Case o' The Week: Our Privacy Protections are Koh-Dependent -- In re: Application for Telephone Information - Fourth Amendment and Historical Cell Site Location Information
“Considering the
ubiquity of cell phones, and the important role they play in today’s world, it
is untenable to force individuals to disconnect from society just so they can
avoid having their movements subsequently tracked by the government.”
In re: Application for Telephone Information
Needed for a Criminal Investigation, 15-XR-90304-HRL-1, at 35 (LHK) (N.D. Cal.
July 29, 2015), decision available here.
Players:
Decision by District Judge Lucy H. Koh, N.D. Cal. Historic win for ND Cal AFPD
Ellen Leonida, R&W Attorney Robin Packel, and Investigator Madeline Larsen,
with welcome amicus help from E.F.F. counsel Hanni Fakhoury and ACLU Senior
Staff Attorney Linda Lye.
Facts: The USAO sought what is dubbed a “d” order for historical
and prospective cell site location information (“CLSI”) relating to specific
(under seal) phone target number(s). Id.
at 9 (referring to 18 U.S.C. § 2703(d)). These (d) orders are not supported by probable cause: the statute only requires "specific and articulable facts." Id. at 6.
San Jose Magistrate Judge Lloyd denied the
application, and the government appealed as
to historical cell site information only. Id. at 9. The Court invited the N.D. Cal. FPD to file a response. Id. at 10. On June 24, the Court held a
(long) hearing with specific questions relating to technical aspects of cell
site technology and the impact on privacy interests.
Issue(s): “Neither the U.S. Supreme Court nor the Ninth
Circuit has squarely addressed whether cell phone users possess a reasonable
expectation of privacy in the CSLI . . . associated with their cell phones . .
. . In the absence of any binding authority, the Court ventures into this ‘troublesome’
area of Fourth Amendment law as a matter of first impression.” Id. at 12.
Held: “Based on the
preceding U.S. Supreme Court cases, the following principles are manifest: (1)
an individual’s expectation of privacy is at its pinnacle when government surveillance
intrudes on the home; (2) long-term electronic surveillance by the government implicates
an individual’s expectation of privacy; and (3) location data generated by cell
phones, which are ubiquitous in this day and age, can reveal a wealth of
private information about an individual. Applying those principles to the
information sought here by the government, the Court finds that individuals
have an expectation of privacy in the historical CSLI associated with their
cell phones, and that such an expectation is one that society is willing to
recognize as reasonable.” Id. at 16.
“[W]here
the information sought is historical CSLI, a warrant supported by probable
cause is required . . . .” Id. at 45.
Of Note: The Hon. Lucy Koh is a Silicon Valley judge, who is used to dealing with massive antitrust litigation involving Adobe, Google,
Intel, Intuit, etc.. She presided over Apple
Inc. v. Samsung, and has had more cutting-edge technology and patents come
across her desk than most federal districts (and some federal circuits) combined.
Combine this tech savvy with cutting-edge privacy and constitutional issues,
and the result is a seminal, forty-six page order that holds that an
application for historical CLSI requires
a showing of probable cause. Id.
at 45.
Notably the government’s declarations bragged of “ever-increasing
precision” of cell site location, id.
at 16, and Judge Koh relies on the government’s own factual record to
find this investigative technique treads on reasonable expectations of privacy,
id. at 17:1-5; 30-32 (distinguishing Davis). It is a remarkably thoughtful opinion
that grapples the realities of modern technologies: a must-read.
How to Use:
The AUSA in
your case relied on a (d) order and did not make a probable cause showing to obtain historical cell site location
data.
Your AUSA has not disclosed to you that agents obtained that data – Feds don’t consider
this Rule 16 discovery.
Because your AUSA obtained historical CSLI without a probable cause showing, the
investigation that flowed from that cell-site data – surveillance, pen
registers, wiretaps – is the Fourth Amendment fruit of a poisonous tree. Seek
disclosure of “all historical cell site location information” and the (d)
orders that produced it, and move to suppress evidence arising from it.
(And no
“good faith exception” (see Cooper
below, that put the Feds on notice)).
For Further
Reading:
Judge Koh stands upon the shoulders of another NorCal privacy champion.
In United States v. Cooper, Judge Susan Illston first held that the
government should have obtained a search warrant for historical CLSI. (Litigated
by ND Cal CJA Attorney Ethan Balogh). For the back story to Judge Koh’s order
(with a link to the Cooper decision) see article here.
Judge Koh stands upon the shoulders of another NorCal privacy champion.
Hon. Judge Susan Illston |
Image
of the Hon. Judge Lucy H. Koh from http://sourcedigit.com/694-judge-lucy-h-koh-apple-inc-v-samsung-case-no-c-11-1846-c-12-0630/
Image
of the Hon. Judge Susan Illston from http://www.wired.com/2014/01/judge-nsl/
Steven
Kalar, Federal Public Defender N.D. Cal. Website at www.ndcalfpd.org
.
Labels: 18 USC 2703(d), Cell Phone, Fourth Amendment, Probable Cause - Search
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