Sabresfansince1980 wrote:
I'm logging back in just so I can comment on this topic.
Squanto, somewhere along the line you are getting foggy about the level of expectation of privacy that private property allows. In any state in the country, including NY, a homeowner has no expectation of privacy against any random person from walking up their driveway or to their door unless told face-to-face or a sign has been posted forbidding anyone to enter the premesis. This is a long time and well established interpretation of the 4th Amendment, and the basis for how police have used GPS units. Under your reasoning, any door-to-door salesman, Jehova's witness, or pizza delivery guy wouldn't be allowed to pull into or walk up your driveway or to your front door.
If any of those people can walk past your car, police can too. You also take a extra mis-step in your logic when you suggest that police can "fuck with" or "rummage through" your car. If they can walk past it like the mail man or UPS guy, they can place a tracking device somewhere on the exterior of the vehicle. They can't open a door, the hood, trunk, or tap into the car battery, or in any way mess with the car in order to use a GPS unit. To do any of those things they need a warrant or court order (preferably a court order because a warrant is public info, and we wouldn't want the suspect to be able to run down to the court and read about the GPS unit on his vehicle while it was still in place).
The comparison made to Google is accurate - anything that can be seen from a normal vantage point with human eyes, or the assist of binoculars, is fair game and outside the expectation of privacy afforded by the 4th Amendment, even if it's an overhead view from an airplane. Once higher tech equipment is needed, like infrared or night vision, a warrant is necessary. But as far as a GPS unit goes, it simply replaces a set of human eyes that would otherwise be watching a vehicle move along on a public street that is outside the expectation of privacy under the 4th. Even if the vehicle is on private property in a driveway, it's still fair game as long as it can be seen from the street or any neighboring business property.
In summary, even though it's the 9th circuit, I'd be STUNNED if they had over ruled the lower court. I already studied and circulated the Pineda-Moreno case where I work back in January for my professional benefit. It's no surprise that the linked article is a wild, fearful rant portraying that "1984" is upon us, but it's pure rhetoric. Supreme Court cases like Kyllo vs. US and others have already put limits on technologically enhanced surveillance techniques. There is no "dangerous", "bizarre", or "scary" decision here leading to a slippery slope. There are seperate, individual cases that come along under different circumstances. Some go against law enforcement, some go for it. We all live, learn, and adapt accordingly. Fortunately law enforcement is still better at that than criminals, and otherwise innocent people don't have a damn thing to worry about in the meantime.
Somehow, I have a hard time accepting a GPS unit as a replacement for human eyes.
Human eyes can only track what they see. A GPS gives locational information at will.