AP/ November 8, 2011, 10:08 AM

Supreme Court weighs legality of GPS tracking

Amnuaiporn Maneewan, 42, displays how she sets up GPS equipment under a car, outside her office in Bangkok, Thailand, March 14, 2011.

Amnuaiporn Maneewan, 42, displays how she sets up GPS equipment under a car, outside her office in Bangkok, Thailand, March 14, 2011. / AFP/Getty Images

Updated at 3:24 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court invoked visions of an all-seeing Big Brother and satellites watching us from above. Then things got personal Tuesday when the justices were told police could slap GPS devices on their cars and track their movements, without asking a judge for advance approval.

The occasion for all the talk about intrusive police actions was a hearing in a case about whether the police must get a search warrant before using GPS technology to track criminal suspects. The outcome could have implications for other high-tech surveillance methods as well.

The justices expressed deep reservations about warrantless GPS tracking. But there also was no clear view about how or whether to regulate police use of the devices.

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The justices were taken aback when the lawyer representing the government said police officers could install GPS devices on the justices' cars and track their movements without a warrant. To get a warrant, investigators need to convince a judge that there is reason to believe a suspect is involved in criminal activity.

"So your answer is yes, you could tomorrow decide that you put a GPS device on every one of our cars, follow us for a month; no problem under the Constitution?" Chief Justice John Roberts said.

Not only that, government lawyer Michael Dreeben replied, but FBI agents wouldn't need a warrant either if they wanted to rummage through the justices' trash, use a low-tech beeper to track them or tail them around-the-clock with a team of agents. Dreeben said the court has previously ruled that people have no reasonable expectation of privacy in those circumstances.

Justice Samuel Alito captured the essence of the court's concern when he said, "With computers around, it's now so simple to amass an enormous amount of information. How do we deal with this? Just say nothing has changed?"

Justice Stephen Breyer alluded to George Orwell's novel "1984" when he said surveillance in the past depended on human beings and their sometimes flawed memories. But computers don't have that problem, he said.

"The question that I think people are driving at, at least as I understand it and certainly share the concern, is that if you win this case then there is nothing to prevent the police or the government from monitoring 24 hours a day the public movement of every citizen of the United States," Breyer said.

Roberts drew a comparison with artwork to explain his perception of the power of GPS surveillance. "You're talking about the difference between seeing a little tile and a mosaic," Roberts said.

But Dreeben said it would be better for lawmakers rather than judges to set limits. Dreeben said the concerns expressed Tuesday were similar to those in the earlier high court case. Thirty years ago, Dreeben said, "Beeper technology seemed extraordinarily advanced."

The court shouldn't make special rules for GPS devices just because they allow the police to be more efficient in capturing and analyzing data, Dreeben said.

GPS devices are especially useful in early stages of an investigation, when they can eliminate the use of time-consuming stakeouts as officers seek to gather evidence, he said.

The issue arose after the federal appeals court in Washington threw out the drug conspiracy conviction of nightclub owner Antoine Jones. FBI agents and local police did not have a valid search warrant when they installed a GPS device on Jones' car and collected travel information for a month.

The GPS device helped authorities link Jones to a suburban house used to stash money and drugs. He was sentenced to life in prison before the appeals court overturned the conviction. The appellate judges said the authorities should have had a warrant and pointed to the length of the surveillance as a factor in their decision.

For all the unease the justices voiced in questions to Dreeben, they seemed equally torn in questions to Stephen Leckar, Jones' lawyer, about how to impose limits on the police.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg asked whether the use of video surveillance cameras is so different from getting information from a GPS device on a car. In London, Justice Elena Kagan noted, cameras are everywhere.

"It's pretty scary," Leckar said.

Justice Antonin Scalia responded with evident sarcasm. "Well, it must be unconstitutional if it's scary," Scalia said.

More gently, Breyer pointed out that English authorities have used video footage to prevent terrorist attacks.

The point of the questioning was to get Leckar to offer a principled way to draw a line that would still allow police to do their jobs without compromising people's rights.

Leckar said perhaps police could use the GPS device to follow someone for one day or one trip, without first getting a warrant. But that didn't appear to satisfy much of the court, either.

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barbaram99 says:
Did ye know some cell phones and netbook PCs have GPS..My notebook PCs don't. They have wire and wireless cards. Should people be tracked by GPS..Ye tell us..Should crooks be tracked..YES..Did ye know every computer can be tracked by its IP addresses..That is right..I know that as they have to be..
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djseavy says:
It's too bad there isn't a way to kick Scalia's big fat ass off the bench. He's nothing but a premadonna-wannabe. He's sarcastic to attorneys, students when he talks before groups, and just about everybody else that has the misfortune of crossing paths with him.
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kansas1946 says:
hmmmm...have these justices been asleep at the wheel/ (pardon the pun) That is the whole point of "warrentless." Did they think they were immune? How about warrentless sneaking into your home and snooping around. Did they not think they were included in that. It is really funny that as long as other folks are the ones having their civil liberties violted, that is just fine, but not mine. You know, when cops figure out that anyone can slap a GPS on their car as well, maybe they might be a bit concerned. "Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely." Someone much smarter than me said that a long time ago and it is as true now and it was then and really is the basis for our constitution.
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noname2138 replies:
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Absolutely right with your comment Kansas...Let's GPS all cops, judges, congress, all goverment employees, all people who are for this invasion. Let them have people follow them around in grocery stores and see what type of pears they decided to buy--very James Bond, you know.
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noname2138 says:
Honestly, is this still America? Are these the freedoms we want to extol to others? Yes, America is a great place, etc., etc., but you must be able to disagree with what it does in error from time to time. Russia used to be this way, and everyone was watched and monitored, and many people left only to be watched and monitored here. I tried to live without a cell phone for years, until it became more necessary. It doesn't take a genius to know this has been available for years--just open your eyes. It seems kind of weird to hear a judge say, "you mean you could follow all of us?" as if he didn't already know that--either not very techno savvy, or just oblivious.
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p_syrus says:
Moreover, since the right to operate a motor vehicle is NOT constitutionally guaranteed then a grant to the state of authority to monitor any driven vehicle could be deemed implicit in a driver's seeking a license to drive. :-D

Similar precedents already exist with regard to computer usage at work or in public libraries.

Oh, Brave New World ...
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gadfly65 says:
I don't understand how there's even a question about the legality of this, but Iwouldn't be surprised if the conservative-biased court says it's okay. Republicans say they're for smaller, less intrusive government, but they can always rationalize big spending and new invasions of privacy if they fit their agenda.
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mjlewis6 says:
Seems like we have more rights in the constitutions than we have recognized by national and state governments.

Whatever the governments want to impose, is likewise reciprocal: i.e. if in the interest of investigation for a crime, then likewise a citizen has a right of review of government officials actions to look for evidence of a crime for presentation to local grand juries. Put those GPS units out there and don't be surprised citizens want to see where our government, police, CPS, mayor, councilman, lobbyists businessman etc...is going and insure equal transparency. I would love to know where and WHAT our Republican Congressmen are doing....perhaps a little conspiracy meeting somewhere?
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Hala_c replies:
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There you go... watch the watchers. If we citizens can have every aspect of our lives monitored then so should those responsible for implementing such draconian policy and ALL of the results of monitoring those policy makers should be made available to the public.
Quiet_R_Bear replies:
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Hala_c, yes, both Democrats and Republicans need to be watched. Both sides have ignored the Constitution of the United States for far too long.
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Hala_c says:
Surveillance takes time? Duh! So does this mean in order to save time and therefore MONEY, we should just give up our rights altogether? I don't think so.

This all started with the president that wished the U.S. was a dictatorship and that he were the dictator... Bush!
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Quiet_R_Bear replies:
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I am not sure when it started but I know it started WAY before Bush. And is being perpetuated by BOTH political parties.
kroguej replies:
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"the decider" = quasi dictator
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notyrants says:
The Supreme Court of unequal justice is for GPS tracking with the exception of itself, the global non-democratic corporate oligarchies and the so called "free" trade agreements that unionize them in solidarity against the people of the world.
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Overruled1 says:
I have to say that the constitution provides for protection of the privacy of person, property and things.
The laws of our country have been manipulated in favor of those who in power have opportunity to abuse their privileges...which has been demonstrated with Bush and FISA. Then the PATRIOT Act took much more away, I feel this isn't the country I grew up in and instead has become Brixton, with Wiki-leaks playing the part of Guy Falkes.
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notyrants replies:
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It has become the global house of ill repute for global non-democratic corporate oligarchs. A place to reintroduce feudalism to the world.
Quiet_R_Bear replies:
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I am not saying I support the Patriot Act but what about forcing me, a private citizen, to purchase health insurance? Is that constitutional? All I am saying it that BOTH parties are guilty of taking our constutional rights away.
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