Mass phone tracking via cell tower dumps ruled unconstitutional

Skye Jacobs

Posts: 1,994   +58
Staff
What just happened? A pivotal legal decision has emerged from Nevada, where a federal judge has questioned the constitutionality of a controversial investigative tool known as a "tower dump." This law enforcement method allows police to collect data en masse from cell towers, capturing information on every device that connects to a tower during a specific time window. The practice, which can sweep up the location and identifying details of thousands of cell phones, has been widely used to aid criminal investigations – and has also sparked intense debate over privacy and constitutional rights.

The case at the center of this ruling involves Cory Spurlock, who faces serious charges including conspiracy to distribute marijuana and alleged involvement in a murder-for-hire plot. In an effort to place Spurlock at the scenes of the crimes, investigators obtained a warrant for a tower dump, which ultimately captured data from nearly 1,700 unique phones. The data, provided by a wireless carrier, revealed which phones had connected to specific cell towers near the alleged crime scenes during the relevant time frames.

Crucially, none of the individuals whose data was collected had given explicit consent for their location information to be shared, nor was there any mechanism for them to opt out.

When the case reached court, Spurlock's defense team argued that the warrant authorizing the tower dump was overly broad, effectively allowing police to track the digital whereabouts of countless innocent people. They contended that this amounted to a "general warrant" – the kind of indiscriminate search the framers of the Constitution explicitly sought to prohibit.

In her written opinion, US District Judge Miranda M. Du agreed, ruling that the tower dump constituted a search under the Fourth Amendment and that the warrant failed to meet constitutional standards for specificity and probable cause.

Despite this, Judge Du ultimately allowed the evidence from the tower dump to be used in Spurlock's trial. She explained that the officers involved had relied on existing legal standards, and that at the time of the investigation, there was no clear guidance from higher courts in the region regarding the use of tower dumps.

The implications of this ruling extend far beyond Spurlock's case. Privacy advocates have long warned that tower dumps, by their very nature, collect data on large numbers of people who have no connection to any criminal activity. In court, expert witnesses described how the data obtained could be used to reconstruct the movements and associations of every person whose phone connected to the targeted towers, raising concerns about mass surveillance and the erosion of privacy for ordinary citizens.

The Nevada decision follows a similar ruling in Mississippi, where another federal judge found tower dumps unconstitutional and barred their use in an FBI investigation. That case is currently on appeal, with the Department of Justice arguing that tower dumps are a critical tool for law enforcement and that the legal questions surrounding their use remain unsettled.

The broader legal landscape is complicated by the Supreme Court's 2018 decision in Carpenter v. United States, which held that police generally need a warrant to access historical cell-site location data. However, the Carpenter ruling was narrowly tailored and did not directly address the legality of tower dumps or other forms of bulk data collection, leaving lower courts to wrestle with how the Fourth Amendment applies in these contexts.

As legal challenges mount and conflicting decisions emerge across the country, many observers believe the Supreme Court may soon be called upon to clarify the constitutionality of tower dumps.

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Google is tracking EVERY Android phone in real-time if the location services are on, which they are by default (and which Android fights to re-enable if you turn them off). When will Google be ordered to cease and desist with THEIR tracking?
 
Obama once said:
"No one can't have 100% safety with Zero Inconvenience."

The problem is those that worry about their data being accessed by the law are those that have something to hide.
 
The problem is those that worry about their data being accessed by the law are those that have something to hide.
That often used sentence loses credibility when applied to history and all the innocent people (by the court and dpp and before it even gets that far) the cops have harassed.

Then add all the cops and other officials that have accessed information for illegal reasons. Reasons like Ex partners, relatives, potential relatives are very common and hollywood seems to encourage this casual stalking.

In the specific, a locally based but national police officer inserted data into the official record to send to jail a person who was dating his ex.

And that’s just the tip of the iceberg, as the vast majority of illegal and immoral actions by authorities are never found out.

So, no. This is very good legislation in concept.
 
That often used sentence loses credibility when applied to history and all the innocent people (by the court and dpp and before it even gets that far) the cops have harassed.

Then add all the cops and other officials that have accessed information for illegal reasons. Reasons like Ex partners, relatives, potential relatives are very common and hollywood seems to encourage this casual stalking.

In the specific, a locally based but national police officer inserted data into the official record to send to jail a person who was dating his ex.

And that’s just the tip of the iceberg, as the vast majority of illegal and immoral actions by authorities are never found out.

So, no. This is very good legislation in concept.
I'm sorry but Big Tech already has your data and they can do far more damage to you with it that any law enforcement agency....I least you can get money from the government through lawsuits than just at an apology from Meta or Google.
 
That's a good ruling, too bad is now meaningless: if the current Administration (And I use that term generously) can just ignore a 9-0 SCOTUS ruling made mostly of people they personally anointed anyway at this point, anyone under any circumstance in the US can find itself human-trafficked away to a Death Camp in El Salvador so being spied on should not only be expected but almost guaranteed for 100% of US citizens, probably the entire world at this point if they ever have to pass traffic through the US (And I'm sure almost all internet traffic eventually does)
 
That's a good ruling, too bad is now meaningless: if the current Administration (And I use that term generously) can just ignore a 9-0 SCOTUS ruling made mostly of people they personally anointed anyway at this point, anyone under any circumstance in the US can find itself human-trafficked away to a Death Camp in El Salvador so being spied on should not only be expected but almost guaranteed for 100% of US citizens, probably the entire world at this point if they ever have to pass traffic through the US (And I'm sure almost all internet traffic eventually does)

Don't give me that nonsense about Trump human-trafficking 26 innocent angels to a death camp. The US border under Biden's term was an absolute human trafficking disaster.

https://www.congress.gov/118/meeting/house/116344/documents/HHRG-118-JU08-20230913-SD003.pdf

 
NSA says "So what?"

Yep.

Do you really think they would allow a technological standard out there in where the NSA, Officials or Goverment cannot get their hands on?

Purely the fact that the first cellphone tech, GSM, was deliberately weakened, otherwise it would not be allowed in countries for example, france, says enough about mass surveillance.

I live for quite some time with the idea anything I send, I do, is monitored.

Yes it can help in the course of crimes, but privacy is evaded for many because of it.

 
Unless I have no idea about this, shouldn't it be possible to merely query the tower about whether a certain cellphone (phone number, or other identification) connected to that tower within a certain time? A simple yes or no answer would be the result. All the many other cellphones need not be involved.
 
Even worse is the Stingray Devices that are Massive and Delivers Voice 2 Skull Transmissions VIA your Irradiated Head from your Phone along with stealing all of your account Information and sabotaging your call for Help when they kill you in Happy Accidents but if you say anything about it its just crazy and off to the Mental Cult to poison you with Drugs oops I forgot Nervous system control VIA Different Frequencies
 
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