¶1 Thе state appeals the trial court's suppression of evidence taken from Bryan Lietzau's cell phone, arguing the court erred in denying its request to present testimony from Lietzau's probation officer at the suppression hearing and in granting Lietzau's motion to suppress. For the following reasons, we reverse and remand.
¶2 "We discuss only those facts relevant to the suppression ruling challenged on apрeal," State v. Navarro ,
¶3 In August 2014, Lietzau was placed on probation for aggravated harassment. In accordance with the terms of his written conditions of supervised probation, Lietzau agreed to submit to "search and seizure of person and property" by the Adult Probation Department "without a search warrant." He also agreed to grant safe access to his residence and property, submit to searches and seizures of "person and property by any probation officer," and provide probation officers with truthful answers to inquiries.
¶4 In early December 2014, a woman contacted Lietzau's probation officer to report "an inappropriate relationship" she believed Lietzau was having with her thirteen-year-old daughter, S.E. A few weeks later, a probation surveillance officer arrested Lietzau for violating conditions of his probation based on his failure to provide access to his residence, participate in counseling programs, comply with drug testing, and perform community restitution. On the way to the jail, the surveillance officer examined Lietzau's cell phone and saw numerous text messages between Lietzau and S.E. The probation department reported these findings to the Tucson Police Department ("TPD"); a police detective then obtained a search warrant
¶5 Lietzau filed a motion to suppress all evidence gleaned from his cell phone, citing Riley v. California ,
Discussion
¶6 The state contends the trial court erred by suppressing the cell phone evidence because the surveillance officer's examination of Lietzau's phone "was reasonable," and therefore "constitutional" under Adair . It also suggests the search was consensual pursuant to Lietzau's conditions of probation, in which he "agreed and acknowledged" that his personal property could be searched without
¶7 The United States and Arizona Constitutions protect against unreasonable searches and seizures, U.S. Const. amend. IV ; Ariz. Const. art. II, § 8, and a search conducted without a warrant is presumed unreasonable, absent certain exceptions to this rule, State v. Gant ,
¶8 Here, the trial court considered Riley because the surveillance officer searched Lietzau's cell phone a short time after arresting him for probation violations, but correctly noted that Riley did not "deal with the issue of when someone's on probation, and they've agreed to allow the Probation Department to search their property." The court then considered United States v. Lara , a Ninth Circuit case reversing the denial of a suppression motion based on a warrantless and suspicionless search of a probationer's cell phone, in part because his terms of probation did not clearly encompass such a search.
Probationary Search
¶9 Our supreme court has held that when a defendant is on probation, "his expectations of privacy are less than those of other citizens not so categorized." State v. Montgomery ,
the nature and severity of the probationer's prior conviction(s) for which he is onprobation; the contеnt and scope of the probation conditions; the nature and severity of the suspected criminal offenses or probation violations giving rise to the search; whether the suspected crimes or violations are the same as or similar to the crimes of which the probationer was previously convicted; and the nature, source, and plausibility of any extraneous information supporting the searсh.
¶10 At the outset, we note that the facts of Lietzau's case may be viewed as falling somewhere on a spectrum between Lara , to the extent that case may be persuasive, and Adair , the binding precedent of our supreme court. As in Lara , the search here involved a cell phone and its data, for which the Supreme Court has afforded heightened protection. See Riley ,
¶11 Looking to Adair , however, Lietzau was under active probation supervision and subject to a valid, enforceable condition of his probation expressly authorizing warrantless searches by probation officers. Adair ,
Application of Adair
¶12 First, Lietzau was on felony probatiоn, and his probation officer had been contacted by an identified individual whose only motivation was that of a mother concerned for her child's safety. She specifically named Lietzau, obviously known to her as a criminal offender, and indicated she had reason to believe he was inappropriately involved with her thirteen-year-old daughter. Indeed, she contacted the probation department on more than one occasion, including the arresting surveillance officer, to voice her fears. The probation department thus had a well-founded, non-arbitrary reason to suspect Lietzau of committing another felony while on probation, rather than "[m]ere speculation," as urged by Lietzau. While Lietzau asserts the probation department "had no information to indicate that the inapрropriate nature of that relationship was criminal or otherwise violated [his] conditions of probation," it is well established that reasonable suspicion is not negated by possibilities of innocent conduct. See State v. Evans ,
¶13 Although there was no testimony about the arresting officer's motivation in searching Lietzau's phone after the trial court declined to hear the state's probation department witness, and Lietzau argues the
¶14 Second, cell phones are "ubiquitous" repositories of communications and photos "for a variety of purposes," State v. Tucker ,
¶15 Third, although the court in Lara determined that "property" does not "unambiguously include cell phone data" when read with specifically enumerated categories of property in defendant Lara's terms of probation, that particular scenario does not exist here.
¶16 Because, unlike in Lara , the search of Lietzau's cell phone was supported by reasonable suspicion that he was committing a new offense, we disagree with the trial court's conclusion that the search was not conducted for the proper purpose of determining his compliance with probation conditions. Adair ,
Trial Court's Findings
¶17 We lastly address Lietzau's assertions that "the [s]tate failed to present any evidence" that the search was conducted for a proper probationary purpose, and "the trial court's faсtual findings were fully supported by the evidence." The court's only factual findings, however, related to the way the search occurred, which was not disputed. In fact, the court concluded that the search had been conducted in the "proper manner." And after repeatedly denying the state's requests to introduce testimony, the court said it did not "need any" and went on to focus solely on the allegations underlying Liеtzau's arrest. As noted earlier, the court proceeded to discuss case law, primarily Lara and Adair , and then concluded that the search had "violated [Lietzau's] constitutional rights," in large part because it found the search arbitrary for being unrelated to the underlying probation violations he was charged with. As already discussed, however, this conclusion was erroneous. Further, we are aware of no basis or authority, аnd Lietzau identifies none, holding that a probationary search is limited to the confirmation of known or charged probation violations.
¶18 Indeed, not even founded suspicion for a known or suspected violation of probation is required if the search of a probationer's home that would otherwise raise Fourth Amendment prohibitions is reasonable under the totality of the circumstances. Adair ,
Conclusion
¶19 Under the tоtality of the circumstances, including Lietzau's significantly diminished privacy rights as a probationer, his acceptance of search conditions when he agreed to probation which arguably included his cell phone, the probation department's well-grounded suspicion that Lietzau might be involved in a serious offense with an adolescent child, and the well-known use of cell phones as an aid in committing sexual offenses against children, it cannot be said the officer's search of Lietzau's cell phone was unreasonable. See Adair ,
¶20 Because we have determined the probationary search here was lawful on the specific facts involved, we reverse the trial court's order granting Lietzau's motion to suppress and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
Notes
At the hearing, the state repeatedly asked that Lietzau's probation officer be permitted to testify, but the trial court declined its request, stating it had read the parties' "responses," and did not "need any testimony."
The warrant application stated that S.E.'s mother was aware her minor daughter was "possibly sexually active" with an adult, impliedly identified as Lietzau, S.E. had told a doctor she had been sexually active with a twenty-one-year-old male "on previous occasions," and the probation department had informed TPD they had reviewed Lietzau's cell phone and found "information on that phone that pertained to that relationship."
Thus, while Lietzau's probation terms are another factor to consider under Adair , it is not necessary to reach thе issue of whether they constitute an independent waiver of rights regarding his cell phone or electronic data. See Knights ,
Because we reverse on this ground, we need not address the state's additional argument that the trial court erred in not permitting its witness to testify at the evidentiary hearing.
