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| What I find more egregious is, if this somehow sticks, non-USA citizens are still not protected from these invasive searches. This should be a human rights issue, not a local law. |
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| Is this then a done deal? Or can the Supreme Court somehow decide there was a half-sentence in a Federalist Paper which argued the opposite and invalidate the ruling? |
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| This is a ruling by a District Court. It could be appealed to the Circuit Court, and then to the Supreme Court.
In the federal court system, District Court decisions are not binding precedent. Circuit Court decisions bind the District Courts in their circuit, and Supreme Court decisions bind all lower courts. This District Court is in the Second Circuit. Another District Court in the same Circuit made a similar decision in US v. Smith, but the Second Circuit Court has not yet ruled on warrantless border searches of cell phones. Several other Circuit Courts have, however, and their rulings were all opposite of this one: the First Circuit in Alasaad v. Mayorkas; the Fifth Circuit in US v. Castillo; the Seventh Circuit in US v. Wanjiku; and the Ninth Circuit in US v. Cano. In short: this decision is not binding precedent, and a substantial amount of binding precedent exists in the opposite direction within other circuits. (Credit for case law information to: https://www.wilmerhale.com/insights/client-alerts/20231115-o...) |
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| SCOTUS doesn't always make shitty decisions. Sometimes dozens of lower courts will all make a shitty decision and then it gets to SCOTUS and they somehow use their greater resources to produce a better decision contrary to everyone's expectations.
IIRC pretty much 99% of state and fed courts had ruled against the warrant requirement for GPS tracking until it hit SCOTUS and they went the opposite direction (just): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Jones_(2012) |
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| 2012 was a very different court.
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| For the Hacker News members who are reflexively downvoting my comment, presumably for political reasons, I refer you to Riley vs. California, the 2014 SCOTUS decision that ruled warrantless searches of cell phones were unconstitutional:
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/573/373/ The opinion was written by Roberts with a concurrence by Alito. Again, presumably, the 2024 court is likely to take an even a dimmer view of the Feds trying to expand their powers and circumvent the 4th Amendment than the 2014 court. |
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| Didn't a former Greek finance minister recently get banned from Germany for political reasons? In France it is illegal to deny the holocaust but legal to deny the Armenian genocide. |
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| They just have to change the language back to English
What's the alternative? The guy paid $1000+ just to get there and spent 3+ hours at customs. Refusing is basically saying "ok I fly back home" |
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| Aaaaand with the bootloader unlocked, they'll just grab the Cellebrite and/or call up Cellebrite Professional Services for remote unlock assistance.
https://cellebrite.com/en/advanced-services/ The biggest thing is to set your device up on arrival to be powered OFF. Most of Cellebrite (and other security vendors) solutions rely on the phone having been unlocked once since first poweron (or "AFU"). |
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| Yeah. This wasn’t even an appeals court, so all this means is this judge thinks that.
As it is I wouldn’t be surprised if the government doesn’t appeal to avoid setting a wider precedent. |
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| If the government broke the social contract so deeply to me, I can only imagine how I would react. You are truly a sovereign citizen now. The government has no legitimate authority over you anymore. |
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| > They can still get your texts and contacts and call history from your car though. In many cars it syncs
Source? If so, that's a privacy boon for CarPlay and Android Auto. |
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| You can't apply the law retroactively.
There are ... some exceptions. Pardons can be granted (presidential or gubernatorial) for those convicted of specific violations, or under procedures later discredited. This doesn't of itself provide the ability to prosecute bad cops / bad prosecutors, but does at least undo some of the damage. E.g., President Biden has given broad pardons for marijuana possession under US and D.C. (administered by the Federal government) law: <https://www.npr.org/2023/12/22/1221230390/biden-pardons-clem...> This doesn't include state convictions for drugs possession (the vast majority of such convictions) but does signal to states which direction the Federal government is leaning. But your damage control is within reach. |
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| Sorry, but that's insane. You can't legitmizime criminalizing and imprisoning someone for the the crime of not having a time machine. You can legitimize the government making amends for its mistakes. |
In the 1980s the only border I knew where printed material was searched was the East German border. Back then the practice was considered outrageous.