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United States v. Cory Castetter
2017 WL 3319302
7th Cir.
2017
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Background

  • Michigan police obtained and executed a warrant to install and monitor a GPS tracker on Mark Holst’s car to investigate methamphetamine trafficking. The device transmitted real-time location data.
  • On September 4, 2014, tracking showed Holst’s car stopped at a house for over an hour; an informant reported Holst had gone to buy methamphetamine.
  • Police stopped Holst later and found methamphetamine; information from the GPS tracking and that stop was relayed to other officers.
  • Indiana officers used that information to obtain a second warrant to search the house in whose driveway Holst had lingered (owned by Cory Castetter); the search yielded drugs and about $62,000 in cash.
  • Castetter moved to suppress evidence from the second warrant, arguing (1) Michigan police lacked authority to monitor Holst’s car while it was in Indiana and (2) the GPS-derived information implicated Castetter’s privacy so evidence about his home should be excluded. The district court denied suppression; Castetter pleaded guilty conditional on appeal.

Issues

Issue Castetter's Argument Government's Argument Held
Whether information from a out-of-state GPS tracking warrant must be excluded because the tracking occurred across state lines Michigan police lacked authority to monitor Holst’s car in Indiana; Fourth Amendment concerns about extraterritorial tracking Fourth Amendment is not limited by state borders; warrant requirements were satisfied and state-law limits do not trigger suppression in federal prosecutions Rejected Castetter; state borders do not invalidate the warrant-derived information and suppression is not required
Whether information obtained by monitoring Holst’s car invaded Castetter’s Fourth Amendment privacy such that evidence discovered later must be excluded The first warrant tracked Holst, not Castetter; police could not use it to learn about activities at Castetter’s home without a warrant based on his own conduct Tracking revealed only Holst’s car location — Holst had no privacy interest in location vis-à-vis Castetter; learning about a third party from a valid warrant is permissible Rejected Castetter; no reasonable expectation of privacy in another’s location and derivative use of location info did not violate Castetter’s rights
Whether state-law limits on extraterritorial police action require exclusion of evidence in federal prosecutions State-law prohibitions (Michigan) on extraterritorial enforcement should bar use of that surveillance in Indiana Federal courts do not apply the exclusionary rule to enforce state-law restrictions; the Indiana judge implicitly approved using the information Rejected Castetter; violations of state law do not justify suppression in federal prosecutions
Whether GPS/satellite/internet tracking implicates sovereignty or national-power limits that would invalidate the surveillance Tracking crosses state lines and uses satellite/internet resources, so it exceeds local authority and implicates sovereignty concerns Radio, interstate networks, and GPS are federally regulated; tracking does not offend state sovereignty for Fourth Amendment purposes Rejected Castetter; national regulation of these systems supports validity of the tracking and its use

Key Cases Cited

  • United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. 400 (2012) (GPS tracking and attachment of a device implicate Fourth Amendment protections)
  • Virginia v. Moore, 553 U.S. 164 (2008) (violations of state law do not automatically trigger suppression in federal prosecutions)
  • Kyllo v. United States, 533 U.S. 27 (2001) (use of technology to obtain detailed information from inside a home can implicate the Fourth Amendment)
  • Hoffa v. United States, 385 U.S. 293 (1966) (information given by a willing informant does not violate the target’s Fourth Amendment rights)
  • United States v. Payner, 447 U.S. 727 (1980) (privacy invaded of a third party cannot be asserted by another to suppress evidence)
  • Rawlings v. Kentucky, 448 U.S. 98 (1980) (standing to challenge a search depends on one’s own expectation of privacy)
  • Gonzales v. Raich, 545 U.S. 1 (2005) (federal authority extends to regulation of activities implicating interstate commerce, relevant to national regulation of communications and GPS)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: United States v. Cory Castetter
Court Name: Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
Date Published: Aug 4, 2017
Citation: 2017 WL 3319302
Docket Number: 17-1327
Court Abbreviation: 7th Cir.