Wednesday round-up

At Supreme Court Brief (subscription required), Tony Mauro reports that “Deputy U.S. Solicitor General Michael Dreeben will detour from special counsel Robert Mueller’s legal team next week to argue before the U.S. Supreme Court in high-profile privacy case,” Carpenter v. United States, which asks whether the government must obtain a warrant for cell-site-location information. At the Washington Post’s Volokh Conspiracy blog, Will Baude explains why “the positive law model” of the Fourth Amendment, under which “it is a search for the government to gather information in a way that a similarly situated private party would not be allowed to do,” provides “an alternative theory” for evaluating Carpenter “that may avoid a lot of line-drawing problems.”

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