Search for: "Antoine Jones" Results 81 - 100 of 169
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24 Jan 2012, 3:42 pm by nflatow
Jones, and unanimously held that the government violated Antoine Jones’s Fourth Amendment rights by surreptitiously monitoring his vehicle’s movements on public roads for four weeks. [read post]
24 Jan 2012, 3:37 pm by Ethan Ackerman
Supreme Court; Jan 23, 2012) In 2005 federal agents convinced a judge to issue a warrant so they could affix a cellular-based GPS tracker to the underside of Antoine Jones' wife's car, which the agents then tracked constantly for almost a month. [read post]
The decision effectively overturned Antoine Jones’s life sentence for drug trafficking which was obtained, in part, through the use of location tracking information generated by a GPS device secretly placed by the FBI, without a search warrant, on Jones’s wife’s Jeep Grand Cherokee. [read post]
24 Jan 2012, 8:12 am by Martin L. Stern
 Although unanimous, the Court’s reasoning was fractured and the Court left open many questions about how advancing technology must be balanced with the Fourth Amendment’s privacy expectations and protections against unreasonable searches.The facts of the case are straightforward: In 2004, Antoine Jones came under suspicion of narcotics trafficking and became a target for investigation by the FBI and the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department. [read post]
Antoine Jones, No. 10–1259: Without obtaining a proper search warrant the Government installed a Global-Positioning-System (GPS) tracking device on a vehicle. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 10:41 pm by zshapiro
The Supreme Court, Monday, denied the government’s petition to reinstate the drug conviction of Antoine Jones after it was reversed by the DC Circuit. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 5:41 pm by Jeff Neuburger
Antoine Jones that the Government’s attachment of a GPS-tracking device to a vehicle, and the subsequent monitoring of the movements of that vehicle on public streets, constitutes a search. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 2:41 pm by Jeff Neuburger
Antoine Jones that the Government’s attachment of a GPS-tracking device to a vehicle, and the subsequent monitoring of the movements of that vehicle on public streets, constitutes a search. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 2:19 pm by Charley Moore
Jones, secretly attached a global positioning system (GPS) device to the vehicle of a drug suspect named Antoine Jones to track his vehicle every day, 24 hours a day, as he drove around the Washington, D.C. area. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 12:18 pm
The case revolves around Antoine Jones, who was a suspected cocaine dealer in Washington, D.C. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 11:47 am by nflatow
Jones invalidates the life sentence of Antoine Jones, who was convicted of conspiracy to sell cocaine using evidence obtained over the course of a month from a GPS device attached to Jones’ Jeep Grand Cherokee. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 11:32 am by Steve Hall
Jones, No. 10-1259, concerned Antoine Jones, who was the owner of a Washington nightclub when the police came to suspect him of being part of a cocaine-selling operation. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 11:09 am by Joe Palazzolo
” The case involves Antoine Jones, a Washington nightclub owner who was sentenced to life in prison for conspiracy to sell cocaine. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 10:36 am by brian
” The Court found that the government violated the Fourth Amendment, which protects American from unreasonable searches, when it placed a GPS device to Antoine Jones’s car and tracked his movements continuously for a month. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 9:52 am by Michael Buchanan
In a rare unanimous decision, the United States Supreme Court ruled on January 23, 2012, in U.S. v Antoine Jones,  that attaching a GPS device to a suspect’s vehicle is a search under the Fourth Amendment. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 9:29 am by Ateqah Khaki, ACLU
” The Court found that the government violated the Fourth Amendment, which protects American from unreasonable searches, when it placed a GPS device to Antoine Jones’s car and tracked his movements continuously for a month. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 9:04 am by Christopher Danzig
Police in Washington, D.C. placed a GPS tracking device on the car of Antoine Jones, a nightclub owner, without obtaining a warrant. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 8:58 am by Lyle Denniston
The Court flatly rejected the government’s argument that it was simply not a search, in the constitutional sense, to physically — and secretly — attach a small GPS tracker on the underside of the car used by a man, Antoine Jones, who was a principal target of an investigation into a drug-running operation in Washington, D.C., and its suburbs. [read post]