United States v. Lattin ( 2023 )


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  •   This opinion is subject to revision before publication.
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE    ARMED FORCES
    _______________
    UNITED STATES
    Appellee
    v.
    Liam C. LATTIN, First Lieutenant
    United States Air Force, Appellant
    No. 22-0211
    Crim. App. No. 39859
    Argued December 6, 2022—Decided March 31, 2023
    Military Judge: Bryan D. Watson
    For Appellant: Elizabeth A. Harvey, Esq. (argued);
    Major Spencer R. Nelson and Bethany L. Payton-
    O’Brien, Esq. (on brief).
    For Appellee: Major Jay S. Peer (argued); Colonel
    Naomi P. Dennis, Lieutenant Colonel Matthew J.
    Neil, and Mary Ellen Payne, Esq. (on brief); Lieuten-
    ant Colonel Thomas J. Alford.
    Judge MAGGS delivered the opinion of the Court, in
    which Judge SPARKS and Senior Judge
    CRAWFORD joined. Chief Judge OHLSON filed a
    dissenting opinion, in which Judge HARDY joined.
    _______________
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    Judge MAGGS delivered the opinion of the Court.
    Military Rule of Evidence (M.R.E.) 311(a) (2019 ed.)
    makes evidence obtained from an unlawful search and sei-
    zure inadmissible only when certain conditions are met.
    One of these conditions is that “exclusion of the evidence
    results in appreciable deterrence of future unlawful
    searches or seizures and the benefits of such deterrence
    outweigh the costs to the justice system.” M.R.E. 311(a)(3).
    By imposing this condition, M.R.E. 311(a) implements the
    United States Supreme Court’s holding that the Fourth
    Amendment of the United States Constitution requires ex-
    clusion of unlawfully obtained evidence only when “the
    benefits of deterrence . . . outweigh the costs.” Herring v.
    United States, 
    555 U.S. 135
    , 141 (2009); see Manual for
    Courts-Martial, United States, Analysis of the Military
    Rules of Evidence app. 22 at A22-20 (2016 ed.) [hereinafter
    Drafters’ Analysis] (explaining that M.R.E. 311(a)(3) im-
    plements the Herring decision).
    In this case, the United States Air Force Court of Crim-
    inal Appeals (AFCCA) agreed with Appellant that a search
    of his cell phone violated the Fourth Amendment because
    the search authorization was overbroad. United States v.
    Lattin, No. ACM 39859, 
    2022 CCA LEXIS 226
    , at *36-37,
    
    2022 WL 1186023
    , at *13 (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. Apr. 20,
    2022) (unpublished). The AFCCA nonetheless concluded
    that the military judge had not abused his discretion by
    declining to exclude evidence obtained and derived from
    the search. Id. at *49-57, 
    2022 WL 1186023
    , at *18-20. The
    AFCCA rested its conclusion on the military judge’s ruling
    under M.R.E. 311(a)(3) that exclusion of the evidence
    would not result in appreciable deterrence of future unlaw-
    ful searches or seizures and that even if it did, the benefits
    of such deterrence would not outweigh the costs to the jus-
    tice system. Id. at *49-57, 
    2022 WL 1186023
    , at *18-20.
    We granted review of two assigned issues:
    I. Whether the lower court erred when it did not
    apply the exclusionary rule.
    2
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    II. Whether the lower court erred when it failed to
    address a search authorization’s stated expiration
    date.
    For reasons that we provide below, we answer both ques-
    tions in the negative.
    I. Background
    In January 2019, Cadet A.W. of the Air Force Reserve
    Officer Training Corps was visiting Luke Air Force Base
    with her unit. During the visit, Appellant drove Cadet A.W.
    to his apartment. After they went inside, Appellant force-
    fully kissed her, bit one of her nipples, penetrated her
    vagina with his fingers, and engaged in other unwanted
    sexual conduct. Cadet A.W. subsequently underwent a fo-
    rensic examination which produced DNA samples.
    As part of an ensuing investigation, Special Agent L.B.
    of the Air Force Office of Special Investigations applied to
    Appellant’s commander for authorization for “a search of
    the . . . person of” Appellant and authorization for the “sei-
    zure, copying and analysis of the following specified prop-
    erty[:] SUBECT’s DNA [and] SUBJECT’s mobile device
    with biometric access.” Special Agent L.B. attached an af-
    fidavit to her application. In the affidavit, Special Agent
    L.B. stated that during the alleged assault, Cadet A.W. had
    sent texts to her boyfriend and that Cadet AW’s boyfriend
    had sent texts to Appellant. Special Agent L.B. further ex-
    plained that the Chief of Military Justice at Luke Air Force
    Base had advised her to seek authorization to obtain a sam-
    ple of Appellant’s DNA and to seize Appellant’s cell phone.
    The Commander approved the search authorization re-
    quest without placing any limits on how Special Agent L.B.
    was to search the phone. The search authorization speci-
    fied that the authority to search would expire on February
    16, 2019.
    Pursuant to the authorization to seize Appellant’s DNA,
    Special Agent L.B. obtained swab samples from Appellant.
    These samples subsequently matched DNA that was pre-
    sent on Cadet AW’s left nipple, inside her bra, and on the
    inside front panel of her leggings. Pursuant to the
    3
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    authority to seize Appellant’s phone, Special Agent L.B.
    asked Appellant to turn over his phone and he complied.
    In her search of the phone, Special Agent L.B. discov-
    ered texts between Cadet A.W. and Appellant and between
    Cadet A.W.’s boyfriend and Appellant. Special Agent L.B.,
    however, also found texts on Appellant’s phone that were
    unrelated to what she had mentioned in her affidavit. In
    the words of the AFCCA, Special Agent L.B. decided to
    “rummage [through the phone] for anything that might be
    interesting for [the Air Force Office of Special Investiga-
    tion’s] investigation into Appellant.” Lattin, 
    2022 CCA LEXIS 226
    , at *52, 
    2022 WL 1186023
    , at *19. For example,
    she searched for texts that mentioned “OSI,” the abbrevia-
    tion of the Office of Special Investigation. She also looked
    at the texts of individuals who were identified only by their
    phone numbers rather than their names, “just to see who
    it was or what they were talking about.” Her examination
    of the phone continued beyond February 16, 2019, the date
    on which the search authorization expired.
    During her search, Special Agent L.B. found texts sug-
    gesting that Appellant might have witnessed an unrelated
    sexual assault in September 2018. Concerned about the in-
    formation in these texts, Special Agent L.B. contacted First
    Lieutenant K.A., the victim of this other sexual assault.
    First Lieutenant K.A. initially had no recollection of the in-
    cident in question because she had been intoxicated when
    it happened. But she did provide information to Special
    Agent L.B. that, when combined with information in the
    texts that Appellant had sent, indicated that Appellant
    might have sexually assaulted her.
    Appellant was subsequently charged with sexual as-
    saults of both Cadet A.W. and First Lieutenant K.A. and
    abusive sexual contact of Cadet A.W. in violation of Article
    120, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 
    10 U.S.C. § 920
     (2018). Before trial, Appellant moved to suppress the
    evidence resulting from the search of his phone. He argued
    that the search of his phone was unlawful primarily be-
    cause the search authorization was overbroad and because
    the Government improperly continued to search the phone
    4
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    after the search authorization had expired. He asked the
    military judge to exclude “[t]he evidence discovered on [his]
    phone,” which consisted mostly of text messages. He fur-
    ther asked the military judge to exclude any evidence sup-
    porting the charges pertaining to First Lieutenant K.A. be-
    cause those charges “stem[med] from text message[]
    conversations that occurred in September 2018, none of
    which would have been located on [Appellant’s] phone but
    for the [G]overnment’s . . . illegal search of his entire
    phone.”
    At a hearing on the motion, Special Agent L.B. testified
    about how she had applied for the search authorization and
    how she had searched the phone. On cross-examination,
    she explained that her standard practice was to search all
    information on any phone that comes into the Govern-
    ment’s possession because of her understanding that
    “when there’s probable cause for anything on the phone,
    you can search everything on the phone.” She further ex-
    plained that she learned this practice at a Federal Law En-
    forcement Training Center. Special Agent L.B. also testi-
    fied that she believed that she could continue to search the
    phone after February 16, 2019, because she had seized the
    phone before that date.
    The military judge denied Appellant’s motion to exclude
    the evidence. In a written opinion, the military judge
    reached the following conclusions: (1) the search authori-
    zation was not overbroad, and Special Agent L.B.’s
    searches of the phone were within the scope of the search
    authorization; (2) the search of the phone was timely be-
    cause Special Agent L.B. initiated the search before Febru-
    ary 16, 2019; (3) even if Special Agent L.B. had exceeded
    the scope of the search authorization, the inevitable discov-
    ery and good faith exceptions prevented exclusion; and (4)
    even if the search was unlawful, the exclusionary rule
    should not apply based on M.R.E. 311(a)(3).
    The military judge’s fourth conclusion, and the reason-
    ing behind it, stand at the center of this appeal. Accord-
    ingly, these matters require special attention. As men-
    tioned above, M.R.E. 311(a)(3) makes the exclusionary rule
    5
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    inapplicable unless “exclusion of the evidence results in ap-
    preciable deterrence of future unlawful searches or sei-
    zures and the benefits of such deterrence outweigh the
    costs to the justice system.” Under M.R.E. 311(d)(5)(A), as
    explained in more depth below, the Government has the
    burden of proof on this issue. Addressing these require-
    ments, the military judge stated:
    Assuming arguendo that [Special Agent L.B.]’s
    searches of the accused’s phone were unlawful
    and no exceptions applied, the [G]overnment
    could still meet their M.R.E. 311(d)(5)(A) burden
    through demonstration, by a preponderance of the
    evidence, that the deterrence of future unlawful
    searches or seizures is not appreciable, or such de-
    terrence does not out-weigh the costs to the justice
    system of excluding the evidence. A preponder-
    ance of the evidence suggests that they can and
    have.
    (Emphasis added.)
    The military judge supported his conclusion by assert-
    ing that “[i]f an error exists in this case, the error rests with
    the issuing commander, who signed the [search authoriza-
    tion form] without it indicating a more narrow scope.” Ad-
    dressing Special Agent L.B.’s conduct, he asserted that
    “[a]ny wrong done to the accused’s rights was by accident,
    not design” and that “[t]here is little public good to be had
    in excluding evidence that was obtained from what must
    surely be a mistake, if even a mistake at all was made.”
    Focusing on evidence derived from the text messages found
    on the phone, the military judge added: “To exclude [First
    Lieutenant K.A.’s] testimony in perpetuity does not result
    in appreciable deterrence to [Special Agent L.B.] and, even
    if it did, such deterrence does not out-weigh the costs to the
    justice system of excluding the live testimony of this par-
    ticular witness.”
    A general court-martial comprised of officer members,
    subsequently tried Appellant. At trial, the Government in-
    troduced texts from Appellant’s phone. The Government
    also called as witnesses both A.W. (who by then had been
    promoted from Cadet to Second Lieutenant) and First
    6
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    Lieutenant K.A. An expert witness testified that DNA sam-
    ples taken during Cadet A.W.’s forensic examination
    matched Appellant’s DNA profile.
    The court-martial found Appellant guilty, contrary to
    his pleas, of two specifications of sexual assault and one
    specification of abusive sexual contact. 1
    On appeal, the AFCCA decided that the search author-
    ization violated the Fourth Amendment because it was
    overbroad. Lattin, 
    2022 CCA LEXIS 226
    , at *36-37, 
    2022 WL 1186023
    , at *13 (citing Groh v. Ramirez, 
    540 U.S. 551
    ,
    557 (2004)). The AFCCA reasoned that the search authori-
    zation “failed to identify the data contained on the device
    for which the Government had probable cause to seize, i.e.,
    text messages related to [Cadet] AW’s allegation of sexual
    assault.” Id. at *36-37, 
    2022 WL 1186023
    , at *13. The
    AFCCA further decided that the good faith, inevitable dis-
    covery, and plain view exceptions to the Fourth Amend-
    ment’s exclusionary rule did not apply. Id. at *37-45, 
    2022 WL 1186023
    , at *13-16. The AFCCA did not address Ap-
    pellant’s argument that the search also was unlawful be-
    cause Special Agent L.B. did not complete it before the ex-
    piration date stated in the fourth paragraph of the search
    authorization. See id. at *34-35, 
    2022 WL 1186023
    , at *12.
    The AFCCA, however, affirmed the military judge’s de-
    cision not to apply the exclusionary rule to either the text
    messages on Appellant’s phone or First Lieutenant K.A.’s
    testimony. Id. at *56-57, 
    2022 WL 1186023
    , at *20. The
    AFCCA held that the military judge had not abused his
    discretion by concluding that exclusion of the evidence
    would not “result[] in appreciable deterrence of future un-
    lawful searches” and that the benefits of future deterrence
    would not “outweigh the costs to the justice system” under
    1 The court-martial found Appellant not guilty of two other
    specifications not at issue here.
    7
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    M.R.E. 311(a)(3). Id. at *56-57, 
    2022 WL 1186023
    , at *20
    (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted). 2
    II. Lawfulness of the Search
    An initial question is whether this Court must rule on
    the lawfulness of the search of Appellant’s phone. At trial,
    as explained above, Appellant argued that the search was
    unlawful both because the search authorization was over-
    broad and because Special Agent L.B. continued to search
    the phone after the expiration date specified in the search
    authorization. The military judge held that the search was
    not unlawful for either of these reasons but alternatively
    held that even if the search was unlawful, the exclusionary
    rule did not apply. The AFCCA, in contrast, held that the
    search was unlawful because the search authorization was
    overbroad and did not reach the question of whether the
    search was also unlawful because the search authorization
    had expired. The AFCCA, however, upheld the military
    judge’s determination that the exclusionary rule did not
    apply.
    In this context, we can resolve the appeal without de-
    ciding whether the search was unlawful. Instead, we will
    simply assume that the search was unlawful and proceed
    directly to the question whether the military judge abused
    his discretion by not applying the exclusionary rule. Be-
    cause we ultimately conclude that the military judge did
    not abuse his discretion, our assumption that the search
    was unlawful will not prejudice the Government. 3
    2 One judge disagreed. Id. at *102, 
    2022 WL 1186023
    , at *34
    (Cadotte, J., dissenting in part and in the result). The dissenting
    judge would not have applied the exclusionary rule to First Lieu-
    tenant K.A.’s testimony but would have applied it to the text
    messages and other derivative evidence. Id. at *103-04, 
    2022 WL 1186023
    , at *37.
    3 The Government asserts in its brief that the issue of
    whether the search authorization was overbroad “is a close call.”
    The Government, however, recognizes that the scope of the
    search authorization is not a granted issue in this case, and it
    8
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    This approach also leads us to answer the second as-
    signed issue in the negative. As quoted above, the second
    assigned issue asks whether the lower court erred when it
    failed to address the search authorization’s stated expira-
    tion date. We hold that the answer is no because the
    AFCCA held—and we assume without deciding—that the
    search authorization was unlawful regardless of the expi-
    ration date. Accordingly, the AFCCA could proceed, as we
    also do, directly to the question whether the exclusionary
    rule should apply.
    III. Application of the Exclusionary Rule
    A. Governing Law and Standard of Review
    Although the Fourth Amendment “contains no provi-
    sion expressly precluding the use of evidence obtained in
    violation of its commands,” Arizona v. Evans, 
    514 U.S. 1
    ,
    10 (1995), the Supreme Court long ago created an exclu-
    sionary rule that forbids the use of improperly obtained ev-
    idence at trial. Weeks v. United States, 
    232 U.S. 383
    , 398
    (1914). The Supreme Court has explained that this exclu-
    sionary rule is “designed to safeguard Fourth Amendment
    rights generally through its deterrent effect.” United States
    v. Calandra, 
    414 U.S. 338
    , 348 (1974). In other words, if
    the government cannot use evidence that the police ob-
    tained by violating the Fourth Amendment, the police will
    have an incentive not to violate the Fourth Amendment.
    The exclusionary rule, however, does not apply every
    time law enforcement officials violate the Fourth Amend-
    ment. For example, the Supreme Court has recognized a
    good faith exception to the rule for when police obtain evi-
    dence “in objectively reasonable reliance on a subsequently
    invalidated search warrant.” United States v. Leon, 
    468 U.S. 897
    , 922 (1984). More recently, the Supreme Court
    has articulated a general principle concerning the applica-
    tion of the exclusionary rule. In Herring, the Supreme
    Court held that for the exclusionary rule to apply “the
    focuses its argument on whether the exclusionary rule should
    apply.
    9
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    deterrent effect of suppression must be substantial and
    outweigh any harm to the justice system.” 
    555 U.S. at 147
    .
    The President has codified the exclusionary rule, as it
    pertains to courts-martial, in M.R.E. 311(a), which
    provides:
    (a) Evidence obtained as a result of an unlaw-
    ful search or seizure made by a person acting in a
    governmental capacity is inadmissible against the
    accused if:
    (1) the accused makes a timely motion to sup-
    press or an objection to the evidence under this
    rule;
    (2) the accused had a reasonable expectation
    of privacy in the person, place, or property
    searched; the accused had a legitimate interest in
    the property or evidence seized when challenging
    a seizure; or the accused would otherwise have
    grounds to object to the search or seizure under
    the Constitution of the United States as applied to
    members of the Armed Forces; and
    (3) exclusion of the evidence results in appre-
    ciable deterrence of future unlawful searches or
    seizures and the benefits of such deterrence out-
    weigh the costs to the justice system.
    (Emphasis added.) M.R.E. 311(a)(3), the provision primar-
    ily at issue in this case, strives to incorporate the balancing
    test that the Supreme Court described in its Herring deci-
    sion. See Drafters’ Analysis app. 22 at A22-20.
    Another part of the rule, M.R.E. 311(d)(5)(A), addresses
    the burden of proof with respect to M.R.E. 311(a)(3),
    stating:
    [T]he prosecution has the burden of proving by a
    preponderance of the evidence . . . that the deter-
    rence of future unlawful searches or seizures is
    not appreciable or such deterrence does not out-
    weigh the costs to the justice system of excluding
    the evidence.
    Parsing this provision reveals that the exclusionary rule
    does not apply if the Government either proves that “the
    10
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    deterrence of future unlawful searches or seizures is not
    appreciable” or proves that “such deterrence does not out-
    weigh the costs to the justice system of excluding the evi-
    dence.” For convenience, in the discussion below, we will
    refer to these two possible showings as the “appreciable de-
    terrence test” and the “balancing test.”
    This Court reviews a military judge’s ruling on a motion
    to suppress evidence under M.R.E. 311(a) for an abuse of
    discretion. 4 United States v. Dease, 
    71 M.J. 116
    , 120
    (C.A.A.F. 2012). We recently explained this standard as
    follows:
    A military judge abuses his or her discretion
    when: (1) the military judge predicates a ruling on
    findings of fact that are not supported by the evi-
    dence of record, United States v. Ellis, 
    68 M.J. 341
    ,
    344 (C.A.A.F. 2010); (2) the military judge uses in-
    correct legal principles, id.; (3) the military judge
    applies correct legal principles to the facts in a
    way that is clearly unreasonable, id.; or (4) the
    military judge fails to consider important facts.
    See United States v. Solomon, 
    72 M.J. 176
    , 180-81
    (C.A.A.F. 2013).
    United States v. Rudometkin, 
    82 M.J. 396
    , 401 (C.A.A.F.
    2022).
    One issue in applying the abuse of discretion standard
    of review in this case is deciding how to characterize a mil-
    itary judge’s determinations, under M.R.E. 311(d)(5)(A),
    that “the deterrence of future unlawful searches or seizures
    is not appreciable” or that “such deterrence does not out-
    weigh the costs to the justice system of excluding the evi-
    dence.” Are these determinations findings of fact that must
    be upheld unless they are “clearly erroneous”? Or are they
    something else?
    One might argue that these determinations should be
    treated as findings of fact because M.R.E. 311(d)(5)(A) re-
    quires proof of these matters “by a preponderance of the
    4 Appellant and the Government agree that the abuse of dis-
    cretion standard of review applies.
    11
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    evidence,” which is typical for matters that are findings of
    fact. But a counterargument is that these matters are not
    exactly “facts” in the traditional sense. The magnitude of
    deterrence of “future unlawful searches and seizures” is
    more of a prediction of what is likely to happen in the fu-
    ture rather than an assessment of something that has al-
    ready happened. And weighing the benefits of deterrence
    against the costs to society is more a question of judgment
    than an issue of fact. 5
    We think that the counterargument is stronger. Accord-
    ingly, we will not review the military judge’s determina-
    tions with respect to the appreciable deterrence test or bal-
    ancing test merely for clear error. Instead, we think that a
    less deferential standard should apply and that the ques-
    tion is whether the military judge’s assessment of these
    matters was a “clearly unreasonable” exercise of discre-
    tion. 6 Rudometkin, 82 M.J. at 401.
    B. Discussion
    In this case, as explained above, the military judge
    ruled that, even if the search was unlawful, the Govern-
    ment had satisfied its burden under M.R.E. 311(d)(5)(A) for
    showing that the exclusionary rule should not apply to ei-
    ther the text messages or to First Lieutenant K.A.’s testi-
    mony. The military judge specifically concluded that the
    Government had met its burden under the appreciable de-
    terrence test by proving by a preponderance of the evidence
    that “the deterrence of future unlawful searches or seizures
    is not appreciable.” The military judge also concluded that
    the Government had met its burden under the balancing
    test by proving that, even if excluding the evidence would
    5 By way of analogy, this Court reviews a military judge’s
    balancing of relevance against prejudice under M.R.E. 403 for
    an abuse of discretion. See United States v. Ruppel, 
    49 M.J. 247
    ,
    251 (C.A.A.F. 1998).
    6 The parties have not argued that we should review the mil-
    itary judge’s assessment of these tests de novo.
    12
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    result in appreciable deterrence, “such deterrence does not
    out-weigh the costs to the justice system.”
    The Government makes little effort to defend the mili-
    tary judge’s holding with respect to the appreciable deter-
    rence test. Although the military judge concluded that
    there would be no appreciable deterrence to Special Agent
    L.B., the Government admits in its brief that “one individ-
    ual in this case will be deterred by exclusion: [Special
    Agent L.B.].” For this reason, we will focus our discussion
    on the “balancing test.” Under the applicable standard of
    review, as discussed above, the question for us is whether
    the military judge abused his discretion by making a
    clearly unreasonable determination that “deterrence
    [would] not outweigh the costs to the justice system.”
    M.R.E. 311(d)(5)(A).
    Both parties address this question at length in their
    briefs. Appellant acknowledges that excluding First Lieu-
    tenant K.A.’s testimony would likely result in setting aside
    the finding that Appellant is guilty of sexually assaulting
    her. “However,” Appellant argues, “this cost does not out-
    weigh the deterrent effect that exclusion of such evidence
    will provide. Only the loss of a conviction such as this will
    resonate within the military law enforcement community.”
    Appellant asserts that the loss of the evidence would have
    the benefit of ensuring (1) the proper instruction of special
    agents; (2) the proper practice by special agents in general;
    and (3) the proper practice by Special Agent L.B. in the fu-
    ture. In sum, Appellant concludes: “The cost to the justice
    system may be high, but the deterrent effect would be
    greater.”
    The Government responds that the costs of exclusion
    are “particularly high” in this case. The Government
    identifies these costs as: (1) disabling First Lieutenant K.A.
    from testifying permanently, even though she is an
    eyewitness and her testimony is relevant and material;
    (2) requiring the Court to ignore reliable and trustworthy
    text messages; and (3) shortening the duration of
    Appellant’s incapacitation from committing future
    offenses. The Government also disagrees about the extent
    13
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    of the deterrence. Quoting Herring, 
    555 U.S. at 144
    , the
    Government explains that a violation of the Fourth
    Amendment must be “ ‘sufficiently deliberate that
    exclusion can meaningfully deter it.’ ” The Government
    stresses that even if Special Agent L.B.’s search was
    unlawful, the military judge properly found that she
    attempted to respect Appellant’s rights. The Government
    supports this assertion by noting that Special Agent L.B.
    applied for a search authorization, she had an attorney
    review her application, and she searched the phone in
    accordance with what she understood the search
    authorization to allow. Although Special Agent L.B.
    testified that she had been taught that she could search the
    entire contents of any phone in the Government’s
    possession, the military judge could have interpreted
    Special Agent L.B.’s belief “as a misunderstanding of what
    she learned about the plain view doctrine” at a Federal Law
    Enforcement Training Center. The military judge made no
    finding that instructors are incorrectly instructing military
    law enforcement agents. And the record does not
    demonstrate that other members of the military law
    enforcement community are making the same kinds of
    mistakes that the AFCCA determined that Special Agent
    L.B. made in this case.
    Counsel for both parties have greatly aided this Court
    with their careful articulation of their views on the costs to
    society and the benefits of deterrence that could flow from
    excluding the evidence. These factors are essential parts of
    the balancing test in M.R.E. 311(a)(3). But as explained
    above, the costs to society and the benefits of future deter-
    rence are not historical facts that are either true or false
    but instead are matters that depend on judgment. As the
    parties’ arguments show, the issue in this case is not one-
    sided. Regardless of whether we would agree with the mil-
    itary judge’s balancing of the costs and benefits on de novo
    review, we cannot say that the military judge’s decision
    was clearly unreasonable. The high costs of excluding the
    evidence are undisputed, and while exclusion of the evi-
    dence may produce some future deterrence, the degree of
    14
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Opinion of the Court
    this future deterrence is subject to reasonable disagree-
    ment. We therefore conclude the military judge did not
    abuse his discretion in denying Appellant’s motion to sup-
    press the evidence obtained from his phone under M.R.E.
    311(a).
    IV. Conclusion
    The decision of the United States Air Force Court of
    Criminal Appeals is affirmed.
    15
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Judge OHLSON, dissenting
    Chief Judge OHLSON, with whom Judge HARDY joins,
    dissenting.
    This case does not involve complex and cutting-edge
    search techniques for smartphones or computers, nor does
    it involve search and seizure issues unique to the military
    and its mission. Rather, we are presented here with a clas-
    sic and straightforward example of a blatantly unconstitu-
    tional fishing expedition by law enforcement. As the Su-
    preme Court has noted, it is precisely this type of “wide-
    ranging exploratory search[ which] the Framers intended
    to prohibit.” Maryland v. Garrison, 
    480 U.S. 79
    , 84 (1987).
    And yet here, the majority fails to enforce the constitu-
    tional rights of Appellant through the invocation of the ex-
    clusionary rule, despite the fact that such exclusion is nec-
    essary and warranted in order to deter future unlawful
    searches, and despite the fact that such deterrence out-
    weighs the costs to the justice system. For these reasons, I
    respectfully dissent.
    The Relevant Facts
    The facts of this case are key. Simply stated, Special
    Agent L.B. impermissibly and indiscriminately rummaged
    through Appellant’s personal cell phone, opening and
    reading communications that were patently unrelated to
    the isolated incident that gave rise to the search
    authorization. The narrow purpose of the search
    authorization was to confirm that communications
    regarding an alleged sexual assault occurring during the
    early morning hours of January 26, 2019, actually came
    from Appellant’s phone. Further, based on the information
    provided to her, Special Agent L.B. reasonably knew that
    Appellant and the victim had never met nor communicated
    before that date. But rather than limiting her search for
    communications from on or after January 25, 2019—the
    day the victim met Appellant for the first time—Special
    Agent L.B. searched through Appellant’s personal cell
    phone and read immaterial communications from months
    before that date involving individuals unrelated to the
    January 26th incident. What is more, Special Agent L.B.
    testified that she read these random conversations “just to
    see who it was or what they were talking about.” (Emphasis
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Judge OHLSON, dissenting
    added.) This admission by Special Agent L.B. about the
    voyeuristic nature of her search is quite extraordinary, and
    it is absolutely alarming in the context of whether the
    privacy rights of our servicemembers are being adequately
    protected by military law enforcement officers.
    During the suppression hearing, Special Agent L.B.
    further affirmed her belief that “she could search
    [Appellant’s] whole phone” because “when there’s probable
    cause for anything on the phone, [law enforcement] can
    search everything on the phone.” (Emphasis added.)
    Moreover, Special Agent L.B. stated that she had
    conducted cell phone searches in this manner for the last
    two years, and she testified that she was taught to search
    this way at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center
    (FLETC). These are sure signs of both recurring and
    systemic negligence—or worse. And when Special Agent
    L.B.’s rummaging eventually uncovered ambiguous
    evidence of another potential crime, she failed to seek a
    new search authorization, blithely asserting that “there
    was no need to get an expanded scope.”
    As can be seen then, the facts of this case present us
    with a glaring and systemic contravention of Appellant’s
    constitutional rights that must not be tolerated in the mil-
    itary justice system. Accordingly, I write to express my firm
    belief that the majority should have applied the exclusion-
    ary rule here to not only ensure that this particular appel-
    lant’s rights were vindicated but also to incentivize mili-
    tary law enforcement officials not to similarly violate other
    servicemembers’ Fourth Amendment rights in the future.
    The Search Authorization Was Unlawful
    Both parties agree that the search in this case was un-
    lawful. I commend the Government for making this conces-
    sion upfront. Oral Argument at 34:30–34:35, United States
    v. Lattin, No. 22-0211 (C.A.A.F. Dec. 6, 2022). Further, the
    majority assumes that the search authorization was un-
    lawful for purposes of its analysis. Indeed, the search au-
    thorization was facially deficient because it was not reason-
    able for the commander to authorize a search of Appellant’s
    phone without any parameters about what information or
    2
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Judge OHLSON, dissenting
    applications could be searched, seized, and analyzed in Ap-
    pellant’s phone. 1
    Because the search authorization was unlawful, any
    search stemming from that authorization was unlawful as
    well. And importantly, the lower court held that good faith,
    inevitable discovery, and the plain view doctrine—excep-
    tions to the exclusionary rule that otherwise might have
    supported the admission of the evidence obtained from
    Special Agent L.B.’s unlawful search—do not apply here.
    The Government does not directly challenge the lower
    court’s holding on these points. Consequently, the key issue
    before us is whether the exclusionary rule should apply.
    The Exclusionary Rule Should Apply Here
    Because Special Agent L.B.’s unlawful search was
    reckless or grossly negligent, and because her unlawful
    conduct was evidence of recurring and systemic negligence,
    the exclusionary rule should have been applied here. The
    military judge’s determination that Special Agent L.B.
    acted reasonably, and that this case did not involve
    recurring or systemic negligence on the part of law
    enforcement, was clearly erroneous and failed to consider
    important facts. Thus, the military judge abused his
    discretion in denying Appellant’s motion to suppress the
    unlawfully obtained evidence.
    The Supreme Court has held, “To trigger the exclusion-
    ary rule, police conduct must be sufficiently deliberate that
    exclusion can meaningfully deter it, and sufficiently culpa-
    ble that such deterrence is worth the price paid by the jus-
    tice system.” Herring v. United States, 
    555 U.S. 135
    , 144
    (2009). The “exclusionary rule serves to deter deliberate,
    reckless, or grossly negligent conduct, or in some circum-
    stances recurring or systemic negligence.” 
    Id.
     “For exclu-
    sion to be appropriate, the deterrence benefits of suppres-
    sion must outweigh its heavy costs.” Davis v. United States,
    
    564 U.S. 229
    , 237 (2011). In essence, these competing prin-
    ciples can be distilled to two key factors put forward by the
    1 The relevant part of the search authorization allowed, with-
    out restrictions, for the “seizure, copying, and analysis of [Appel-
    lant’s] mobile device with biometric access.”
    3
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Judge OHLSON, dissenting
    Supreme Court in Davis: (a) “When [law enforcement offic-
    ers] exhibit ‘deliberate,’ ‘reckless,’ or ‘grossly negligent’ dis-
    regard for Fourth Amendment rights,” or “the case in-
    volve[s] ‘recurring or systemic negligence’ on the part of
    law enforcement,” “the deterrent value of exclusion is
    strong and tends to outweigh the resulting costs,” but
    (b) “when [law enforcement officers] act with an objectively
    ‘reasonable good-faith belief’ that their conduct is lawful,
    or when their conduct involves only simple, ‘isolated’ negli-
    gence, the ‘deterrence rationale loses much of its force.’ ”
    
    Id. at 238, 240
     (citations omitted).
    As noted by the majority, these two competing princi-
    ples have been codified in M.R.E. 311(a)(3). The exclusion-
    ary rule should apply under two conditions: (1) when “ex-
    clusion of the evidence results in appreciable deterrence of
    future unlawful searches or seizures,” and (2) when “the
    benefits of such deterrence outweigh the costs to the justice
    system.” M.R.E. 311(a)(3). For the sake of convenience and
    for consistency with the majority opinion, I will also refer
    to these two conditions as the “appreciable deterrence test”
    and the “balancing test.”
    The Appreciable Deterrence Test
    For reasons I find puzzling, the majority glides over the
    “appreciable deterrence test” and instead focuses on the
    “balancing test.” The majority perhaps assumes, without
    explanation, that the only person who could be deterred by
    the application of the exclusionary rule is Special Agent
    L.B. herself.) Perhaps they take this position based on the
    Government’s claim that only “ ‘one individual in this case
    will be deterred by exclusion: [Special Agent L.B.].’ ”
    United States v. Lattin, __ M.J. __, __ (13) (C.A.A.F. 2023)
    (quoting Brief for Appellee at 49, United States v. Lattin,
    No. 22-0211 (C.A.A.F. Oct. 26, 2022)).
    It presumably is true that Special Agent L.B. would be
    deterred if the exclusionary rule were to apply here. But
    she is far from the only consideration. The search authori-
    zation was patently facially invalid. Applying the exclu-
    sionary rule here would thus serve to deter other Air Force
    Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) agents from simi-
    larly requesting grossly overbroad search authorizations.
    4
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Judge OHLSON, dissenting
    In fact, this deterrence principle would apply to all those
    involved in criminal investigations—to include judge advo-
    cates who, as in the instant case, may be presented with
    facially and conspicuously deficient language in a search
    authorization and must choose whether or not to fulfill
    their professional obligation to protect the rights of our ser-
    vicemembers by simply saying, “No. This material does not
    pass constitutional muster.” 2
    In sum, the message that would be sent by the invoca-
    tion of the exclusionary rule in this case would be clear:
    Evidence obtained from facially invalid search authoriza-
    tions may be subject to suppression—not just in an aca-
    demic, hypothetical, and remote sense but in a real, con-
    crete, and principled sense.
    The Balancing Test
    The majority writes that “the costs to society and the
    benefits of future deterrence are not historical facts that
    are either true or false but instead are matters that depend
    on judgment.” Lattin, __ M.J. at __ (14). Be that as it may,
    the duty of this Court is demonstrably clear—we must de-
    termine whether the military judge abused his discretion
    in evaluating the information presented. Discerning the
    costs and benefits are indeed “matters that depend on judg-
    ment,” but that judgment must nonetheless be reasonable.
    
    Id.
     And, as discussed below, the military judge’s conclu-
    sions in this case were clearly unreasonable and hence his
    2  There were at least three individuals involved in drafting
    and approving the search authorization. Special Agent L.B. pre-
    pared the search authorization (Air Force Form 1176). Appel-
    lant’s group commander, Colonel M.R., signed off on the overly
    broad search authorization. Judge Advocate Captain W.T. read
    over Special Agent L.B.’s affidavit, explained probable cause
    standards to Colonel M.R., and, concerningly, reviewed the
    search authorization to provide legal feedback. In addition, there
    were at least two AFOSI agents involved in executing the search
    authorization—Special Agent L.B. and another AFOSI agent.
    Applying the exclusionary rule here would also deter such law
    enforcement personnel—not just Special Agent L.B.—from con-
    ducting completely unreasonable searches based on facially in-
    valid search authorizations.
    5
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Judge OHLSON, dissenting
    disposition of the motion to suppress constituted an abuse
    of discretion.
    I. Special Agent L.B.’s unlawful search was
    reckless or grossly negligent
    There are two primary reasons why the military judge
    clearly erred when he found that Special Agent L.B. was
    not reckless or grossly negligent in conducting this search.
    First, Special Agent L.B. searched for text message conver-
    sations that predated the incident with Cadet A.W. by more
    than four months—despite having no reason to think Ap-
    pellant and the victim had met or been in communication
    with each other prior to that incident. Indeed, Cadet A.W.
    previously provided AFOSI with the relevant communica-
    tions, and Special Agent L.B.’s justification for the search
    was to merely corroborate their existence. This blatant de-
    parture from the original purpose of the search demon-
    strates that Special Agent L.B.’s conduct was unreasona-
    ble, and it serves as a concerning display of Special Agent
    L.B.’s misunderstanding of the scope of her authority. Sec-
    ond, Special Agent L.B. knew the phone numbers of the vic-
    tim and witnesses of the January 26, 2019, incident, and
    yet she searched through Appellant’s personal cell phone
    and read conversations with other unsaved contacts. There
    simply was no reasonable justification for Special Agent
    L.B.’s actions.
    AFOSI began investigating the incident between Appel-
    lant and Cadet A.W. on January 26, 2019, the same day as
    the alleged assault. Special Agent L.B. took over the case
    sometime in February 2019. She knew the incident be-
    tween Appellant and Cadet A.W. occurred during the early
    morning hours of January 26, 2019. She also presumably
    knew from reviewing Cadet A.W.’s interview and the text
    messages Cadet A.W. provided that Appellant and Cadet
    A.W. had never met before and had never texted before the
    incident in question. Therefore, once Special Agent L.B. ob-
    tained Appellant’s phone, she should have known she was
    looking for evidence related to an incident from late Janu-
    ary 2019 between two people who had neither met nor
    texted before that date. Any reasonable person would rec-
    ognize that evidence relating to that incident would have
    been generated on or after January 25, the day Appellant
    6
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Judge OHLSON, dissenting
    and the victim first met. However, Special Agent L.B.
    scrolled through messages from at least as far back as Au-
    gust 2018. Searching messages from before the date of the
    incident—let alone more than four months before—
    amounts to a fishing expedition in the starkest sense, and
    it was done in violation of Appellant’s Fourth Amendment
    rights.
    It must be borne in mind that Special Agent L.B., a mil-
    itary criminal investigator, was no naïf who was oblivious
    to the iPhone interface. She accurately testified that “the
    way the I-phone works is it shows all the recent messages
    first, by contact, and then the only text that shows up is the
    most recent text message exchange.” She knew that text
    conversations are saved and displayed in a chronological
    manner; the information displayed is functionally equiva-
    lent to an email inbox. Special Agent L.B. should have rea-
    sonably known then that text threads related to the inci-
    dent with Cadet A.W. would necessarily have occurred on
    or after January 25. Yet alarmingly, Special Agent L.B.
    seemed unconcerned by any temporal constraints on her
    search. In response to the question about whether she be-
    lieved “[t]hat when there’s probable cause for anything on
    the phone, you can search everything on the phone,” she
    responded, “Yes.”
    Special Agent L.B. also testified she was looking for con-
    versations between certain identified individuals and “she
    knew what phone numbers to look for.” She further testi-
    fied that as she searched through Appellant’s phone, she
    noticed Cadet A.W. was not saved as a contact. In other
    words, Cadet A.W.’s phone number was listed without a
    corresponding name. Remarkably, Special Agent L.B. then
    (somehow) concluded that any conversation with an un-
    saved contact was fair game for review because they might
    contain evidence of other potential victims. As noted above,
    in an extraordinarily damaging concession, Special Agent
    L.B. candidly explained that she looked through these con-
    versations with other unsaved contacts “just to see who it
    was or what they were talking about.” Because she knew
    what phone numbers were relevant in her search for evi-
    dence related to Cadet A.W., it was completely unreasona-
    ble for her to randomly search through these nonresponsive
    7
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Judge OHLSON, dissenting
    phone numbers for evidence of “any other victims that
    could be out there.” Thus, at a minimum, Special Agent
    L.B.’s conduct was reckless or grossly negligent.
    In addition to the military judge’s findings being clearly
    unreasonable, he also misapprehended the law when he
    applied our reasoning and holding in United States v. Rich-
    ards, 
    76 M.J. 365
     (C.A.A.F. 2017). This case is clearly dis-
    tinguishable. In Richards, we did indeed cite with approval
    the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit’s
    observation that “[t]he prohibition of general searches is
    not to be confused with a demand for precise ex ante
    knowledge of the location and content of evidence.” Rich-
    ards, 
    76 M.J. at 369
     (emphasis added) (internal quotation
    marks omitted) (quoting United States v. Richards, 
    659 F.3d 527
    , 541 (6th Cir. 2011)). But we also underscored, as
    the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
    pithily opined, “ ‘As always under the Fourth Amendment,
    the standard is reasonableness.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting United
    States v. Hill, 
    459 F.3d 966
    , 974 (9th Cir. 2006)). And im-
    portantly, we dropped a footnote stating: “Obviously, what
    is reasonable in one instance may not be so in another.” 
    Id.
    at 369 n.6.
    In Richards, the search was not only for communica-
    tions but also for images. And “computer files [containing
    images] may be manipulated to hide their true contents.”
    Id. at 370 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting
    United States v. Mann, 
    592 F.3d 779
    , 782 (7th Cir. 2010)).
    But folders on a computer are not chronologically ordered
    text threads on an iPhone. In the instant case, there was
    simply no basis for Special Agent L.B. to conclude that the
    old text messages she opened and read were related to any
    effort by Appellant to “hide, mislabel, or manipulate files
    to conceal criminal activity.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted) (quoting United States v. Stabile, 
    633 F.3d 219
    ,
    237 (3d Cir. 2011)). Again, I emphasize that while a more
    expansive search authorization may have been reasonable
    in Richards given the uncertainty as to when the crime oc-
    curred, it was not reasonable here for Special Agent L.B. to
    rummage through texts on Appellant’s phone that were ex-
    changed four months prior to the alleged assault.
    8
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Judge OHLSON, dissenting
    The military judge’s misapplication of Richards colored
    his view of the reasonableness of Special Agent L.B.’s ac-
    tions. According to the military judge, “when searching an
    electronic device . . . ‘there may be no practical substitute
    for actually looking in many (perhaps all) folders.’ ” (quot-
    ing Richards, 
    76 M.J. at 370
    ). The takeaway the military
    judge instead should have gleaned from our Richards opin-
    ion is the following statement contained within it: “[T]he
    authorization and accompanying affidavit [although broad]
    did not give authorities carte blanche to search in areas [of
    the appellant’s electronic devices that were] clearly outside
    the scope of the crime being investigated.” 
    Id.
    II. Special Agent L.B.’s unlawful conduct and her testi-
    mony establish recurring and systemic negligence
    As further evidence that law enforcement here was “suf-
    ficiently culpable” to warrant the invocation of the exclu-
    sionary rule,� Herring, 
    555 U.S. at 144
    , the record strongly
    suggests that Special Agent L.B.’s conduct was not an iso-
    lated incident. She herself testified that it’s been her
    “standard practice” for the past two years to search for an-
    ything on a seized phone. According to Special Agent L.B.,
    she had a “right to be in the phone,” and if she saw “some-
    thing that [led her] to believe there’s evidence of [another]
    crime . . . there was no need to get an expanded scope.” Her
    significantly misguided understanding of what she could
    lawfully search for in a cell phone seized pursuant to a
    search authorization, and the fact that she had conducted
    her searches this way for years, is sufficient evidence of re-
    curring negligence.
    And in terms of there being a systemic problem, Special
    Agent L.B. testified that she (supposedly) learned her
    search methodology from the Federal Law Enforcement
    Training Center. As observed by the majority, the military
    judge made no finding that instructors at FLETC are in-
    correctly instructing military law enforcement agents. Lat-
    tin, __ M.J. at __ (14). But neither did the Government in-
    troduce evidence to rebut its own witness’s assertion. And
    the mere fact that Special Agent L.B. believes FLETC
    taught her she can search the entire contents of a phone
    whenever it is seized suggests FLETC may not be appro-
    priately drilling into its graduates a scrupulous
    9
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Judge OHLSON, dissenting
    appreciation of the fundamentals of Fourth Amendment
    rights. In addition, Special Agent L.B. testified that it was
    her practice in cases such as this one to input search pa-
    rameters based on her discussions with “legal” [i.e., a judge
    advocate].
    Thus, as can be seen from all of the points above, the
    Government’s own star witness makes it clear that we are
    confronted with a systemic violation of servicemembers’
    constitutional rights.
    III. The price paid by the justice system
    As the Supreme Court has stated, “The principal cost of
    applying the [exclusionary] rule is, of course, letting guilty
    and possibly dangerous defendants go free.” Herring, 
    555 U.S. at 141
    . It is important to underscore, however, that in
    the instant case that “principal cost” would not have mate-
    rialized if the exclusionary rule had been properly applied
    because the evidence that sustained Appellant’s convic-
    tions against Cadet A.W. was untainted by the unlawful
    search. As a result, the exclusion of the unconstitutionally
    obtained evidence would have had no effect on Appellant’s
    other convictions; he still would remain guilty of sexual as-
    sault and abusive sexual contact involving Cadet A.W. In
    short, excluding the improperly obtained evidence would
    not have let this “guilty and possibly dangerous defend-
    ant[] go free.” 
    Id.
    Nonetheless, it is still critical to acknowledge that the
    personal trauma endured by First Lieutenant K.A. would
    not be reflected in the results of Appellant’s court-martial.
    That fact is certainly lamentable. Unfortunately, however,
    this result is an outgrowth of the Government’s improper
    conduct and is a cost that society must bear under these
    circumstances. Simply stated, the exclusion of the evidence
    in this case would serve as a compelling deterrent to future
    unlawful searches, and this deterrence would outweigh the
    resulting social costs. Indeed, to hold otherwise, as the ma-
    jority does, essentially grants law enforcement carte
    blanche when it comes to drafting search authorizations
    without even coming close to “particularly describing the
    place to be searched, and the persons or things to be
    seized,” U.S. Const. amend. IV, and when it comes to
    10
    United States v. Lattin, No. 22-0211/AF
    Judge OHLSON, dissenting
    conducting completely unreasonable searches based on
    those overly broad search authorizations.
    Conclusion
    We must do better in protecting the constitutional
    rights of those who serve in our armed forces. Accordingly,
    I would hold that the military judge abused his discretion
    when he declined to impose the exclusionary rule in this
    case. 3 Because the majority holds to the contrary, I respect-
    fully dissent.
    3 Because of my proposed disposition of this case, I need not
    reach Issue II.
    11