{"id":440,"date":"2014-06-25T23:49:52","date_gmt":"2014-06-26T03:49:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www3.law.harvard.edu\/journals\/hlpr\/?p=440"},"modified":"2015-10-02T15:21:01","modified_gmt":"2015-10-02T15:21:01","slug":"riley","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/journals.law.harvard.edu\/lpr\/2014\/06\/25\/riley\/","title":{"rendered":"Unfortunately, Resolving Wurie Perfunctorily may Weaken Riley"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>By Noah Marks<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Part 2 in a <a href=\"http:\/\/journals.law.harvard.edu\/hlpr\/2014\/06\/riley-v-california-is-good\/\">2-part series<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Editor&#8217;s note: At the author&#8217;s request, this post has been revised substantially since\u00a0its original posting\u00a0to more clearly express the author&#8217;s intent.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Earlier today, the Supreme Court issued an opinion covering both <a href=\"http:\/\/www.supremecourt.gov\/opinions\/13pdf\/13-132_8l9c.pdf\">Riley v. California and United States v. Wurie<\/a>, holding that police must obtain a warrant before searching cell phones. Even though the decision ostensibly resolved both cases, the Court\u2019s reasoning and rhetoric clearly focused on <em>Riley<\/em>, the more egregious breach of privacy where police <a href=\"http:\/\/www.volokh.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/89\/2013\/08\/Riley-cert-petition-final-1.pdf\">repeatedly<\/a> and extensively explored a suspect\u2019s smart phone. The Court spent comparatively little time on <em>Wurie<\/em>, despite its salient distinguishing features: it involved a non-smart flip phone and a significantly more limited search. Riley is rightly being hailed as a decisive, landmark, and compelling defense of privacy in the digital age. Unfortunately, the Court\u2019s failure to address <em>Wurie<\/em>\u2019s differences casts an unnecessary shadow over its decision by potentially blurring the distinction between physical and non-cell phone digital devices and creating anomalies in police practice.<\/p>\n<p>The Court dismissed the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.differencebetween.info\/difference-between-smartphone-and-normal-phone\">dramatic differences<\/a>\u00a0in technological capabilities apparently on the basis that the divergence between cell phones and any other physical object that could be on someone\u2019s person dwarfs any divergence between types of cell phones. The Court said that the privacy concerns tower over the interest of law enforcement because cell phones pose no risk to police and are capable of storing an astonishing breadth, depth, quality, and quantity of information. From the Court\u2019s perspective, all cell phones can contain every piece of mail from the past months, every picture ever taken, every book and article read, numerous websites visited and illnesses endured, apps downloaded, nearly every location visited, not to mention addresses and phone numbers for thousands of entries. Indeed, the Court distinguished these cases from pen registers in Smith v. Maryland because \u201ccell phone\u201d is a misnomer. The Court enumerates equally accurate names including cameras, video players, calendars, tape recorders, libraries, diaries, albums, televisions, maps, or newspapers.<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>However,\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/shop.sprint.com\/mysprint\/shop\/phone_details.jsp?prodId=dvc7640001prd&amp;deviceSKUId=76400103&amp;flow=AAL&amp;planSKUId=&amp;ptn=&amp;tabId=dt_phones\">typical flip phones<\/a>are not commonly used as newspapers or televisions, and most are not wifi enabled, come with minimal memory, have few or no apps, have limited contacts, and cannot effectively surf the web, sync with the cloud, or download files. Even though it still would be infeasible to physically carry in paper form the quantity of information on a flip phone, and flip phones similarly pose no threat to police, there are significantly less potential privacy concerns in Wurie than in Riley.<\/p>\n<p>The Court does not acknowledge this. Instead, the Court\u2019s holding applies to cell phones regardless of type, but based on the privacy implications that primarily arose in Riley. Not discussing Wurie unfortunately leaves it unclear which attributes of cell phones (cloud? video? memory? diversity of functions? cellular data? wifi? location data? call history?) are dispositive. Without that clarity, because the Court frames its holding as applying to \u201ccell phones\u201d (regardless of misnomer) it is reasonable to conclude that telephonic capability is dispositive. However, the privacy concerns apply in varying degrees to all digital devices. It\u2019s not clear how the holding would apply to a basic Kindle, Kindle Fire, iPod nano, regular iPod, iPad, iPad with cellular data, cloud-enabled camera, or Google Glass, even though all of those devices implicate fewer privacy concerns that Riley but many surpass the concerns implicated by Wurie\u2019s flip phone (but may be less pervasive). The asymmetry between the Court\u2019s rhetoric about the vast invasion of privacy wrought by the capabilities of minicomputers and the holding\u2019s application to Wurie but not non\u2013cell phone digital devices has the potential to undermine the decision\u2019s defense of privacy in the digital age.<\/p>\n<p>On top of ignoring the technological differences, the Court also ignored the significant differences in the searches. In Riley, the police confiscated his iPhone and examined its videos, text messages, the contacts list, photographs, and other information. In contrast, after confiscating Wurie\u2019s flip phone, the police noticed that it rang repeatedly. The number was named \u201cmy house.\u201d Then, the police simply opened the phone and clicked two buttons to retrieve the number. Along the way, they took note of the background picture of a woman.<\/p>\n<p>The Court implicitly argues that ignoring the distinction between the searches enables a clear ruling: police cannot inspect the digital contents of a cell phone without a warrant, but the physical contents are incident to the arrest and fair game. However, in practice the ruling may not be as clear as the Court intended. A physical search may include pressing a button, perhaps accidentally. Pushing the Home button on an iPhone reveals the background image and missed alerts, which may include text messages and phone numbers. Must a police officer ignore this digital information? Grouping <em>Wurie<\/em> with <em>Riley<\/em> suggests so, but it\u2019s hard to see why. Just like ignoring the technological differences, collapsing the searches\u2019 differences transforms a clear-cut rule into something that is in reality difficult to apply and, as Alito notes in his concurrence, creates anomalies in police practice.<\/p>\n<p>Practically speaking, more and more people have smarter and smarter objects that closely approximate iPhones. Given that, it\u2019s probably reasonable for the Court to focus on <em>Riley<\/em> more than <em>Wurie<\/em>. However, resolving Wurie summarily passes over complexity that has the potential to undermine the decision\u2019s powerful, appropriate, and wonderful simplicity. Future litigation will undoubtedly address the application of the Court\u2019s spot-on privacy rationale to all digital objects. Similarly, the complexities inherent in distinguishing between the Court\u2019s simple directive \u2013 no searching cell phones \u2013 and physical searches will be ironed out in time. Deciding <em>Wurie<\/em> based on <em>Riley<\/em> establishes what will hopefully be a powerful pro-privacy foundation, but the Court missed an opportunity to resolve such questions decisively and in favor of safeguarding privacy by minimizing and not addressing Wurie\u2019s relevant differences.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By Noah Marks Part 2 in a 2-part series Editor&#8217;s note: At the author&#8217;s request, this post has been revised 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