What Roman Mars Can Learn About Con Law
Government
On January 6th, a mob stormed the US Capitol to try to stop the certification of the presidential election results. Many of the insurrectionists will be tracked down and charged with crimes, in part, because their cell phone placed them in the Capitol Building during the attack. The case of Carpenter v. United States is the closest the Supreme Court has come to weighing in on the matter of historical cell phone data, but the decision didn’t not offer an opinion on law enforcement’s use of a location specific cell phone tower data dump without an individual suspect in mind. This brings up questions about the way warrants usually work under the Fourth Amendment.
78- The Disqualification Clause
77- Gag
76- Margarine, Meadows, and Removal
75- Comstock Zombies
74- On the Eve of Trump's Arraignment
73- Lies, George Santos, and the 1st Amendment
72-Weddings, Websites, and Forced Speech
71- The War Between the States
70- Trump's Bet on Cannon
69- The Mar-a-Lago Warrant
68- The Longest Week
67- Jan 6 and the Evidence Against Trump
66- After Dobbs
65- The Second Amendment
64- Ethics and Masks
63- The Leaked Draft
62- On the Other End of the Line
61- Book Banning and the Constitution
60- The Administrative State
59- A Jurisprudence of Doubt
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