Skip to main content
logo Harvard Law Review
Primary Menu
  • Publications
    • Print
    • Forum
    • Blog
  • Explore
    • Explore By Author
    • Explore By Topic
    • Explore By Volume & Issue
  • Student Writing
    • Notes
    • Recent Cases & More
    • Developments In The Law
  • Supreme Court
    • Forewords
    • Case Comments
    • Student Case Comments
    • Crosswords
    • Statistics & Visualizations
  • Fellowship
    • About
    • Fellowship Essay
    • Current & Past Fellows
    • Apply
  • About
    • Submit
    • Organization & History
    • Board of Editors
    • Writing Competition
    • State of the Review
    • HLR Factsheet
Harvard Law Review Authors
Author

Ian Samuel

Ian Samuel is a Climenko Fellow and Lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School. He is a former law clerk for Judge Alex Kozinski of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and for Justice Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court of the United States. He also previously served on the appellate staff of the Justice Department’s Civil Division, and as a Bristow Fellow in the Office of the Solicitor General.   His areas of scholarly interest focus on cyberlaw and security, especially as they intersect with criminal law and procedure, constitutional law, and intellectual property. He is the author of Warrantless Location Tracking, 83 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1324 (2008), which evaluated the circumstances under which it ought to be legal for the government to track a person’s movements using her cell phone, and The New Writs of Assistance (forthcoming 2018), which concerns the government's ability to acquire information and aid from network-service providers.

Fourth Amendment Blog Essay

Carpenter and the Property Vocabulary

December 8, 2017 Last week, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in Carpenter v. United States, which will decide whether the government may acquire — without a...
  • Ian Samuel
Fourth Amendment Blog Essay

Carpenter and Our Third-Party Future

October 27, 2017 Later this year, the Supreme Court will hear argument in Carpenter v. United States. The question presented is whether the government may, without a...
  • Ian Samuel

Archives

  • Print
  • Forum
  • Blog
  • Subscribe

Fellowship

  • About
  • Fellowship Essays
  • Meet the Fellows
  • Apply

About

  • Board of Editors
  • Organization & History
  • Submit
  • Writing Competition

Copyright © 1887-2026 Harvard Law Review. All Rights Reserved. Accessibility

WordPress vector logo kevinleary.net