Chief Justice John Roberts and Michael Fischer, Pennsylvania chief deputy attorney general, are displayed on a smartphone during oral arguments before the Supreme Court in 2020. | Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images
If I’d only listened to the first half of the Supreme Court’s Monday argument in Chatrie v. United States, a case asking when police can use cellphone data to determine who was present near the site of a crime, I would be convinced that the Court is about to drastically limit Americans’ right to privacy.
Most of the justices’ questions to Adam Unikowsky, the lawyer fo...
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