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To: jessduntno

This seems to contradict your earlier position:

“No. [”Is it the lock-maker’s duty to give the government a master key?”] They can only ask him to unlock one specific door, described in a warrant. “

I liked the previous reply better. :)


170 posted on 02/19/2016 6:51:11 PM PST by D-fendr (Deus non alligatur sacramentis sed nos alligamur.)
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To: D-fendr

I have never said anything but. I am against warrant less searches. In order to be legal it must conform to the 4th amendment. On this issue, the amendment is clear. If you look back up thread you will NEVER see me contradict that amendment. It was Justice Scalia’s by the way.

Attentiveness to privacy in the digital age should thus be front and center for any jurist, whether focusing on the text of the Fourth Amendment, the purposes for which it was signed, or our new world that the Founders scarcely could have imagined. Regardless of whom President Obama appoints to the Court, privacy in the 21st century is something on which many bedfellows can agree.


180 posted on 02/19/2016 7:04:26 PM PST by jessduntno (Steady, Reliable, and (for now) Republican - Donald Trump, (D, R, I, D, R, I, R - NY) /s)
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