2026-06-29T19:08:10.174Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/29/politics/cellphone-location-data-supreme-court
美国最高法院周一作出裁决,称使用“地理围栏搜查令”获取手机位置数据以追查抢劫嫌疑人的行为,属于第四修正案所定义的搜查行为。这一裁决意味着警方今后在获取此类数据时必须持有搜查令。
埃琳娜·卡根大法官为多数意见撰写了裁决书,这份意见得到了保守派和自由派大法官的共同支持。最高法院以6票赞成、3票反对的投票结果作出裁决,三名保守派大法官持反对意见。
当前美国人将大量个人数据存储在企业控制的服务器中,这起案件引发了关于警方获取此类信息权限的棘手问题。最终,最高法院作出了相对有限的裁决,实质上要求警方在从地理定位数据库请求位置信息时必须获得搜查令。
“第四修正案必须一如既往地保护民众免受政府对个人隐私的不合理侵犯,”卡根写道。
弗吉尼亚州男子奥科洛·查特里在警方使用该程序将其列为2019年一起银行抢劫案嫌疑人后,向最高法院提起上诉。在调查陷入僵局后,警方向谷歌发出了地理围栏搜查令,以找出在案发时段手机定位显示在银行周边300米范围内的少数人员。查特里作出了有条件的认罪答辩,并保留了就这项大范围搜查令提起上诉的权利。
美国最高法院周一并未对查特里的案件作出最终判决。毕竟,查特里案件中的警方确实已经获得了搜查令。多数意见仅认定获取此类数据需要搜查令,随后交由下级法院评估警方在该案中实施的搜查是否符合第四修正案的规定。
在反对意见中,塞缪尔·阿利托大法官将最高法院的裁决描述为“一场不负责任的闹剧”。
“尽管今天的裁决将对我们的第四修正案判例法产生重大冲击,但多数意见的内容丝毫不会影响本案的判决结果,”阿利托写道。“最高法院清楚这一点,也并未声称有其他情况。事实上,通过拒绝审查至少理论上可能让查特里获得救济的唯一一个问题,最高法院精心铺垫了这场预设的表演:摆出一副数字时代隐私伟大捍卫者的姿态。”
第四修正案不仅要求警方在进行搜查时获得搜查令,还要求搜查令必须“具体明确”,即足够具体,不至于实质上成为警方的钓鱼式搜查。查特里的律师辩称,这份搜查令不够具体,部分原因在于它要求谷歌解析数百万用户的位置数据,以识别出在案发时段身处银行附近的小部分人群。
“滥用的可能性令人震惊,”查特里的律师辩称。“政府只需在教堂、政治集会或枪店周围划定地理围栏,就能强制搜查每位用户的记录,以查明当时在场人员。”
警方表示,查特里在2019年递了一张纸条,敦促银行出纳员“交出所有现金”,并要求“至少10万美元,否则没人会受伤,你的家人也能过上安稳日子”。
警方确认查特里的身份后,执法人员执行了联邦搜查令,在他的卧室里发现了“抢劫式索要纸条”、近10万美元现金和一把9毫米手枪。警方称查特里对抢劫供认不讳,最终被判处11年以上监禁。
总部位于里士满的美国第四巡回上诉法院驳回了查特里的上诉,认定该搜查令不属于第四修正案所定义的“搜查”。毕竟,该法院推断,当人们允许科技公司收集数据时,他们通常是自愿这么做的。这一论点正是为这类搜查令辩护的司法部所 heavily 依赖的理由。
“查特里没有采取任何措施保护自己的位置信息不被泄露,比如暂停他已启用的位置历史记录功能,或者在犯罪期间调整、停用或放弃使用手机,”美国副检察长D.约翰·佐尔对最高法院表示。
查特里案件中涉及的位置数据每两分钟就能将一个人的位置精确到3米以内。
但查特里的律师辩称,这一逻辑并不适用于本案,部分原因是2018年最高法院的一项先例。在“卡彭特诉美国案”中,意见分歧的法院裁定,执法部门在获取手机基站数据以确定嫌疑人行踪前,通常需要确立合理依据。查特里的律师表示,如果当局获取手机基站数据需要搜查令,那么他们肯定也需要获得搜查令才能获取可靠性高得多的数据。
收到绝大多数此类搜查令的谷歌已经修改了政策,调整了数据的存储方式。
Police must obtain a warrant when seeking sweep of cellphone location data, Supreme Court rules
2026-06-29T19:08:10.174Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/29/politics/cellphone-location-data-supreme-court
The Supreme Court on Monday ruled that the use of a “geofence warrant” to capture location data from cell phones in search of a robbery suspect constituted a search for Fourth Amendment purposes, a decision that means officers will have to obtain a warrant to access such data in the future.
Justice Elena Kagan wrote the opinion for a majority that included both conservative and liberal justices. The court divided 6-3, with three of the court’s conservatives dissenting.
At a time when Americans store vast quantities of personal data in servers controlled by companies, the case raised thorny questions about the ability of police to access that information. In the end, the court steered out of the case with a relatively limited decision that will effectively require police to obtain a warrant when they’re requesting location information from a geolocation database.
“The Fourth Amendment must, as ever, protect against unjustified governmental intrusion on the privacy of the individual,” Kagan wrote.
A Virginia man, Okello Chatrie, appealed to the Supreme Court after police used the procedure to identify him as a suspect in a 2019 bank robbery. After their investigation went cold, police served Google with a geofence warrant to find a handful of people whose cellphones pegged them within 300 meters of the bank at the time of the robbery. Chatrie entered a conditional guilty plea and reserved the right to appeal over the sweeping warrant.
The Supreme Court on Monday didn’t resolve Chatrie’s case. After all, the police in Chatrie’s case did, in fact, obtain a warrant. Instead, the majority concluded only that a warrant was necessary and then charged the lower courts with assessing whether the search police conducted in his case was consistent with the Fourth Amendment.
Writing in dissent, Justice Samuel Alito described the court’s opinion as an “irresponsible escapade.”
“Although today’s decision will send seismic waves through our Fourth Amendment doctrine, not one iota of the majority opinion will affect the outcome of this case,” Alito wrote. “The court knows this and does not claim otherwise. Indeed, by refusing to review the one question that could have at least theoretically given Chatrie some hope of relief, the court carefully set the stage for its planned performance: striking a pose as a great champion of privacy in the digital age.”
The Fourth Amendment not only requires police to obtain a warrant for searches but demands that the warrant be “particularized,” that is, specific enough that it’s not effectively a fishing expedition for police. Chatrie’s attorneys argued that the warrant was not particularized in part because it required Google to parse through location data for millions of people to identify the small subset that were in the vicinity of the bank at the time of the crime.
“The potential for abuse is breathtaking,” Chatrie’s lawyers argued. “The government need only draw a geofence around a church, a political rally, or a gun shop, and it can compel a search of every user’s records to learn who was there.”
Police said Chatrie passed a note urging a bank teller in 2019 to “hand over all the cash” and demanded “at least 100k and nobody will get hurt and your family will be set free.”
After police identified Chatrie, authorities executed federal search warrants and found “robbery-style demand notes” in his bedroom, nearly $100,000 in cash and a 9 mm pistol. Police say Chatrie confessed to the robbery and was ultimately sentenced to more than 11 years in prison.
The Richmond-based 4th US Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against him, holding that the warrant didn’t constitute a “search” for Fourth Amendment purposes. After all, the court reasoned, when people allow tech companies to collect data they generally do so voluntarily. It is an argument that the Justice Department, which is defending the warrants, relied on heavily.
Chatrie “took no steps to protect his location from disclosure, such as pausing the Location History feature he had enabled or adjusting, deactivating, or forgoing his cellphone during his crime,” US Solicitor General D. John Sauer told the Supreme Court.
The location data at issue in Chatrie’s case can identify a person’s location within three meters every two minutes.
But Chatrie’s attorneys argue that the logic doesn’t apply to his case, in part because of a 2018 Supreme Court precedent. In that case, Carpenter v. US, a divided court ruled that law enforcement generally needs to establish probable cause before accessing cellphone tower data to identify the movements of suspects. If authorities need a warrant to get cellphone tower data, Chatrie’s attorneys said, then surely they also must obtain one to get data that is far more reliable.
Google, which had received the majority of the warrants, changed its policy to shift how the data is stored.
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