MEMORANDUM OPINION
Defendant Ali Saboonchi is alleged to have violated Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations (the “ITSR”) promulgated under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (the “IEE-PA”). Previously, Saboonchi moved to suppress the fruits of warrantless forensic searches of his smartphones and flash drive performed under the authority of the border search doctrine after they were seized at the U.S.-Canadian border. Following a hearing on September 23, 2013, I sought supplementary briefing and issued a written opinion denying the motion on April 7, 2014. United States v. Saboonchi,
I. BACKGROUND
Saboonchi and his wife were stopped by United States Customs and Border Protection (“CBP”) agents on March 31, 2012 at the Rainbow Bridge outside of Buffalo, New York when returning from a daytrip to the Canadian side of Niagara Falls. Def.’s Mot. to Suppress Evid. 2, ECF No. 58. Saboonchi and his wife were questioned before eventually being released, but CBP seized several electronic devices with the intent to search them: an Apple i Phone, a Sony Xperia phone, and a Kingston DT101 G2 USB flash, drive (the “Devices”). Id. at 3. The Devices were sent to Baltimore, where Homeland Security Investigations (“HSI”) agents imaged and forensically searched each device using specialized software. See ICE Report of Investigation Continuation (the “ICE Reports”), Defs Mot. to Suppress Ex. A., ECF No 58-1. Saboonchi moved to suppress the fruits of the warrantless searches of the Devices, along with the statements he made to investigators on April 13, 2012. Def.’s Mot. to Suppress 1.
Following an evidentiary hearing, I sought supplemental briefing from the parties. H’rg Tr. 37:10- — 42:25, September 23, 2013, ECF No. 89. On April 7, 2014, I issued a lengthy opinion in which, after a thorough analysis of both the relevant law and realities of modern technology, I held that a forensic search of a computer or electronic device constituted an nonroutine search even when performed at the international border and that such a search must rest on reasonable, particularized suspicion. Saboonchi
II. DISCUSSION
A. Riley v. California
Subsequent to my ruling, the Supreme Court issued Riley v. California, — U.S. -,
In Chimel and Robinson, the Court weighed the strength of the government interests in the search against the diminished, but still existent, expectation of privacy held by an arrestee. Riley,
Riley held unequivocally that digital data is not subject to the warrant exception for searches incident to arrest and that, as a general matter, law enforcement officers must obtain a warrant before searching the contents of an arrestee’s electronic devices. Id. at 2484. But it did not recognize a categorical privilege for electronic data, and expressly noted that “even though the search incident to arrest exception does not apply to cell phones, other case-specific exceptions may still justify a warrantless search of a particular phone,” id. at 2494 (emphasis added), such as the exigent circumstances exception, id. The border search exception is one such case-specific exception.
B. The Border Search Exception Is Unaffected by Riley
As I discussed in my previous opinion, the basis for the border search exception is “[t]he Government’s interest in preventing the entry of unwanted per
Riley expressly declined to address case-specific Fourth Amendment exceptions, but explained, as an example, how the exigent circumstances exception still might apply.
Nonetheless, Defendant argues that “[t]he traditional exception to the warrant requirement for searches occurring at the border has no more application to the search of Mr. Saboonchi’s iPhone than the exception for searches incident to arrest had in Riley.” Defs Mot. 5. This sweeping statement might have merit if the search incident to arrest and border search exceptions had the same purpose, were evaluated the same way, or were treated similarly under the law. But that is not the case. A search incident to arrest involves a defendant with a diminished, but still present, expectation of privacy, and the Supreme Court has found on only one occasion that an arrestee’s expectation of privacy was sufficiently diminished so as to permit the search of containers found on his person. Riley,
That simply is not the case with routine border searches, where container searches are permissible with absolutely no suspicion. “Time and again, [the Supreme Court has] stated that ‘searches made at the border ... are reasonable simply by virtue of the fact that they occur at the border.’ ” Flores-Montano,
C. The Riley Findings Support My Conclusion
The Riley Court rejected the Government’s argument that “a search of all data stored on a cell phone is ‘materially indistinguishable’ from searches of [an arres-tee’s] physical items.” Riley,
Riley involved conventional searches, not forensic searches, and it is without question that the forensic search of Sa-boonchi’s Devices was more invasive than the conventional searches discussed in Riley. But the underlying logic in the two cases is the same. The Supreme Court and I both noted that the sheer quantity of information available on a cell phone makes it unlike other objects to be searched. Riley,
That is why, on the Defendant’s motion, I applied the most restrictive standard that the law has applied at the international border when I considered whether Saboonchi’s Fourth Amendment rights had been violated. Saboonchi,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, Defendant’s Motion to Reconsider will be DENIED.
Notes
. The facts underlying Saboonchi’s motion are detailed in my earlier Memorandum Opinion, United States v. Saboonchi,
