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legal · NPR

Supreme Court restricts use of geofence warrants

NPR Published Jun 29, 2026 Reviewed Jun 29, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
The U.S. Supreme Court restricted the use of geofence warrants with a 6-3 majority.
6 justices · majority3 justices · dissenting
Justice Elena Kagan, Justice
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Complying with a warrant, Google initially identified 19 people who were in or near the bank.
19 people · initially identified
Google, company
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Google ultimately provided police with the names of three people whose location data showed they were at the bank.
3 people · ultimately identified
Google, company
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Attorneys argued that geofence warrants directed Google to search millions of users' location histories.
at least 1000000 users · location histories searched
attorneys, defense counsel
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Attorneys argued that millions of people were subjected to a search due to geofence warrants despite not being suspicious.
at least 1000000 people · subjected to search
attorneys, defense counsel
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Google initially found 19 people near the bank in response to a geofence warrant and later provided the police with the names of three people.
19 · people initially found near the bank3 · people ultimately provided to police
Google
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The U.S. Supreme Court Al Drago/Getty Images hide caption

The Supreme Court on Thursday restricted the use of a relatively new law enforcement technique that allows police to tap into giant tech-firm databases to see who was near the scene of a crime.

Writing for the 6-3 majority, Justice Elena Kagan said that the technique, known as geofencing, violates the Fourth Amendment's prohibition against unreasonable searches.

A "geofence warrant" entails drawing a virtual fence around a geographic area where a crime was committed. The government can then seek a warrant to require a tech company to search its data to identify any of its users who were within the geofence at the time of the crime.

This case stems from a robbery in the suburbs of Richmond, Va. A man stole $195,000 from a bank, but after two months, the case had gone cold. That is, until detectives served a warrant on Google, asking for the location information of cellphone users in and around the bank for the hour before and after the crime was committed.

Complying with the warrant, Google initially found the names of 19 people who were in or near the bank, but Google pushed back, ultimately providing the police with the names of just three people whose location data showed they were at the bank. When police went to the home of one of them, they found a pistol matching one seen on security camera footage of the robbery and nearly $100,000 in cash. That man, Okello Chatrie, later confessed and was convicted of the crime.

His attorneys argued in filings to the court that geofence searches violate the Fourth Amendment because they allow the government "to search first and develop suspicions later." The geofence warrants in this case directed Google to search millions of users' location histories, meaning that millions of people were subjected to a search despite never having done anything suspicious.

But the government argued in its filings that because people can choose not to give companies like Google their location data, that data is not constitutionally protected.

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