State of New Jersey v. Rasheem W. McQueen: Upholding Right to Privacy in Phone Calls
State of New Jersey v. Rasheem W. McQueen: Upholding Right to Privacy in Phone Calls
Decided August 10, 2021, the New Jersey Supreme Court confirmed that people have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their phone calls and that those phone calls may not be recorded or monitored without proper notification or some other exception to the law. This is true even for criminally-arrested persons making the phone call from a police station. Police arrested Mr. McQueen and brought him to the police station. He made a call from the police station to Mr. Allen-Brewer. Police did not advise him that the call was being recorded and there was no posted notification the call would be recorded or could be used against him for prosecution. Police suspected that this call might contain incriminating evidence, and obtained the recording. It contained incriminating evidence; Mr. McQueen was charged with additional crimes. The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibits “unreasonable searches and seizures.” This means that a warrant is required to obtain evidence, with some exceptions. In addition, the New Jersey Constitution provides heightened protection to telephone calls and prohibits government eavesdropping. A warrant is required, unless the situation falls within one of the exceptions.
Image by James Sutton, via Unsplash.com.
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