The FBI and the Metropolitan Police Department suspected Antoine Jones, a Washington, D.C. nightclub owner, of narcotics trafficking. Investigators obtained a warrant from the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia authorizing installation of a GPS tracking device on Jones's Jeep Grand Cherokee within 10 days and within the District of Columbia. Agents did not comply: they installed the device on the 11th day while the Jeep was parked in a public lot in Maryland. For the next 28 days, the government used the device to monitor the Jeep's movements continuously, generating thousands of data points about the vehicle's location. The location data helped tie Jones to a suspected stash house and formed a core component of the government's evidence. Jones was convicted of a drug conspiracy and sentenced to life imprisonment. On appeal, the D.C. Circuit reversed, holding that the month-long monitoring constituted a search requiring a warrant. The Supreme Court granted certiorari.
Does the government conduct a Fourth Amendment "search" when it physically attaches a GPS tracking device to a suspect's vehicle and uses that device to monitor the vehicle's movements on public roads?
A government action constitutes a Fourth Amendment search when officers physically intrude on a constitutionally protected area—persons, houses, papers, or effects—with the purpose of obtaining information. The Katz reasonable-expectation-of-privacy test remains a separate and sufficient path to finding a search, but Katz does not displace the traditional, property-based trespass inquiry.
Yes. The government's physical attachment of a GPS device to Jones's vehicle, an "effect," and its use of that device to obtain information constituted a search under the Fourth Amendment. Because the government did not obtain a valid warrant and did not preserve an alternative basis for reasonableness, the judgment suppressing the GPS evidence was affirmed.
Majority (Scalia, J.): The Fourth Amendment secures persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches. At common law, a governmental trespass on a protected area to obtain information qualified as a search. Katz, which introduced the reasonable-expectation-of-privacy test, did not repudiate this traditional approach; it added a complementary framework. Here, the government committed a trespass by physically attaching the GPS device to Jones's Jeep—an effect—with the intent to gather information. That intrusion, by itself, triggered the Fourth Amendment, making the continuous monitoring a search. The Court distinguished the "beeper" cases. In United States v. Knotts, officers used a beeper to track a container over a single trip; the government did not physically intrude on the defendant's effects, and the monitoring disclosed only movements on public roads. In United States v. Karo, the beeper was placed in a container before the defendant acquired it, so there was no governmental trespass onto the defendant's property; the search in Karo occurred when monitoring revealed information from within a private home. By contrast, in Jones, officers physically trespassed onto Jones's vehicle to install the device. Concurrence (Alito, J., joined by Ginsburg, Breyer, and Kagan): The property-based approach is too narrow for modern surveillance. The critical question should be whether long-term GPS monitoring infringes a reasonable expectation of privacy. In Alito's view, short-term monitoring of public movements likely does not, but prolonged, around-the-clock surveillance over four weeks does. Although he concurred in the judgment, he would locate the constitutional violation in the duration and comprehensiveness of the monitoring, not the act of physical attachment. Concurrence (Sotomayor, J.): Justice Sotomayor joined the majority's property analysis but emphasized that long-term GPS monitoring also raises serious privacy concerns under Katz. She questioned the continuing vitality of the third-party doctrine in the digital age, warning that pervasive monitoring can reveal intimate details about individuals' lives. She suggested courts may need to reconsider assumptions that people lack a reasonable expectation of privacy in information handed to third parties or generated by pervasive technology.
Jones re-centered property concepts in Fourth Amendment analysis while preserving Katz, giving courts two independent routes to deem government conduct a search: physical trespass on protected areas or violation of a reasonable expectation of privacy. Practically, Jones pushed law enforcement toward obtaining warrants for GPS tracking and laid doctrinal groundwork for subsequent digital-privacy decisions. Its concurring opinions anticipated the Court's recognition, in Carpenter v. United States, that long-term aggregation of location data (even without physical trespass) implicates reasonable expectations of privacy. For students, Jones illustrates how constitutional doctrine adapts to technology, how multiple opinions shape controlling principles, and how precedent (Knotts and Karo) is reconciled with modern surveillance capabilities.
United States v. Jones restores a vital, property-centered strand of Fourth Amendment doctrine and pairs it with Katz's privacy analysis to address the realities of digital-age policing. By holding that physically attaching a GPS device to a vehicle and using it to monitor movements is a search, the Court forced law enforcement to treat technology-enabled tracking with the same constitutional seriousness as traditional intrusions.