Recent case law prompts this court to confront yet again an important question of electronic surveillance law: Under what statutory authority is law enforcement permitted to continuously monitor a cell phone’s location in (or near) real time?
Background
As part of a drug trafficking investigation, the government has applied for an order under § 2703(d) of the Stored Communications Act (SCA) compelling a phone company to disclose, among other information, cell site data for a target phone “on a continuous basis contemporaneous with” the beginning and end of a call, and if reasonably available, during the call as well.
In the past the DOJ has invoked a “hybrid” of several statutes to support its request, but the government’s application here relies solely upon the SCA. This court initially denied this part of the government request, but indicated it would consider further briefing on the issue if the government chose to submit it. No such brief was filed.
Analysis
Writing on a mostly clean slate nine years ago,
Since 2005, other magistrate and district judges have weighed in.
Last year a divided Fifth Circuit panel held that orders for historical cell site records under the SCA do not categorically violate the Fourth Amendment. In re Application of the United States for Historical Cell Site Data,
Even so, given law enforcement persistence in pursuing this authority, it seems appropriate to revisit our 2005 statutory holding in light of the Fifth Circuit’s recent constitutional ruling. The main questions are (1) whether the SCA authorizes ongoing surveillance of cell phone use; (2) whether cell phone tracking is distinguishable from other forms of tracking covered by the Tracking Device Statute and Rule 41; and (3) whether the hybrid theory — a combination of the SCA with other statutes — offers a plausible alternative legal regime for cell phone tracking. The answer to each question is no, for reasons explained below.
1. Distinguishing Historical and Prospective Cell Site Records
The Fifth Circuit’s emphasis that its' holding was limited to historical cell site information begs the obvious question: what exactly is historical cell site information? The SCA does not define the term; in fact, the words “historical” and “cell site” are never used in the SCA. The closest the Fifth Circuit comes to a definition is the following passage: “In the case of such historical cell site information, the Government merely comes in after the fact and asks a provider to turn over records the provider has already created.”
The government’s application here exceeds the scope of the one blessed by Historical Cell Site in two significant respects. First, the information sought here is “prospective,”
Instantaneous storage theory. The government does not think so. In other cases, the government has vigorously challenged the viability of any distinction between “historical” and “prospective” cell site data, arguing that cell phone signaling data becomes a “record” as soon as it is captured and digitally “stored” on the provider’s system. This data-is historical in one sense and prospective in another: “[T]he same datum that is prospectively created by a disclosure order is a ‘record’ by the time that it must be turned over to law enforcement.”
This argument, dubbed the “instantaneous storage” theory by Judge Orenstein in the first reported cell site opinion,
The instantaneous storage argument is not unreasonable, so far as it goes. The SCA does not specify a particular cut-off date for determining which records are to be produced. There are many possibilities: the date of the government’s application; the date the order is signed by the judge; the date the order is served on the provider; the date the provider actually produces the records; or a different date specified by the court’s order. Absent a clear dividing line to separate present from future data,
The Supreme Court in Berger v. New York recognized a fundamental distinction between ongoing electronic surveillance and a one-time search, leading the Court to impose more stringent procedural requirements than those applicable to an ordinary search warrant.
The hidden nature of electronic surveillance makes it more likely that an investigation will reveal private information. ... Electronic surveillance monitors continuously, increasing the likelihood that people other than the target of the surveillance will have their private information disclosed. Even hardened criminals talk to their mothers and lovers.... Electronic surveillance is “indiscriminate” in the sense that it may obtain information that has no link to criminal activity. Any number of entirely innocent people may either call or be called from a wiretapped phone. Electronic surveillance casts a far wider net than a traditional search for evidence of a crime at a target’s home or business.... Finally, electronic surveillance cannot be effective unless it is secret ... Compared to traditional searches, ... law enforcement agents can use electronic surveillance investigations to flout the law without notifying anyone.21
Mindful of these dangers, Congress has been attentive to the distinction between ongoing surveillance and one-time access when regulating law enforcement investigative techniques. Continuous search mechanisms like wiretaps, pen registers, and tracking devices are typically hemmed in by duration periods and other prospective features.
The SCA is part of a comprehensive statute passed in 1986, the Electronic Communications Privacy Act. In separate titles, that law recognizes three different types of ongoing surveillance. Title I amended the Wiretap Act to include interception of electronic communications content. The same title also authorized use of tracking devices outside the district of installation, providing a broad definition of “tracking device” subsequently incorporated into Rule 41.
Title II, referred to as the Stored Communications Act, is different. Modeled after the Right to Financial Privacy Act (RFPA) governing law enforcement access to bank records,
The SCA’s only nod to prospective data gathering is section 2703(f), which authorizes the government to require a provider “to preserve records and other evidence in its possession pending the issuance of a court order.”
In sum, as two noted scholars on the ECPA have written, “Congress never intended the Stored Communications Act to
2. Tracking Surveillance Under the ECPA
Separate and apart from the SCA’s text, a familiar principle of statutory construction compels rejection of the government’s surveillance request. As explained above, the SCA is part of a larger statute, the ECPA, and its provisions must be construed in harmony with the rest of that law. Steve Jackson Games, Inc. v. United States Secret Service,
Tracking Device Statute. Similarly here, continuous and contemporaneous monitoring of cell site location data is tantamount to tracking, a form of surveillance Congress separately treated in ECPA.
It might be argued that, in theory, nothing in the SCA prevents an agent from preparing a stack of 2703(d) orders to be served one per hour, day after day, thereby accomplishing the continuous monitoring sought here. Likewise, nothing in the SCA explicitly prohibits an agent from making a similar end run around the Wiretap Act, by lining up a string of § 2708(a) orders for stored emails and serving them seriatim. But, as Professor Kerr has observed, obtaining email content in this way “makes the access the functional equivalent of a wiretap, [and so] should be regulated by the Wiretap Act, not the SCA.”
Smartphone decision. Some courts have resisted the conclusion that the Tracking Device Statute covers prospective tracking by cell site data. While not disputing that a cell phone is a tracking device in fact,
First, Smartphone argues that the phrase “tracking device” had a plain meaning both prior and extrinsic to the enactment of the ECPA in 1986,
Next, the Smartphone court points to subsection (a) of section 3117 discussing the “installation” of a mobile tracking device, and from this lone word infers that “the statute is aimed at devices installed specifically to track someone or something, as opposed to cell phones which, incidental to their intended purpose, can be tracked or traced.”
The term “cell phone” is itself misleading shorthand: many of these devices are in fact minicomputers that also have the capacity to be used as a telephone. They could just as easily be called cameras, video players, rolodexes, calendars, tape recorders, libraries, diaries, albums, televisions, maps, or newspapers.47
Or, just as easily, “the world’s most effective tracking devices.”
Finally, the Smartphone opinion worries that taking the “tracking device” definition literally would lead to warrants in “illogical and unworkable” circumstances, such as bicycle tire tracks in a muddy field, or an automobile taillight, or the transmitter of a pirate radio station. But these examples are not particularly troublesome,
Smartphone does not address these anomalies, nor -the larger question they pose: why, instead of a uniform and coherent legal regime for tracking devices, would Congress prefer a fragmented scheme with varying standards dependent upon the type of technology used? Multiple standards for tracking technologies (most of which rely on radio waves in some form anyway) would seem to accomplish very little for law enforcement,
These considerations compel me to respectfully disagree with my colleague from New York, and to reject the SCA as standalone authority for prospective, continuous, and contemporaneous cell site monitoring. Both in fact and in law, this type of surveillance converts a smartphone into a tracking device, and it is governed by the standards of Rule 41, not the SCA.
3. Hybrid Theory
If the prior analysis is correct, then the SCA is not a proper vehicle to compel continuous disclosure of any type of records, including cell site data. In other cases, the government has argued, with limited success, that cell site data is a special category of business records, accessible by a unique combination of statutory authorities. This “hybrid theory” posits that a 1994 law (CALEA)
Unlike the Western Front commanders of a century ago, I will resist the temptation to launch yet another sortie over the same ground slogged by these competing opinions. Instead, a short summary of the main unanswered questions for the hybrid theory will suffice:
• Paternity. If the SCA and the Pen/ Trap Statute were indeed the parents of a new form of surveillance, why don’t they seem to know each other? Neither statute mentions such a symbiotic relationship with the other, nor do their respective legislative histories hint at such a pairing.
• Birthday. Even if these statutes had a covert one-night stand, when did the rendezvous occur? The relevant statutory provisions were passed at various times over 15 years. On none-of those occasions did anyone in Congress, DOJ, industry, or academia announce (or even notice) that a new breed of electronic surveillance had been spawned.
• Congressional clairvoyance. How did Congress know in 1994, when CALEA was passed, that seven years later the Patriot Act would amend the pen/trap definitions to include signaling information such as cell site dath? Until 2001, the Pen/Trap Statute had covered only phone numbers dialed, not call location information.
• Hidden elephant. Why would Congress by a wink and a nod create an alternative legal regime for an investigative technique — mobile tracking devices— already the subject of a specific statute and established procedures? Justice Sca-lia’s memorable phrase is apt: “Congress, we have held, does not alter the fundamental details of a regulatory scheme in vague terms or ancillary provisions — it does not, one might say, hide elephants in mouse-holes.”
Lacking persuasive responses to questions such as these, the hybrid theory remains a highly implausible adventure in statutory interpretation.
Conclusion
To summarize, even if the Fifth Circuit’s Historical Cell Site holding should survive post -Riley challenges, nothing in that opinion undermines this court’s 2005 ruling that the SCA is not an appropriate vehicle for continuous monitoring of prospective cell phone location data. The same holds true for recent decisions in other districts, like Smartphone. Whether or not cell site data is ultimately held worthy of Fourth Amendment protection, the Tracking Device Statute and Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure have already struck a fair balance between law enforcement and privacy concerns, and that balance is entitled to ungrudging respect by courts and prosecutors.
Notes
. Sealed Application ¶ 20. The full text of this request reads: “For the Target Device, after receipt and storage, records or other information pertaining to subscriber(s) or customer(s), including the means and source of payment for the service and cell site information, provided to the United States on a continuous basis contemporaneous with (a) the origination of a call from the Target Device or the answer of a call to the Target Device, (b) the termination of the call and (c) if reasonably available, during the progress of the call, but not including the contents of the communications. ’'
. The SCA does not generally ’ empower the government to require providers to create documents. See In re Application,
. Presumably the monitoring would be coextensive with the 60-day pen register accompanying this request. See In re Sealing and Non-Disclosure of Pen/Trap/2703(d) Orders,
. In re Application,
. 18 U.S.C. § 3117.
. For a summary of reported cell site decisions as of June 2010, see ECPA Reform and the Revolution in Location Based Technologies and Services: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties of the H. Comm, on the Judiciary, 111th Cong. 93 (2010), available at ssrn.com/abstract=2173529.
. See e.g., In re Application,
. See e.g., United States v. Espudo,
. Since that time, two significant cell phone-related decisions have been handed down: Riley v. California, - U.S. -,
.
.Id. at 604. None of the parties before the Fifth Circuit contested the categorization of cell site data as "a record or other information pertaining to a customer or subscriber” within the meaning of the SCA. Nor was the issue raised or decided by the lower court, which confined itself to the constitutional question. In re Application of United States for Historical Cell Site Data,
.
. Strictly speaking, the term "prospective record” is an oxymoron, because there is no such thing as a record of a future event, at least in ordinary experience. Cf. Back to the Future (Universal Pictures 1985). Nevertheless, it will be used here as a convenient shorthand to distinguish those records from the historical records covered by the Fifth Circuit's decision.
. Orenstein,
. Id.
. United States v. Espudo,
. See United States v. Booker,
.As the poet says, the present is a moving finger that "writes, and having writ, moves on.” Edward Fitzgerald, The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam 71 (William Henry Martin & Sandra Mason, 4th ed. 1879). See also Tennessee Williams, The Glass Menagerie 96 (New Directions 2011) ("The future becomes the present, the present the past.”); cf. William Faulkner, Requiem for a Nun 73 (Vintage Books 1950) ("The past is never dead. It’s not even past.”).
. Berger v. New York,
. See e.g., United States v. Cuevas-Sanchez,
. Susan Freiwald, Online Surveillance: Remembering the Lessons of the Wiretap Act, 56 Ala. L. Rev. 9, 18-19 (2004).
. See In re Application,
. Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(e)(1)(A) imposes a limited duty to supplement discovery responses only "if the party-learns that in some material respect the disclosure or response is incomplete or incorrect.” See Reed v. Iowa Marine and Repair Corp.,
. Some cases freely concede that the SCA by itself imposes no such obligation, but attempt to derive such an obligation by reading the SCA in combination with the Pen Register Statute, which does authorize prospective surveillance. See e.g. In re Application,
. See Fed. R.Crim. P 41(a)(2)(E) ("'Tracking device' has the same meaning set out in 18 U.S.C. 3117.”). This definition was part of a 2006 amendment to specify procedures for issuing tracking device warrants.
. S.Rep. No. 99-541, at 3 (1986), 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3555, 3557.
. See Susan Freiwald & Sylvain Metille, Reforming Surveillance Law: The Swiss Model, 28 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 1261, 1322-24 (2013) (contrasting the RFPA with Swiss law, which does permit real-time surveillance of bank transactions).
. 18 U.S.C. 2703(f).
. In re Application,
. Brief for Center for Democracy and Technology et al., Amicus Curiae Supporting Appellants, United States v. Councilman,
.
. 18 U.S.C. § 3117.
. See H.R. 3378, 99th Cong., 1st Sess., Title II, § 201. The proposed bill would have required probable cause for a tracking device order, and reasonable cause for a pen register. Legislative history suggests that these tracking devices provisions were later removed due to uncertainty over the proper constitutional standard for tracking device •warrants after U.S. v. Karo,
. This definition was a shorter version of that originally proposed in H.R. 3378, which read: "an electronic or mechanical device which permits the tracking of the movement of a person or object in circumstances in which there exists a reasonable expectation of privacy with respect to such tracking.” H.R. 3378, 99th Cong. § 205 (1985) (emphasis added).
. Fed.R.Crim.P. 41(d)(1), (e)(2)(C), (f)(2). The Advisory Committee Notes observed that the 2006 amendments did not resolve the constitutional issue of the showing required for a tracking warrant, which was left open in Karo. The rule simply provides that the magistrate judge must issue the warrant if probable cause is shown, and takes no position whether something less than probable cause would suffice. 'This court has found no case grant
. Orin Kerr, A User’s Guide to the Stored Communications Act, and A Legislator’s Guide to Amending It, 72 Geo. Wash. L.Rev. 1208, 1232-33 (2004).
. Id. at 1233.
. One prominent investigative journalist on the technology/privacy beat has described cell phones as "the world's most effective tracking devices, even when they are turned off.” Julia Angwin, Dragnet Nation 141 (2014).
. 18 U.S.C. § 3117(b); Fed.R.Crim.P. 41(a)(2)(E).
.
. S. Rep. 99-541, at 10 (1986), 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 3557. For a discussion of the evolution in tracking technology, see United States v. Katzin,
. See 2A N. Singer & S. Singer, Statutes and Statutory Construction § 45.8 at 53 (7th ed.2014) (noting that popular or received meaning of words in statute may be consulted only "in the absence of a statutory definition'’).
. United States v. Ramirez,
. Electronic Communications Privacy Act: Hearing on H.R. 3378 Before Subcomm. on Courts, Civil Liberties, and Admin, of Justice of the H. Comm, on the Judiciary, 99th Cong. Hearing on HR 3378, 99th Cong. 99 (1985). (statement of John W. Stanton, Chairman, Telelocator Network of America, and Executive Vice President, McCaw Communications Co., Inc.).
.
. The Pen/Trap Statute repeatedly uses the same word, even though the modem pen register is installed electronically rather than physically. 18 U.S.C. §§ 3121-3125; see also Susan Freiwald, Uncertain Privacy: Communication Attributes After the Digital Telephony Act, 69 S. Cal. L. Rev. 949, 982-89 (1996) (describing the evolution of the pen register from mechanical device to computer system).
. Riley v. California,- U.S. -,
. See supra note 38.
. A bicycle wheel rut may provide evidence that something has passed, but it is no more a "mechanical or electronic device" than a footprint or the wake of a ship. A bicycle and a taillight may be devices, but neither intrinsi
. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 41(a)(2)(E) (" 'Tracking device’ has the meaning set out in 18 U.S.C. § 3117(b).”).
. In this district the government's practice is to invoke at least three different legal mechanisms to track a target: a SCA 2703(d) order for tracking a cell phone by single tower cell data; a "precise location” warrant based on probable , cause for tracking a cell phone's precise location by GPS or triangulation; and a Rule 41 tracking warrant for GPS tracking by device other than a cell phone.
. Communications Assistance to Law Enforcement Act, 47 U.S.C. § 1002(a)(2).
.
. See supra note 6.
. See e.g., In re Application,
. 18 U.S.C. § 2702(a)(3) ("Except as provided in subsection (b) or (c), ... a provider of remote computing service or electronic communications service to the public shall not knowingly divulge a record or other information pertaining to a subscriber or customer of such service ... to any governmental entity-”).
. 18 U.S.C. § 2702(c)(1)—(6). Significantly, the prohibition on divulging customer records was first added to the SCA in 2001, the same time the pen/trap definitions were expanded to include "dialing, routing, addressing, and signaling information.” 18 U.S.C. § 3127.
.
. Id. at 835.
.
. Whitman v. Am. Trucking Ass’n,
