ruveyn wrote:
In Griswald v Connecticut Justice Goldberg invoked the 9 th amendment. We have a natural or human right to privacy.
If the gummint wants to peek inside let them get a search warrant.
ruveyn
Pesky, activist judges![/sarcasm]
I note, however, that the right found in
Griswold certainly isn't absolute. There are countless situations in which an individual either has no legitimate expectation of privacy, or has waived any expectation of privacy through the undertaking of a public act.
So, again I ask the question: what legitimate expectation of privacy does a person have while operating a motor vehicle?
Certainly in Fourth Amendment cases, cars have afforded little protection.
(See, for example,
Whren v.
United States (1996) 517 U.S. 806
http://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal ... /case.html)
Given that motor vehicle operation takes place in public I suggest that the open fields doctrine negates any subjective expectation of privacy on the part of the driver of that vehicle--particularly with respect to the method in which that vehicle is being operated. If police are routinely able to use surveillance technology like radar to determine the speed at which you are operating your vehicle, I see no basis on which to conclude that other types of surveillance are constitutionally excluded.
_________________
--James