Geofence Warrants and the Fourth Amendment: What Chatrie v. United States Means for Law Enforcement episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 29, 2026 · 39 MIN

Geofence Warrants and the Fourth Amendment: What Chatrie v. United States Means for Law Enforcement

from Guardian Mindset Podcast · host Attorney Eric Daigle

Chatrie v. United States Key Takwaways: Technology is advancing faster than the law. Law enforcement leaders should anticipate evolving Fourth Amendment standards around geofence warrants, Google location data, and other digital investigative tools. Geofence warrants raise major questions about particularity, voluntariness, probable cause, and privacy. Courts remain divided on whether these warrants amount to a Fourth Amendment search. The traditional Third-Party Doctrine from cases like United States v. Miller and Smith v. Maryland is now being tested against modern privacy expectations shaped by Carpenter v. United States. The key legal tension is whether location data shared with a company like Google should be treated like ordinary business records or as deeply revealing digital information that deserves stronger constitutional protection. Supreme Court scrutiny of geofence warrants may lead to stricter requirements for law enforcement, including narrower timeframes, tighter geographic limits, stronger probable cause articulation, and step-by-step minimization procedures. For law enforcement, the practical takeaway is clear: avoid broad digital searches, work closely with prosecutors, document the investigative need, and make every warrant as particularized as possible. Ongoing education is essential. Agencies need to stay ahead of emerging technology, changing court standards, and the legal risks tied to digital evidence collection. Learn more at DLGLearningCenter.com. Geofence Warrants and Fourth Amendment Tensions This episode focuses on Chatrie v. United States, a major geofence warrant case involving Google location data, digital privacy, and the Fourth Amendment. The case began with a bank robbery investigation where a detective obtained a geofence warrant for Google location data within a defined area around the crime scene. That data eventually helped identify the suspect. The legal issue is whether the government can collect location data from multiple users within a geofence and then narrow the results later. That question creates a major Fourth Amendment concern: does this type of warrant allow the government to search first and justify later? The episode explains why geofence warrants create tension between investigative needs and constitutional protections. Even when the government obtains a warrant, the warrant must still satisfy the Fourth Amendment’s requirements of probable cause and particularity. The concern is that a geofence warrant may sweep in data from people who were merely near a crime but had no connection to it. Foundational Doctrines and Modern Technology The episode walks through the major Supreme Court cases shaping this issue, including United States v. Miller, Smith v. Maryland, and Carpenter v. United States. Miller and Smith form the foundation of the Third-Party Doctrine. Under that doctrine, information voluntarily shared with a third party, such as a bank or telephone company, may lose Fourth Amendment protection. The government argues that Google location data falls into that same category because users voluntarily share location information with Google. But Carpenter complicates that analysis. In Carpenter, the Supreme Court recognized that modern cell phone location data can reveal deeply personal details about a person’s life and movements. The Court required stronger Fourth Amendment protection for historical cell-site location information. That creates the central conflict in Chatire: should geofence location data be treated like ordinary third-party business records, or should it receive stronger privacy protection because of how revealing modern digital tracking... Chapters (00:00:00) - The Problem With Technology and Warrant(00:10:50) - Smith vs. Maryland, Fourth Amendment(00:21:25) - Fourth Amendment issues in Google data search(00:24:03) - The Google Geofence Warrant case(00:31:04) - Does the Carpenter Extension Extend to Digital Communications?(00:36:29) - Geofence Warrant Oral Argument

Chatrie v. United States Key Takwaways: Technology is advancing faster than the law. Law enforcement leaders should anticipate evolving Fourth Amendment standards around geofence warrants, Google location data, and other digital investigative tools. Geofence warrants raise major questions about particularity, voluntariness, probable cause, and privacy. Courts remain divided on whether these warrants amount to a Fourth Amendment search. The traditional Third-Party Doctrine from cases like United States v. Miller and Smith v. Maryland is now being tested against modern privacy expectations shaped by Carpenter v. United States. The key legal tension is whether location data shared with a company like Google should be treated like ordinary business records or as deeply revealing digital information that deserves stronger constitutional protection. Supreme Court scrutiny of geofence warrants may lead to stricter requirements for law enforcement, including narrower timeframes, tighter geographic limits, stronger probable cause articulation, and step-by-step minimization procedures. For law enforcement, the practical takeaway is clear: avoid broad digital searches, work closely with prosecutors, document the investigative need, and make every warrant as particularized as possible. Ongoing education is essential. Agencies need to stay ahead of emerging technology, changing court standards, and the legal risks tied to digital evidence collection. Learn more at DLGLearningCenter.com. Geofence Warrants and Fourth Amendment Tensions This episode focuses on Chatrie v. United States, a major geofence warrant case involving Google location data, digital privacy, and the Fourth Amendment. The case began with a bank robbery investigation where a detective obtained a geofence warrant for Google location data within a defined area around the crime scene. That data eventually helped identify the suspect. The legal issue is whether the government can collect location data from multiple users within a geofence and then narrow the results later. That question creates a major Fourth Amendment concern: does this type of warrant allow the government to search first and justify later? The episode explains why geofence warrants create tension between investigative needs and constitutional protections. Even when the government obtains a warrant, the warrant must still satisfy the Fourth Amendment’s requirements of probable cause and particularity. The concern is that a geofence warrant may sweep in data from people who were merely near a crime but had no connection to it. Foundational Doctrines and Modern Technology The episode walks through the major Supreme Court cases shaping this issue, including United States v. Miller, Smith v. Maryland, and Carpenter v. United States. Miller and Smith form the foundation of the Third-Party Doctrine. Under that doctrine, information voluntarily shared with a third party, such as a bank or telephone company, may lose Fourth Amendment protection. The government argues that Google location data falls into that same category because users voluntarily share location information with Google. But Carpenter complicates that analysis. In Carpenter, the Supreme Court recognized that modern cell phone location data can reveal deeply personal details about a person’s life and movements. The Court required stronger Fourth Amendment protection for historical cell-site location information. That creates the central conflict in Chatire: should geofence location data be treated like ordinary third-party business records, or should it receive stronger privacy protection because of how revealing modern digital tracking...

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Chatrie v. United States Key Takwaways: Technology is advancing faster than the law. Law enforcement leaders should anticipate evolving Fourth Amendment standards around geofence warrants, Google location data, and other digital investigative...

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