Supreme Court Decision

Personal Rights and the Expectation of Privacy in the Digital Age

From Chesley Brown International

Risk Management

[dpArticleShare]

In Major Privacy Case, Court Rules Law Enforcement Must Obtain Warrant To Track Cellphone Data.

 

In a recent ruling by the Supreme Court in the case of Carpenter v. United States, the court held in a 5-4 decision authored by Chief Justice Roberts, that the government violates the Fourth Amendment of the Constitution by accessing historical records containing physical locations of cellphones without a search warrant. Emergencies, such as child abductions and bomb threats, are excluded from the ruling, where the “need to protect threatened individuals, pursue suspects or prevent destruction of evidence” exists. Prior to this case, government entities could obtain cellphone location records by claiming the information was required as part of an investigation.

Chief Justice John G. Robert Jr. wrote “We decline to grant the state unrestricted access to a wireless carrier’s database of physical location information.

In this case, authorities gathered real-time location data over a span of 127 days. The data collected showed Tim Carpenter near each robbery as it occurred. With this data they were able to connect him to a string of robberies of Radio Shack and T-Mobile stores, for which he was convicted and sentenced to 116 years in prison.

Almost everyone has a cell phone as a necessary extension of themselves, and phones go everywhere we do. Cell phone data tracks a person’s every move including where they slept, where they go, and which church, if any, they attend.

If unrestricted access were allowed, with the increasing number of cell phone towers and developing cell phone technology, the user’s every action and location could be easily determined within 50 feet - a virtually time-stamped documentation of their every move.

Cell phone data could assist law enforcement in the pursuit, capture and prosecution of terrorists, serial killers, rapists, and other threatening menaces to society. The challenge has been to uphold the Fourth Amendment while also adapting to the technology of the digital age.

Generally, a warrant must now be obtained by authorities for this information.

According to Chief Justice Roberts, the data in one’s cell phone compares to the wearing of an ankle monitor, providing “near perfect surveillance”.

In his opinion, the Constitution must adapt to the evolution of the “vast technological changes”.

You may also feel free to contact us; we are more than happy to assist you in reviewing your company's data security and storage practices. 

Always be prepared. Sign up for our Mailing List

Get expert insight and analysis delivered directly to your inbox.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

How Can We Help?

Contact us today to discuss how Chesley Brown can help navigate your organization navigate around ever-evolving threats, and mitigate your risk.

Meet our Experts

Kim Meador

Executive VP & COO
(888) 711-7644 | Email

Josh Noland

VP of Operations
(888) 711-7644 | Email

Max Briggs

VP of Operations
(888) 711-7644 | Email

Group of protesters holding signs demanding climate action - commercial security strategy can help reduce or eliminate the impact of protests and civil disruption

When Protests Go Local: What Civil Unrest in 2026 Will Demand of Commercial Security Strategy

In December, Verisk Maplecroft published its annual Civil Unrest Index with a clear projection: 2026 will be more disruptive for property and political-violence insurers than 2025 was. The judgment was based on the frequency and intensity of protests over the previous twelve months — and on the underlying conditions that produce them — and it…
Read More
corporate travel risk

The New Geography of Corporate Travel Risk: What Summer 2026 Demands of Executive Travel Programs

Threats to individuals jumped 37% in 2025. The State Department has codified hostage diplomacy as a primary threat. The K&R market is projected to grow 6.4% annually through 2033. Here's what corporate executives — and the programs meant to protect them — need to understand about international travel risk in 2026.
Read More
An engineer and the safety team walking a construction site discussing risk awareness and executive protection

When the Hardest Target Isn’t Hard Enough: Executive Protection Lessons from the Correspondents’ Dinner Attack

A would-be assassin reached gunfire range of the President of the United States at a black-tie dinner secured by the Secret Service. For corporate security leaders, the Correspondents' Dinner shooting is a case study in why traditional executive protection thinking is no longer enough.
Read More

SIGN UP FOR EXCLUSIVE INSIGHTS

Get the latest Chesley Brown insights and strategies directly in your inbox.

Sign Up Form Inline

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.