CHRIS McALILEY, Magistrate Judge.
Defendant Byramji Moneck Javat ("Javat") has filed a Motion to Suppress Electronic and Documentary Evidence, (ECF No. 177), which the Honorable Donald M. Middlebrooks has referred to me, (ECF No. 178). The Motion is fully briefed (ECF No. 228, 241, 260, 261),
Javat's motion, as modified by his reply memorandum, makes two Fourth Amendment claims: first, that the government's warrantless seizure from Javat of his electronic devices, at the time of his arrest, was not made lawful by the search incident to arrest doctrine,
For the reasons that follow, I recommend that the Court grant Javat's Motion, and I summarize my reasoning here. First, I conclude that the warrantless search of Javat's messenger bag, at some unknown time after his arrest, was in violation of the Fourth Amendment, and that this requires that Javat's electronic devices, and all evidence seized from them, and evidence derived therefrom, be excluded from evidence in this prosecution. If the Court accepts this recommendation, this alone supports the suppression of evidence.
I nonetheless proceed to Javat's second and alternative argument, of unreasonable delay, which requires the Court to balance the government's and Javat's interests. If the Court adopts my analysis and conclusion on Javat's first argument, then, as I explain in Section II (B), I believe this requires the conclusion that the government's twenty-day delay in securing a search warrant for Javat's devices, was constitutionally unreasonable, and this would be a second justification for the exclusion of evidence. If, however, the Court were to not agree with my conclusion on the first argument, this would alter the balancing analysis, such that the twenty-day delay in securing a search warrant was constitutionally reasonable, and would not justify suppression.
On August 7, 2018, an Indictment was filed with this Court under seal that charged Javat, and five co-defendants, with wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud, theft of pre-retail medical products and conspiracy to obtain pre-retail medical products by fraud or deception. (ECF No. 3).
Agent Fielder, who is the case agent on this matter, coordinated the arrests of the defendants. The government knew that Javat resided in the United Arab Emirates, (ECF No. 3, p. 2) and believed that he traveled to the United States only a few times a year. Once the arrest warrants were issued, Agent Fielder tasked another agent with researching Javat's location. Fielder was surprised to learn only days later, on or about August 16 or 17, 2018, that Javat was in the United States, and had tickets for a flight that would depart the country on Saturday, August 18, 2018, from the Dulles International Airport, in the metropolitan Washington, D.C. area.
Fielder asked for assistance from the FDA/OCI Metropolitan Washington Field Office, to arrest Javat at the Dulles airport, and Agent Flagg was assigned the task. Flagg knew nothing about the investigation before that time. Fielder "kind of gave him a brief overview," (Tr. at 65), sent Flagg a photo of Javat, and his travel information and the arrest warrant.
On Saturday August 18, 2018, at about 8:30 am, Flagg and his FDA/OCI colleague, Agent Kurisky, arrived at the Dulles airport where they met two uniformed airport officers.
Flagg saw that Javat had entered the airport with a roller suitcase and a messenger bag. Javat's wife and children also had luggage with them. At the time of his arrest, Javat's suitcase was at his feet, and his messenger bag was either over his shoulder, or resting on top of his suitcase. His family's luggage was also nearby, within Javat's reach. Flagg asked Javat for his electronics. Javat, who was very cooperative, removed a Samsung smartphone from either his pants or blazer pocket, and handed it to Agent Kurisky. Javat said that he had a laptop computer in his messenger bag, and he handed the bag to Flagg. Flagg took the cellphone, messenger bag, and Javat's suitcase, and escorted Javat to the curb outside the airport terminal, where he patted him down, placed Javat inside his car, and put the luggage in the trunk.
Sometime later, and Flagg did not say when, he searched Javat's messenger bag and suitcase. It was only then that he learned that three additional Samsung smartphones were inside the messenger bag. (Tr. 100-101).
On September 7, 2018, twenty days after Javat's arrest, Agent Fielder presented an application for a search warrant for Javat's five electronic devices to a Magistrate Judge of this Court. That Judge issued a search warrant for the devices that same day.
During this period of time Agent Fielder served as the Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the local FDA/OCI field office, located in Plantation Florida. As a supervisor, Fielder's responsibilities included overseeing other agents' investigations, and approving their reports and their leave. The field office was short-staffed at that time and applicants for open law enforcement positions were being interviewed. Fielder did not participate in the interviews, but he did review some resumes. Thus, during this twenty day period, some of Fielder's time was devoted to his supervisory duties. In addition, Fielder had other cases or investigations, aside from this one, that he worked on in this timeframe.
Javat was the first of the defendants in this case to be arrested, and on the day of his arrest Fielder began to coordinate the arrests of the other five defendants. This required Fielder to communicate with other law enforcement officers about "manpower, logistics and things of that nature" and required him to "review reports." (Tr. at 36). On Monday, August 20, 2018, Defendants Luis Soto and Emanuel Daskos were arrested in this District and had their initial appearances before the Miami Division of this Court. That same day Defendant James Sipprell was arrested in the Northern District of Georgia, where he resides. Fielder interviewed Defendant Sipprell by telephone at the time of his arrest.
On Tuesday, August 21, 2018, Fielder travelled to the Eastern District of Virginia District Court to attend Javat's pretrial detention hearing, which took place the following day, and which resulted in an order that Javat be held without bond.
When the Defendants were arrested, this triggered Fielder to do a number tasks on this case. He prepared reports of arrests and communicated with other arresting agents to get their reports. He began a review of all the evidence and reports generated during the investigation to collect information for upcoming discovery production, and discussed this, among other matters, with the lead Assistant U.S. Attorney. These discussions included Fielder attending meetings at the U.S. Attorneys Office. Fielder knew that one of the defendants was involved in a lawsuit and, to avoid the possibility of the prosecution team viewing that defendant's privileged communications, Fielder contacted other FDC/OCI agents to identify who could participate in a taint review team, and then put those agent(s) in touch with the U.S. Attorneys Office.
Fielder began to prepare his search warrant application on or about Wednesday, August 29, 2018. He was the only agent knowledgeable enough about the case to be able to prepare the application.
Fielder emailed his proposed search warrant application to the lead Assistant U.S. Attorney on Monday, September 3, 2018, which was Labor Day, and a federal holiday when Fielder's office was officially closed. He believes the Assistant U.S. Attorney made some changes to his draft. It was three days later, on Friday, September 7, 2018, that Fielder presented the warrant application to the Court, and as noted, the Court issued the warrant that same day. The government later made a forensic examination of those devices, and according to Javat's Motion, the government seized "millions of communications and documents, which the government has listed as evidence in this prosecution." (ECF No. 177 at 4).
In his Motion, Javat asks the Court to exclude from evidence the laptop computer and the four cellphones the government seized from him at the Dulles Airport, along with any evidence the government later seized when it searched those devices, or derived from that evidence. Javat makes two arguments: first, that the warrantless seizure of those devices was not justified by the search incident to arrest doctrine—the only exception to the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement that the government relies upon—and second, that the government unreasonably delayed securing a search warrant for those devices. For the following reasons, I find that both arguments have merit and call for the exclusion from evidence of Javat's electronic devices, and the evidence seized from them.
It has long been the law that the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution requires that the government must have a search warrant before it can search and seize, unless it can demonstrate the application of one of the recognized exceptions to the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement. Arizona v. Gant, 556 U.S. 332, 338 (2009) (citing Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347, 357 (1967)). The government must do so by a preponderance of the evidence.
The Court has refined the scope of that exception over time. The first such decision was Chimel v. California, 395 U.S. 752 (1969), in which officers arrested the defendant in his home, pursuant to an arrest warrant, and then thoroughly searched the entire house. The Court found that that search was unlawful and wrote the following:
Id. at 763. The Court thus established that incident to arrest, officers may search where an arrestee might reach, and seize any weapons or evidence. Because the search in Chimel went "far beyond the petitioner's person and the area from within which he might have obtained either a weapon or . . . . evidence" the Court found that the search was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment and unlawful. Id. at 768.
Later, in United States v. Robinson, 414 U.S. 218 (1973), the Court made clear that this search may be made whether or not there is probable cause to believe that the person arrested has a weapon or is about to destroy evidence. This is because the "potential dangers lurking in all custodial arrests make warrantless searches of items within the `immediate control' area reasonable without requiring the arresting officer to calculate the probability that weapons or destructible evidence may be involved." United States v. Chadwick, 433 U.S. 1, 14-15 (1977) (quoting Robinson).
The Supreme Court in Chimel, thus set forth the physical scope of a lawful warrantless search incident to arrest, and in Robinson, the Court made clear that the government need not justify the purpose for its search incident to arrest, if the search fell within that scope.
In United States v. Edwards, 415 U.S. 800 (1974), the Court found that the exception encompassed the seizure and search of the defendant's clothing at the jail, approximately ten hours after his arrest. The defendant there was lawfully arrested, at about 11:00 p.m., for attempting to break into the post office and he was transported to the local jail where he was held. As the defendant was being jailed, investigators learned that the intruder had pried open a window, leaving paint chips on the window sill. The next morning police purchased clothing for the defendant which they gave to him at the jail, and they seized, without a warrant, the clothing the defendant was wearing at the time of his arrest. Later examination of the clothing identified paint chips that matched those found at the window.
The Edwards Court found that it was reasonable to search the defendant at the jail without a warrant for "any evidence of the crime in his immediate possession, including his clothing." Id. at 805. The Court noted that it was only after the arrest that the police
Id. (citations omitted).
In the final Supreme Court decision that bears on the issues now before this Court, Chadwick, the Court addressed the temporal scope of a lawful warrantless search incident to arrest of luggage in police custody. The defendants in that case had traveled on an Amtrak train with a 200-pound footlocker, which they removed from the train at their arrival station. Police had probable cause that the footlocker contained narcotics, and they placed the defendants under arrest at the station and seized the footlocker. The officers searched the defendants at that time and found keys to the footlocker. "The agents had no reason to believe that the footlocker contained explosives or other inherently dangerous items, or that it contained evidence which would lose its value unless the footlocker were opened at once." 433 U.S. at 4. The officers transported the defendants and the footlocker to the Federal Building and an hour and a half after the arrests, the agents opened the footlocker without a warrant, and found marijuana. Id. at 4-5. The Court found the search of the footlocker was unlawful, as it fell outside the temporal scope of a search incident to arrest.
Id. at 15 (citations and quotation marks omitted).
Putting together these parameters of the search incident to arrest doctrine and applying them to the record before this Court, I reach the following conclusions.
First, Flagg and his law enforcement colleagues lawfully arrested Javat at the Dulles airport.
Second, Flagg was entitled to search, at the time of arrest, Javat's person and "the area within his immediate control" for weapons or evidence. Chimel, 395 U.S. at 763. Flagg did not need to justify that search with probable cause that Javat had either. Robinson, 414 U.S. at 477. Flagg did search Javat's person, when he asked Javat if he had any electronics and Javat pulled a cellphone from his pocket and handed it to the officer. The government's seizure of that phone was lawful because it occurred at the time of arrest and was taken from Javat's person.
Third, the law enforcement officers had the right to search Javat's messenger bag and suitcase when they were with Javat at the airport, again, because they were within his immediate control. Chimel, 395 U.S. at 763. In fact, Javat gave the officers reason to believe they might find evidence in the messenger bag, when he told them it held his laptop. They did not, however, search either bag. Rather, they seized both bags and searched them later, sometime after they had brought Javat to the federal jail. We do not know when Flagg searched the bags, other than that this had occurred by August 29, 2019, eleven days after the arrest, as documented by the Inventory of Evidence Flagg prepared on that date, that identified a total of four cellphones and one laptop, that Flagg had seized for evidence. As Flagg testified, he did not know the messenger bag contained three additional cellphones, until he opened it, at some unstated time.
Fourth, Flagg's search of the messenger bag hours or days after Javat's arrest was unlawful as it was "remote in time [and] place from the arrest, [and] no exigency exist[ed]." Chadwick, 433 U.S. at 15. That bag was in Flagg's "exclusive control, and there [was] no longer any danger that [Javat] might gain access to the property to seize a weapon or destroy evidence" and thus the search was "no longer an incident of the arrest." Id. Under this circumstance, it would have been reasonable for Flagg to apply for a warrant to search both bags which, of course, he did not do.
The government would have this Court dispense with the Chadwick temporal requirement, arguing that the government knew, at the time Javat handed over his messenger bag, that it contained the laptop and cellphones. The government argues this "was the functional equivalent of a hands-on search for the devices, conducted immediately at the very time and location of arrest. There was no remote-in-time-and-place search to uncover them, because the agents did not need to search for them by that point." (ECF No. 261, at 5). There are two fatal problems with this argument. First, it mischaracterizes Flagg's testimony. Flagg testified that Javat told him that his laptop was in the messenger bag,
Fifth, Flagg's warrantless search of the bags well after he left Javat at the jail, is not justified by the rule set forth in Edwards, that officers may search an arrestee's person, and "effects in his immediate possession" after he has been placed in custody. Edwards, 415 U.S. at 804-5. The suitcase and messenger bags were not in Javat's "immediate possession" when Flagg searched them, and thus his search plainly falls outside the Edwards rule. The Chadwick Court made clear that this distinction is what sets the case apart from Edwards, when it ruled that "[o]nce law enforcement officers have reduced luggage or other personal property not immediately associated with the person of the arrestee to their exclusive control, and there is no longer any danger that the arrestee might gain access to the property . . . a search of that property is no longer an incident of the arrest." Chadwick, 433 U.S. at 15 (emphasis added).
The government cites two Eleventh Circuit decisions that apply Edwards (see ECF No. 261, at 4), and they do not lead to a different conclusion. The first, United States v. Baldwin, 644 F.2d 381 (5th Cir. 1981)
Finally, Javat's argument, made in his reply memorandum, (ECF No. 241), and at oral argument at the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing, that the government's seizure of Javat's electronics was unlawful because their incriminating nature was not "immediately apparent," is without merit on the facts of this case. Flagg had, or had read, the arrest warrant, which stated the charges in the Indictment, and Fielder had given Flagg a brief overview of the investigation. It was reasonable for Flagg to believe that Javat's electronics might hold evidence of his participation in wire fraud involving the purchase and sale of FDA-regulated products. In short, the potential evidentiary value of his cell phone and laptop was apparent.
In sum, I conclude that the government has not met its burden to establish that its search of Javat's messenger bag falls within the search incident to arrest doctrine, and this is reason alone, for the suppression of evidence.
The exclusionary rule, first announced for the federal courts in Weeks v. United States, 232 U.S. 383 (1914), and later extended to state courts by Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U.S. 643 (1961), makes impermissible the introduction of evidence obtained in violation of a defendant's Fourth Amendment rights. Flagg searched the messenger bag in violation of Javat's Fourth Amendment rights, and the contents of that bag — three Samsung cellphones and a laptop — must be excluded from evidence. Further, because the government relied upon the results of that unlawful search to procure the warrant to search the electronic devices in that bag, the information found during the search of those devices must also be excluded from evidence. Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U.S. 471, 488 (1963) (evidence that the government came at "by the exploitation of that illegality . . . may not be used against" the defendant).
There is one electronic device that the government did not obtain from the unlawful search of Javat's messenger bag — the Samsung cellphone seized from Javat's person. Although the search warrant the government later obtained included that cellphone, this lawfully-seized device must nonetheless be excluded from evidence. When the government seizes an individual's property, it must make a clear record and chain-of-custody of that seizure and retention of evidence, especially so when that evidence is fungible or subject to exchange. The government did not make that record here, which leaves it unable to identify that particular Samsung cellphone that was lawfully searched for and seized incident to arrest. On this record, all four of Javat's Samsung cellphones, and his laptop computer, and the evidence later taken from them pursuant to a warrant-authorized forensic search, must be excluded from evidence.
For completeness, I address Javat's second argument that even if the government's search of Javat's messenger bag was lawful, his electronics and the evidence derived from them, should still be suppressed because the government unreasonably delayed in securing a search warrant for those devices. Javat primarily relies upon the Eleventh Circuit's decision in United States v. Mitchell, 565 F.3d 1347 (11th Cir. 2009), as authority for this argument.
In Mitchell, the Eleventh Circuit found that a twenty-one day delay in securing a search warrant for that defendant's computer hard drive was unreasonable on the facts of that case. The decision is premised on the notion that an otherwise lawful seizure of evidence can violate the Fourth Amendment if the "police act with unreasonable delay in securing a warrant." Id. at 1350. Courts must determine whether a delay is unreasonable "in light of all the facts and circumstances and on a case-by-case basis." Id. at 1351 (citation and quotation marks omitted). This requires a "careful balancing of governmental and private interests." Id. (citations and quotation marks omitted).
The Eleventh Circuit has since written, in depth, on this subject in United States v. Laist, 702 F.3d 608 (11th Cir. 2012) and Thomas v. United States, No. 18-12157, 2019 WL 2158775 (11th Cir. 2019). In these cases, the Court made clear that Mitchell did not establish a bright-line rule or a presumption that a delay exceeding 21 days in getting a warrant is unreasonable. Laist, 702 F.3d at 618; Thomas, 2019 WL 2158775 *11-12. To the contrary, those decisions emphasize the very case-specific nature of this analysis, and identify a number of factors that courts should consider in their balancing of the government's and defendant's interests. Those factors include: (1) the significance of the interference with the defendant's possessory interest, (2) the duration of the delay, (3) whether the defendant consented to the seizure, (4) the government's legitimate interest in holding the property as evidence, (5) the government's diligence in pursuing a search warrant. Laist, 702 F.3d at 613-14. The government's diligence, in turn, can be measured by a number of considerations, which may include: (1) the nature and complexity of the investigation, (2) whether "overriding circumstances arose, necessitating the diversion of law enforcement personnel to another case", (3) the quality of the warrant application and the amount of time it should take to prepare it. These factors "are by no means exhaustive." Laist, 702 F.3d at 614.
A "careful balancing of governmental and private interests"
The government argues, rightly, that Javat's possessory interest in these devices was diminished, in the twenty-day period before the search warrant was issued, because he was in federal custody. The Bureau of Prisons would not have allowed Javat access to his cellphones or laptops. So, upon his arrest, Javat would have been without those devices, regardless of the government's seizure. Javat, however, is also correct that had his family been allowed to keep those devices at the time of his arrest, Javat could have asked them to access information on his behalf. More than two weeks after his arrest, Javat's wife did ask Flagg for the return of all her husband's possessions seized at the airport. Flagg responded by delivering to her everything but Javat's electronics. On this record, I find that Javat maintained a possessory interest in the devices, but a diminished one.
Javat did not consent to the seizure of his cellphones and laptop, and this weighs in his favor. The twenty-day length of the delay, to borrow the phrase used in Laist, and Thomas, was "not insubstantial." Laist, 702 F.3d at 616 (a twenty-five day delay); Thomas, 2019 WL 2158775 *12 (a thirty-three day delay). I find that the length of the delay here, weighs modestly in favor of Javat.
As for the government's diligence, I find that this weighs modestly in the government's favor. Agent Fielder, the case agent, plainly had his hands full as of the moment of Javat's arrest on Saturday August 18, 2019. For Fielder, the first nine days that followed that arrest (that is, through Monday August 27, 2018), were consumed with the arrests of the other defendants in this case and their initial court appearances, as well as travel to and from Javat's detention hearing in Virginia. Two days later, on Wednesday, August 29, 2018, Fielder began to draft the search warrant package, which he submitted to the lead prosecutor six days later, on Monday, September 3, 2018. While the search warrant application that Fielder prepared certainly did not require six full days of his time, I do not believe that constitutional reasonableness necessarily mandates that once Fielder began drafting the warrant application, it was his sole occupation. In fact, it was not. Fielder was a supervisor in the FDA/OCI Planation, Florida field office, and it would not be reasonable to expect him to abandon all supervisory responsibilities once the government seized Javat's devices. The same is true for Fielder's other investigations or cases, that required some of his attention during this period. Moreover, as important as it was for Fielder to timely submit a search warrant, Fielder was also acting responsibly when he began the process of gathering evidence that the government would soon have to disclose to the defense. This obligation would be triggered upon the Court's issuance of the standing discovery order at the first arraignment, which could take place within days of the initial appearances.
Fielder testified that he was the only agent sufficiently knowledgeable about the case who could draft the search warrant application. This too appears reasonable given Fielder's primary role in this lengthy and complex investigation. The length and complexity of the investigation is a factor the Eleventh Circuit has recognized can support a finding of diligence, and I find this weighs in the government's favor here. Laist, 702 F.3d at 617 (a year-long investigation of child pornography "of this scope and complexity requires more time to prepare a warrant").
As for the warrant application itself, it was simple and relatively straightforward, and does not suggest on its face that a significant period of time was needed for its preparation.
Agent Fielder struck me as diligent and sincere in his efforts to manage competing responsibilities during these first twenty days after Javat's arrest. Notably, that period included three weekends, including the long Labor Day weekend, and to Fielder's credit, he completed his search warrant package on Labor Day; a day when he was legally entitled to not be at work. Fielder's diligence stands in sharp contrast to the officer in Mitchell, who "simply believed that there was no rush." 565 F.3d at 1353. And, while in hindsight Fielder might have reprioritized some tasks to complete his search warrant application earlier, hindsight is not the measure of reasonableness. Thomas, 2019 WL 2158775 *13.
In the end, the decisive factor in the balancing test is the legitimacy of the government's interest in holding the laptop and cellphones in that twenty-day period. As noted earlier, the government had a reasonable belief that Javat's cellphones and laptop likely contained evidence of Javat's alleged participation in a wire fraud conspiracy, and this would have supported its intention to secure a warrant to search those devices, had they been lawfully seized. If the government's search and seizure had been lawful, I would have concluded that the balancing of the government's and Javat's interests sufficiently favored the government such that the twenty-day delay was reasonable.
But, the government's warrantless search of the messenger bag was not lawful, and it must follow that its twenty-day possession of the three Samsumg phones and the laptop found in that bag was not legitimate. The government did legitimately hold the one Samsung smartphone that it took from Javat at the airport. But, it chose to submit one search warrant application for all five devices, and as already noted, the government does not know which of those phones was the one lawfully seized. I conclude that the illegality of the government's delayed search of the messenger bag decidedly tips the balance, such that the twenty-day delay in securing the search warrant was unreasonable, and was thus a violation of the Fourth Amendment. On this record, this serves as a second justification for the suppression of evidence.
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully
"Q. Okay. Do you know which of the four cell phones was the cell phone on Mr. Javat's person?
A. No, I don't.
Q. And did you ever know?
A. No."
Tr. at 60.
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Well, specifically, how did he give you the laptop?
A. I believe the laptop was in the messenger bag, and he gave us the messenger bag containing the laptop.
Q. Did he indicate to you that there was a laptop in there?
A. Yeah, he told us he had a laptop with him.
Q. So you took the messenger bag and the suitcase?
A. Yes, sir.
(Tr. at 100)
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And what did you find when you went into that messenger bag?
A. Additional — three additional cell phones and the laptop, of course.
Q. So would it be accurate to say that when you first had this interaction with the Defendant, you were only aware of one cell phone and one laptop?
A. I believe so, yes, sir.
(Tr. at 101).