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Carpenter v. United States announced that the third-party doctrine has limits in the digital age — that the government cannot obtain comprehensive records of a person's location history from cell phone companies without a warrant, even though those records were voluntarily shared with a third party. The full implications of Carpenter — for email, cloud storage, social media, metadata, and the entire digital footprint that modern life generates — are still being worked out in courts across the country, and the constitutional warrior who commands the complete post-Carpenter framework has a powerful tool for challenging digital government overreach.
The Constitutional Fourth Amendment Advanced Warrior is Volume LXIV of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series, delivering the complete advanced Fourth Amendment analysis across every contested doctrinal frontier.
Wayne Richard Evangelista covers at advanced depth: the third-party doctrine's post-Carpenter erosion — what requires a warrant now, what remains unprotected, and how to press the argument for further extension; administrative search doctrine — the Camara-See framework, pervasively regulated industry doctrine, and OSHA and EPA search practice; the border search doctrine — the Flores-Montano rule, the Riley v. California application to digital devices at the border, and the circuit split on forensic device searches; the special needs doctrine from Griffin v. Wisconsin through school drug testing and beyond; immigration enforcement searches and Martinez-Fuerte checkpoints; the Franks v. Delaware warrant challenge; and advanced suppression motion practice covering the good faith exception, fruit of the poisonous tree, independent source, and inevitable discovery.
The Constitutional Fourth Amendment Advanced Warrior
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