Author:
McJunkin Ben A.,Prescott J.J.
Abstract
More than forty U.S. states currently track at least some of their convicted sex offenders using GPS devices. Many offenders will be monitored for life. The burdens and expense of living indefinitely under constant technological monitoring have been well documented, but most commentators have assumed that these burdens were of no constitutional moment because states have characterized such surveillance as “civil” in character—and courts have seemed to agree. In 2015, however, the Supreme Court decided in Grady v. North Carolina that attaching a GPS monitoring device to a person was a Fourth Amendment search, notwithstanding the ostensibly civil character of the surveillance. Grady left open the question whether the search—and the state’s technological monitoring program more generally—was constitutionally reasonable. This Essay considers the doctrine and theory of Fourth Amendment reasonableness as it applies to both current and envisioned sex offender monitoring technologies to evaluate whether the Fourth Amendment may serve as an effective check on post-release monitoring regimes.
Publisher
University of California Press
Cited by
2 articles.
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1. Electronic Monitoring as an Alternative to Incarceration as Part of Criminal Justice Reform;Handbook of Issues in Criminal Justice Reform in the United States;2021-12-05
2. Community‐Based Approaches to Sex Offender Management;The Wiley Handbook of What Works with Sexual Offenders;2020-06-12