Judge
Calls Location-Tracking Orwellian, While Congress
Moves To Legalize It
A federal judge’s decision requiring the government
to get a court warrant before obtaining mobile-phone
location data is one of a string of conflicting
opinions on the topic. It comes as lawmakers and the
Supreme Court weigh in on the hot-button issue of
locational privacy. U.S. District Judge Nicholas
Garaufis ruled on Tuesday that the government can only
acquire cellphone location data on a surveillance
target with a full-blown “probable cause” warrant
from a judge. The government had argued that it’s
entitled to the data whenever it’s “relevant” to
a criminal investigation — a lower standard. The
feds were seeking 113 days worth of cell-site data, or
“recorded information identifying the base-station
towers and sectors that received transmissions” from
the target’s cellphone.