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FBI Director Kash Patel confirmed during mullin-dhs-nomination-advances-despite-gop-opposition.html" class="story-link" title="Mullin’s DHS nomination advances to full Senate despite opposition from Republic">Senate testimony that the agency purchases commercially available location data that can track Americans' movements. This data, unlike information obtained directly from cell phone providers, can be accessed without a warrant. The practice appears to continue despite legal questions raised by the Supreme Court's Carpenter v. United States decision regarding location privacy.

The revelation touches on fundamental questions about digital privacy and government surveillance in an era where location data is routinely collected and sold. Many assumed the Supreme Court's Carpenter ruling had restricted restate.html" class="story-link" title="Netflix Execs ‘Laughed’ at Claim the Streamer Demands Movies and TV Shows Restat">such practices, making the FBI's admission particularly significant for privacy advocates and constitutional scholars.
Privacy advocates say

This practice circumvents constitutional protections established in Carpenter v. United States, which required warrants for location data from cell providers. Purchasing the same information from data brokers creates an end-run around Fourth Amendment protections, allowing mass surveillance without judicial oversight.

FBI says

The practice involves only commercially available information that is legally purchased and used consistently with constitutional requirements. The data helps legitimate law enforcement investigations while operating within existing legal frameworks for accessing publicly available commercial information.