5/11/2009 11:04:32 AM
this will be abused tremendously
5/11/2009 11:05:29 AM
I don't see the problem. If you aren't a criminal, you have nothing to worry about.
5/11/2009 11:34:08 AM
A small part of me thinks, "Well yeah, the police could just tail you everywhere around town." But they wouldn't. And you'd likely notice them if they did. Which does kind of seem to make an important difference.This kind of remind me of that case back several years ago about infrared searches - the Supreme Court found that you do need a warrant for those, even though the EM radiation is "outside the house." (That is, it's emitted through the walls). Surprisingly, this is one of the places Scalia sided with civil liberties. This case strikes me as remarkably in the same vein.
5/11/2009 11:38:13 AM
if they already had evidence that someone was into devious things and was a criminal i wouldnt have a problem with it but i see this
5/11/2009 12:57:35 PM
...so the court said it was perfectly alright for police to attach something to your personal property for the objective of tracking your movements...without a warrant?
5/11/2009 1:01:02 PM
Does this mean we can put GPS units on patrol cars? Could be handy in avoiding speeding tickets around town.
5/11/2009 1:02:19 PM
Haha I was thinking the same thing.
5/11/2009 1:21:12 PM
This is horrible, but I'm not surprised. Nearly all cops don't give a fuck about your rights.
5/11/2009 1:40:54 PM
5/11/2009 1:57:10 PM
5/11/2009 7:55:11 PM
So question:if you find one of these on your car, you can just take it off and sell it on ebay, right?
5/11/2009 10:55:45 PM
I would guess you could. As long as there wasn't anything that said "this belongs to the police, mang," then I'd say you could sell it on eBay
5/11/2009 11:00:49 PM
5/11/2009 11:05:47 PM
If I found one of those on my car I would put it into a FedEx box and mail it to China.
5/11/2009 11:56:39 PM
nah, I think it would find itself at the bottom of the nearest deep body of water
5/12/2009 12:03:03 AM
[Edited on May 12, 2009 at 12:05 AM. Reason : L]
5/12/2009 12:03:34 AM
warrant should be requiredif they do not find the crime serious enough to stake you out or get a warrant than they should be doing something more productivebetween debit cards and cell phones big brother can track all of our movements anyway........that is here to stay
5/12/2009 12:48:54 AM
5/12/2009 12:53:08 AM
I'm sorry, but did they or did they not obtain a warrant? It would seem like the objection over warrants would be moot if they did, yet the case specifically decided that the police do not require warrants. Furthermore, the man's objection was on fourth amendment grounds; therefore, something tells me this news report isn't exactly accurate. Otherwise, where would the case even come into play? Again - I doubt there'd be any constitutional argument at all if the police actually had a warrant to install and use the device on his car.I mean, unless the objection is that it was a secret search - i.e., not being notified of the device is the matter at issue. Which is still not made very clear.[Edited on May 12, 2009 at 1:19 AM. Reason : .]
5/12/2009 1:17:46 AM
A driveway is a public place? ORLY?
5/12/2009 6:58:24 AM
^ For the purposes of observation, yes. If you walk up and down your driveway in leather underwear, and people walking down the street take pictures, they aren't violating your privacy, as your driveway is viewable from the road without needing to circumvent privacy measures (i.e. a privacy fence). Doesn't make it public from the standpoint of anyone can use it like a playground, but for the purposes of observing you it most certainly is public.
5/12/2009 7:44:45 AM
[Edited on May 12, 2009 at 7:45 AM. Reason : m-m-m-multipost]
5/12/2009 10:37:48 AM
The story is the op is poorly written, is there another source? Either they had a warrant to do the gps tracking, in which case i dont see a problem with it, or they didn't have a warrant in which case its bad.If they did have a warrant, as the story claims, why would he sue?
5/12/2009 10:42:36 AM
5/12/2009 10:46:42 AM
reallydo most police forces have the resources to do this to everyone?Hell, most are underbudget these days and hurting to be able to just patrol the streets
5/12/2009 10:51:25 AM
Leave it to me do do your research for you:http://www.wicourts.gov/ca/opinion/DisplayDocument.html?content=html&seqNo=36414Court documents for the appeal in question.
5/12/2009 10:51:59 AM
So the guy in the tribune is just an idiot.
5/12/2009 10:57:38 AM
5/12/2009 11:02:54 AM
I dont think anyone is arguing against GPS tracking with a warrant, but gps tracking without one would definitely be a violation. Its the same as a warrantless wiretap.
5/12/2009 11:08:04 AM
Reading his stupid article further his issue is the wording that the judge used indicating that they do not need a warrant, even though in this case they got one. Reading the court documents indicate this as well. I'm the idiot this time.The guy was trying to appeal the warrant and the judge said, "appeal it? they didn't even need it!"[Edited on May 12, 2009 at 11:18 AM. Reason : appeal]
5/12/2009 11:17:11 AM
5/12/2009 12:07:57 PM
5/12/2009 12:37:27 PM
Can someone please show me an instance when this has been abused, as opposed to an instance where a womans life was likely saved or prevented from being raped?
5/12/2009 12:47:06 PM
^Ends don't justify means. Even though the stalker was caught, his right to privacy was trampled.
5/12/2009 12:58:00 PM
no it wasn't you retard. they got a warrant.
5/12/2009 1:03:40 PM
At some point the libertarians have to stop crying about the eroding of liberties until it has been shown that the powers are in fact being abused. And please don't tell me "by then it will be too late".This lady had a good suspicion, them putting a GPS on his car was no different than paying outrageous sums of money to track him for 5 weeks.What does a cop make, 45k a year, so his total cost of employment is in the 80k range, and you'd need at least three of them to tail 24 hrs a day. So we're talking nearly 20 grand devoted to this guy versus a few hundred dollar GPS device.I say hooray technology. I'll get outraged when the cases of abuse start happening, until then, I have other stuff to be pissed about.
5/12/2009 1:03:47 PM
Again, there's nothing to complain about if they got a warrant. And in this case, it sounds like they did. Nobody's complaining about that.What's at issue is when they do it without a warrant.You know, with, without. Kind of a big difference.
5/12/2009 1:06:50 PM
5/12/2009 1:18:50 PM
5/12/2009 1:20:56 PM
^Very good point.
5/12/2009 1:30:08 PM
5/12/2009 1:33:16 PM
5/12/2009 1:34:34 PM
5/12/2009 1:47:51 PM
5/12/2009 1:49:05 PM
I'm almost certain if warrant-less GPS made it to the Supreme Court it would be thrown out. It doesn't apply to this case since they did have a warrant. Ergo, until someone actually is convicted based on a warrant-less GPS, and then the conviction is upheld by the Supreme Court, the libertarians can unwad their panties.
5/12/2009 1:56:38 PM
5/12/2009 2:32:40 PM
5/12/2009 2:44:00 PM
5/12/2009 2:51:00 PM