The adage that a man’s home is his castle isn’t about authority. It’s about protection — the walls that keep others out.
But even strong walls need a door.
We understand that instinctively. Police need a warrant.
But that shorthand doesn’t quite capture what the Constitution actually does.
The Fourth Amendment doesn’t depend on whether you lock the door. It requires the government to have a key.
The Fourth Amendment addresses both:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated,and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
It secures the lock — and defines the key.
The Fourth Amendment has spent more time in court than most, because its text demands it every time the government acts.
That isn’t an accident. It’s exactly the point.
Like other parts of the Bill of Rights, this sistered right and responsibility — two pieces joined to make something stronger — exists for a reason. The colonies had already seen what happened without it.
Under British rule, general warrants gave officials broad authority to search almost anything without limits or justification.
“You could think of a general warrant as a kind of blank check for the government official who is executing the warrant,” said Joshua Windham, a senior attorney with the Institute for Justice.
There was no independent check — the same people authorizing the searches were often the ones carrying them out.
The Fourth Amendment doesn’t just grant the right to defend your space. It doesn’t hand the keys to the government, either. It recognizes that both have a role — and that it takes a third party to weigh the argument and decide whether the door can be opened.
For the Founding Fathers, this was concrete. They weren’t drawing philosophical boundaries. They were talking about real intrusions: doors opened, chests unlocked, persons seized.
“The only way that officials could really invade what we now call your privacy was by invading your property,” Windham said.
While the Fourteenth Amendment is often the battleground for modern privacy arguments — from contraception to interracial marriage to same-sex relationships — the Fourth Amendment was one of the first lines of defense for personal autonomy.
And that protection isn’t limited to what can be touched.
“All these things are not like poking a hole in or breaking a hole in something physical, but they are still intruding in something that is yours,” said Windham.
That has required courts to look back at a document written before the invention of the steamboat and assess its applicability in a world of artificial intelligence.
Today, people exist in different kinds of spaces. Some may be physical technology, like a computer or a cellphone. Increasingly, they are the elusive arenas of cyberspace and internet clouds.
“The Fourth Amendment protects people, not places,” said Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart in the landmark 1967 decision Katz v. United States, which reshaped how courts understand privacy.
The door may be different than originally envisioned. The key is no less required.