Oral Argument Preview: Chatrie vs. United States
5 hours ago
- #Fourth Amendment
- #Geofence Warrants
- #Digital Privacy
- The Supreme Court will hear Chatrie v. United States on April 27, 2026, to address the constitutionality of geofence warrants under the Fourth Amendment.
- Geofence warrants compel service providers like Google to disclose location data for devices within a specific area and time to identify suspects, with usage rising sharply.
- Chatrie arose from a 2019 bank robbery; police obtained a warrant for Google's Location History data, leading to Chatrie's identification after a three-step anonymization process.
- The Fourth Circuit initially ruled no Fourth Amendment search occurred due to the third-party doctrine, but after en banc review, it was deeply split, leading to Supreme Court review.
- Chatrie argues geofence warrants are unconstitutional searches violating privacy and property interests, akin to general warrants, while the government claims no reasonable expectation of privacy exists for voluntarily shared short-term location data.
- Amicus briefs from tech companies, civil liberties groups, and others largely oppose geofence warrants, citing privacy risks, lack of particularity, and civil rights implications.
- The case's outcome could significantly impact law enforcement's use of digital surveillance tools and set precedents for Fourth Amendment protections in the technological age.