A bipartisan group of senators questioned the Justice Department this week regarding how the governments treatment of cellphone-generated location data in national security cases has changed in lieu of the Supreme Court decision in Carpenter v. United States last June. The Carpenter case addressed the application of the Fourth Amendment to cell-site location information, or CSLI, which are geolocation records produced by users cell phones communicating with cell towers and stored by wireless providers. The court held that because CSLI provides an intimate window into a persons life, police must obtain a warrant to collect it.