Abstract
In Part I, this article explores the challenges to privacy, personhood and probable cause raised by DNA collection as identification sanctioned in Maryland v. King. Part II considers the presumed infallibility of DNA testing that undergirds the Supreme Court's embracement of genetic identification. Lastly, in Part III, this article will try to decipher the Court's Fourth Amendment logic in denying privacy to the information in human cells but embracing them in cell phones in Riley v. California
Recommended Citation
Ken Strutin,
DNA without Warrant: Decoding Privacy, Probable Cause and Personhood,
18
Rich. J. L. & Pub. Int.
319
(2015).
Available at:
https://scholarship.richmond.edu/pilr/vol18/iss3/5