After being charged with attempted possession of heroin in
violation of Washington’s Revised Code § 69.50.407 (attempt) and §69.50.4013(1) (possession of a controlled substance), Shawn D. Hinton filed a
motion to suppress evidence. State v.
Hinton, __ P.3d __, 2012 WL 2401673 (Washington Court of Appeals 2012).
More precisely, he moved to suppress “`any and all evidence
obtained as a result of the search of the cell phone taken from Daniel Lee.’” State
v. Hinton, supra. To understand why that search mattered to Hinton, it’s
necessary to understand how the case arose:
On November 3, 2009, when Detective
Kevin Sawyer arrived to begin his shift, several officers gave Sawyer an iPhone
they had seized from Daniel Lee, who had been arrested earlier that day on drug
charges. . . . [W]hile Sawyer
had the iPhone in his possession, he heard a `ding’ from the iPhone, indicating
it had received a new text message. . . .
Sawyer picked up the iPhone and viewed the following message, which appeared in its entirety on the iPhone's screen: `Hey whats up dogg can you call me i need to talk to you.’ . . . The text message was from `Z–Shawn Hinton.’ . . . Sawyer knew Hinton from past arrests.
Sawyer picked up the iPhone and viewed the following message, which appeared in its entirety on the iPhone's screen: `Hey whats up dogg can you call me i need to talk to you.’ . . . The text message was from `Z–Shawn Hinton.’ . . . Sawyer knew Hinton from past arrests.
Sawyer responded to Hinton's text message using
Lee's iPhone. The following text message exchange occurred:
`[Sawyer]: Can't now. What's up? . . .
[Hinton]: I need to talk to you about business.
Please call when you get a chance. . . .
[Sawyer]: I'm about to drop off my last. . . .
Through a series of additional text messages, the men agreed to meet for a drug transaction in a grocery store parking lot. Sawyer contacted Hinton in the parking lot and arrested him. After the arrest, Sawyer called the phone number associated with Z–Shawn Hinton in Lee's iPhone, and Hinton's cell phone rang.
State v. Hinton,
supra.
The Court of Appeals explained that the “basis of the
officers' seizure of Lee's iPhone” was not clear from the record, but that did
not matter because whether it was “lawfully seized is not at issue in this
case.” State v. Hinton, supra. It
also noted that (i) to find “the phone number associated with Z–Shawn Hinton,”
Sawyer had to “navigate to the contacts folder on Lee's iPhone” and (ii) it was
“unclear from the record when Sawyer accessed the contacts folder to retrieve
Hinton's phone number.” State v. Hinton, supra. And the court also noted that at the hearing
on the motion to suppress, Sawyer testified that “a `ball’ is `a drug
weight’ equivalent to `approximately 3.54 grams’ and `sick’ is `a drug
term’ that describes `when people are coming off the high and . . . looking to
get some more.” State v. Hinton, supra.
In his motion to suppress, Hinton argued that Sawyer’s
actions violated “Washington Constitution, article I, section 7 and
the 4th Amendment [to the U.S. Constitution].” State v. Hinton, supra. The
prosecution argued, in response that “Hinton “`did not have a legitimate
expectation of privacy in the text messages.’” State v. Hinton, supra.
As I’ve noted in earlier posts, the 4th Amendment creates a
right to be free from “unreasonable” searches but does not apply if law
enforcement conduct does not result in a “search.” As I’ve also explained, under the U.S. Supreme
Court’s decision in Katz v. U.S. 389U.S. 347 (1967), searches violate a “reasonable expectation of privacy”, which
is why the prosecution focused on that issue in its response to Hinton. As I’ve also explained in earlier posts, to
have such an expectation one must (i) believe the place or thing is “private”
and (ii) society must accept that belief as objectively reasonable.
The Court of Appeals began its analysis of Hinton’s argument
under the Washington state constitution.
As Wikipedia notes, every U.S. state has its own constitution. So Hinton is moving to suppress under both
the federal 4th Amendment and state law.
Here, Hinton argued that he “had a reasonable expectation of
privacy in the text message he sent to Lee's iPhone.” State
v. Hinton, supra. The court found it
was “important” that Hinton was “arguing a privacy interest in another's
electronic device, not his own.” State v. Hinton, supra. It then analyzed his argument under both the
state and federal constitutions.
It began with Article I § 7 of the Washington Constitution,
which states that “`[n]o person shall be disturbed in his private affairs, or
his home invaded, without authority of law.’”
State v. Hinton,
supra. The court explained that this
provision protects a person’s
home and private affairs from
warrantless searches. . . . It is well settled that article I, § 7 affords
qualitatively different -- and potentially broader -- protections than those
provided by the 4th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. . . . But merely
holding that a given state constitutional provision affords enhanced protection
in a particular context does not necessarily lead to the same result in a
different context.
State v. Hinton, supra. As I’ve explained in earlier posts, a state
constitution can’t provide less protection than the 4th Amendment
but it can provide more.
The Court of Appeals noted that in dealing with a motion to
suppress under Article I § 7, it uses a “two-step analysis”: First, it decides if the “State has intruded
into a person's private affairs.” State
v. Hinton, supra. If it finds the state has done this, the court then
determines “whether the authority of law required by article I, § 7, justifies
the intrusion, which is satisfied only by a valid warrant, limited to a few
jealously guarded exceptions.” State v. Hinton, supra. It noted that “[v]oluntary exposure by a
defendant is relevant to our inquiry and can negate an asserted privacy
interest.” State v. Hinton, supra.
After analyzing the facts in this case, the Court of Appeals
found that Hinton’s Hinton's “text messages to Lee's iPhone are not Hinton's
private affairs for purposes of article I, § 7”, for two
reasons. State v. Hinton, supra. The
first was that there “is no long history and tradition of strict legislative
protection of a text message sent to, displayed, and received from its intended destination, another person's iPhone.” State
v. Hinton, supra. (To analyze an
Article I § 7 challenge, a court must consider state statutes, laws and case
law support the privacy interest being asserted by a defendant. State
v. Hinton, supra.)
The other reason
was that case law from another division of the Court of Appeals established a “distinction in article I, § 7 jurisprudence
between when a governmental officer intercepts a message transmitted from the
sender to the recipient and when a governmental officer views a message
received by a third party.” State v. Hinton, supra. In State v. Wojtyna, 70 Wash. App. 689, 855
P.2d 315 (Washington Court of Appeals 1993), officers seized a drug dealer’s pager and
monitored its incoming calls; based on what they learned, a detective called
one of the incoming numbers and arranged to meet the person who called
(Wojtyna) for a drug deal. State v. Wojtyna, supra.
The court held that the police violated neither the Washington
Constitution or the 4th Amendment by seizing “`a number sent to
and received by a third party which happened to be
Wojtyna's.’” State v. Wojtyna, supra
(emphasis in the original). It noted that by “transmitting his number into a
pager,” Wojtyna assumed the risk that it would be received by whomever was in
possession of the pager or that its owner would disclose the contents to
police. State v. Wojtyna, supra. So, since the “confidentiality of the
transmission was uncertain”, it was not “private” under either Article I § 7 or
the 4th Amendment. State v.
Wojtyna, supra.
This court found that the Wojtyna applied here: “Hinton
transmitted messages to a device . . .over which he had no control. . .
. [H]e voluntarily ran the risk that his messages . . . would be received
by whomever possessed the iPhone,” and so “had no control over what that person
might do with that message.” State v. Hinton, supra. So his text messages were not protected by
Article I § 7. State v. Hinton, supra.
The Court of Appeals basically applied this same analysis to
Hinton’s 4th Amendment argument, noting that he, like Wojtyna,
sent messages to Lee's iPhone, over
which he had no control. . . .He ran the risk that whomever
possessed the iPhone, whether it be Lee or someone else, would receive his
messages. . . .The 4th Amendment does not protect Hinton's ‘misplaced
trust that the message actually would reach the intended recipient.’ State v. Wojtyna, supra.
State v. Hinton,
supra.
Hinton tried to distinguish Wojtyna by arguing that because
cell phones can
now `perform[ ] many of the functions
of a personal computer,’ an individual who sends a text message to a cell phone
has a greater expectation of privacy in that communication than an individual,
like . . . Wojtyna, who sends a message to a less sophisticated
device like a pager.
State v. Hinton,
supra.
The Court of Appeals rejected this argument, noting that it
is
the individual's decision to transmit a
message to an electronic device that could be in anybody's possession -- and
not the receiving device's level of technological complexity -- that defeats
the individual's expectation of privacy in that communication.
State v. Hinton,
supra.
In arguing that “a person has a reasonable expectation of
privacy `in e-mails and text messages sent and received from a cell phone’”,
Hinton relied on a federal court of appeals’ decision involving emails. State
v. Hinton, supra (citing U.S. v.
Warshak, 631 F.3d 266 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit 2010)). The Warshak court held that a person “enjoys a reasonable expectation of privacy in the
contents of emails ‘that are stored with, or sent or received through, a
commercial ISP.’’ U.S. v. Warshak, supra.
The Court of Appeals rejected this argument because the Warshak court was concerned with the
legality of the government's request
that a service provider intercept a customer's e-mails before
the e-mails reached the intended recipient's computer. Here, there was no
interception, through the service provider or otherwise. Sawyer simply read the
text messages after they were delivered to the intended recipient.
State v. Hinton,
supra.
It also found that while Warshak did
not help Hinton, “its comparison of e-mails with traditional forms of
communication is helpful and we adopt it to hold that text messages deserve
privacy protection similar to that provided for letters. State v. Hinton, supra.
As I noted in an earlier post, the U.S. Supreme Court has,
since the nineteenth century, held that “sealed mail” is “private” and
therefore protected by the 4th Amendment. The Hinton court noted that courts have “consistently applied the
standard for letters to new technology.”
State v. Hinton, supra. It
therefore found that “[l]ike letters, a [person] has a privacy interest in
messages stored on his or her own cell phone”, which means such messages cannot
“be intercepted and searched” by law enforcement officers unless the
interception and search comply with the 4th Amendment. State v. Hinton, supra.
The Court of Appeals therefore found that
[o]n his own iPhone, on his own
computer, or in the process of electronic transit, Hinton's communications are
shielded by our constitutions. But after their arrival, Hinton’s text messages
on Lee's iPhone were no longer private or deserving of constitutional
protection.
Accordingly, the trial court did not
err by denying Hinton's motion to suppress.
State v. Hinton,
supra.
1 comment:
Does this mean that the phone contents changed after the police took possession? Like a computer hardware disk, law enforcement has started to take hash verified "images" of the contents of smartphones to verify that they evidence has not been tampered with. Sounds like a possible suppression waiting to happen.
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