¶ 1. David D. Ramage appeals a judgment entered on pleas permitted by
North Carolina v. Alford,
*486 I.
¶ 2. The facts here are essentially not disputed. At the beginning of the evidentiary hearing on Ramage's motion to suppress the child-pornography images, he and his lawyer agreed that:
• On April 21, 2005, he was living with Sarah Folger.
• He owned the computers seized and searched by the police.
• "[H]е would occasionally allow [Folger] to use both of those computers, and that both computers did not have a password that was needed in order to use them and she would not have to sign in with a password."
This was confirmed by a Milwaukee police detective, who was the only person to testify at the suppression hearing. The detective told the circuit court thаt he went to the Ramage/Folger apartment on April 21 because he had been asked to go there by a man who was tutoring Folger to help her get a "GED" as part of a social-service agency's program. 3 The tutor was at the Ramage/Folger apartment when the detective arrived. The detective surmised that Folger was around twenty-three years old at thе time.
¶ 3. There were two computers in the apartment — a laptop in Ramage's bedroom, and a desktop computer in the living room, which was the apartment's common area. Folger had her own bedroom in the apartment. She told the detective that she was *487 allowed to use both computers. She also told him "that the computer might contain some sexual stories and possible child pornography." She said, however, that she had not seen any child-pornography images on either computer.
¶ 4. Ramage does not dispute that Folger gave the detective permission to look at the computers, and she signed a mostly pre-printed consent form, which, as material, authorized the detective "or any law enforсement officer, to conduct a complete search of... [m]y premises, and all property found therein, located at [the apartment's address] [and] [m]y personal computer(s), electronic storage devices, peripheral data storage devices, manuals, books and any other related materials to include an examination of any dаta stored." The detective testified that Folger and her tutor went into Ramage's bedroom to get the laptop, which had a broken screen. The detective took the computers to the police department where law-enforcement personnel discovered the child pornography. 4 The police did not have a search warrant, either аt the Ramage/Folger apartment or when they later accessed the computers.
¶ 5. Ramage was out of town on April 21, and, according to the detective, Folger was "concern[ed] . . . that David Ramage would find out that the police were *488 called and she wanted to make sure that he was not aware that any of the computers were accessеd, so that was her primary concern and her request was that it be returned prior to his arrival back to the residence that subsequent week." 5 Ramage returned in the early morning of April 26 and was arrested shortly after noon on that day outside of his apartment building.
¶ 6. As we have seen, the circuit court denied Ramage's motion to suppress the child-pornography images discovеred when the police examined his computers. It ruled that since the computers were not protected by a password and Folger had free access to them, she was able to consent to their search and seizure. Although Ramage concedes on appeal that, as phrased by his main brief on this appeal, "Folger gave voluntary consent, and that she could legally consent to a search of the apartment and personal property therein," he contends that she could not consent to the detective taking the computers to the police department, and, also, that the subsequent search of those computers for child pornography was unlawful because the police did not have a search warrant authorizing that search. As we discuss below, we disagree.
II.
¶ 7. As noted, the police did not have a search warrant when the detective took Ramage's computers to the police department, and the police did not have a
*489
search warrant when they found child-pornography images on the computers. The law is settled that undеr the Fourth Amendment "[w]arrantless searches are 'per se' unreasonable and are subject to only a few limited exceptions."
State v. Kieffer,
¶ 8. The key decision on which Ramage relies is
People v. Blair,
¶ 9. In holding that the detectives had violated the Fourth Amendment by taking the computer from Blair's house,
Blair
reasoned that irrespective of whether the father's consent to search the house permitted the deputies to turn on the computer, they did not have the right to take the computer out of the house because the son was the computer's sole owner and its contraband nature was not immediately apparent.
Id.,
¶ 10. Although it is true that the Fourth Amendment protects both "privacy" and "property" from unlawful government intrusion,
Soldal v. Cook County,
¶ 11. Significantly, however,
Soldal
also specifically rеcognized that a valid consent permits a lawful Fourth-Amendment seizure.
Id.,
¶ 12. As
Matlock
notes, enforcement of a valid third-party consent stems from the property owner's relinquishment of his or her Fourth Amendment right to privacy in the property by virtue of the third party's relationship with the property and the owner: "The authority which justifies the third-party consent does not rest upon the law of property, with its attendant historical and legal refinements."
Matlock,
¶ 13. As we have seen, Folger specifically gave the detective the right to "conduct a complete search of. . . [m]y premises, and all property found therein, located at" thе Ramage/Folger apartment. Further, Folger also permitted the detective to take the computers away for further analysis as long as they were "returned prior to [Ramage's] arrival back to the residence that subsequent week." Folger's agreement that the detective could take the computers out of the apartment so they could be subject to what the pre-printed form referred to as a "complete search," and what the detective *493 testified was "further analysis" gave the detective the right under the Fourth Amendment to do what he did.
¶ 14. As an alternative contention in support of his argument that the trial court erred in not suppressing evidence of the child-pornography images, Ramage asserts "that even if the seizure were justified, the police could not search the computers without a warrant." This contention, however, ignores that Folger, as we have seen, gave the police permission to access the computers. Indeed, Ramage recognizes, as phrased by his reply brief on this appeal, that under the scope of Folger's consent, the deteсtive "could have turned on the computers" in the apartment.
6
In any event, as the circuit court observed, this case is similar to
State v.
Petrone,
¶ 15. In
Petrone,
police got search warrants for "all camera, film, or photographic equipment used in the taking, processing and development of photographic pictures, involving nude and partially nude female juveniles."
Id.,
¶ 16. Ramage contends, however, that insofar as
Petrone
is read to not require a search warrant to access his computers outside of the apartment, the decision is at odds with
Walter v. United States,
¶ 17. In
Walter,
films were mis-delivered by a private carrier to a company that called the Federal Bureau of Investigation because the films' packaging revealed that the films might have been obscene.
Id.,
447 U.S at 651-652. The FBI screened the films without first getting a sеarch warrant.
Id.,
447 U.S at 652. In reversing the denial of a motion to suppress evidence of the films,
Walter,
in an opinion by Justice John Paul Stevens announcing the Court's judgment andjoined-in by Justice Potter Stewart, ruled that even though the "FBI agents were lawfully in possession of the boxes of film," "the unauthorized exhibition of the films constituted an unreasonable invasion of their owner's constitutionally protected interest in privacy. It was a search;
*495
there was no warrant; the owner had not consented; and there were no exigent circumstances."
Id.,
447 U.S at 654.
7
Here, of course, there was a valid third-party "consent" — Folger's agreement that the detective could remove the computers from her apartment and, as phrased by the written consent form, "conduct a complete search of... all property found" in the apartment.
Walter
is not on point. Neither is
United States v. Carey,
¶ 18. In
Carey,
the defendant consented to a warrantless search of his apartment for illegal drugs and related material.
Id.,
By the Court. — Judgment and order affirmed.
Notes
The Honorable Jeffrey A. Wagner presided over the suppression and plea hearings, and the Honorable M. Joseph Donald presided over the final sentencing and the postconviction proceedings.
A person may appeal an order denying a motion to suppress even though that person has accepted conviction. Wis. Stat. § 971.31(10).
"GED" is the acronym for "general educational diploma" or general high-school "equivalency diploma."
See State ex rel. Saenz v. Husz,
The Record is not clear whether the detective took both or just one of the computers. The transcript of his testimony at the suppression hearing has him using the singular by saying that he "took the computer to the Milwaukee Police Department and an examination revealed child pornography." As we noted in the main body of this opinion, however, the criminal complaint refers to two computers on which the child-pornography images were found. It is immaterial to our analysis whether the detective took, and the department examined, one or two computers.
The transcript's use of the singular "it" in the sentence fragment "that it be returned" also makes the Record unclear. As noted in the preceding footnote, however, it is not material to our analysis whether the detective took, and the department examined, one or two computers.
As we have noted, the screen on the laptop was broken.
Justice Thurgood Marshall joined in the Court's judgment withоut either joining in Justice Stevens's opinion or by writing a separate concurring opinion.
Walter v. United States,
