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House Oversight Leaders Ask Lynch To Explain DOJ’s Geolocation-Related Policies by Aug. 7

House Oversight Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, and ranking member Elijah Cummings, D-Md., wrote a letter to Attorney General Loretta Lynch Wednesday asking her to clarify the Justice Department’s recent update guidance to federal prosecutors and investigators. The letter asks…

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DOJ to explain its policies on geolocation after the Supreme Court’s recent decision that officers must secure a warrant before searching data on cellphones and a 2012 ruling that said a warrant must be obtained before placing a GPS device on a person’s private property, the letter aid. “Please be prepared to discuss the Department’s position on whether geolocation of cellular phone users constitutes content or metadata and the Department’s position on whether a warrant is required to collect real-time geolocation information,” the letter said. They asked Lynch to respond to its questions by providing a briefing to committee staff by Aug. 7, it said.