Core holding and immediate implications
In Chatrie v. United States (2026), the Supreme Court held that police officers conduct a Fourth Amendment “search” when they obtain detailed cell‑phone location data, such as Google’s Location History, via geofence warrants, because individuals have a reasonable expectation of privacy in records of their physical movements even if those records are held by a third‑party company (Kagan, 2026; The Guardian, 2026). The Court concluded that this applies even when the time window is short and the data is obtained from a technology provider, and remanded for the Fourth Circuit to evaluate whether the particular geofence warrant at issue was reasonable in terms of probable cause and particularity and how the good‑faith exception to the exclusionary rule applies (Kagan, 2026; Justia, 2024).
Practically, this means that law enforcement must treat geofence‑based access to smartphone location data as a constitutionally significant search, with warrant requirements and exceptions similar to those recognized in Carpenter v. United States for cell‑site location information (Kagan, 2026; Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, 2026).
Ramifications for police and law enforcement practices
Geofence warrants as high‑scrutiny tools
Geofence warrants compel a provider like Google to disclose location data for every device estimated to be within a defined geographic area during a specified time frame, typically through a multi‑step process that begins with anonymized device data and proceeds to disclosure of subscriber identities (Kagan, 2026; American Civil Liberties Union, 2026; Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, 2026). The Court’s opinion emphasizes the breadth of such warrants and their potential to resemble “general warrants,” particularly when they encompass residences, churches, schools, and hospitals within the radius (Kagan, 2026; American Civil Liberties Union, 2026).
For police practice, this implies:
- Agencies will need to narrow the geographic scope, time window, and criteria for device selection at each step of a geofence warrant to withstand probable‑cause and particularity scrutiny (Kagan, 2026).
- Internal review by legal advisors or prosecutors before seeking geofence warrants will likely become standard to reduce the risk of suppression and civil liability (Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, 2026).
Limits on short‑term and “targeted” location requests
The government had argued that accessing two hours of Location History data around a crime scene should be treated differently from long‑term tracking; the Court rejected this distinction, observing that even short‑term monitoring can reveal highly sensitive movements, such as visits to medical, legal, or political locations (Kagan, 2026). The opinion also states that Fourth Amendment protections do not hinge on the quantity of information obtained once the category of information is protected, and that the ability to select limited time slices from a comprehensive database does not diminish the constitutional intrusion (Kagan, 2026).
Consequently, law enforcement cannot justify bypassing warrant requirements solely by limiting the duration of location data requested, and must be prepared to show probable cause and necessity even for relatively narrow time windows (Kagan, 2026; The Guardian, 2026).
Restriction of the traditional third‑party doctrine
The Court explicitly declines to apply the traditional third‑party doctrine from United States v. Miller and Smith v. Maryland to Location History data, echoing its earlier approach in Carpenter (Kagan, 2026). It reasoned that location records are “qualitatively different,” uniquely revealing, and not truly “voluntarily shared” in the conventional sense, because modern smartphone use and repeated prompts to enable Location History make the generation of such data a pervasive feature of daily life rather than a discrete business transaction (Kagan, 2026; Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, 2026).
For police practice, this indicates that subpoena‑like tools directed to providers for historical smartphone location data will generally be constitutionally inadequate absent a warrant, and agencies must distinguish carefully between traditional business records and digital diaries of movement (Kagan, 2026; American Civil Liberties Union, 2026).
Multi‑step digital warrants and judicial oversight
The geofence warrant in Chatrie used a three‑stage process: (1) anonymized data for all devices in the geofence during the one‑hour window; (2) extended movement data inside and outside the geofence for selected devices; and (3) disclosure of identifying information for a further subset of devices (Kagan, 2026; Justia, 2024). Justice Jackson’s concurrence stresses that steps two and three were not subject to detailed judicial standards in the warrant and allowed officers to broaden the search and de‑anonymize users without additional judicial findings of probable cause, which she characterizes as granting a “roving commission” inconsistent with warrant requirements (Jackson, 2026).
Police departments will therefore need to ensure that:
- Warrants explicitly define the criteria for narrowing devices at each stage and the basis for moving from anonymized data to identifying information (Kagan, 2026; Jackson, 2026).
- Magistrates, not officers alone, determine the scope and sequence of data access, potentially by requiring new or amended warrants for subsequent stages in complex digital searches (Jackson, 2026).
Exigent circumstances and recognized exceptions
The Court notes that its holding does not foreclose warrantless access to location data in true emergencies, consistent with existing exigent‑circumstances doctrine (Kagan, 2026). However, the opinion suggests that such situations must involve compelling needs of law enforcement and be narrowly tailored to the emergency at hand, which implies that routine investigations will rarely qualify (Kagan, 2026; American Civil Liberties Union, 2026).
Ramifications for prosecutions and criminal cases
Suppression litigation and the good‑faith exception
In the underlying federal case, the district court and the Fourth Circuit both upheld admission of the geofence‑derived evidence based on the good‑faith exception, even while expressing serious concerns about the warrant’s breadth and constitutional validity (United States v. Chatrie, 2024; American Civil Liberties Union, 2026). Justice Alito’s dissent in the Supreme Court emphasizes that many past cases involving geofence warrants are likely to survive suppression challenges because officers relied on warrants in an unsettled legal environment (Alito, 2026).
For prosecutors, this means:
- Past convictions based on similar geofence warrants will likely be defended by arguing that officers acted in objective reliance on judicially issued warrants and pre‑Chatrie case law (United States v. Chatrie, 2024; Alito, 2026).
- New investigations after Chatrie will face tighter standards; the ability to invoke good‑faith will weaken over time as the constitutional limits become settled and widely known (Alito, 2026).
Strategic use of location evidence
Because the Court describes Location History as akin to a personal journal—similar to emails, documents, photos, and calendars stored in the cloud—such evidence will attract strong privacy‑based challenges and may be perceived by juries as intrusive surveillance (Kagan, 2026; American Civil Liberties Union, 2026). Prosecutors may respond by using geofence‑derived information primarily to generate leads and corroborate other evidence, rather than as the sole or central proof of identity or guilt (Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, 2026).
Broader implications for policing and surveillance
Shift away from dragnet surveillance techniques
The Court’s reasoning, along with advocacy from organizations such as the ACLU and EFF, signals skepticism toward investigatory methods that start with an area and time and then identify potential suspects from the entire population present, rather than focusing on specific individuals for whom probable cause already exists (American Civil Liberties Union, 2026; Electronic Frontier Foundation, 2026). This has implications not only for geofence warrants but for other “reverse” techniques, such as reverse keyword searches and broad social‑media data pulls.
Law enforcement agencies are likely to:
- Emphasize suspect‑specific investigative methods and use reverse‑location or reverse‑keyword tools only when narrowly tailored and backed by strong justifications that can satisfy courts under Chatrie’s framework (Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, 2026).
- Develop minimization procedures to discard information about non‑suspects quickly after initial screening whenever reverse‑search methods are used (American Civil Liberties Union, 2026).
Data architecture and provider practices
Google has indicated in its Supreme Court filings and public statements that, as of mid‑2025, it moved Location History storage from centralized servers to user devices and no longer maintains data in a form that would allow responding to geofence warrants for Location History (Kagan, 2026; Bloomberg Law, 2026). Commentary notes that other technology and telecommunications companies may consider similar approaches, such as on‑device storage and shorter retention periods, to reduce exposure to broad law‑enforcement demands and privacy criticism (Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, 2026).
This evolution will force police and prosecutors to:
- Rely more heavily on carrier‑held cell‑site data (still governed by Carpenter) and on traditional device searches, rather than cloud‑based geofences (Kagan, 2026; Bloomberg Law, 2026).
- Maintain ongoing dialogue with provider legal and compliance teams to understand what data exists, how it is stored, and what legal processes can realistically reach it (Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, 2026).
References
American Civil Liberties Union. (2026, March 4). United States v. Chatrie. ACLU. https://www.aclu.org/cases/united-states-v-chatrie
Alito, S. A. (2026). Dissenting opinion in Chatrie v. United States, 609 U.S. ___ (No. 25‑112). (Included in slip opinion PDF attached by the Court Reporter.)
Bloomberg Law. (2026, April 26). Supreme Court weighs warrants tied to phone location data. Bloomberg Law. https://news.bloomberglaw.com/us-law-week/justices-weigh-legality-of-warrants-tied-to-phone-location-data
Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2026, March 2). Brief of Amicus Curiae Electronic Frontier Foundation in support of petitioner, Chatrie v. United States (No. 25‑112). Electronic Frontier Foundation. https://www.eff.org/files/2026/03/02/chatrie-v-us-eff-scotus-brief.pdf
Jackson, K. B. (2026). Concurring opinion in Chatrie v. United States, 609 U.S. ___ (No. 25‑112). (Included in slip opinion PDF attached by the Court Reporter.)
Justia. (2024, July 8). United States v. Chatrie, No. 22‑4489 (4th Cir. 2024). Justia. https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/ca4/22-4489/22-4489-2024-07-09.html
Kagan, E. (2026). Opinion of the Court in Chatrie v. United States, 609 U.S. ___ (No. 25‑112). (Slip opinion, October Term 2025, as provided in 25‑112_0am4.pdf.)
Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP. (2026, February 2). Supreme Court to address constitutionality of geofence warrants for the first time. Paul, Weiss Publications. https://www.paulweiss.com/insights/client-memos/supreme-court-to-address-constitutionality-of-geofence-warrants-for-the-first-time
The Guardian. (2026, June 29). US supreme court rules geofence warrants require constitutional privacy protections. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jun/29/supreme-court-geofence-warrants-case-decision
United States v. Chatrie, 590 F. Supp. 3d 901 (E.D. Va. 2022). (District court decision discussing geofence warrant, Fourth Amendment, and good‑faith exception.)
Perplexity AI. (2026). Perplexity AI system documentation and capabilities (GPT‑5.1). Perplexity AI. https://www.perplexity.ai (general product and system information page).
Use of Artificial Intelligence (Perplexity AI)
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