Supreme Court’s GPS Ruling Hints at Greater Scrutiny of Surveillance Tech [MIT Technology Review]

STEPHEN CASS

Yesterday the U.S. Supreme Court threw out the conviction of a man sentenced to life imprisonment on the basis that key information used to prosecute him had been illegally obtained.

A GPS tracking device, which reported its location via the cell phone network, had been placed on the defendant’s car without a warrant. Four weeks of nearly continuous tracking provided the basis of an indictment and subsequent conviction for drug trafficking. In a victory for privacy advocates, the Supreme Court ruled that this tracking violated the American constitution’s 4th amendment protections against warrantless searches and seizures of “persons, [and their] houses, papers, and effects.”

Because the decision did not fall along the usual conservative versus liberal lines, and because there are competing views among the justices on just how the 4th amendment was violated, this case has provided a great deal of grist for the mills of court watchers (for an excellent dissection of the legal issues, see the SCOTUSblog’s coverage.)

But a broad swath of technology industries are also paying attention, as the court has taken the opportunity to clearly signal its interest in the 4th amendment implications of warrantless electronic surveillance through things such email records, GPS-enabled smart phones, or in-car assistance technologies.

In this particular case, the majority decision of the court hinged on the finding that, by attaching a physical tracking device to the defendant’s car in the absence of a valid warrant, law enforcement officials committed an act of trespass. But, even as they restricted their judgement to these narrow grounds, the judges warned that, “It may be that achieving the same [tracking] through electronic  means, without an accompanying trespass, is an unconstitutional invasion of privacy…”

Thus, while declining to say one way or another, it’s likely that the court will accept for a review a future case speaking to these issues should one arise, which it it almost inevitably will, given today’s fuzzy boundaries between public and private information. For example, just because I disclose my location to my cell phone carrier, is that information really  open for the police to peruse without a warrant,especially as disclosing that information is essential to using the service? And what about, say, non-essential but non-public information shared with a social network?

What’s clear is that the Supreme Court is aware of the often permeable membrane between a communications technology and a surveillance technology.

Which particular such technology will ultimately fall under the Court’s microscope is impossible to guess, but which ever one does, it’s likely to produce a landmark ruling that will go a long way to defining the societal auspices under which these technologies operate, as they complete their transition from optional extras to essential products and services required by most people.

Drive-by Gun Scans Prompt Privacy Questions [MIT Technology Review]

BY CHRIS OPFER

The NYPD recently announced that it’s working on a mobile scanner designed to detect concealed weapons on people from up to 75 feet away. The department won’t say when the devices might hit the street or how much they will cost, but Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly has already praised them as “a cutting-edge effort to deter gun violence.”

The police department is developing the device with the U.S. Department of Defense. The device measures terahertz waves—which are naturally emitted by people and objects and pass through materials such as clothes, which is how the scanner can reveal guns or other hidden objects. The current model can scan from up to about 15 feet away; Kelly hopes to increase the range to 75 feet before mounting the device on police vehicles.

City officials tout the technology as an alternative to NYPD’s controversial “stop and frisk” technique, in which officers stop people on the street for questioning—often patting them down in the process. Opponents of the practice say it unfairly targets minorities. Blacks and Hispanics accounted for 87 percent of the roughly 600,000 people stopped by the NYPD in 2010, according to the Center for Constitutional Rights, a civil rights organization based in New York City.

“I think this is a positive development,” says Richard Cardinale, a New York attorney who represents plaintiffs in police misconduct cases. “The biggest benefit of stop and frisk is that police are getting guns off the street and saving lives. If you have this new way to detect guns, people don’t have to suffer the indignity of being searched for no reason.”

Not everyone is ready to embrace the new technology, however. “There are serious Fourth Amendment problems raised by the use of this technology,” says Michael Price, counsel for the Brennan Center for Justice’s Liberty and National Security Program. “The idea that police could mount a scanner on a car and take images of everyone within a certain range is troubling.”

The Fourth Amendment guarantees individuals the right to be free from “unreasonable searches and seizures.” Generally, the law allows cops to stop and frisk a person if the officer has “reasonable suspicion” that the person is committing or about to commit a crime. The threshold is lower than the “probable cause” required for police to search a person’s car, get a warrant to search a home, or make an arrest.

Cardinale says scanning a person for weapons isn’t a search at all, likening the technology to traffic light cameras and speed guns, neither of which requires reasonable suspicion in order to be used.

The question of whether a certain technique is a search or frisk under the law largely turns on the subject’s privacy expectation. Courts generally require police to obtain a warrant before entering a home because, even in tiny New York City apartments, people expect a modicum of privacy there.

In 2001, the Supreme Court ruled that police use of thermal imaging devices to check homes for the telltale heat produced by high-intensity lamps used in indoor marijuana-growing operations constitutes a search under the Fourth Amendment and is “presumptively unreasonable” without a warrant.

Even on the street, where a person has a lower privacy expectation, the law requires some minimal basis—reasonable suspicion—for stopping a person and searching him. That includes scanning for weapons, according to Price. “The Fourth Amendment doesn’t vanish when you leave your house.”

My ‘luck’-

I write a post saying I’m going to make 2012 the best year ever.  An hour or two later I am packing up the kids and our clothes and getting kicked out of yet another place for yet another stupid reason.  So much for a happy anniversary.  Now I am laughing at myself for daring to be so damnably hopeful.  Me and my misplaced optimism.  You’d think I would have learned better by now.

Anyway, fast forward two weeks.  I have managed to keep my family together for a few more months at least and kept my husband from getting tossed out on his ass.  He’s lost another job because of his chronic health issues and although we have a place to stay, there isn’t money for much else.  My inbox is bursting with rejection emails.  I’ve been sick with a respiratory infection, but now that I’m better, my nicotine consumption is soaring.  My nerves are almost shot.  I sleep too much.  I have good days and I have zombie days.  What if I can’t get a job?  What if I can?  Will it even be enough to matter?  How do I enroll in classes if I don’t know where I will be next quarter?  I can’t even enroll online because I may or may not have internet access at the point of classes starting.

IQ of 121, 10 years in customer service, and I can’t even get a job as a waitress.  I’m applying to fast food now.  If they won’t hire me I really have no idea what options are left.