Courts: Search A Cell Phone? No Problem. Touch A Mouse? Violate 4th Amendment.

from the 4th-amendment-law-is-confusing dept

Julian Sanchez points us to a bizarre 4th Amendment ruling. While we’ve seen courts regularly pick away at the 4th Amendment, and allow things like warrantless wiretapping and tracking individuals via their phones without a warrant. In this case, the court ruled that touching a mousepad, thereby taking a laptop out of screensaver mode, constituted a “search” and was subject to the 4th Amendment. While I’m happy to see courts actually recognizing the importance of the 4th Amendment, and the need for law enforcement to obtain warrants, I’m having trouble understanding how this is a 4th Amendment search when those other — much more invasive — actions are not.

The details of the case involve someone who posted a threat to Craigslist about bringing a gun to a mall. Police tracked the guy down at his house, and while there, one of them touched his mousepad, changing the screen from the blank screensaver mode to fully on, displaying some information that was used to arrest the guy. Since stuff seen in plain sight is not considered a search, the question is whether or not this uncovered things that were not in plain sight, and thus constituted a search. I can understand why the court ruled the way it did in this case (though I’m a bit surprised). I’m just struggling to understand how that’s not a legal search, but something like scanning the entire contents of a mobile phone during a traffic stop is a legal search.

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Comments on “Courts: Search A Cell Phone? No Problem. Touch A Mouse? Violate 4th Amendment.”

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61 Comments
PrometheeFeu (profile) says:

Re: Re:

I think that would probably depend. If you blow on the mouse in order to turn off the screen saver, I bet that’s a search. On the other hand if he has a very sensitive mouse and the mere act of walking next to the desk turns off the screen save, I think that would not be a search. If a cop really wanted to be a jerk, I bet he could get away with bumping against the desk, to move the mouse and claimed it was accidental. That’s a lesson: Password-protect your screen-saver. Then you won’t have to deal with 4th amendment issues when it comes to that.

Phil G. says:

Re: Re:

A search warrant is usually specific and not just to come in and go through everything you have. Generally, they can look at what the warrant specifies and only in reasonable places where the item(s) may be found.

You wouldn’t look for a look for a big screen tv in someone’s sock drawer for example. If its a small item, good luck…

Since they are talking computers… it can get interesting I am sure. Currently it seems once a computer is involved, they scan scour it…

Anonymous Coward says:

Mike, you sort of have to read the full story to understand what happened here.

This was not a warranted search. So when invited into a PRIVATE home, they can only observe, and not touch anything. IE, they cannot kick a box over to see what falls out, example. They only went to talk to the guy, nothing more at that point.

In a car, the rules have been set – anything that isn’t unlocked and in range of the driver (pretty much the whole interior in many cases) is considered to be valid for search of a car in a public place on the public roads. That would include any documents in the car, or (not surprisingly) those documents as stored on a cell phone.

The search types are different, the circumstances are different, and the courts have long held the difference and supported it with judgement after judgement.

I know you don’t like it – you seem to be pushing for more protection for criminals – but that is the state of the law, backed with hundreds of judgements.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

>> you seem to be pushing for more protection for criminals

While I don’t disagree with the overall idea in your post, this statement just pisses me off.

No one is a criminal until after the trial is over. Please don’t do this again if you want people to take your arguments seriously.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

I think it’s worth noting that people ARE criminals if they’ve broken the law, whether or not a jury of their peers find them to be so. But, to your point, our justice system (and the officers thereof) must treat someone as innocent until they’ve been proven guilty in a court of law.

Almost Anonymous (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

“””I think it’s worth noting that people ARE criminals if they’ve broken the law, whether or not a jury of their peers find them to be so.”””

I think it’s worth noting that you are 100% wrong. First, innocent until proven guilty. Second, if a jury finds you innocent of breaking the law, then you are BY DEFINITION, not a criminal. You are making the mistake of conflating morality with legality.

btr1701 says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

> I think it’s worth noting that you are 100%
> wrong. First, innocent until proven guilty.

No, he’s right. If a person is murdered, for example, then *someone* committed that murder and whoever that is is a criminal even if they haven’t been tried (or even caught or identified).

If a crime occurs, it has to have had a perpetrator, and that perpetrator is by definition a criminal.

Jeffrey Nonken (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

Nevertheless, AC@9:17 is having trouble with the “innocent until proven guilty” concept. Those “protections for criminals” are intended to protect the innocent and assure that even the guilty are given a fair hearing. AC appears to assume that anybody who needs such protections is ipso facto a criminal. This then suggests that the only purpose for a trial is to figure out just how guilty the person is so as to conjure up a suitable punishment. Like, death by dismemberment for jaywalking.

…Sorry, now I’m just getting sarcastic.

PrometheeFeu (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

“First, innocent until proven guilty. “

That’s just a short-hand aphorism. The concept of the presumption of innocence is much more nuanced and rich than is expressed in that one-liner. Presumption of innocence is a rule of proof. It can best be summed up as saying that the burden of proof rests upon the prosecutor in criminal proceedings and doubt must benefit the accused.

If you like the most common formulation, it is better said as “Deemed innocent until proven guilty.” Your guilt is a matter of fact. If you did something you are guilty of it. However, the courts only recognize guilt after all the proper hurdles have been cleared.

Almost Anonymous (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

“””Your guilt is a matter of fact. If you did something you are guilty of it.”””

Bullshit. You aren’t guilty ’till you lost the third appeal.

Ok, snark aside, I respectfully disagree with you. “Guilt” in this context is a legal concept. Just “doing something” does not make you guilty. It is the judge and jury that decide whether or not there is “guilt”. For instance, willfullness and intent are SUPPOSED to play a large part in the decision of whether a suspected criminal has broken a law (and therefore is “guilty” of breaking a law).

Yes, I’m nit-picking with words because that is all that laws are: words and semantics. It is a mistake to talk about our laws as if they are physical laws. Ever try arguing with gravity?

PrometheeFeu (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

You’re not being any more nit-picky than anyone else on this. It all depends how you define “guilt”. Are we talking about “guilt” in a whodun’it sort of way? (+mens rea etc…) Or “guilt” is a “convicted” sort of way? Not a particularly interesting discussion.

In other words, I think I respectfully agree with you and feel stupid for once again getting involved in a definitional argument. Keep promising myself not to do it, but it’s too tempting.

AdamBv1 (profile) says:

Re: Re:

The thing is while a cell phone sitting on a seat is in plain sight is all the data on it in plain sight? If you can’t even disturb a mouse and turn off a screen saver how can you justify getting past a lockscreen on a smartphone (not even talking about a password protected one, just the normal lockscreen a touchscreen phone uses)?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Adam, it’s about location… the house is a private area, the car is private, but the courts have deemed the area of the driver’s reach to be “personal space” which can be checked.

You are looking at the magician’s flash paper that Mike is trying to pull off, making you look in the wrong place for the wrong answer. It isn’t a question of a device, because in a private home without a warrant, the police could not open a file box to see what is inside. But in a car, they have full right to open a box within the drivers reach without a warrant.

Don’t get stuck on the “device” argument, it’s meaningless.

Chronno S. Trigger (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

What is the exact law on that. Can they search any unlocked container within easy reach of the driver whenever they feel like it, or do they need probable cause? Like, if I get pulled over for speeding, can they search my glove box (my current one doesn’t have a lock) for drugs, or do they have to have reason to think I have drugs?

Ninja (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

My thoughts. If you were stopped for speeding why the heck would a cop need to peep on your phone contents? Even if the guy is stopped for driving drunken and they need evidence they can simply check the car for alcohol, you can hardly get drunk from using your phone.

Unless there is an explicit order from the police to find a specific phone and its contents (which would enable them to check your phone because they’d stop you for that), then there’s no reasoning in this world that justifies a search on your phone contents. And it is blatant rape of the 4th Amendment.

AdamBv1 (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

I know this is what the law currently says, my point is how can you say this makes sense and is consistent?

Phones nowadays ARE computers and we seem to be going opposite ways in how we are letting them be searched. Home computers are being protected and need a proper warrant to be searched but phones are continually getting less protection.

Then you can go even further with this and ask if they have a right to search my phone can they check my dropbox because I have an app for it oh my phone? What about my FTP? Remote desktop into my home PC and search that too?

As I said, the line between real computers and mobile devices is constantly blurring and we need to get a bit more consistent with how search procedures are applied to them.

PrometheeFeu (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

That’s not the issue. Your car is private. But if you get arrested, you and your car can get searched. In this case, the cops had no right to search that house. They were invited them in which only allows them to look, not search. Moving the mouse to reveal what was behind the screen saver was a search. An illegal one. Same would have been true if the cop had instead started looking through a cellphone.

DCX2 says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

I didn’t realize the security of my papers and personal effects should be contingent on which private place they’re in.

I think Mike’s point is that the device argument *should not be meaningless*. It’s one thing to search a car for any weapons etc, but once you see that the smartphone is within the driver’s reach, all you should be able to do is see “oh, that’s a smartphone”. What is inside the smart phone should not be fair game, because it cannot possibly contain a weapon.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

“I didn’t realize the security of my papers and personal effects should be contingent on which private place they’re in.”

A box of papers in your house, closed up, or a box of papers on the sidewalk open. Which one is secure, and which one is not?

The search of a car isn’t limited to weapons.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

I read it, I was just making a very extreme example. The car driving down the road, stopped for speeding, example, is private, but the area of the driver’s reach is no more private that something that might be on him if he was stopped and changed with urinating in public.

Having those files in your possession at the time of arrest makes them “searchable”, no matter the location.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Re:

The car driving down the road, stopped for speeding, example, is private, but the area of the driver’s reach is no more private that something that might be on him if he was stopped and changed with urinating in public.

And thus urinating in the toilet on a bus is “urinating in public” if it is on a public road, huh?.

The anti-Mikes are sure a bunch of loons.

PrometheeFeu (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

It’s not actually the location that matters. It’s the circumstances that lead to the information being uncovered. When you are arrested, police officers can perform a “search incident to arrest” which would otherwise be a violation of your 4th amendment right. Basically, they can search your person and what you carry. Since your phone is on your person, it is covered by the “search incident to arrest”. If a police officer knocks on your door and you let them in, (a bad idea BTW) they are allowed to use their eyes and see what is in “plain view”. However, being in your house does NOT allow them to search your house. They are allowed to use their eyes and notice anything that is “in plain view” such as a printout lying on your coffee table or a pot plant in your open closet. Similarly, if your computer screen is on, they can look at what is currently displayed. Same for your phone. But, they cannot pick up your phone and pull up data, nor can they start using your computer because that is then a search which was not authorized.

tl;dr; Moving a mouse or using a cellphone counts as a search. If you are arrested, they can search what you carry on you. If you invite them inside your house, they can’t “search” they can only see what’s in plain view.

btr1701 says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

> If you are arrested, they can search what
> you carry on you.

This rule was created before the invention of smartphones and the data they contain.

It’s not clear at all that the police have a legal right to examine the exhaustive contents of your phone as a search incident to arrest. What if it’s password protected? Do they have a right to demand you open it up for them? Do they have a right to access apps that lead to bank accounts, cloud storage, and/or give remote access to a home computer? If not, why not? If the cops can search the contents of the phone itself merely because it was on your person when you were arrested, why can’t they search the apps themselves? The apps are on your person as well, right?

The reality is that this is an extremely gray area of the law right now, with a mashup of rulings coming from courts of various levels and various jurisdictions and there is nothing even resembling a hard and fast rule as to what’s constitutional and what is not.

It’s going to take the Supreme Court to settle it once and for all, and the sooner the better.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

Adam, it’s about location… the house is a private area, the car is private, but the courts have deemed the area of the driver’s reach to be “personal space” which can be checked.

Oh, I see how that works. And if that phone has internet access as well, then “the internet” is within the driver’s reach as well and anything that can be accessed by it is subject to warrant-less search as well. And I suppose the body cavities of the driver and passengers are included too. We might as well just get rid of the 4th amendment.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

“If you’re asked to get out of your vehicle, immediatly close and lock the door. Again, if he asks for the keys, ask for the search warrant.”

Oh, there is some nice but VERY bad legal advise. It isn’t where you are standing now that matters, but rather where you WERE. In getting out, locking the door, and refusing access you have both created probably cause for a full warrant, and also likely gained yourself an obstruction of justice charge.

Talk about bad advice.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

Oh, you want some GOOD legal advise? Don’t do anything to get pulled over in the first place.

Or why don’t you just sprout wings and fly? That would probably be just about as realistic. Seriously, I used to teach driving classes and I don’t think I’ve *ever* seen someone drive more than just a few blocks without doing something they could bet pulled over for if a cop wanted to (and usually before they even get out of their driveway).

btr1701 says:

Re: Re: Re:

There’s no such thing as ‘probably cause ‘.

The term is ‘probable cause’.

And locking a car door in and of itself does not establish probable cause that a crime has been committed or that there is evidence of a crime in the car (which is what must be established for probable cause to exist), nor does it satisfy the elements of obstruction.

Ima Fish (profile) says:

I’m just struggling to understand how that’s not a legal search, but something like scanning the entire contents of a mobile phone during a traffic stop is a legal search.

A search of a person’s home is much different from a search of someone during a traffic stop. For one thing, there is no need to do an inventory search of someone’s home. While it’s quite common during a traffic stop. And because basically everything is searchable during a traffic stop, courts have stretched that to even laptops and cell phones. Even though their contents cannot be inventoried in any meaningful way.

Almost Anonymous (profile) says:

Re: Re:

“””Even though their contents cannot be inventoried in any meaningful way.”””

Not sure why you think this. There are tools available now that can fairly quickly copy a laptop’s hard drive, and I believe I’ve read there are tools that can do this with a smartphone’s storage as well. Oh, and by the way, they won’t ever dispose of their copy. You know, just in case.

Here is a related story (sorry about registration notices):
http://www.nysun.com/national/customs-agents-copy-travelers-laptop-phone-data/80735/

BentFranklin (profile) says:

I’d like to see the arguments about the constitutionality of computer/smartphone searches take another tack. We are increasingly using electronics as an extension of our minds, and the distinction between them will become increasingly blurred. So, the right to cryptography and to not have our electronics searched *anywhere* should be seen as an extension of the right to remain silent.

Matty boi (user link) says:

Courts search a cell phone! YES!

Don’t no it it’s the same her in aus but from wat u said sounds like ur in for a rude shock! I had argument with mother one night, said some stupid things and went for a walk to cool off! (Apparently mum was worried I was still in room and thought maybe I hurt myself) By time I got home there where how ever many pigs or cops or who ever they think they are.. in house and yard, asking me if I was Matt… I couldn’t even get near my mum before they said the found a .22 cal, which I hid pretty good like no way they seen that by accident, No comment I said!! So I arrested on the spot, but wait there’s more… They found my hydro set up hidden in cupboard, ripped out my plants and stole my lights, charged with cultivating , I said no comment officer lol! took my sling shot which was a charge as well! No comment I said, took my ww2 ak and .44 rounds with 1941 or 1942 printed on the bottoms and took a couple of .22’s, yep more charges and more no comment from me! took 8 phones which I never got back and a couple of USB sticks, no comment officer, took 2 computers which I eventually got back and smashed em obviously after they touch!! 1 comment officer, they family computers 😉 which rounded off my whole “one sentence worth” of there hours of questions and interview!! Mind u the dogs stole heaps more things from my room which they kept off the record! The best part of it guys .. Got SECTION 32 for gun and or section 9 or something? ( both no convictions lol) and about 2 yrs worth of councilling crap and 1grand fine for cultivating and ammo and a bloody slingshot!!!!!! 🙂 funny shit ay! And I didn’t dog on no one!!! Just goes to show if dumb asses keep there mouths shut when interegated they be alrigh!! No need for mrs getting shot! Just keep quiet 😉 😉 f#%k the police they can Come get me again anytime! POINT BEING THEY BE KICKING BOXES OVER MATEY! don’t u worry about that!!!!!

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