Darlene Storm, Computer World - Two out of every three people reading this could have your electronic
devices searched, without there being any reasonable suspicion, because
the Department of Homeland Security has decided that such search and
seizures do not violate your Fourth Amendment protection against
unreasonable search and seizure. Border agents don’t need probable cause
and they don’t need a stinking
warrant
since they don’t need to prove any reasonable suspicion first. Nor,
sadly, do two out of three people have First Amendment protection; it is
as if DHS has voided those Constitutional amendments and protections
they provide to nearly 200 million Americans.

Those numbers come from the ACLU’s estimates of how many people live
within 100 miles of the United States border, since Homeland Security’s
Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties concluded that border
searches of electronic devices do not violate the Fourth Amendment.
Previously, the ACLU called this area the
Constitution-Free Zone
and provided a map showing how many people within states along the all
our borders are affected without constitutional rights. The estimate is
that nearly two out of three Americans live in the Constitution-Free
Zone.
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