US must reveal some cellphone tracking cases-court

Release Date ‎Sep 6, 2011‎ in Reuters

 
   

Was Your Cell Phone Tracked? Justice Ordered to Hand Over Data

PC Magazine - Chloe Albanesius - ‎Sep 7, 2011‎
An appeals court this week ordered the Department of Justice to let the American Civil Liberties Union examine certain cell phone records obtained without a warrant. The US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit upheld a lower court ...

DoJ Must Reveal Tracking Data Methods, Court Says

Forbes - ‎Sep 7, 2011‎
Visit us today at http://www.mobiledia.com We write with a fundamental belief that it doesn't have to have happened yesterday to be news, and that people are more interested in how the facts of today will impact their lives for tomorrow. ...

DOJ Must Disclose Details About its Tracking of Suspects

Wall Street Journal (blog) - Nathan Koppel - ‎Sep 7, 2011‎
We've written a good amount about the extent to which the Constitution blocks law enforcement from using technology to secretly track the whereabouts of suspects. A prime issue that has come up in various cases is whether law ...

Court: Make some phone tracking data public

CNN International - Bill Mears - ‎Sep 6, 2011‎
Washington (CNN) -- Information about how and when the government gathers and uses cell phone location data to track certain criminal suspects should be made available to the public, a federal appeals court ...

US must reveal some cellphone tracking cases-court

Reuters - Jeremy Pelofsky, James Vicini - ‎Sep 6, 2011‎
WASHINGTON, Sept 6 (Reuters) - The US government must tell the public how it tracked suspects by cellphone without having given a judge detailed reasons for the tracking in some cases, an appeals court ruled on ...

Appeals Court Rules Justice Dept. Must Reveal Details of Warrantless Tracking ...

AllGov - ‎Sep 8, 2011‎
Civil libertarians won an important victory in federal court on Tuesday involving the government's use of cell phone data to track suspects without a warrant. Since the September 11 attacks, US intelligence and federal law enforcement agencies have ...

DOJ must release records about cellphone location tracking

Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press - ‎Sep 7, 2011‎
The US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia held yesterday that the US Department of Justice must release case docket information in certain criminal cases resulting in convictions or guilty pleas. The ruling applies to cases in which the ...

US must give info on cellphone tracking

UPI.com - ‎Sep 7, 2011‎
WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 (UPI) -- The US Justice Department must provide information on cases in which warrantless cellphone tracking was used to get convictions, a federal appeals court says. Three judges on the federal appellate court in Washington ruled ...

Warrantless Cell Phone Location Tracking Dealt a Blow by the ACLU

Death and Taxes - Dj Pangburn - ‎Sep 7, 2011‎
The US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit has ordered the Department of Justice to comply with the ACLU's Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request relating to cell phone data accessed by the government ...

Appeals court says police must reveal some cell phone wiretaps

AHN | All Headline News - ‎Sep 7, 2011‎
A federal appeals court decision this week opens the door for some private citizens to find out the extent of government eavesdropping into their personal cell phone conversations. The US Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled ...

Court orders DOJ to release information about cellphone tracking

The Hill (blog) - Brendan Sasso - ‎Sep 7, 2011‎
A federal appeals court on Tuesday ordered the Justice Department to turn over information about cases where the government accessed cellphone location data without a warrant. The court's decision was a victory ...

ACLU Wins Round in Battle Against Warrantless Cell Phone Location Tracking

American Civil Liberties Union News and Information (blog) - ‎Sep 6, 2011‎
Today the ACLU won a significant victory in our battle to ensure that cell phones don't become Big Brother tracking devices. Following a four-year fight, the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit has ordered the Department of Justice (DOJ) to comply ...

Appeals Court Rules Against Justice Dept. in Cellphone Tracking Case

ticklethewire.com - Allan Lengel - ‎Sep 6, 2011‎
The DC Appeals Court ruled against the Justice Department Wednesday, saying it must publicly disclose secret information about how and when the government gathers and uses cell phone location data to track certain ...

Federal Appeals Court Upholds Disclosure of Cellphone Tracking Data

The BLT: Blog of Legal Times (blog) - ‎Sep 6, 2011‎
A federal appeals court in Washington today sided against the US Department of Justice in upholding the public release of information about court cases in which the authorities used cellphone location data to track criminal suspects. ...

Justice Dept. loses round in warrantless phone tracking

CNET - Don Reisinger - ‎Sep 7, 2011‎
The American Civil Liberties Union is touting its victory in a case against the Department of Justice over alleged mobile phone tracking. According to the group, the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit ordered the Justice Department to hand over ...

Court upholds disclosure of cellphone tracking cases

msnbc.com - ‎Sep 6, 2011‎
WASHINGTON â€" The government must tell the public how it tracked suspects by cellphone without having given a judge detailed reasons for the tracking in some cases, an appeals court ruled on Tuesday, in a case pitting new technology against privacy ...

DoJ Must Reveal Tracking Data Methods, Court Says

Business Insider - ‎Sep 7, 2011‎
Mobiledia Staff writes with a fundamental belief that it doesn't have to have happened yesterday to be news, and that people are more interested in how the facts of today will impact their lives for tomorrow. An appeals court ruled the Justice ...

Appeals court says police must reveal some cell phone wiretaps

Gant Daily - ‎Sep 7, 2011‎
Washington, DC, United States (AHN) â€" A federal appeals court decision this week opens the door for some private citizens to find out the extent of government eavesdropping into their personal cell phone conversations. The US Circuit Court of Appeals ...

 

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