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Criminal Law

Faculty Scholarship

Series

2017

Privacy

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Searching Places Unknown: Law Enforcement Jurisdiction On The Dark Web, Ahmed Ghappour Apr 2017

Searching Places Unknown: Law Enforcement Jurisdiction On The Dark Web, Ahmed Ghappour

Faculty Scholarship

The use of hacking tools by law enforcement to pursue criminal suspects who have anonymized their communications on the dark web presents a looming flashpoint between criminal procedure and international law. Criminal actors who use the dark web (for instance, to commit crimes or to evade authorities) obscure digital footprints left behind with third parties, rendering existing surveillance methods obsolete. In response, law enforcement has implemented hacking techniques that deploy surveillance software over the Internet to directly access and control criminals’ devices. The practical reality of the underlying technologies makes it inevitable that foreign-located computers will be subject to remote …


Certain Certiorari: The Digital Privacy Rights Of Probationers, Daniel Yeager Jan 2017

Certain Certiorari: The Digital Privacy Rights Of Probationers, Daniel Yeager

Faculty Scholarship

In a recent oral argument, a judge on the California Court of Appeal told me they had "at least 50" pending cases on the constitutionality of probation conditions authorizing suspicionless searches of digital devices. As counsel of record in three of those cases, I feel positioned to comment on this hot topic within criminal law. My intention here is less to reconcile California's cases on suspicionless searches of probationers' digital devices than to locate them within the precedents of the United States Supreme Court, which is bound before long to pick up a case for the same purpose.