Massachusetts' Top Court Says Warrants Are Needed For Real-Time Cell Site Location Info
from the this-means-you,-Stingrays dept
Five years ago, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court got out ahead of the tech curve by declaring that state law enforcement would need warrants to seek historical cell site location info. This predated the US Supreme Court's Carpenter decision by four years. The state court's prescient decision was compelled by the state's Constitution, which provides greater protections than the United States' Constitution.
But no matter which Constitution was used, the court found that the Third Party Doctrine shouldn't cover CSLI because, while everyone uses cellphones to communicate with each other, not a single cellphone user carries one around just to create tracking data for the government.
A recent decision by the same court expands protections for cellphone users -- going further than Carpenter's protection of historical cell site location info. As the ACLU's Kade Crockford points out, real-time acquisition of location info now comes with a warrant requirement. This covers more than service provider-assisted "pings." It also covers one of law enforcement's favorite toys.
Crucially, the ruling takes a different approach from the Supreme Court’s Carpenter decision in one key respect: Instead of confining its mandate to the narrow circumstances of the case before the Court, the ruling extends the warrant protection to other types of real-time cellphone tracking, including where the government uses its own technology rather than requesting the assistance of cellphone companies. In a huge victory for Massachusetts residents, the ruling explicitly specifies that it additionally applies to law enforcement’s use of so-called “stingrays,” also known as cell-site simulators, or devices that police can use to directly track cellphones—enabling police to cut out the cellphone company from the equation entirely.
As the court points out in its decision [PDF], manipulating a person's phone to reveal its location has nothing to do with third-party records or phone users' implied relinquishment of this tracking data. The only party involved is the government. The service provider may be involved, but the phone's owner certainly isn't.
The intrusive nature of police action that causes an individual's cell phone to transmit its real-time location raises distinct privacy concerns. When the police ping a cell phone, as they did in this case, they compel it to emit a signal, and create a transmission identifying its real-time location information. [...] This action and transmission is initiated and effectively controlled by the police, and is done without any express or implied authorization or other involvement by the individual cell phone user. See id. (noting that cell phone ping is "undetectable to the [cell phone] user"). Without police direction, such data would also not otherwise be collected and retained by the service provider.
This active inducement of a signal, solely for the purpose of locating a phone, is something invasive enough it requires a warrant. Since that's all Stingrays do -- induce all phones in the area to cough up identification/location info -- there's no way Stingrays aren't covered by this ruling. The court is clear law enforcement means and methods that subvert societal expectations are unreasonable. Hence the need for warrants.
We confidently conclude that such police action implicates reasonable expectations of privacy. Indeed, society reasonably expects that the police will not be able to secretly manipulate our personal cell phones for any purpose, let alone for the purpose of transmitting our personal location data.
The footnote attached to this paragraph specifically references Stingray devices. And it makes it clear this ruling covers whatever new tech/method law enforcement uses to obtain real-time location info, preemptively instituting a warrant requirement for future tech developments.
We recognize that the government's ability to compel a cell phone to reveal its location is not limited to the pinging that occurred in this case. For instance, law enforcement in other jurisdictions have used "cell site simulators" to track down persons of interest by "trick[ing] all nearby phones" into revealing their location information (quotations omitted). State v. Andrews, 227 Md. App. 350, 379 (2016). Nor do we doubt that as technology continues to advance, the government will develop new ways to compel an individual's cell phone to reveal its location. The privacy concerns raised by pinging a cell phone apply equally to any circumstance where the cell phone's location information is generated as a direct result of the government's manipulation of an individual's cell phone.
It's a solid ruling. And it shows some states are going to set the pace in tech/privacy cases simply because their state Constitutions provide residents with more protections than are found at the federal level. If we can't get a unified stance from the top court in the land, maybe we can piece it together state-by-state.
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Filed Under: 4th amendment, cell site location info, csli, massachusetts, privacy, warrants
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Well, it's sort of a no-brainer
It's just that the federal Supreme Court has to catch up with the millennium we are living in. I doubt that the people actually having written the Constitution would take as long as that but their role in maintaining the meaning of the Constitution is confined to rotating in their graves these days.
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Re: Well, it's sort of a no-brainer
The people who wrote the Constitution would declare the entire Government null and void and require us to start over with a non-corrupt version. The NSA alone would make them start shooting those in charge for ever allowing it.
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Re: Re: Well, it's sort of a no-brainer
And the Government would have them rounded up as terrorists, tossed in Guantanamo, and tortured for giving us freedom instead of happiness. (And now it's time for me to go write a gritty reboot of the 'Grand Inquisitor' from Karamazov... or better yet, not write it and just sue anyone who does.)
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Even this decision won't mean much when the first officer to violate it claims qualified immunity.
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Re: Re: Re: Well, it's sort of a no-brainer
It is not a trade off between freedom and happiness.
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Re: a no-brainer
They would seek a much different confederation model that did not reply upon a mere written constitution to restrict normal government excesses and rapid expansion.
Relying on the US Supreme Court to protect citizen rights is a fundamental rookie error.
Constitution's authors figured the sovereign American state governments would be the primary enforcers of their Constitution; Lincoln's Union Army proved the whole American Republic experiment to be a painful farce.
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Massachusetts isn't in the 8th Circuit, so at least they can still put chalk marks on people's cell phones
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Re: Re: a no-brainer
The didn't intend for the Constitution to restrict things. That's a perversion, and it's why some of them were against the bill of rights. The Constitution grants powers to government; anything not so granted is a power they're not supposed to have.
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Re: Re: Re: a no-brainer
Pretty much.
People use the caps on Constitution without thinking about what the word means - it's a list of items describing what constitutes what it is describing.
The Constitution is simply a list of what the government it was forming MUST do.
The Bill of Rights, the first ten Amendments to the Must Do list are items the newly formed government must NOT do.
The problem comes in when you start "interpreting" the clearly-worded document to mean what you want it to mean.
The difference between a Conservative Justice and a Liberal Justice has nothing to do with right/left politics.
A Conservative starts with The Constitution, then works through case law to make a determination.
A Liberal starts with the resolution they want and works backwards to try and warp the Constitution to allow it.
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Re: Re: Well, it's sort of a no-brainer
...if that was the sort of thing the people who wrote the Constitution were likely to do, they probably would have added a mechanism for doing that to the Constitution.
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'Stingray' Never heard of it.
And/or engages in some good old fashion evidence laundering.
Still, better to have it on the books and at least have the chance(if ever so insanely small) for punishments, than not have it there and have no chance whatsoever.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Well, it's sort of a no-brainer
[Note to self: new Dostoevsky material needs work; for now, go back to dumb Kurt Gödel references and stealing from John Oliver.]
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Re: Re: Re: Re: a no-brainer
Sometimes "MUST", sometimes "MAY". Section 8, enumerated powers, is all MAY; they are not, for instance, required to declare war or grant copyrights/patents/etc.
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Does any company make a phone case that will completely shield a phone so it's only detectable when you use it? I realize this would also stop it from receiving incoming calls or texts, but I'm curious if such a thing exists for people who might want to carry a cell phone, but not have it act as a full-time tracking device.
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Damn, Zof's not going to like this, is he?
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Re: Re: Re: Well, it's sort of a no-brainer
They did not try exercising constitutional means of English Law in order to separate themselves from England. Clearly they were of the "if it is broken beyond repair, start over" persuasion.
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Re:
Turn it off, and if paranoid, put it in a metal foil bag, or find a phone that fits in an Altoids tin.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: a no-brainer
It's not as cut-and-dried as that, as recent events are proving. Any authoritarian will find a way to "make" the Constitution say what it wants. If you were right we wouldn't have a surveillance state and constant attacks on women's rights to self-determination whether they are pregnant or not.
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