone Searches by Police Should Be Unconstitutional

Earlier this week, Gary Shapiro, CEO of the Consumer Electronics Association, had an op/ed in the Washington Post delving into the question of whether or not the police can search for data on your cellphone without a warrant. The specific case is United States v. Wurie in which the police scrolled through the recent calls on a suspected drug dealer's flip phone to figure out where his house was located. The house was raided, drugs were found, and now the defendant is claiming that the search of his phone violated his Fourth Amendment privacy right against unreasonable search and seizure. The case is now before the Supreme Court.
Shapiro accepts that police scrolling through a flip phone's call list is like checking an address book or diary found on a suspect, which earlier courts have ruled permissible without a warrant. Smartphones are different. Shapiro writes:
Today's smartphones and tablets are computers and hold vast amounts of personal information — not just contacts and text messages but also photographs, videos, e-mails, social media accounts, banking information and more. And tablets and smartphones will only become more innovative. Today, 66 percent of online U.S. adults own such a device, according to an August survey by the Consumer Electronics Association.
The questions that courts should be thinking about include: What if the confiscated phone is a password-protected smartphone? What if it is a tablet requiring biometric access? Can police try to recover the password or force the biometric key to access confidential information as part of an arrest?
When a person takes the precaution of using a password or biometrics to limit access, it's clear that person expects his or her information to remain private. With smartphones and tablets storing greater and more sensitive data than older mobile phones can, it is reasonable to expect greater privacy. Violating that expectation of privacy without a warrant clearly contradicts the Fourth Amendment. Granted, it may be appropriate to do so in an exigency, such as a life-threatening situation — but any information thus obtained could not be used as evidence in a court of law.
I am no constitutional scholar, but I would think that if someone goes to the trouble of password protecting or encrypting their cell phones, tablets, or computers, that suggests, ipso facto, that he expects privacy. Nevertheless, the brave defenders of our borders - Homeland Security goons - insist that they have the right to warrantless searches of our phones and computers.
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Just another example of how the war on drugs is hurting non drug users and non drug dealers. Because dealers use cell phones, your right to privacy is gone.
Just another example of how the war on drugs is hurting non drug users and non drug dealers. Because dealers use cell phones, your right to privacy is gone.
So nice I posted it twice.
Shapiro accepts that police scrolling through a flip phone's call list is like checking an address book or diary found on a suspect, which earlier courts have ruled permissible without a warrant. Smartphones are different. Shapiro writes:
Well fuck him for accepting this, because the Fourth Amendment is pretty explicit: The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.[1]
It looks like a case of "take their rights but stop when you start taking mine."
Um, duh, a address book isn't made out of the same kind of paper they used in the 1700s. That's the only kind of paper that is protected.
You know what else should be unconstitutional?
Cue the usual actors to tell us that things like mail wasn't historically protected, therefore, your cell phones are open territory.
Yeah, but in this case they're comparing the cell phone address book to an actual address book, which is clearly protected by the "papers and effects" clause. They can't have it both ways.
"Warrantless Cellphone Searches by Police Should Be Unconstitutional"
It is.
It is always important to remember that (for instance) the penaltax is not constitutional, it was ruled constitutional. The Supreme Court can not remake reality, though they can later what the government will pretend reality is.
this! So many people have forgotten this. They just believe everything the Supreme Court says as a fact...how naive. It is like believing the Federalist were right on the National Bank -_- They helped right it and pissed on it in 2 years :/
so how is looking through a diary or contact book not protected by the 4th? Isn't that part of PAPERS?
wtf
No, it's not part of papers, but is part of effects.
why is it part of effects and not paper? what does paper mean in that statement?
I think it's both, and is (not "should be") already unconstitutional.
"which earlier courts have ruled permissible without a warrant"
It says that courts has ruled it permissible without a warrant, which is ridiculous! We are so far gone holy crap. Cop can just look at my stuff with no warrant wtf
Is it on paper? No? Have fun with your flintlock musket, teabagger!
huh?
A lot of commenters don't read the article first.
Your sad devotion to that ancient text won't help you find the hidden liberties you seek.