Maryland Court to Baltimore Police: Want to Track Phones? Get a Warrant.
Ruling establishes that people have expectation of physical location privacy.


In what could potentially be a major (if limited to one state) privacy decision, Maryland's Court of Special Appeals has ruled that carrying around a cellphone with GPS features doesn't mean that the police can simply use it to track people's physical locations without a warrant or the protection of the Fourth Amendment.
The court is referring to cell tower simulating devices we've come to know as "stingrays." Use of these tools has spread to law enforcement offices across the country, and the police have been doing everything in their power to keep their uses secret. From The Baltimore Sun:
"We conclude that people have a reasonable expectation that their cell phones will not be used as real-time tracking devices by law enforcement, and — recognizing that the Fourth Amendment protects people and not simply areas — that people have an objectively reasonable expectation of privacy in real-time cell phone location information," the judges wrote.
"The court's opinion is a resounding defense of Fourth Amendment rights in the digital age," added Nathan Freed Wessler, a staff attorney who specializes in technology and privacy with the American Civil Liberties Union. "The court's withering rebuke of secret and warrantless use of invasive cell phone tracking technology shows why it is so important for these kinds of privacy invasions to be subjected to judicial review.
Dan Kobrin, an attorney with the public defender's office who argued the case before the court, said the impact is "enormous" and "will hopefully curb abuse of this device and bring it out into the sunlight." But he said it was unclear whether the ruling can be applied retroactively.
The state's attorney general's office can appeal the decision to the state's supreme court but is still looking over the ruling at the moment, according to the Sun.
Baltimore is one of the cities where police had been using the stingrays and had been concealing that fact from the courts and defendants as part of a non-disclosure agreement to get permission from the Department of Justice to use them. They even agreed to drop cases in order to prevent disclosure of the tools. You can read that non-disclosure agreement here.
You can read the court's ruling here.
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Hmmmm.... What would happen if I used a Stingray? Would that be criminal?
[insert tasteless Steven Irwin joke here]
"Crikey!"
"Have a go at this one!"
When it goes to SCOTUS, the decision will be hung or they'll call it a tax and tell the plaintiff to STFU.
There's no reason for the police to just track people randomly. We can trust them to have a good reason. So if they do it, it must be for a good reason.
Because terrorists! The children!! If we save just one life!
Which "reasons" did I miss?
A reverse nut shot on a Thursday!
And a great Welch piece destroying Sanders!
Add in some repulsive Nutrasweet/Epi basement bondage routines for a threefor and we're in business!
DON'T TEASE ME REASON!!!
War on cops.
Seems legit
I'm surprised any prosecutor takes any mention of a stingray into court. Apparently they haven't heard of parallel construction in Maryland.
Rule of law, Hugh. It's a wonderful thing, isn't it?
I'm sure there are laws making this perfectly above board, Epi. Just like there are laws making torture and unilateral drone strikes legal. It's just that the laws are secret. So just trust the Top Men when they tell you this is all totes legit.
Is there *anything* the law can't do? It's like magic!
They can even make it so people moving from one place to another are committing the most heinous crime imaginable.
Blood and Soil rape denialist!
Is there a hashtag to combat that kind of denialism? Like #believehitler?
#Tr....nah, let's aim higher than the low-hanging fruit.
#RapistSchlongsMatter?
Rule of law, Hugh. It's a wonderful thing, isn't it?
I've heard of it. Not sure I've ever actually seen it outside of a laboratory environment. Any ideas where I might see it in the wild?
Government is just another name for what we pay people to not tell us about.
How the hell does the paper get away with disclosing that non-disclosure agreement? It's like the First Amendment doesn't even protect your right to not have people say hurtful things about you.
What happens when the cops do it anyway? Yeah, nothing. So it really doesn't matter.
"You can't do it, we just got pardoned by the Governor himself!"
"It went out on the radio."
"Is that right? Well, we ain't got a radio."
Every time an action is ruled unconstitutional, everyone who has performed that act should be charged with breaking the law. It won't happen, but it should.
The law only circumscribes the actions of the common masses. Their betters do as they please, and people are free to sue them afterward. If, after a few years of expensive legal action, the judge agrees that the law applies to all then perhaps they will stop. After they have exhausted all appeals.
By which to say... I completely fucking agree with you.
But your honor, stingray is a cool name. Like scorpion or wolf pack. We can't be crime fighters without stuff with cool names.
VIPR
"But...but...if you insist on this 'privacy' thingy the terrorists and dope fiends will GET US! WE'LL ALL DIE SCREAMING!!!"
people have a reasonable expectation that their cell phones will not be used as real-time tracking devices by law enforcement
"Well, these days it's unreasonable to be reasonable."
"will hopefully curb abuse of this device"
Yes, that will totally happen. When the courts tell them they can't play with their little toys anymore they will absolutely put them away and play by the rules.
Oh by the way, anytime you have to stipulate that a court ruling will "hopefully" cause a change in the little piggies' behavior, something went terribly terribly wrong at some point in the past.
Maybe this could have been used to save Freddie Gray.