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Media, Law & Policy

Standout Element in Carpenter v. U.S. Decision: Justice Gorsuch’s Dissent

Friday, June 22, 2018, By Daryl Lovell
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On Friday, the Supreme Court ruled that law enforcement need to obtain search warrants to access phone location information.

is an associate professor of law at the 黑料不打烊 College of Law. Professor Gouldin teaches constitutional criminal procedure, criminal law, evidence, constitutional law, and criminal justice reform.

Gouldin says:

鈥淥ne interesting aspect of the recent decision in Carpenter v. United States is Justice Gorsuch鈥檚 dissent. While many will, no doubt, cast the Carpenter decision as a 5-4 decision narrowing the reach of the Court鈥檚 broadly-applied and long-criticized third-party doctrine, close readers will see that the lineup is a bit more complex. For those trying to predict where the justices stand on Fourth Amendment issues going forward, this is better characterized as a 5-3-1 decision with Justice Gorsuch standing alone.

鈥淎lthough he dissents, Justice Gorsuch repeatedly suggests that he sees government overreaching (and a potential Fourth Amendment violation) in the factual background of the case. He unmistakably criticizes the third-party doctrine, stating, for example, that 鈥榌c]onsenting to give a third party access to private papers that remain my property is not the same thing as consenting to a search of those papers by the government鈥 and agreeing with the majority that 鈥榯he rationale of Smith and Miller is wrong.鈥

鈥淒espite these concerns about the doctrine and about the underlying question, Justice Gorsuch dissents from the majority opinion, ruling against Carpenter on procedural grounds. In Gorsuch鈥檚 view, Carpenter failed to assert and develop essential property-based, positive law arguments that Justice Gorsuch suggests might have persuaded him to rule in Carpenter鈥檚 favor. (鈥業n these circumstances, I cannot help but conclude鈥攔eluctantly鈥攖hat Mr. Carpenter forfeited perhaps his most promising line of argument.鈥) Justice Gorsuch says, explicitly, that it is 鈥榚ntirely possible a person鈥檚 cell-site data could qualify as his papers or effects under existing law鈥.鈥

 

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Keith Kobland
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Daryl Lovell
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Division of Communications and Marketing

T听315.443.1184 听听M听315.380.0206
dalovell@syr.edu |

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