https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2020/02/removing-a-gps-tracking-device-from-your-car-isnt-theft-court-rules/


"An Indiana man may beat a drug prosecution after the state's highest court 
threw out a search warrant against him late last week. The search warrant was 
based on the idea that the man had "stolen" a GPS tracking device belonging to 
the government. But Indiana's Supreme Court concluded that he'd done no such 
thing—and the cops should have known it."
"Last November, we wrote about the case of Derek Heuring, an Indiana man the 
Warrick County Sheriff's Office suspected of selling meth. Authorities got a 
warrant to put a GPS tracker on Heuring's car, getting a stream of data on his 
location for six days. But then the data stopped."
"Officers suspected Heuring had discovered and removed the tracking device. 
After waiting for a few more days, they got a warrant to search his home and a 
barn belonging to his father. They argued the disappearance of the tracking 
device was evidence that Heuring had stolen it."                    [end of 
partial quote]


Jim Bell's comment follows:    In January 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 
that a warrant is necessary to place a GPS tracking system on a car.  

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Jones


"United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. 400 (2012), was a landmark United States 
Supreme Court case which held that installing a Global Positioning System (GPS) 
tracking device on a vehicle and using the device to monitor the vehicle's 
movements constitutes a search under the Fourth Amendment.[1]"

"In 2004 defendant Jones was suspected of drug trafficking. Police 
investigators asked for and received a warrant to attach a GPS tracking device 
to the underside of the defendant's car but then exceeded the warrant's scope 
in both geography and length of time. The Supreme Court justices voted 
unanimously that this was a "search" under the Fourth Amendment, although they 
were split 5-4 as to the fundamental reasons behind that conclusion. The 
majority held that by physically installing the GPS device on the defendant's 
car, the police had committed a trespass against Jones' "personal effects" – 
this trespass, in an attempt to obtain information, constituted a search per 
se."




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