San Francisco Should Stop Sharing the Ankle Monitor Data of Suspects on Pretrial Release
Thomas A. Berry and Brent Skorup Law enforcement officials around the country increasingly pressure criminal suspects, after arrest, to submit to continuous real‐time location tracking. This invasive pretrial release monitoring practice is typically accomplished by attaching a GPS device to a suspect’s ankle.
San Francisco Should Stop Sharing the Ankle Monitor Data of Suspects on Pretrial Release
Thomas A. Berry and Brent Skorup Law enforcement officials around the country increasingly pressure criminal suspects, after arrest, to submit to continuous real‐time location tracking. This invasive pretrial release monitoring practice is typically accomplished by attaching a GPS device to a suspect’s ankle.
San Francisco Should Stop Sharing the Ankle Monitor Data of Suspects on Pretrial Release
Thomas A. Berry and Brent Skorup Law enforcement officials around the country increasingly pressure criminal suspects, after arrest, to submit to continuous real‐time location tracking. This invasive pretrial release monitoring practice is typically accomplished by attaching a GPS device to a suspect’s ankle.
San Francisco Should Stop Sharing the Ankle Monitor Data of Suspects on Pretrial Release
Thomas A. Berry and Brent Skorup Law enforcement officials around the country increasingly pressure criminal suspects, after arrest, to submit to continuous real‐time location tracking. This invasive pretrial release monitoring practice is typically accomplished by attaching a GPS device to a suspect’s ankle.
San Francisco Should Stop Sharing the Ankle Monitor Data of Suspects on Pretrial Release
Thomas A. Berry and Brent Skorup Law enforcement officials around the country increasingly pressure criminal suspects, after arrest, to submit to continuous real‐time location tracking. This invasive pretrial release monitoring practice is typically accomplished by attaching a GPS device to a suspect’s ankle.
San Francisco Should Stop Sharing the Ankle Monitor Data of Suspects on Pretrial Release
Thomas A. Berry and Brent Skorup Law enforcement officials around the country increasingly pressure criminal suspects, after arrest, to submit to continuous real‐time location tracking. This invasive pretrial release monitoring practice is typically accomplished by attaching a GPS device to a suspect’s ankle.
San Francisco Should Stop Sharing the Ankle Monitor Data of Suspects on Pretrial Release
Thomas A. Berry and Brent Skorup Law enforcement officials around the country increasingly pressure criminal suspects, after arrest, to submit to continuous real‐time location tracking. This invasive pretrial release monitoring practice is typically accomplished by attaching a GPS device to a suspect’s ankle.
San Francisco Should Stop Sharing the Ankle Monitor Data of Suspects on Pretrial Release
Thomas A. Berry and Brent Skorup Law enforcement officials around the country increasingly pressure criminal suspects, after arrest, to submit to continuous real‐time location tracking. This invasive pretrial release monitoring practice is typically accomplished by attaching a GPS device to a suspect’s ankle.
San Francisco Should Stop Sharing the Ankle Monitor Data of Suspects on Pretrial Release
Thomas A. Berry and Brent Skorup Law enforcement officials around the country increasingly pressure criminal suspects, after arrest, to submit to continuous real‐time location tracking. This invasive pretrial release monitoring practice is typically accomplished by attaching a GPS device to a suspect’s ankle.
New Defending Globalization Content: The Conservative and Progressive Cases for Globalization
Scott Lincicome Today we’ve published two new essays for Cato’s Defending Globalization project: “The Conservative Case for Globalization” by Jeb Hensarling explains that free trade has historical, intellectual, economic, geopolitical, and moral justifications that conservatives have long embraced—and still should. “The Progressive Case