The Pak Banker

US Court weighs major digital privacy case

- -AP

WASHINGTON: The U.S. Supreme Court takes up a major test of privacy rights in the digital age as it weighs whether police must obtain warrants to get data on the past locations of criminal suspects using cellphone data from wireless providers. The justices at 10 a.m. (1500 GMT) are due to hear an appeal by a man named Timothy Carpenter convicted in a series of armed robberies in Ohio and Michigan with the help of past cellphone location data that linked him to the crime locations. His American Civil Liberties Union lawyers argue that without a court-issued warrant such data amounts to an unreasonab­le search and seizure under the U.S. Constituti­on's Fourth Amendment.

Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s routinely request and receive this informatio­n from wireless providers during criminal investigat­ions as they try to link a suspect to a crime.

Police helped establish that Carpenter was near the scene of the robberies of Radio Shack and T-Mobile stores by securing from his cellphone carrier his past "cell site location informatio­n" tracking which cellphone towers had relayed his calls. The legal fight has raised questions about the degree to which companies protect their customers' privacy rights. The big four wireless carriers, Verizon Communicat­ions Inc, AT&T Inc, T-Mobile US Inc and Sprint Corp, receive tens of thousands of these requests annually from law enforcemen­t.

Verizon was the only one of those four companies to tell the Supreme Court that it favors strong privacy protection­s for its customers, with the other three sitting on the sidelines.

There is growing scrutiny of the surveillan­ce practices of U.S. law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce agencies amid concern among lawmakers across the political spectrum about civil liberties and authoritie­s evading warrant requiremen­ts.

The Supreme Court twice in recent years has ruled on major cases concerning how criminal law applies to new technology, both times ruling against law enforcemen­t. In 2012, the court held that a warrant is required to place a GPS tracking device on a vehicle. Two years later, the court said police need a warrant to search a cellphone seized during an arrest. Carpenter's bid to suppress the evidence failed and he was convicted of six robbery counts. On appeal, the Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld his conviction­s, finding that no warrant was required for the cellphone data.

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