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STATE v. BROWN, A-4510-12T3. (2014)

Court: Superior Court of New Jersey Number: innjco20140911243 Visitors: 13
Filed: Sep. 11, 2014
Latest Update: Sep. 11, 2014
Summary: NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION PER CURIAM. This is the State's interlocutory appeal from the grant of defendant Gerald Brown's in limine motion requiring the State to produce an expert to explain internet service provider and cell phone records it intends to introduce at defendant's trial to establish that defendant uploaded a video of his former girlfriend in a state of undress. We reverse and remand for a Rule 104 hearing. Defendant has been indicted on
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NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION

PER CURIAM.

This is the State's interlocutory appeal from the grant of defendant Gerald Brown's in limine motion requiring the State to produce an expert to explain internet service provider and cell phone records it intends to introduce at defendant's trial to establish that defendant uploaded a video of his former girlfriend in a state of undress. We reverse and remand for a Rule 104 hearing.

Defendant has been indicted on two counts of third-degree invasion of privacy, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-9b and 14-9c, for surreptitiously videotaping the victim, his former girlfriend D.W., as she prepared to take a shower and uploading that video to a Twitter1 account for dissemination to others following their breakup. The victim discovered the crime on January 27, 2011, when she got several messages from a Twitter subscriber (user) sent to her Twitter account.

The first such message was in the form of a tweet stating, "remember the COP that took u 2 the HOOKAH bar n da summer? He said good looking out 4 da happy ending HOOKer!!!" Within minutes, the victim received another tweet from the same user, "stop looking 4 all these dudes 2 be ur daddy.... they just wanna nut all n dat fat azz ... DatS ALL!!" Several minutes later, that user tweeted to someone else, "[t]his TRICK [D.W.] is a MAJOR WHORE n the tri state area...." Over the next several minutes, D.W. received several more tweets from the same user that insinuated that she was a prostitute.

At 9:06 a.m., D.W. received a tweet from the user, which was also sent to four other Twitter subscribers. The tweet provided an embedded link to a video hosted by TwitVid.com, a service that provides a means for Twitter users to share videos. The tweet also contained the symbol "<—" pointing to D.W.'s username, implying that the video was with reference to her. Upon viewing the video, D.W. recognized herself and her bathroom and the male voice off camera as belonging to defendant. D.W. was not aware that defendant had videotaped her and did not know such a video existed until seeing it on Twitter.

After obtaining defendant's cell phone number from the victim, Detective Bolan of the Cyber Crimes Unit in the Essex County Prosecutor's Office obtained a communications data warrant (CDW) for Twitter account information relating to the user. Twitter responded that the account was created on January 26, 2011, at 7:10 p.m. from a certain IP address.2 Using DomainTools, a publicly available directory of IP addresses, Bolan found that the IP address was registered to Research in Motion (RIM) Technologies, now known as Blackberry.3

Bolan sent a subpoena to Blackberry requesting subscriber information for IP address 74.82.68.16 on January 27, 2011, for an identified one hour and forty-minute period. Blackberry responded by requesting the user's International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) or International Mobile Subscriber Identity (IMSI) numbers.4 Bolan obtained the information by transmitting a grand jury subpoena to T-Mobile, Brown's cellular service provider, which provided the ISMI number to Brown's phone.

Using the IMSI number provided by T-Mobile, Blackberry responded to the subpoena by advising that on January 27, 2011, a Blackberry device at the IP address 74.82.68.16 provided by Twitter, downloaded the TwitVid application (app) from Blackberry App World. Blackberry also responded by identifying an email address associated with the account. Using the information received from Blackberry, Detective Bolan served a subpoena on Microsoft, operator of the msn.com domain, requesting subscriber information on that email address. The response from Microsoft revealed that the account belonged to a "Gerald Brown."

The issue before the Law Division was whether the State needed an expert to explain that document trail to the jury. Defendant asserted that the information collected in response to the CDW and subpoenas pertained to internet-working protocols and applications that were extremely technical and outside the ken of the average juror, thus requiring an expert to explain the links. The State maintained that expert opinion was unnecessary as it did not intend to have Bolan provide an opinion conclusively linking defendant to the Twitter account or the video. Instead, Bolan would testify to the steps she took in conducting her investigation and the business records obtained in response to the CDW and subpoenas. The State maintained that Bolan would do no more than provide the circumstantial links from which the jury could draw a conclusion.

The Law Division did not conduct a Rule 104 hearing or hear oral argument on the motion. Instead, after the parties submitted briefs, relying predominately on out-of-state cases, the court issued a written opinion. The judge wrote:

Extensive and diligent research performed by both parties, and supplemented by the Court's own research, has failed to uncover any cases from inside or outside this jurisdiction that are directly on point. Nonetheless, the Court finds United States v. Ganier, 468 F.3d 920, 925-26 (6th Cir. 2006) somewhat instructive. In Ganier, the court determined that an expert was required to testify about his use of forensic software to determine what searches were run on three different computers. Id. at 923. The Court reasoned that "[s]oftware programs such as Microsoft Word and Outlook may be as commonly used as home medical thermometers, but the forensic tests Drueck ran are more akin to specialized medical tests run by physicians." Id. at 926. This Court acknowledges that the fast pace of technological advancements lessens the persuasiveness of Ganier which was decided in 2006. Technology that was new and evolving in 2006 may be commonplace in 2013. Nonetheless, this Court finds that the issues involved in this case (IP addresses and advanced networking protocols used by mobile device applications, RIM networks, and T-Mobile) are more akin to specialized medical tests and the use of forensic software to find information about computer searches, and less akin to the output of popular software programs such as Microsoft Word and Outlook. Id. at 926.

After poring over these records, and aided by both parties' written submissions, this Court has experienced significant difficulty and confusion in attempting to discern exactly how the records link the Defendant to the particular video in question. The Court finds that the concepts required to establish this inferential link are "so esoteric that jurors of common judgment and experience cannot form a valid judgment" about whether or not Defendant uploaded this video. Butler v. Acme Markets, Inc., [89 N.J. 270,] 283 [(1982)]. The Court has broad discretion to determine whether or not this subject-matter is beyond the ken of the average juror. The fact that this Court, with the luxury of time and written explanations, struggled mightily to understand the technical subject-matter demonstrates the complexity of these issues. Therefore, an expert witness is required.

We conclude that we lack the record to definitively resolve this issue. Accordingly, we remand for a Rule 104 hearing to determine the nature and extent of the evidence the State seeks to introduce as part of Bolan's proffered testimony and whether she is qualified to give such evidence. See State v. McLean, 205 N.J. 438, 450-61 (2011) (addressing lay and expert opinion in the context of drug prosecution); State v. Green, 417 N.J.Super. 190, 206 (App. Div. 2010) (holding that the court erred in concluding that defendant was not qualified to testify as an expert without conducting a hearing under N.J.R.E. 104 to ascertain the factual testimony that would be offered and the opinions that would be expressed). In addition, the court should address under N.J.R.E. 901 the issue of the authentication of the documents the detective received in response to the CDW and the subpoenas she issued.

Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.

FootNotes


1. Twitter bills itself as "an information network made up of 140-character messages called Tweets." Getting Started with Twitter, https://support.twitter.com/articles/215585# (last visited Aug. 27, 2014).
2. As the Chief Justice explained in State v. Reid, 194 N.J. 386, 390 (2008): To interact with other computers also attached to the Internet, a computer must be assigned an Internet Protocol address, or IP address. [See Harry Newton, Newton's Telecom Dictionary 342 (23rd ed. 2007)]. An IP address is a string of up to twelve numbers separated by dots — for example, 123.45.67.89. Ibid. In certain situations, a computer is assigned a permanent IP address, called a static IP address. Ibid. Most often, when an individual connects to the Internet, his or her Internet Service Provider dynamically assigns an IP address to the computer, which can change every time the user accesses the Internet. Ibid. In other words, the "dynamic" IP address assigned to the computer can be different for each Internet session. Ibid.
3. Again, from Reid: Recently, IP Address Locator Websites have become available to the general public. Such websites operate similarly to a reverse phone directory: they permit a person to type in an IP address and obtain the name and location of the registrant for that address.... [B]ecause most Internet users access the Internet via third-party service providers like AOL, Comcast, Yahoo, and others, Address Locator Websites typically reveal the name and location of the service provider — such as Comcast — but not information about the individual user. [Id. at 391.]
4. An IMEI identifies a user's mobile handset number; it remains constant so long as the SIM (Subscriber Identification Module) card is not changed, and the IMSI identifies "the user's country code, user account, network code and telephone number." Jen Manso, Cell-Site Location Data and the Right to Privacy, 27 Syracuse Sci. & Tech. Rep. 1, 4 n.15 (2012).
Source:  Leagle

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