The Legal Archive
In this episode of The Legal Archive, you are guided through the quiet legal history behind one of the most influential ideas in American constitutional law: the reasonable expectation of privacy. This episode explores how the Fourth Amendment moved away from physical trespass and toward a more fragile, human question; what people believe to be private, and when the law agrees. ⸻ Beginning with early wiretapping cases and the Supreme Court’s decision in Katz v. United States, this narrative traces how courts came to recognize privacy not as a place, but as an expectation. You will follow the doctrine as it develops through landmark cases involving telephone booths, discarded garbage, thermal imaging, GPS tracking, and digital location data. Rather than focusing on technical legal tests, this episode examines how privacy has been shaped by belief, exposure, technology, and changing social norms. Sources and references for this episode : https://thelegalarchive.substack.com/p/origins-the-reasonable-expectation ⸻ Told in a slow, steady, second-person narration, this episode is designed for quiet listening, reflection, and long-form understanding of legal history. It is calm, non-dramatic, and intentionally restrained; allowing the law itself to unfold without urgency or commentary. ⸻ What this episode covers You will hear about: * the origin of the reasonable expectation of privacy standard * Katz v. United States and the shift away from physical trespass * how courts evaluate privacy in public and private spaces * surveillance, technology, and constitutional limits * why privacy is treated as an expectation rather than a guarantee ⸻ This is not a documentary. It is legal history, told quietly and clearly.
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