MEMORANDUM
I. Factual Background
A. Facts Relating to the Charge of Armed Bank Robbery
On January 4, 2010, at approximately 12:24 p.m., two white males robbed a Bank of America branch(“Bank”) located in Waltham, Massachusetts. Gov’t Jan. 22 Aff. ¶ 5. Both robbers wore ski masks, dark-colored hooded sweatshirts, and brandished what appeared to be handguns. Id. The robbers approached tellers, demanded money, and fled with approximately $10,676.00 in U.S. currency. Id. A witness outside the bank observed the robbers enter a red sports utility vehicle and flee the area. Id.
Meanwhile, on this same day, approximately ten minutes earlier (at around 12:15 p.m.) Special Agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) initiated surveillance on a black Chrysler which was parked on a public street in Waltham. Id. ¶ 6. The vehicle was registered to the defendant Craig Sрarks’s mother, but was primarily used by Sparks himself. Id. The vehicle was located through a Global Positioning System (“GPS”) device that had previously been affixed to the external undercarriage of the vehicle. 1 At the time the Agents initiated surveillance, the engine of the vehicle was running but no one was in, or near, *386 the vehicle. Id. The vehicle was parked roughly two blocks away from the Bank. Id.
Approximately ten minutes after surveillance of the Chrysler was initiated, Agents found themselves in the most fortuitous of positions — they observed a red Jeep Cherokee approach at a high rate of speed and pull into a driveway across from the Chrysler. They watched two individuals wearing dark-colored hooded sweatshirts get out of the Jeep, run across the street, enter the Chrysler, and drive off. Id. One of the individuals was carrying a dark-colored bag. Id.
After observing the switch from “getaway car” to “clean car,” and learning of the bank robbery several minutes later, the investigators attempted to follow the Chrysler but lost visual contact shortly after it drove away. Id. ¶ 8. Using the GPS, visual surveillance of the Chrysler was reacquired on northbound Interstate 95. Id. Shortly thereafter, a Massachusetts State Police cruiser initiated a traffic stop of the vehicle with FBI agents directly behind. Id. As the Chrysler entered the breakdown lane the driver slammed on the brakes and drove the vehicle into a ditch alongside Interstate 95. Id. Two white males jumped from the Chrysler and fled into the woods along the Interstate. Id. Special Agents pursued the men but the suspects evaded immediate capture. Id. A number of state, local, and federal law enforcement officers joined the search. Id.
In the snowy woods through which the two men had fled, investigators found $1,381 in United States currency and a backpack containing clothing, including two hooded sweatshirts. Id. ¶ 11. One suspect, identified as Benjamin Michaud, was apprehended sometime after 1:00 p.m. in Lincoln, Massachusetts with $9,284 in United States currency wrapped in money bands from the bank where the robbery had occurred. 2 Id. ¶ 9.
During a safety sweep of the abandoned Chrysler, two BB guns, which looked like the weapons used in the bank robbery, were located on the floor of the front passenger seat. Id. ¶ 12. After obtaining a search warrant, investigators impounded and thoroughly searched the Chrysler. They fоund, inter alia, footwear consistent in appearance with those worn by the robbers, a cell phone with the battery removed, a knife, a dagger, two white gloves turned inside out as if they had been worn and removed, a screwdriver, and Sparks’s wallet, containing several pieces of his identification. Id. ¶ 12-13.
Investigators also examined information from the GPS device that was affixed to the vehicle. Id. ¶ 14. The GPS data indicated that the Chrysler was in the area of Sparks’s apartment on the morning of January 4, 2010; that the Chrysler traveled to Charlestown, Massachusetts and moved around to various locations in Charlestown for approximately 30 minutes; 3 and that the vehicle then traveled to Waltham, ending up on the street where Agents initially observed it. Id.
Based оn the above evidence, and more, the defendant Sparks was arrested for the bank robbery on February 16, 2010, in Maine, and transferred to Massachusetts on February 23, 2010.
B. Facts Relating to the Global Positioning System
The GPS device was able to provide information as to its location in “real time” *387 and to record its location as the Chrysler moved from place to place. Gov’t Sept. 16 Aff. ¶ 3. It did so by communicating with satellites to get a “fix” on its position and then connecting with a service provider. Id. FBI Agents working the case were able to log onto a website and obtain information as to the location of the GPS device, and thus the vehicle, as it was moving. Id. This information was also stored and accessible for later review. Id.
The GPS device ran on its own battery for power, and drew no power from the Chrysler itself. Id. ¶ 3. The original power supply failed and so, on December 28, 2009, the FBI replaced the battery, and reaffixed the GPS device. Id. The GPS device was attached and reattached without a warrant. Def.’s Mem. 4, n. 1.
At the time the GPS device was first attached to Sparks’s vehicle on December 24, 2009, the FBI suspected that Sparks had committed three armed bank robberies in Massachusetts in the preceding three months. Gov’t Sept. 16 Aff. ¶ 2. Believing that Sparks would commit further robberies, and having seen Sparks driving the Chrysler, the FBI decided to place the GPS device on this vehicle. Id. The GPS device was affixed between 2:00 a.m. and 4:00 a.m., eleven days prior to the date of the bank robbery. At oral argument, the government conceded that at the time agents placed the GPS device on the vehicle it was parked in a private open-air parking lot used by the tenants of two, separate, multi-unit residential buildings. Tr. Mot. Suppress 7. Sparks rented an apartment in one of these buildings at the time. The street that the apartment building and parking lot were on was a private street.
II. ANALYSIS
The defendant, Craig Sparks, moved to suppress evidence obtained following the placement of the GPS device on his vehicle. 4 Sparks argued for application of the exclusionary rule based on violations of his First 5 and Fourth Amendment rights.
A. General Fourth Amendment Standard
The Fourth Amendment secures the right of an individual “to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures” and provides that this right “shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. Although the Fourth Amendment protects against certain governmental intrusions, it has never been held to provide a generalized right to privacy.
See Katz v. United States,
If the government intrudes upon a reasonable expectation of privacy without a warrant, the invasion is presumptively unconstitutional. Likewise, if no reasonable expectation of privacy is infringed, the government action does not implicate the Fourth Amendment. The two-prong Katz analysis, therefore, presents a threshold determination that must be satisfied before inquiry into the constitutionality of a search or seizure is required. See id.
B. Reasonable Expectation of Privacy
In analyzing the expectation of privacy in this case there are two main issues before the Court: (1) whether the installation of the GPS device on the Chrysler infringes upon any reasonable expectation of privacy, and (2) whether monitoring the location of the GPS device, and thus the vehicle, infringes upon any reasonable expectation of privacy.
1. Installation of the GPS
Regarding the first issue — the installation of the GPS device — it is argued that there are two privacy interests potentially at stake: an interest in the private parking lot in which the vehicle was parked and an interest in the exterior of the vehicle.
a. Private Parking Lot
The parking lot in which Sparks’s car was parked and the adjoining street were private property. Unfortunately for Sparks, notions of property law are only marginally relevant to this Court’s Fourth Amendment analysis.
See United States v. Cruz Pagan,
Trespass aside, the FBI Special Agents did not invade any constitutionally protected area within Sparks’s dwelling or curtilage. It is without question that private residences are entitled to the utmost protection from governmental intrusion.
United States v. Karo,
Under factual circumstances strikingly similar to those before this Court, the Ninth Circuit applied the four-factor test to a parking area used by residents and guests, located between two apartment buildings, and ruled the area was excluded from the defendant’s curtilage.
United States v. Soliz,
The parking area in which Sparks parked the Chrysler similarly must be excluded from the curtilage of his rented apartment. Although the parking lot sat in close proximity to his apartment building, the remaining three factors weigh against a ruling of curtilage. The parking area was in no way bounded or enclosed, and it has not been alleged that the lot was used for anything other than parking. Further, the only attempts to keep the area protected were two “Private Property No Trespass” signs, one affixed to a fence beyond Sparks’s apartment building and the other posted on the facade of the neighboring apartment building. Gov’t Sept. 16 Aff. ¶ 4. As there is no indication that the lot was used for private activities, nor did it provide any actual privacy, the Fourth Amendment will not be extended to protect its contents.
See United States v. Pineda-Moreno,
Moreover, as a tenant, Sparks may allege no reasonable expectation of privacy in the lot or street because these were common areas, available for the shared
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benefit of the residents. “[I]t is now beyond cavil in this circuit that a tenant lacks a reasonable expectation of privacy in common areas of an apartment building.”
United States v. Rheault,
Common areas are open to all residents and those whom they may invite. No one tenant has the right to exclude others from using the area, and, therefore, no reasonable person would think that he could store private items in the common area and be free of public scrutiny.
Rheault,
b. Exterior of the Vehicle
Having established that Sparks did not have a reasоnable expectation of privacy in the parking lot, this Court must now decide whether he nonetheless maintained an expectation of privacy in the exterior of his vehicle.
(1) Subjective Expectation
To begin, the analysis into subjective expectations turns on whether the movant was “seeking] to preserve as private” the area or item at issue.
Id.
at 351,
(2) Objectively Reasonable Expectation
Even were this Court to conclude that Sparks maintained a subjective expectation of privacy in the exterior of his vehicle, this expectation is not one that society is willing to recognize as reasonable. The Supreme Court has been clear that motor vehicles are entitled to a significantly diminished expectation of privacy because their “function is transportation and [they] seldom serve[] as one’s residence or as the repository of personal effects.”
See Cardwell v. Lewis,
The minimal physical intrusion associated with affixing a GPS device will not, standing alone, create a Fourth Amendment violation.
See Cardwell,
Because Sparks had no reasonable expectation of privacy either in the shared parking lot or in the exterior of his vehicle, the placement of the GPS device on the vehicle cannot be considered a search or seizure.
2. Monitoring of the GPS
Separate and distinct from any privacy interest in the exterior of a motor vehicle or in a private parking lot is the potential privacy interest in one’s movements in the vehicle. The Supreme Court has held that “[a] person travelling [sic] in an automobile on public thoroughfares has no reasonable expectation of privacy in his movements from one place to another.”
United States v. Knotts,
Sparks argues that, although society may not recognize the privacy interests in single public trips, he does maintain a reasonable expectation of privacy in the aggregate of his travels. The first rationale for this argument is essentially that the whole of one’s movements during the course of surveillance is not actually exposed to the public because the likelihood that anyone will observe all those movements is essentially nil.
See United States v. Maynard,
Attempting to tie improbability to illegality is inappropriate in light of several Supreme Court Fourth Amendment decisions concerning new technology.
See United States v. Jacobsen,
Sparks also argues that the aggregate of his travels became something of a synergism — the whole of his movements being more private than his individual travels. Citing solely to a recent decision from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, Sparks alleges that the longer the GPS was placed on the car, the more his privacy was invaded because it gave the government a wealth of information about his personal preferences.
See Maynard,
While this may be factually true, it is legally unconvincing. Athough the continuous monitoring may capture quantitatively more information than brief stints of surveillance, the type of information collected is qualitatively the same. Sparks’s aggregation argument against prolonged surveillance, as supported by the court in
Maynard,
is also practically unappealing. The exclusionary remedy for Fourth Amendment violations is a strong and blunt instrument.
See Kerr, supra,
at 527. To avoid improper application of this strict remedy it is important to provide the police with clear ex ante rules.
Id.
The court in
Maynard,
however, leaves police officers with a rule that is vague and unworkable. It is unclear when surveillance becomes so prolonged as to have crossed the threshold and created this allegedly intrusive mosaic. What’s more, conduct that is initially constitutionally sound could later be deemed impermissible if it becоmes part of the aggregate. Finally, and as expounded upon
infra,
a rule prohibiting prolonged GPS surveillance due to the
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quantity or quality of information it accumulates would also incidentally outlaw warrantless visual surveillance and this Court is unwilling, and unable, to extend the reach of the Fourth Amendment that far.
See Knotts,
3. Precedent
This Court is persuaded that this case falls within the ambit of the Supreme Court’s holding in
Knotts
that the warrant-less placement of a beeper tracking device inside a chloroform container, which allowed police officers to follow the defendant’s movements along public roads, did not violate the Fourth Amendment because there was no reasonablе expectation of privacy in public travel.
9
Sparks asks this court to disregard
Knotts
by arguing that modern GPS devices are so technologically advanced that they cannot be compared to primitive beeper devices. It is true that the GPS device used here was highly sophisticated, allowing the FBI accurately to locate Sparks’s vehicle from any computer, at any time of the day or night, and to store a record of his travels for the entirety of the eleven day period.
10
This is certainly more advanced than the relational “pings” of the beepers of yesteryear. A similar argument could have been made regarding the telephone in 1880 and the video camera in 1950.
See Weaver,
Yet it is not the mere “newness” of technology that might warrant reevaluation of Supreme Court precedent, but rather any increased intrusion into zones of privacy. As noted in
Kyllo v. United States,
Warrantless visual surveillance or “tailing” of Sparks unquestionably would have been permissible and would have revealed to the FBI all of the same details the GPS device provided,
11
only at a much higher cost, and possibly at a higher risk to law enforcement officers.
12
Where the use of a
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tracking device serves only as a technological substitute for an otherwise legal activity, it must remain constitutionally sound.
13
See Knotts
Nothing in the Fourth Amendment prohibits the police from augmenting their sensory abilities.
Knotts,
Officers routinely use highly sophisticated tools including radios, street cameras, radar, helicopters, computers, quick-access files of license tags and fingerprints, and microscopes in the performance of their duties. “[M]ost of these devices and systems intrude into areas of citizens’ lives that were private in the day of the deerstalker and magnifying glass” and yet they are permissible today in order to facilitate efficient and accurate law enforcement.
Michael,
In the era of modern GPS devices, nearly every federal court of appeals and district court to address this issue has ruled that the government is not required to obtain a warrant before installing or monitoring a hidden GPS device on the exterior of a vehicle.
14
See United States v. Mar
*395
quez,
One of the main rationales underlying the decision in Maynard was that the use of the GPS device was continuous and prolonged. Id. Although the FBI’s use of the GPS device in monitoring Sparks was technically continuous, the surveillance of Sparks is readily distinguishable from that which was declared unconstitutional in Maynard. In Maynard, the police installed a GPS device and monitored the defendant twenty-four hours a day for twenty-eight days. Id. at 558. Using the data, the government was able to establish a pattern consistent with drag trafficking. Id. at 567. In contrast, the FBI installed the GPS device on Sparks’s vehiclе for eleven days and used the data to locate the vehicle in order to initiate visual surveillance. In this respect, the use of the GPS device on Sparks’s vehicle is more akin to the use of the beeper in Knotts than that of the GPS device in Maynard.
The Supreme Court in
Knotts
expressly reserved the issue of the constitutionality of twenty-four hour surveillance of private citizens without judicial knowledge or supervision because the “reality [of police practice] hardly suggests abuse.”
Whether and what kind of restrictions should, in the name of the Constitution, be placed on [mass] surveillance when used in routine criminal enforcement are momentous issues that fortunately we need not try to resolve in this case.... Should government someday decide to institute programs of mass surveillance of vehicular movements, it will be time enough tо decide whether the Fourth Amendment should be interpreted to treat such surveillance as a search.
Garcia,
III. CONCLUSION
Today this Court must attempt to strike the balance between the constitutional protections of personal privacy and the ability of the government to protect the public through the use of bourgeoning technology. In the active pursuit of law enforcement “[t]here is a tradeoff between security and privacy, and often it favors security.”
Garcia,
Here, the actions taken by the police were directed at essentially public places and activities. Sparks had neither a subjective nor objectively reasonable expectation of privacy in the open air parking lot, the exterior of his car, or the movement of his vehicle on public streets. The government’s ability to harness advanced technology to assist in effective law enforcеment does not change this constitutional analysis. Given the absence of any reasonable expectation of privacy by Sparks, this Court must conclude that no warrant or other court order is necessary to install or monitor the GPS.
For these reasons, Sparks’s motion to suppress was DENIED from the bench on September 22, 2010.
Notes
. Facts regarding the GPS device are detailed infra.
. Michaud was charged with armed bank robbery and, on October 20, 2010, proffered a conditional guilty plea.
. The ‘'getaway” Jeep was determined to have been stolen in Charlestown, Massachusetts. Gov’t Jan. 22 Aff. ¶ 14.
.At the time Michaud conditionally pleaded guilty he also moved to join this motion to suppress. The Court allowed Michaud to join the motion but did not hear argument as to Michaud. The Court notes without deciding, hоwever, that as a temporary passenger in Sparks’s vehicle, Michaud stands in a significantly worse position than Sparks as a challenger to the legality of the GPS device.
. Sparks’s argument that the evidence must be excluded because the government violated his First Amendment right to free association is without merit. The exclusionary rule is a judicial remedy for violations of the Fourth Amendment, not the First Amendment.
See Mapp v. Ohio,
. A search occurs when a state actor infringes upon an expectation of privacy society consid
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ers reasonable. A seizure occurs when the state interferes with an individual’s possessory interest in property or freedom of personal movement. It is, however, practically irrelevant "whether a рarticular governmental intrusion is classified as a 'search' or as a seizure.’ What matters is whether it violates an individual’s legitimate expectation of privacy. Therefore, it is not necessary to speculate whether [the government’s action] ‘searches’ or ‘seizes’ anything.”
United States v. Bailey,
. As the issue was not presented, this Court makes no findings as to whether a trespass occurred.
. Even this expectation of respect is tempered when we enter the public sphere. One ought expect that a child may duck under a parked vehicle to track an errant ball, or that the local restaurant may place an advertising menu under the wiper blade. These small intrusions may be bothersome, or even statutorily proscribed, but are nonetheless an expected part of daily public life.
. Sparks’s argument that the First Circuit’s decision in
United States v. Moore,
. This technology, however, is not the type of highly sophisticated equipment that would require a warrant under
Kyllo v. United States,
. In fact, visual surveillance would likely have revealed a great deal more information than GPS surveillance alone. Although the GPS device gives a detailed report of the vehicle’s location at a given time it tells nothing about who was driving the car, where the individual traveled once he has left the vehicle, or what venues could be found at a particular location.
. “GPS devices cost between a few hundred dollars and perhaps $2,500, plus the minimal costs of monitoring. The U.S. national average of having a private investigator tail a *394 suspect is $60 to $65 per hour.... Thus a one-person, sixteen-hour tail would, on average cost at least $960.” John S. Ganz, It's Already Public: Why Federal Officers Should Not Need to Use GPS Vehicle Tracking Devices, 95 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 1325, 1357 (2005). It is easy to see how the costs associated with any long-term visual surveillance would quicldy overwhelm law enforcement resources.
. It bears mentioning that here, the GPS device here was used to reestablish visual contact once the Agents had initiated pursuit. This arguably means that the use of the GPS technology enabled police officers to do something that could not be done with mere visual surveillance. The Supreme Court in
Knotts,
however, expressly certified that such use of technology passed constitutional muster.
. State courts have split as to whether the monitoring of a GPS device constitutes a search under their respectivе state constitutions. Several state supreme courts, including that of Massachusetts, have ruled that the warrantless monitoring of GPS devices violates their state constitutions.
Commonwealth v. Connolly,
. This is especially so in light of recent publicity surrounding the increased use of GPS devices by law enforcement. See, e.g., Mina Kim, FBI’s GPS Tracking Raises Privacy Con-cents, National Public Radio, Oct. 27, 2010, http://www.npr.org/templates/story/stoiy.php? storyId= 130833487.
. But, for examples of widespread government surveillance, see Protect America Act, 50 U.S.C.A. §§ 1805a to 1805c (2007) (allowing the government to conduct foreign intelligence surveillance on targets reasonably believed to be located outside the United States); Charlie Savage, U.S. Tries to Malee it Easier to Wiretap the Internet, N.Y. Times, Al, Sept. 27, 2010 (explaining a bill, proposed by the Obama administration, that would require all *396 communications service providers — including BlackBerry and Facebook — to be technologically capable of complying with a wiretap order if served, much like telephone companies are required to do under the Communications Assistance to Law Enforcement Act, 47 U.S.C. 1001 to 1010 (1994)); James Risen & Eric Lichtblau, Bush Lets U.S. Spy on Callers Without Courts, N.Y. Times, Al, Dec. 16, 2005 (revealing the warrantless surveillance of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people’s phone calls by order of President Bush).
