As Wikipedia notes, and as I explained in earlier
posts, search incident to arrest is an exception to the 4th Amendment’s default requirement that officers obtain a search warrant before
they search a place or thing. This post
examines a recent decision of the Massachusetts Supreme Court in which it
addressed whether the exception applied to the search of a particular cell
phone.
The case is Commonwealth
v. Phifer, 463 Mass. 790, --- N.E.2d ----, 2012 WL 6013907 (Massachusetts
Supreme Judicial Court 2012), and this is how it arose:
At approximately 5:46 P.M. on
July 11, 2011, Officer Peter Fontanez and Detective John A. McCarthy, two
officers in the drug control unit of the Boston police department, were
conducting a drug investigation in the Orient Heights neighborhood of the East
Boston section of Boston. The officers saw [Demetrius A. Phifer] standing at a
street corner, and Fontanez noticed that [Phifer] was talking on his cellular
telephone and apparently waiting for or looking for someone.
Both officers recognized [Phifer] and
knew he had two outstanding warrants relating to drug charges. After a couple
of minutes, Fontanez observed [Phifer] enter a vehicle at the corner of
Meridian and Falcon Streets; the vehicle was driven by a woman, and Dennis
Claiborne, whom Fontanez also recognized and knew to
be a drug user, was a passenger in the front seat. While the car drove around
the block, Fontanez observed [Phifer] and Claiborne conduct what appeared to be
an exchange and saw [Phifer] `stuff[] something’ into his right pants pocket.
The driver then dropped off [Phifer] close to where she had picked him up.
Based on the officers' training and
prior experience, they believed a drug transaction had occurred. Fontanez then
approached [Phifer] and placed him under arrest on the outstanding warrants.
McCarthy approached the vehicle and recovered cocaine from Claiborne, who
provided McCarthy with his cellular telephone number.
Following
[Phifer’s] arrest and transport to the police station, Fontanez booked [him]
and seized $364 that [Phifer] had with him as well as his cellular telephone.
After booking, McCarthy conducted a few `simple manipulations’ of the cellular
telephone, which he believed to be a `flip phone,’ to `check’ the list of
incoming and outgoing calls. Based on his experience, McCarthy knew cellular
telephones were often used in the drug business. He discovered the recent call
log displayed several received calls from the number associated with
Claiborne's cellular telephone.
Commonwealth v.
Phifer, supra.
After he was “charged in a two-count complaint with
distribution of a class B substance and a drug violation near a school or park,
in violation of Massachusetts General Laws 94C §§ 32(a) and 32J”, Phifer moved
to suppress “evidence obtained from a warrantless search of his cellular
telephone”. Commonwealth v. Phifer, supra. He argued that “the telephone was
searched without probable cause or his consent,” in violation of the” 4th Amendment. Commonwealth v. Phifer, supra.
The trial
court judge denied the motion and a Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Court
granted Phifer’s “application for leave to file an interlocutory appeal
pursuant to Massachusetts Rules of Criminal Procedure Rule 15(a)(2)”,
which meant the court would hear the issue prior to Phifer’s going to
trial. Commonwealth v. Phifer, supra.
The trial judge denied Phifer’s motion on this basis: “[B]ecause [Phifer’s] arrest was lawful, the
detective had the right to perform a search incident to that arrest, and that
because the cellular telephone was lawfully seized during the search, he had
the right to search its contents.” Commonwealth v. Phifer, supra. The Supreme Judicial Court began its analysis
of Phifer’s challenge to the judge’s ruling by explaining that
The U.S. Supreme Court has stated that
`searches conducted outside the judicial process, without prior approval by
judge or magistrate, are per se unreasonable under the 4th Amendment -- subject
only to a few specifically established and well-delineated exceptions.’ Katz
v. U.S., 389 U.S. 347 (1967). `[A] search incident to a lawful arrest’
is one of these `well settled’ exceptions. U.S. v. Robinson, 414
U.S. 218 (1973). `It is the fact of the lawful arrest which establishes the
authority to search, and . . . a full search of the person is not only an
exception to the warrant requirement of the 4th Amendment, but is also a
‘reasonable’ search under that Amendment.’ U.S. v. Robinson, supra.
The search-incident-to-arrest exception `has
traditionally been justified by the reasonableness of searching for weapons,
instruments of escape, and evidence of crime when a person is taken into official custody
and lawfully detained.’ U.S. v. Edwards, 415 U.S.
800 (1974). This court has similarly explained: “The purpose . . . of a search
incident to an arrest is to prevent an individual from destroying or concealing
evidence of the crime for which the police have probable cause to arrest, or to
prevent an individual from acquiring a weapon. . . . A search incident to
arrest . . . is limited . . . to the body of the person arrested and
the area and items within his or her immediate possession and control at the
time.’ Commonwealth v. Santiago, 410 Mass. 737, 575 N.E.2d 350
(Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court 1991).
Commonwealth v.
Phifer, supra.
The opinion says Phifer did not
challenge these general principles, but
argues that cellular telephones are different from other types of items a
person might be carrying on his person at the time of arrest on account of the
telephone's capacity to store vast quantities of private information. And
because cellular telephones are inherently different, [Phifer] claims,
they must be treated differently under the 4th Amendment. . . .
Commonwealth v.
Phifer, supra.
The Massachusetts Supreme Court noted that
[n]either this court nor the U.S. Supreme
Court has addressed whether the contents of cellular telephones may be searched
in whole or in part incident to a lawful arrest. We decline [Phifer’s]
invitation to venture very far into this thicket because there is no need to do so in order
to decide this case. Whatever may be said of a cellular telephone search in
other contexts, the facts here make clear that McCarthy's limited search of the
recent call list on [Phifer’s] cellular telephone was permissible under the 4th
Amendment. . . .
Commonwealth v.
Phifer, supra.
The court then explained that in Commonwealth v. Madera, 402
Mass. 156, 521 N.E.2d 738 (1988), it upheld the search of a
gym bag carried by the defendant at the
time of his arrest as a search incident to arrest that was permissible under
the 4th Amendment. . . . In so holding, we . . . explained:
`The police are entitled to a bright
line rule that permits them . . . to search a bag carried by a person whom they
lawfully arrest on probable cause . . . where there is also probable cause to
believe the bag contains evidence of the crime for which the arrest was made. .
. .’ Commonwealth v. Madera, supra.
This
case falls squarely within the scope of Madera. The evidence
at issue here consists of the contents of the recent call list on the
defendant's cellular telephone.
[Phifer] does not appear to dispute that the cellular telephone itself --
the physical object -- was seized properly during a permissible search incident
to his lawful arrest.
More to the point, like the police in Madera, the officers here had probable
cause to believe the telephone's recent call list would contain evidence
relating to the crime for which he was arrested: Fontanez had seen [Phifer]
using the cellular telephone just before the observed drug transaction between [him]
and Claiborne took place; the police recognized Claiborne as a drug user and
recovered cocaine from Claiborne; and McCarthy testified that based on his
experience, telephones are commonly used in the drug trade. Thus, the search of
the call list in this case was a valid search incident to arrest.
Commonwealth v.
Phifer, supra. The court pointed out, in a footnote, that “[i]t is significant that the search
performed was a simple examination of the recent call list, and that no further
intrusion into the telephone's contents occurred.” Commonwealth
v. Phifer, supra.
It followed up on that point in the body of its opinion,
explaining that
[w]e do not suggest that the assessment
necessarily would be the same on different facts, or in relation to a different
type of intrusion into a more complex cellular telephone or other information
storage device. Determination of the reasonableness of a search `requires a
balancing of the need for the particular search against the invasion of
personal rights that the search entails. Courts must consider the scope of the
particular intrusion, the manner in which it is conducted, the justification
for initiating it, and the place in which it is conducted.’ Bell v.
Wolfish,441 U.S. 520 (1979)
As other courts have noted, . . . today's
cellular telephones are essentially computers, capable of storing enormous
quantities of information, personal, private, and otherwise, in many different
forms. They present novel and important questions about the relationship
between the modern doctrine of search incident to arrest and individual privacy
rights.
Although an individual's reasonable expectation of privacy is diminished concerning
his or her physical person when subject to a lawful arrest and taken into
custody, the same may not necessarily be true with respect to the privacy of
the myriad types of information stored in a cellular telephone that he or she
is carrying at the time of arrest. . . . However, we do not need to consider
these questions in the present case.
Commonwealth v.
Phifer, supra. I cannot help but wonder
why the court took the case if it was not going to address this issue.
One of the justices may have had similar concerns, because
as he noted in a concurring opinion, he “worr[ied] that misunderstandings
may arise from the court's apparent reliance on the bright-line rule announced
in Commonwealth v. Madera, 402 Mass. 156, 521 N.E.2d 738
(1988).” Commonwealth v. Phifer, supra (Justice Gants, concurring).
First, I believe we have yet to decide
whether this `bright-line rule’ is simply a safe harbor, or a constitutional
requirement. . . . At a minimum, Madera declares that, where
the police have both probable cause to arrest and probable cause to believe
that a container carried by the arrestee will yield evidence of the crime for
which the arrest is made, the police need not fear that a search incident to
arrest of that container will be suppressed.
I know of no case where we have
considered the admissibility of evidence found in a container searched incident
to arrest when there was probable cause to arrest . . . but there was not
probable cause that the container would yield
evidence of the crime of arrest. . . .
Second,
for the reasons set forth in the court's opinion, the `bright-line rule’ in Madera does not provide a safe harbor to
conduct a search incident to arrest of text messages or electronic mail
messages (e-mail) that may be found in a `smart’ cellular telephone
(smartphone) found on the arrestee's person.
The search in this case was
permissible because it was limited to a search of the telephone numbers
recently called from that telephone, a search that is not particularly invasive
of privacy. See Smith v. Maryland, 442 U.S. 735 (1979) (individual
has no reasonable expectation of privacy in numbers dialed on his telephone).
We have wisely not yet ruled whether a
more intrusive search of a smartphone, or any other device capable of storing
highly personal information, may be conducted as a search incident to arrest,
even where the police may have probable cause to believe that evidence of the
crime of arrest may be found in the text messages, e-mails, or other data
storage areas of the telephone where an individual maintains a reasonable
expectation of privacy. See U.S. v. Flores–Lopez, 670 F.3d 803
(U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit 2012) (invasive cellular telephone
searches may require greater police justification).
Commonwealth v.
Phifer, supra (Justice Gants, concurring).
2 comments:
Uh, did I miss something here?
Phifer was arrested for outstanding warrants. How was the cell phone supposed "yield evidence of the crime for which the arrest is made...."
As I tell my students, I don't write these opinions . . . I just report on them.
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