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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
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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
- 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)
Original Sources for this Claim (1)
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3 months ago
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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