In 2009, a
federal grand jury indicted Stavros M. Ganias on two counts of tax evasion in
violation of 26 U.S. Code § 7201. U.S. v. Ganias, 2014 WL 2722618 (U.S.Court of Appeals for the 2d Circuit 2014).
After he was sentenced to “twenty-four months
imprisonment”, Ganias appealed, arguing, in part, that “his 4th Amendment
rights were violated when the Government seized his personal computer records
and then retained them for more than two-and-a-half years”. U.S. v. Gania, supra.
The Court
of Appeals begins its opinion by explaining that in the 1980s, after working
for
the Internal Revenue Service (`IRS’) for some fourteen years,
Ganias started his own accounting business in Wallingford, Connecticut. . . . In
1998, he began providing services to James McCarthy and two of [his]
businesses, American Boiler and Industrial Property Management (`IPM’). IPM had
been hired by the Army to provide maintenance and security at a vacant Army
facility in Stratford, Connecticut.
In August
2003, the Criminal Investigative Command . . . received a tip from a
confidential source that individuals affiliated with IPM were . . . stealing copper wire and other items from the Army facility and
billing the Army for work IPM employees performed for American Boiler. The
source alleged evidence of the wrongdoing could be found at the offices of
American Boiler and IPM, as well as at the offices of `Steve Ganias [sic],’ who
`perform[ed] accounting work for IPM and American Boiler'. . . .
[T]he Army
commenced an investigation. Army investigators obtained several search
warrants, including one to search the offices of Ganias's accounting business.
The warrant, issued by the United States District Court for the District of
Connecticut and dated November 17, 2003, authorized the seizure from Ganias's
offices of:
All books,
records, documents, materials, computer hardware and software and computer
associated data relating to the business, financial and accounting operations of
[IPM] and American Boiler. . . .
The warrant was executed two days later. Army computer
specialists . . . helped gather the electronic evidence. The agents did not
seize Ganias's computers; instead, the computer specialists made . . . forensic
mirror images of the hard drives of all three of Ganias's computers. . . .
[T]he investigators copied every file on all three computers -- including files
beyond the scope of the warrant, such as . . . personal financial records.
Ganias was present as [they] collected the evidence, and he
expressed concern about the scope of the seizure. In response, one agent
`assured’ Ganias the Army was only looking for files `related to American
Boiler and IPM.’ Everything else, the agent explained, `would be purged once
they completed their search’ for relevant files.
Back in their offices, the Army computer [searching] the
offices of IPM and American Boiler) onto `two sets of 19 DVDs,’ which were
`maintained as evidence.’ Some eight months later, the Army Criminal
Investigation Lab finally began to review the files.
In the
meantime, while reviewing the paper documents retrieved from Ganias's offices,
the Army discovered suspicious payments made by IPM to an unregistered
business, which was allegedly owned by an individual who had not reported any
income from that business. Based on this evidence, in May 2004, the Army
invited the IRS to `join the investigation’ of IPM and American Boiler and gave
copies of the imaged hard drives to the IRS so it could conduct its own review
and analysis. The Army and IRS proceeded, separately, to search the imaged hard
drives for files that appeared to be within the scope of the warrant and to
extract them for further review.
By
December 2004, . . . the Army and IRS investigators had . . . extracted the
computer files that were relevant to IPM and American Boiler and thus covered
by the search warrant. The investigators were aware that, because of the
constraints of the warrant, they were not permitted to review any other
computer records. Indeed, [they] were careful, at least until later, to review
only data covered by the November 2003 warrant.
They did
not . . . purge or delete the non-responsive files. To the contrary, the
investigators retained the files because they `viewed the data as the
government's property, not Ganias's property.’ Their view was that while items
seized from an owner will be returned after an investigation closes, all of the
electronic data here were evidence that were to be protected and preserved.
As one
agent testified, `[W]e would not routinely go into DVDs to delete data, as
we're altering the original data that was seized. And you never know what data
you may need in the future. . . . I don't normally go into electronic data and
start deleting evidence off of DVDs stored in my evidence room.’ The computer
specialists were never asked to delete . . . those files that did not relate to
IPM or American Boiler.
In late 2004, IRS investigators discovered accounting
irregularities regarding transactions between IPM and American Boiler in the
paper documents taken from Ganias's office. After subpoenaing and reviewing the
relevant bank records in 2005, they began to suspect Ganias was not properly
reporting American Boiler's income. . . .
[O]n July 28, 2005, some twenty months after the seizure of
his computer files, the Government officially expanded its investigation to
include possible tax violations by Ganias. Further investigation in 2005 and early
2006 indicated Ganias had been improperly reporting income for both of his
clients, leading the Government to suspect he might have been underreporting
his income.
At that point, the IRS case agent wanted to review Ganias's
personal financial records and knew, from her review of seized computer
records, they were among the files in the DVDs copied from Ganias's hard
drives. The case agent was aware . . . that Ganias's personal financial records
were beyond the scope of the November 2003 warrant, and consequently did not
believe that she could review the non-responsive files, even though they were
already in the Government's possession.
In February 2006, the Government asked Ganias and his counsel
for permission to access certain of his personal files that were in the
materials seized in November 2003. Ganias did not respond, and thus, on April
24, 2006, the Government obtained another warrant to search the preserved
images of Ganias's personal financial records taken in 2003.
At that point, the images had been in the Government's
possession for almost two-and-a-half years. Because Ganias had altered the
original files shortly after the Army executed the 2003 warrant, the evidence
obtained in 2006 would not have existed but for the Government's retention of
those images.
U.S. v. Ganias, supra. If you would like an overview of how an IRS
criminal investigation is initiated and conducted, check out this site.
In February
2010, Ganias moved to suppress the computer files described above. U.S. v. Ganias, supra. The District Court Judge who had the case held a two-day hearing on the motion and denied it
on April 14, 2010. U.S. v. Ganias, supra.
The Court
of Appeals began its analysis of Ganias’ appealing the denial of his motion to
suppress by explaining that the 4th Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution
protects the rights of individuals `to be secure in their
persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and
seizures.’ U.S. Const. amend. IV. . . . A search occurs when the Government acquires
information by either `physically intruding on persons, houses, papers, or
effects,’ or otherwise invading an area in which the individual has a
reasonable expectation of privacy. See Florida v. Jardines, 133 S.Ct. 1409 (2013); see also Katz v. U.S., 389 U.S. 347 (1967).
A seizure occurs when the Government interferes in some
meaningful way with the individual's possession of property. U.S. v. Jones, 132 S.Ct. 945 (2012). Subject to limited exceptions, a search or seizure conducted without a warrant is presumptively unreasonable.
See Kyllo v. U.S., 533 U.S. 27 (2001).
We must
construe the 4th Amendment `in [ ] light of what was deemed an unreasonable
search and seizure when it was adopted, and in a manner which will conserve
public interests as well as the interests and rights of individual citizens.’ Kyllo v. U.S. supra.
Applying 18th Century notions about searches and seizures to
modern technology, however, is easier said than done, as we are asked to
measure Government actions taken in the `computer age’ against 4th Amendment
frameworks crafted long before this technology existed. As we do so, we must keep in mind that `the ultimate
touchstone of the 4th Amendment is reasonableness.’ Missouri v. McNeely, 133S.Ct. 1552 (2013). Because the degree of privacy secured to citizens by the 4th
Amendment has been impacted by the advance of technology, the challenge is to
adapt traditional 4th Amendment concepts to the Government's modern, more
sophisticated investigative tools.
U.S. v. Ganias, supra.
The court
further explained that the
`chief evil that prompted the framing and adoption of the 4th
Amendment was the “indiscriminate searches and seizures” conducted by the
British “under the authority of general warrants.’’’ U.S. v. Galpin, 720
F.3d 436 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2d Circuit 2013) (quoting Paytonv. New York, 445 U.S. 573 (1980)). General warrants were . . . `not
grounded upon a sworn oath of a specific infraction by a particular individual,
and thus not limited in scope and application.’ Maryland v. King, 133 S.Ct. 1958 (2013).
The British Crown . . . used these questionable instruments
to enter a political opponent's home and seize all his books and papers, hoping
to find . . . evidence of criminal activity. See Stanford v. Texas,
379 U.S. 476 (1965). The Framers abhorred this practice, believing `papers
are often the dearest property a man can have’ and that permitting the
Government to `sweep away all papers whatsoever,’ without any legal
justification, `would destroy all the comforts of society.’ Entick v.Carrington, 95 Eng. Rep. 807 (C.P.1765).
U.S. v. Ganias, supra.
Getting back to this case, the court also explained
that the 4th Amendment guards
against this practice by
providing that a warrant will issue only if: (1) the Government establishes
probable cause to believe the search will uncover evidence of a specific crime;
and (2) the warrant states with particularity the areas to be searched and the
items to be seized. . . .
The latter requirement . . . `makes
general searches . . . impossible’ because it `prevents the seizure of one
thing under a warrant describing another.’ U.S. v. Galpin, supra. This restricts the Government's ability to
remove all of an individual's papers for later examination because it is
generally unconstitutional to seize any item not described in the
warrant.
U.S. v. Ganias, supra.
The court then noted that the parties agreed that the
personal financial records at issue
in this appeal were not covered
by the 2003 warrant, and that they had been segregated from the responsive
files by December 2004, before the Government began to suspect Ganias was involved
in any criminal activity. . . . Ganias does not directly challenge the
Government's practice of making mirror images of computer hard drives when
searching for electronic data, but rather challenges the reasonableness of its
off-site review.
Accordingly, we need not address
whether: (1) the description of the computer files to be seized in the 2003
warrant was stated with sufficient particularity. . . ; (2) the 2003 warrant authorized the
Government to make a mirror image of the entire hard drive so it could search
for relevant files off-site; or (3) the resulting off-site sorting process was
unreasonably long.
U.S. v. Ganias, supra.
The Court of Appeals noted that, instead,
we consider a more limited
question: whether the 4th Amendment permits officials executing a warrant for
the seizure of particular data on a computer to seize and indefinitely retain
every file on that computer for use in future criminal investigations. We hold
that it does not.
U.S. v. Ganias, supra. It found
that if the 2003 warrant authorized the Government
to retain all the data on Ganias's computers on the
off-chance the information would become relevant to a subsequent criminal
investigation, it would be the equivalent of a general warrant. The
Government's retention of copies of Ganias's personal computer records for
two-and-a-half years deprived him of exclusive control over those files for an
unreasonable amount of time.
This combination of circumstances enabled the Government to
possess indefinitely personal records of Ganias that were beyond the scope of
the warrant while it looked for other evidence to give it probable cause to
search the files. This was a meaningful interference with Ganias's possessory
rights in those files and constituted a seizure within the meaning of the 4th
Amendment. . . .
We conclude the unauthorized seizure and
retention of these documents was unreasonable. The Government had no warrant
authorizing the seizure of Ganias's personal records in 2003. By December 2004,
these documents had been separated from those relevant to the investigation of
American Boiler and IPM.
Nevertheless, the Government continued to retain them for
another year-and-a-half until it finally developed probable cause to search and
seize them in 2006. Without some independent basis for its retention of those
documents in the interim, the Government clearly violated Ganias's 4th
Amendment rights by retaining the files for a prolonged period of time and then
using them in a future criminal investigation.
U.S. v. Ganias, supra.
In
reaching this result, the court rejected the government’s argument that it
must be allowed to make the
mirror image copies as a matter of practical necessity and, according to the
Government's investigators, those mirror images were `the government's
property.’ . . .
[P]ractical considerations may
well justify a reasonable accommodation in the manner of executing a search
warrant, such as making mirror images of hard drives and permitting off-site
review, but these considerations do not justify the indefinite retention of
non-responsive documents. . . .
Without a warrant authorizing
seizure of Ganias's personal financial records, the copies of those documents
could not become ipso facto `the government's property’
without running afoul of the Fourth Amendment.
U.S. v. Ganias, supra.
It also
rejected the government’s claim that it “cured any defect of the wrongfully
retained files” when it obtained the 2006 search warrant. U.S. v.
Ganias, supra. The court noted that
“[i]f the Government could seize and retain non-responsive electronic records
indefinitely, so it could search them whenever it later developed probable
cause, every warrant to search for particular electronic data would become, in
essence, a general warrant.” U.S. v.
Ganias, supra.
For these
and other reasons, the Court of Appeals held that “[b]ecause the Government has
demonstrated no legal basis for retaining the non-responsive documents, its
retention and subsequent search of those documents were unconstitutional.” U.S. v. Ganias, supra. It therefore reversed the denial of Ganias’
motion to suppress, vacated his conviction and remanded the case for further
proceedings. U.S. v. Ganias, supra.
1 comment:
Thanks for the interesting read!
Post a Comment