What is Fourth Amendment Law Going Forward?
Last week, I blogged here at Dorf on Law about Chatrie v. United States , the Supreme Court’s first major Fourth Amendment case in eight years. Chatrie held that geofence searches, which use cellphone data to track cellphone users in a certain area at a certain time, are Fourth Amendment searches requiring probable cause and a warrant. Chatrie was a huge win for digital privacy, and it substantially expanded the scope of the Fourth Amendment. In today’s post, I’ll explain what Chatrie means for Fourth Amendment law going forward. The Chatrie opinion potentially transformed Fourth Amendment search law in several ways. In 2018’s Carpenter v. United States , the Supreme Court held that requesting cell phone location data over a seven day period in order to track a suspect’s movements was a Fourth Amendment search requiring a warrant and probable cause. It discussed several factors that contributed to its decision, but the three that lower courts have used most frequently in the wake of ...