OPINION AND ORDER
Rаul Romero Bulton moves to suppress evidence of post-arrest telephone calls to his cellular telephone. Bulton is charged with conspiracy to traffic in narcotics, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812, 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(A) and 846. Bulton argues that an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) violated his Fourth Anendment rights by answering his cellular telephone, without his consent and without a warrant, when it rang between the time of his arrest and the time of his arraignmеnt. *371 For the reasons stated below, the motion is denied.
I.
The facts relevant to the present motion can be stated briefly. 'Button was arrested on October 7, 1998, at approximately 1 p.m., 1 following a three-month investigation into alleged drug dealing activities. At the time of Bulton’s arrest, the arresting agents searched him and found in his possession a cellular telephone, which they seized as evidence. Thereafter, the agents took Button to FBI headquarters, where they began processing his arrest. While the agents were doing so — at approximately 4 p.m. — Bulton’s cellular telephone rang. Altogether, the telephone rang at least nine times. Each time, without seeking Bulton’s consent and without a warrant, one of the agents answered the telephone. Each time, the person on the other end of the call asked for “Nino,” a name which the government contends was used by Bul-ton in the course of his illegal activitiеs and which appears in drug ledgers that were earlier seized by the government. Later on the day of Bulton’s arrest, the agents inventoried the telephone and placed it in storage. It has not been answered since.
II.
Button does not seek to suppress the cellular telephone itself, conceding that it was lawfully seized incident to his arrest.
Cf. United States v. Hernandez,
Whether a warrant was required to answer Button’s cellular telephone depends, first, on whether Button “can claim a 'justifiable,’ a ‘reasonable,’ or a ‘legitimate expectation of privacy’ that has been invaded by government action.”
Smith v. Maryland,
The courts which have held that a person does not have a legitimate expectation of privacy in calls to his telephone have rested that conclusion on the ground that a person does not have a privacy interest in conversations to which he is not a party.
See, e.g., Sangineto-Miranda,
If valid, this rationale presumably would apply to a cellular telephone as well — at least insofar as the telephone was lawfully in the possession of the government, as it was here. However, this rationale appears to me unpersuasive, because it confuses the privacy interest invaded by a search alоne with the interest in whatever is uncovered by a search. That is to say, asserting that a defendant has no privacy interest in the substance of a conversation between a law enforcement agent and a caller does not resolve whether the defendant has a privacy interest in whether that conversation should occur in the first place. The relevant question is not whether a search necessarily uncovers something of a personal or private nature, but rather whether it might — and whether one must invade a legitimate privacy interest in order even to find out.
Cf. Arizona v. Hicks,
To illustrate the point, consider the fоllowing. A tenant normally gives the landlord a right of access to his apartment, at least in cases of emergency. In the event of a leak, therefore, it would be reasonable' — and lawful — for the landlord to authorize a plumber to enter the apartment in order to fix the leak. The plumber would not be an intruder in the apartment; his presence would be lawful. Notwithstanding the lawfulness of the plumber’s presence, however, he would nоt have license to answer the telephone if it were to ring. If he were to do so without the tenant’s consent, he would be acting unreasonably, and the tenant would be amply justified in complaining. What the tenant would be complaining about is an invasion of his privacy. Changing the facts to make the nonintruder a police officer does not change the analysis or the result. That the officer may have a reasonable investigative purpose in answering the telephone might be relevant to whether the act is ultimately justifiable — an issue treated below — but that is irrelevant to the question of whether the resident has a legitimate privacy interest in his telephone calls. 2
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My conclusion that the government did invade a legitimate privacy interest by answering Bulton’s cellular telephone is further reinforced by reference to another line of cases, involving electronic pagers. In these cases, courts have consistently held that the owner of an electronic pager has a legitimate privacy interest in the numerical codes transmitted to the device, even when the transmissions are received while the pager is in the government’s lawful possession.
See, e.g., United States v. Ortiz,
III.
Because Bulton had a legitimate expectation of privacy in the calls to his cellular telephone, the next inquiry is whether answering his telephone without a warrant violated the Fourth Amendment. Unless some exception to the general warrant requirement applies, the evidence of the calls would have to be suppressed.
The government reasons that nо warrant was necessary for the agent to answer Bulton’s telephone by analogy to cases that allow law enforcement officers to answer the telephone when searching premises pursuant to a search warrant.
See, e.g., Stiver,
In the conventional telephone cases, courts have offered three rationales for admitting evidence of telephone calls.
*374
First, as discussed above, several courts have held that answering a conventional telephone does not implicate a legitimate expectation of privaсy.
See, e.g., Sangineto-Miranda,
I have already rejected the first rationale as meritless. As for the second and third rationales, neither is applicable here. In all of the conventional telephone cases decidеd on these grounds, law enforcement officers were conducting searches of the premises pursuant to valid warrants. In each case, therefore, a neutral magistrate authorized the officers’ intrusion on privacy interests — and, more important for present purposes, set limits on the scope of such intrusion. The warrants, in other words, served to “limit[] the area and duration of the search[es],” thereby “preventing] the pоlice from conducting general searches, or from converting specific warrants into general warrants.”
Horton v. California,
Here, by contrast, there was no limitation on the government’s ability to intrude on Button’s privacy. Unlike the telephone lines in
Stiver, Ordonez
and the other cases cited by the government, the telephone in the present case was not fixed in place on premises that the government was obligated to vacate within a reasonable time. Instead, as a cellular telephone, it functioned even in the government’s possession off the premises' — a possession which continues and could even become permanent.
See
21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(2) (establishing that “equipment of any kind which [is] used ... in delivering, importing, or exporting any controlled substance” is subject to forfeiture). To allow government agents to answer a telephone without a warrant under such circumstances, therefore, would allow just the sort of “indiscriminate searches ... conducted under the authority of ‘general warrants’ ” that
*375
the Framers of the Fourth Amendment sought to prohibit.
Payton v. New York,
To be sure, the agents in the present case inventoried and stored Bulton’s telephone on the day of his arrest, and have not answered it since — thus limiting the duration of whatever privacy intrusion Bulton suffered. But the Fourth Amendment was designed tо prevent citizens’ having to rely on the constable’s good faith for protection of their privacy. Accordingly, the argument for a general exception to the warrant requirement for cellular telephone calls must be rejected.
IV.
My conclusion that answering an arres-tee’s cellular telephone constitutes a search and that, generally speaking, a warrant is required to conduct that search does not, however, dispose of this case. The Fourth Amendment forbids “unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. Although a warrant bears on the reasonableness of a search, in certain limited circumstances a warrant is not required.
See, e.g., New Jersey v. T.L.O.,
On the facts and circumstances presented here, answering Bulton’s cellular telephone was not unreasonable. In fact, it would be unreasonable to hold otherwise- — -that is, to establish a rule that required lаw enforcement agents to obtain a warrant under circumstances like these. In the period following arrest but before arraignment, government agents are obligated to perform myriad tasks, from transporting the arrestee, to helping a prosecutor draw up the complaint, to fingerprinting and otherwise processing the arrestee, to preparing the arrestee for presentation to a magistrate.
Cf. County of Riverside v. McLaughlin,
When it is impracticable for government agents to get a warrant, as in these circumstances, the Fourth Amendment does
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not require those agents to ignore potential evidence that might disappear. To the contrary, when “the delay necessary to obtain a warrant ... threaten[s] ‘the destruction of evidence,’ ” no warrant is required for a search or seizure.
Schmerber v. California,
To be sure, at some point, it would become unreasonable for government agents to continue answering an arrestee’s cellular telephone without obtaining a warrant, notwithstanding the exigent circumstances that would exist each time the telephone rang. Were it otherwise, government agents would be justified in answering an arrestee’s cellular telephone each time it rang ad infinitum, thereby rendering the warrant requirement a requirement in name only. The рoint when continued answering of an arrestee’s cellular telephone without a warrant becomes unreasonable, however, is unlikely to come before arraignment, when the agents are under the burden of preparing the defendant himself for presentation to a magistrate. In short, answering an arrestee’s cellular telephone without a warrant in the period before arraignment — so long as the arraignment itself is not unreasonably delayed — is presumptively reasonable and does not violate the Fourth Amendment.
In the present case, it is undisputed that the agents answered Button’s cellular telephone prior to arraignment. Because Button presents no evidence to rebut the presumption of reasonableness in such circumstances, the agents’ answering the calls without a warrant did not violate the Fourth Amendment, and the evidencе of the calls need not be suppressed.
For the foregoing reasons, Button’s motion to suppress evidence of the post-arrest telephone calls to his cellular telephone is denied.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. There is some dispute about the precise time of Bulton’s arrest. For the purposes of this motion, however, the government accepted Bulton’s assertion that he was arrested at 1 p.m. (See 319/99 Hearing Transcript at 44) I will do the same.
. The plumber example reveаls also that the Fifth, Sixth and Eleventh Circuits may well have overstated the case in declaring that a person does not have any privacy interest in a conversation to which he is not a party. A tenant would be justified in feeling even more violated were he to learn, for example, that the plumber had answered the telephone and
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carried on a conversation with his lover or a business colleague — an invasion of рrivacy that would be made all the worse had the plumber permitted the caller to assume that he was the tenant.
Cf. Passarella,
. In
Sangineto-Miranda, Passarella, Vadino
and
Kane,
unlike here, the defendants challenged the answering of their telephones pursuant to both the Fourth Amendment and Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510-2520. In holding that answering the telephone calls did not violate a legitimate expectation of privacy, it may be that these courts read Fourth Amendment standards as simply coextensive with those of Title III, which explicitly provides that "[i]t shall not be unlawful under this chapter for a person acting under color of law to intercept a wire, oral, or electronic communication, where such person is a party to the communication.” 18 U.S.C. § 251 l(2)(c). The statutory prohibition, however, is not coextensive with the constitutional mandate.
See United States v. Dorfman,
. If Button's cellular telephone had been off at the time of his arrest, the outcome of this case might have bеen different. In United States v. Reyes, 922 F.Supp. 818 (S.D.N.Y.1996), the Court held that when a government agent turns an electronic pager on without a warrant, he may not use the resulting exigent circumstances to justify his search because those circumstances were of his own malting. See id. at 834-36. Nevertheless, because it ' appears that Button’s telephone was on when he was arrested, it is unnecessary for me to decide whether the same rule would apply to cellular telephones.
