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Claim Text
"Plaintiff does not have a recognized reasonable expectation of privacy while at work on multiple worksites—owned or controlled by [the homebuilders]—for relatively short times for the single express purpose of laying concrete," Todd wrote.
Simplified Text
Plaintiff does not have recognized reasonable expectation of privacy while at work on multiple worksites for relatively short times for laying concrete Todd wrote
Confidence Score
0.950
Claim Maker
Victoria Todd
Context Type
News Article
Subject Tags
UUID
a1163711-3e4c-41d7-818f-8b39ba8f05de
Vector Index
âś— No vector
Created
February 15, 2026 at 3:04 PM (3 months ago)
Last Updated
February 15, 2026 at 3:04 PM (3 months ago)

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Screenshot of https://reason.com/2026/02/12/do-construction-workers-have-fourth-amendment-rights-a-federal-court-will-decide
https://reason.com/2026/02/12/do-construction-workers-have-fourth-amendment-rights-a-federal-court-will-decide

The Department of Homeland Security argues that it doesn't need a warrant to enter construction sites, challenging Fourth Amendment rights for construction workers. The case stems from immigration raids and detentions of workers, including a U.S. citizen. The Institute for Justice is representing the worker, arguing for Fourth Amendment protections.

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