OPINION AND ORDER
This matter is before the Court on the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss or, in the
BACKGROUND
On December 22, 2014, the Defendant filed a Motion to Dismiss or, in the Alternative, to Suppress [ECF No. 22]. On December 24, 2014, the Government filed a Response [ECF No. 23] indicating that an evidentiary hearing would be necessary, and the Defendant agreed in his Reply [ECF No. 24], filed on January 6, 2015. The Court conducted an evidentiary hearing on February 11, 2015, in which the Court heard the testimony of several witnesses and several exhibits were admitted into the record. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Court took the Motion under advisement and gave the parties additional time to file briefs. The Defendant filed a Brief in Support of His Motion to Dismiss, or in the Alternative, to Suppress [ECF No. 29] on April 8 2015, and requests that the Court suppress all evidence in this case and dismiss the indictment. The Government filed its Response [ECF No. 30] on May 22, 2015. The Defendant filed his Reply [ECF No. 31] on June 2, 2015. The matter is now fully briefed and ripe for ruling.
FINDINGS OF FACT
The Court makes the following findings of fact based upon the evidence and testimony presented during the evidentiary hearing conducted on February 11, 2015.
In September of 2014, the Defendant resided in a one-story home comprised of two rooms with a kitchen and a basement located at 6174 West Noe Street, Kimmel, Indiana. Railroad tracks run along the back of the property about twenty feet from the house, and the property also included a barn and a short driveway.
The Defendant was under investigation as a potential supplier of crystal methamphetamine in the Noble County, Indiana, area, and Task Force Officer (TFO) Sean Lundy of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) was the lead investigator in the case. On September 4, 2014, TFO Lundy obtained and. served a state search warrant of the Defendant’s residence that led to the discovery of approximately one ounce of methamphetamine, a fentanyl patch, scales, lidocaine, loaded syringes, and approximately $62,000.00 in cash. Pri- or to obtaining the warrant, TFO Lundy consulted with Michigan ■ police officers who provided information about an individual making two trips to the Defendant’s residence and returning with methamphetamine. In particular, Michigan authorities had previously sought and obtained a search warrant, including the installation and monitoring of a global positioning system (GPS) tracking device on a 1998 Ford Crown Victoria with a particular license plate that was registered to owners Mark Allen Holst (“Holst”) and Ray Lynn-Ni-kole Hollister (“Hollister”), residents of White Pigeon, Michigan. The GPS unit included a satellite radio receiver that would periodically record, store, and upload location data to the Internet. A state magistrate in Michigan authorized the search warrant for the installation, mainte
After speaking with Michigan authorities, TFO Lundy prepared an affidavit in support of his request for the previously mentioned state search warrant for the Defendant’s residence. TFO Lundy described the property to be searched and discussed an interview with a cooperating ■witness who knew of hn individual who routinely traveled' to the Defendant’s residence to pick up “ice,” or methamph’et-amine. TFO -Lundy then discussed the information he obtained from his conversar tion with Michigan authorities, which included information from a Michigan informant and GPS ■ about two trips to the Defendant’s residence. Michigan authorities stated that the informant provided reliable information in the past, resulting in the seizure of two pounds of methamphetamine, as well as information concerning the activity of Holst. On August -30, 2014, the GPS information from Holst’s car indicated that the car arrived at the Defendant’s residence at approximately 12:48 PM and stayed for about 30 minutes before returning to Michigan. The informant told Michigan -authorities that he knew Holst' had - driven to Kimmell, Indiana and returned to Michigan with methamphetamine. Holst’s car was tracked again on September 4, 2014, this time with real-time GPS tracking. The car arrived at the Defendant’s residence at approximately 12:10 PM and stayed for approximately 1 hour and 22 minutes before returning to Michigan. Michigan authorities tracked the car, noting that it made no significant stops, and eventually stopped. the car and executed a search warrant upon its return to Michigan. Officers found Holst to be the driver and discovered four ounces of methamphetamine in the Car.
Shortly before the search warrant for the Defendant’s residence was obtained, a surveillance officer - observed the Defendant at his residence walking from the house to the outbuilding. The Defendant did not own the tracked vehicle, nor was it registered to the Defendant, and TFO Lundy understood the tracking of the vehicle to be lawful within Indiana based upon the Michigan warrant.
' ANALYSIS
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution guarantees the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. The exclusionary rule is a judicially-created sanction “that bars the prosecution from introducing evidence obtained by way of a Fourth Amendment violation.” Davis v. United States,
At the risk- of belaboring the obvious, private residences are places in which the individual normally expects privacy free of governmental intrusion not authorized by a-warrant, and that expectation is plainly one that society is pre*971 pared to recognize as justifiable. Our cases have not deviated from this basic -Fourth Amendment principle. Searches and seizures inside a home without a warrant are presumptively unreasonable absent exigent circumstances.
Id. at 714-15,
■ The Defendant argues that the sole basis for the search warrant for his home was a prior, warrantless search of his property by electronic means, accomplished by the GPS device attached to Holst’s vehicle. According to the Defendant, the GPS device was used to monitor who was inside the Defendant’s home and the duration of their stay, and that the “Government needed a warrant to electronically monitor the comings and goings from [the Defendant’s] home.” Reply 1, ECF No. 31. The Defendant claims that use of an electronic device, without a warrant, to determine whether a person was in the Defendant’s home at a particular time was an illegal search in violation of the Fourth Amendment and that this im-' properly acquired information, used to connect the Defendant to the subsequently discovered methamphetamine in Holst’s vehicle, provided the sole basis for the search warrant of his home. The Defendant argues that all subsequent evidence in this case was obtained as a direct result of this initial illegal electronic search, and thus requires the suppression of all the evidence in this ease and the dismissal of the indictment pursuant to the fruit of the poisonous tree.-doctrine. Reply 2, ECF No. 31 (citing Segura v. United States,
The Government argues that the Defendant has hot demonstrated that a warrant-less search occurred on his property and that the Defendant lacks standing to challenge the Michigan warrant or the tracking of another person’s vehicle on public roads and within public view.
•First, the Defendant, argues that the GPS device need not physically enter the home to constitute a search. Reply 3, ECF No. 31 (citing Katz,
Both parties compare and contrast the facts of this case with Supreme Court precedent concerning Fourth Amendment challenges to electronic monitoring via “beepers,” another form of electronic tracking devices. In the first case, United States v. Knotts,
The second beeper case, United States v. Karo,
The Defendant argues that the GPS was used to monitor who was inside the Defendant’s home and the duration of their stay, arguing that, pursuant to Karo,
The Court disagrees with the Defendant’s interpretation of Karo and finds that there was no infringement of the Defendant’s Fourth Amendment privacy interests in his home. The Defendant argues that this case is distinguishable from the limited use of the beeper in Knotts because the GPS device, which was monitored continuously, determined who was in his house and the duration of their stay, thereby providing information about the inside of the Defendant’s house without a warrant. However, the “critical fact” by which the Court found a violation in Karo, and distinguished it from Knotts, was that the Government obtained information about the inside of a home — namely, whether a particular article or person were inside at a particular time — through use of an electronic device “that it could not have obtained by observation from outside the curtilage of the house.” Karo,
Here, all of the information obtained by the Government through the electronic monitoring of the GPS device could have been visually verified and obtained without a warrant. The monitoring of the GPS device in this case indicated the location of the car and the duration of the car’s stay at the Defendant’s address. Standing alone, this information does not reveal who was in the home, what activities may have occurred there, or even how long individuals may have been in the home. The Court cannot agree with the Defendant’s assertion that “the Government used war-rantless electronic monitoring to determine whether a particular person was in [the Defendant’s] home at a particular time.” Reply 5. First, the police did not discover that Holst was the driver of the ear until they executed the stop and search warrant of the car when it returned to Michigan from the second trip. The GPS device can only provide information about the location of the car and not the identity of the driver — or other occupants, if any— in the car. Second, the fact that the car arrived at the Defendant’s address says nothing beyond that fact. Did the driver go in the house, or the barn, or stand outside in the yard, or walk across the street to a different address altogether, or even exit the car? One could infer that the driver made the trip for some purpose, and hence did exit the car, but at the moment the GPS fails to provide additional information. Cf. Kyllo,
Likewise, although the Court noted in Karo that “the beeper was monitored for a significant period of time after [its] arrival” inside the house, the length of time that the car — and thus the GPS device— were at the Defendant’s residence reveals nothing about “the interior of the premises that the Government .,. could not have
In addition to the GPS device’s inability to obtain any information about the interi- or of the Defendant’s house, negating any allegéd “search” of the house, the Government argues that the GPS was on the car pursuant to a valid warrant, negating any alleged “warrantless” accusations. However, the pivotal issue in this case is not the existence of a warrant for the GPS device, which the Defendant makes clear he does not challenge, but rather whether the Defendant satisfies his burden to prove that there was a search of his house. See United States v. Scott,
The Court finds that monitoring of the GPS device, including the duration the car was parked at the Defendant’s address, was not a search of the Defendant’s house. Hence, the Defendant’s Fourth Amendment privacy interests were not infringed.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss or, in the. Alternative, .to Suppress [ECF No. 22] is DENIED. , .
Notes
. The Defendant makes clear that he is not challenging the search of Holst's car or the warrant for the GPS device. Rather, he is challenging what he contends was a' warrant-less search of his home by electronic means. A defendant has standing to challenge a war-rantless search if he has a "legitimate expectation of privacy” in the property that was searched. See Rakas v. Illinois,
