Posted on 07/31/2013 8:20:53 AM PDT by Whenifhow
In a major victory for the Justice Department over privacy advocates, a federal appeals court ruled Tuesday that government agencies can collect records showing the location of an individual's cell phone without obtaining a warrant.
The 2-1 ruling by the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans upheld the Justice Department's argument that "historical" records showing the location of cell phones, gleaned from cell site location towers, are not protected by the Fourth Amendment.
A key basis for the ruling: The use of cell phones is "entirely voluntarily" and therefore individuals who use them have forfeited the right to constitutional protection for records showing where they have been used, the court held.
"The Government does not require a member of the public to own or carry a phone," wrote U.S. Judge Edith Brown Clement in an opinion joined by U.S. Judge Dennis Reavley. The opinion continued: "Because a cell phone user makes a choice to get a phone, to select a particular service provider, and to make a call, and because he knows that call conveys cell site information ... he voluntarily conveys his cell site data each time he makes a call."
(Excerpt) Read more at investigations.nbcnews.com ...
So fedex your phone to a friend in another city, commit a crime in the other and use your phone location as proof you didn’t commit the crime.
Like television, all these devices are essentially radio transceivers and utilize the electro-magnetic spectrum, and then utilize my immediate environment, including my body, as a collateral conduit for, admittedly, "non-ionizing radiations." The right to filter, amplify and detect their transmissions is inalienable, just as it would be if two people on opposite sides of my house communicated with flashlights through my bedroom.
They can, of course, scramble, randomly jump frequencies, or make cryptic their transmissions, etc., but spurious radiations are fair game.
Wireless phones companies continuously sell the opposite, but there is a fundamental difference between hard-wired channels and radio.
The expectation of privacy when using a cell phone is an illusion.
The issue immediately branches off into more problematic questions, of course, about record keeping and the fundamental differences between a government's enumerated power and those of citizens talented enough to build and operate equipment capable of detecting, filtering and amplifying RF wavelengths.
And that is another story.
The records are also the property of the subscriber and should be held to something more than the “The Kings Paper”....
You are using logic & common sense..in your interpretation of our great U.S. Constitution & Bill O’ Rights!
Think of everything as opposite!
Think in a twisted, government centric, slave population mentality... then this will make sense.
Think about how the government, operates under the premise that every person is their personal property!
Interesting though, how the government has to provide them for free because it's an essential need.
That and the fact that Verizon forced me to get a new phone so they could collect the data they then share with the NSA.
“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. “
The courts are trying to revise what are our papers. At a minimum, electronic records are not the governments records, so they have no rights to them.
OH OH PERHAPS the NSA needs to retink this one> .......... |
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Here is the cold hard truth:
The government feels you are using their equipment and are therefore not entitled to protection under the Bill of Rights.
Under CALEA, passed in 1996, the government invested more than $500 million of taxpayer monies into service providers and equipment makers telling them to make easy and expiditously access to records anytime they make a request.
Kind of like the king putting a watermark on paper and demanding you use but with strict prohibitions and proscriptions.
We are headed down the path of:
“When in the course of human events....”
Yes... it is a sad truth!
Such as labelling everyone a potential criminal (yes, sitting here drinking coffee & typing may be violating some law.. which law?)
Or perhaps adding an infant to the no-fly list! (my child broke a law at the advanced age of 11 months..hmmm?)
What is the breaking point?
Exactly. Then the next issue is that we have ALL rights by default, except where otherwise enumerated, while they have NO powers except the listed ones.
In other news,
beatings will continue until morale improves.
I have no words... Need to head over to the sports mans warehouse and get some more target rounds. Keep hoping I will find my stainless steel rifle I had the canoe accident with.
Hey, if taxes are not voluntary, then I don’t have to give them to the Feds. Whew, glad that’s cleared up.
That they haven't made any effort tells us that they are more interested in expanding government power than protecting our rights.
“The use of cell phones is “entirely voluntarily” and therefore individuals who use them have forfeited the right to constitutional protection for records showing where they have been used, the court held.”
Saving money is entirely voluntary, so the gov’t can track my banking information. Using credit/debit cards are entirely voluntary, so the gov’t can track my spending. Watching TV is entirely voluntary, so the gov’t can track my viewing habits.
Every day I participate in thousands of entirely voluntary actions, therefore the government needs to implant a tracking chip to ensure that they can track my activities.
The founders are spinning and the sheeple are bleating away in ignorance.
“entirely voluntarily”
Nice choice of words!!!
Did you realize that you “Voluntarily” wave your rights as well???
“The rights of the individuals are restricted only to the extent that they have been voluntarily surrendered by the citizenship to the agencies of government.”
City of Dallas v Mitchell, 245 S.W. 944
The gubmint is free to listen to your phone calls and read your emails...since these were not around at the time the 4th Amendment was incorporated, right?
Apparently thats how The Regime reads it:
Justice Department Expands Hunt for Data on Cellphones
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/11/26/justice-department-expands-hunt-for-data-on-cellphones/
Obamas NSA eavesdropping goes beyond that of Bush... after campaigning on the promise of: No warrantless wiretaps if you elect me!
http://news.cnet.com/8301-10784_3-9845595-7.html
headlines read: NSA Exceeds Legal Limits In Eavesdropping Program , U.S. phone intercepts go beyond legal limits , and NSA Found Improperly Spying on Americans.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123985123667923961.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
http://uk.reuters.com/article/burningIssues/idUKTRE53F09820090416
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/04/15/justice-dept-nsa-improperly-spied-americans/
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