0:26-mj-06229-1 USA v. Application For A Warrant By Telephone Or Other Reliable Electronic Means
Magistrate Judge Miscellaneous Matter: Warrants/Applications/Orders
This case, USA v. Application For A Warrant By Telephone Or Other Reliable Electronic Means, is a miscellaneous matter in the Southern District of Florida. It involves a "Magistrate Judge Miscellaneous Matter: Warrants/Applications/Orders.".
Stage
Court order issued
Timeline
3 events
Coverage
3 articles
Sources
1
Court
S.D. Fla.
Southern District of Florida · 11th Circuit · FL
Docket
Not captured
Criminal
Stage
Court order issued
Active
Filed
Date unavailable
Not in the available feed
Latest Filing
0:26-mj-06229-1 USA v. Application For A Warrant By Telephone Or Other Reliable Electronic Means
Order · May 04, 2026
Coverage
3 articles
1 source tracked
Participants
1 Defendant
1 linked entity
Judge
Not assigned in feed
This case is tied to Southern District of Florida, a federal district court in FL.
The newest docket activity we have is a order dated May 04, 2026.
The visible party/entity graph currently includes Application For A Warrant By Telephone Or Other Reliable Electronic Means.
Press monitoring has found 3 related articles from 1 distinct source.
USA v. Application For A Warrant By Telephone Or Other Reliable Electronic Means is an active criminal matter in Southern District of Florida under docket 26-mj-06231.
The main identified defendant or respondent is Application For A Warrant By Telephone Or Other Reliable Electronic Means. The case is currently organized around Charge status, plea posture, and court supervision, Current docket activity and next procedural step, Criminal charges and procedural posture, Pending motions, orders, and near-term docket movement.
The available docket gives enough signal to track the case, but not enough to overstate the merits. This page will become more useful as filings, orders, hearings, and party appearances add detail.
On May 4, 2026, the docket recorded a order: A magistrate judge issued a warrant allowing law enforcement to obtain information by telephone or other electronic means. This warrant is part of a larger case, USA v. Application For A Warrant By Telephone Or Other Reliable Electronic Means.
The warrant's. On May 4, 2026, the docket recorded a order: A magistrate judge issued a warrant for a telephone or other reliable electronic means in the case USA v. This warrant allows law enforcement to obtain information or evidence.
The warrant.
The next thing to watch is whether the latest order produces a substantive order, a scheduling change, a settlement signal, or a filing that clarifies the parties' positions.
Southern District of Florida (S.D. Fla.) is a federal district court in the 11th Circuit, FL.
A magistrate judge issued a warrant allowing law enforcement to obtain information by telephone or other electronic means. This warrant is part of a larger case, USA v. Application For A Warrant By Telephone Or Other Reliable Electronic Means. The warrant's issuance is a significant development in the case.
A magistrate judge issued a warrant for a telephone or other reliable electronic means in the case USA v. Application For A Warrant By Telephone Or Other Reliable Electronic Means. This warrant allows law enforcement to obtain information or evidence remotely. The judge's order is a routine step in the investigative process.
A magistrate judge issued a warrant allowing law enforcement to obtain information by telephone or other electronic means. This warrant is part of a larger case, USA v. Application For A Warrant By Telephone Or Other Reliable Electronic Means. The warrant grants law enforcement the authority to conduct electronic surveillance.
Magistrate Judge Miscellaneous Matter: Warrants/Applications/Orders
Magistrate Judge Miscellaneous Matter: Warrants/Applications/Orders
Magistrate Judge Miscellaneous Matter: Warrants/Applications/Orders
Sources tracked
1 outlet · 3 articles
Timeline events
3 records on file
Last updated
3 days, 1 hour ago
Juryvine aggregates docket entries from PACER/CourtListener, press coverage, and GDELT signals. Ingestion timestamps do not appear in the What Changed feed — that reflects real court activity only.