UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. JUAN MANUEL SANCHEZ-JARA, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 17-2593
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Argued April 6, 2018 — Decided May 3, 2018
891 F.3d 644
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 15 CR 457 — Jorge L. Alonso, Judge.
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge. Like United States v. Patrick, 842 F.3d 540 (7th Cir. 2016), this appeal concerns the use of a cell-site simulator to locate someone. And like Patrick it does not require us to determine when, if ever, the use of this device must be authorized by a warrant supported by probable cause, for in this case such a warrant was obtained.
Cell-site simulators ... function by transmitting as a cell tower. In response to the signals emitted by the simulator, cellular devices in the proximity of the device identify the simulator as the most attractive cell tower in the area and thus transmit signals to the simulator that identify the device in the same way that they would with a networked tower.
A cell-site simulator receives and uses an industry standard unique identifying number assigned by a device manufacturer or cellular network provider. When used to locate a known cellular device, a cell-site simulator initially receives the unique identifying number from multiple devices in the vicinity of the simulator. Once the cell-site simulator identifies the specific cellular device for which it is looking, it will obtain the signaling information relating only to that particular phone. When used to identify an unknown device, the cell-site simulator obtains signaling information from non-target devices in the target‘s vicinity for the limited purpose of distinguishing the target device.
By transmitting as a cell tower, cell-site simulators acquire the identifying information from cellular devices. This identifying information is limited, however. Cell-site simulators provide only the relative signal strength and general direction of a subject cellular telephone; they do not function as a GPS locator, as they do not obtain or download any location information from the device or its applications. Moreover, cell-site simulators used by the Department must be configured as pen registers, and may not be used to collect the contents of any communication, in accordance with
18 U.S.C. § 3127(3) . This includes any data contained on the phone itself: the simulator does not remotely capture emails, texts, contact lists, images or any other data from the phone. In addition, Department cell-site simulators do not provide subscriber account information (for example, an account holder‘s name, address, or telephone number).
Department of Justice Policy Guidance: Use of Cell-Site Simulator Technology (Sept. 3, 2015) at 2. See also the Wikipedia entry at <en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IMSI-catcher>.
Whether the simulator works this way is potentially important, because the warrant did not authorize the investigators to obtain the contents of any calls, to plumb any phone‘s address book or instant messages, or otherwise to get anything except location and certain metadata, the sorts of things available from pen registers and trap-and-trace devices. To get the contents of calls and messages, the agents would have needed a warrant under the wiretap statutes.
The warrant issued in 2015 was based not on the wiretap statutes but on
To this the United States replies that “reasonable grounds” is just an alternative way to describe probable cause, which under Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213 (1983), means enough to lead a prudent person to think that the search may well reveal evidence of crime. The prosecution also contends that, if there is a difference, something less than probable cause suffices to obtain the sort of information covered by
None of this matters, however, because the warrant not only recites the language of
Nothing in the record of this case suggests that the agents acquired information that would have required a wiretap warrant. Certainly the United States did not propose to use any information about the content of Sanchez-Jara‘s calls or personal data scraped from his cell phone. After the district court denied Sanchez-Jara‘s motion to suppress the location and traffic data, he entered a conditional guilty plea to drug and firearms charges and reserved the right to argue that the search was not supported by a valid warrant. We do not read either his conditional plea or his appellate brief as attempting to present a contention that the agents obtained or used information that would have required a wiretap warrant.
At oral argument counsel for Sanchez-Jara maintained that the warrant authorized a general search. Counsel seems to have meant two things by this: first that agents sought not contraband but evidence of crime, and second that the agents could follow the phones wherever they went. Neither of these is constitutionally problematic. The first theme harks back to the days before Warden v. Hayden, 387 U.S. 294 (1967), disapproved the “mere evidence” doctrine. Hayden
AFFIRMED
