John Christopher Reynolds v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2014 )


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  •                                              COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Alston, McCullough and Senior Judge Annunziata
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued at Alexandria, Virginia
    JOHN CHRISTOPHER REYNOLDS
    MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
    v.     Record No. 2179-12-4                                   JUDGE ROSSIE D. ALSTON, JR.
    MAY 27, 2014
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ARLINGTON COUNTY
    Daniel S. Fiore, II, Judge
    Dusty Sparrow, Assistant Public Defender (Allison H. Carpenter;
    Matthew T. Foley, on briefs), for appellant.
    Rosemary V. Bourne, Assistant Attorney General (Kenneth T.
    Cuccinelli, II,1 Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    John Christopher Reynolds (appellant) appeals his convictions of felony hit and run in
    violation of Code § 46.2-894 and DWI maiming in violation of Code § 18.2-51.4. On appeal,
    appellant alleges that the trial court (i) “erred in denying [appellant’s] motion to suppress
    evidence seized as a result of the Arlington County Police Department’s unlawful attachment of
    a GPS unit to [appellant’s] vehicle in Maryland without a search warrant and for purpose of
    arrest,” and (ii) “erred in denying [appellant’s] motion to suppress evidence seized as a result of
    the unlawful search of his cell-site information for the purpose of tracking [his] movements.”
    Finding no error, we affirm.
    
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    1
    Mark R. Herring succeeded Kenneth T. Cuccinelli, II, as Attorney General on January
    11, 2014.
    I. Background
    The night of December 29, 2010, appellant met some friends for drinks in the Ballston
    neighborhood of Arlington, Virginia. After parting ways with his friends, who testified they left
    appellant sleeping in his car parked in the Ballston Mall parking garage, appellant drove his
    vehicle down Fairfax Drive in Arlington and struck Rebekah Grant, a pedestrian, while she was
    crossing the street with a friend. Appellant did not stop, and an eyewitness saw appellant’s
    vehicle take a right-hand turn off of Fairfax Drive shortly thereafter.
    A. The Investigation
    When officers arrived at the scene, they recovered one half of a side marker light with a
    Dodge Chrysler logo and serial number and a piece of a passenger side mirror with a date stamp
    of October 2002 and a part number. Through information from Dodge Chrysler, the eyewitness,
    and the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles, Arlington County Police Officer Robert Wright
    narrowed down the vehicle suspected of hitting Ms. Grant to four Dodge Neons in the area.
    While working to narrow down the list of suspect vehicles in the area, Officer Wright
    received a call from Investigator Rich of the National Insurance Crime Bureau. Investigator
    Rich relayed to Officer Wright that at approximately 4:00 a.m. on December 30, 2010, a call was
    placed to Progressive Insurance Company (Progressive) by John J. Reynolds, appellant’s father,
    who stated that his Dodge Neon was involved in an accident in the parking garage of Fair Oaks
    Mall in Fairfax County, Virginia. Mr. Reynolds’s Dodge Neon was the same make, model,
    description, and VIN number as one of the four Dodge Neons on Officer Wright’s list of suspect
    vehicles. In addition, the damage to Reynolds’ vehicle was consistent with the likely damage to
    the vehicle involved in the hit and run. In further conversations with the insurance company,
    Officer Wright learned that Mr. Reynolds’s insurance claim had already been paid as a total loss
    and he was able to locate and seize the vehicle from a salvage yard in Culpeper, Virginia. When
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    he located Reynolds’ vehicle, Officer Wright observed damage consistent with the pieces found
    at the scene of the hit and run. Officer Wright also learned that the Dodge Neon he ultimately
    seized was registered to appellant’s father and mother, Jacqueline Reynolds. Both John J.
    Reynolds and appellant were listed as authorized drivers on the insurance policy.
    Continuing his investigation, Officer Wright met with the security guard who was on
    duty at the Fair Oaks Mall parking garage the morning of December 30, 2010. The security
    guard told Officer Wright that he did his rounds at approximately 11:00 p.m. on December 29,
    2010, and did not notice the Reynoldses’ vehicle. Moreover, around 4:00 a.m. on December 30,
    2010, the security guard did see the Reynoldses’ vehicle in the garage but did not observe any
    debris. At approximately 5:00 a.m., the security guard saw an older white male by the
    Reynoldses’ vehicle. When approached, the man, presumably appellant’s father, told the
    security guard that the vehicle was involved in a hit-and-run accident on Route 50 when a
    woman struck his car and fled the scene.
    Officer Wright subsequently spoke to Progressive and learned that appellant’s father
    reported that appellant parked the car in the mall parking garage to go out with friends and when
    he returned, the vehicle while parked in the lot had been struck. Officer Wright also learned
    through Progressive that appellant was the usual driver of the vehicle and that he was reported as
    the driver the night of December 29th into the morning of December 30, 2010.
    B. The First, Historical Cell-Site2 Information Court Order
    Having narrowed down the suspects in the hit and run to appellant or his father, Officer
    Wright obtained a court order to retrieve historical cell-site information (the “January order”)3
    2
    FBI Agent Jennifer Banks, admitted by the trial court as an expert in cell-site
    technology, testified that a “cell” is either a cell tower attached to a pole in the street or a panel
    attached to the side of a building that has antennas emitting radio frequencies. Cell phones use
    the cells to communicate. Agent Banks testified that “your cell phone works a lot like a radio, I
    mean it is a radio, essentially.” App. at 444-45.
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    from appellant’s and his father’s cellular service providers and bank records to help him
    determine if appellant or his father had been in Arlington the night of the hit and run. The bank
    records showed that appellant used his debit card at Union Jack’s, a bar/restaurant in the Ballston
    Mall, approximately four hours prior to the accident. The phone records revealed that
    appellant’s father used his cell phone in the early evening hours of December 29, 2010, and then
    not again until he received a call from appellant around 4:00 a.m. on December 30, 2010.
    Meanwhile, appellant’s phone records revealed that he sent and received text messages
    and phone calls throughout the evening of December 29, 2010, until a break from approximately
    12:20 a.m. to 4:00 a.m. on December 30, 2010, when appellant called his father. The cell-site
    records also revealed that appellant’s phone “pinged” off of cellular towers in the Ballston area
    and specifically around Fairfax Drive at the time of the accident. In the hours after the accident,
    appellant’s phone pinged off of towers through Rosslyn, into the District of Columbia, and then
    back out Route 66 west towards Fair Oaks Mall. Officer Wright testified at the hearing on
    appellant’s motion to suppress that “[a]t that time of the investigation, I determined that
    [appellant] was in the vehicle [at the time of the hit and run].”
    C. The GPS Tracking
    Having identified appellant as the main suspect in the hit and run, Officer Wright decided
    he wanted to leverage the “element of surprise” and arrest appellant while he was alone, in hopes
    3
    Data obtained through orders such as the January order exists because during the course
    of a phone call, if the phone is moving, it is “handed off between towers” for the best reception.
    Agent Banks testified that AT&T, appellant’s cellular service provider, can provide historical
    “handoff information” from tower to tower for a particular cell phone because it maintains those
    records for a period of seven years. This allows law enforcement, through a court order, to
    calculate the approximate location of a user’s phone when it was making or receiving phone
    calls, text messages, or voicemails.
    Agent Banks further explained that historical cell-site data includes the time a call or text
    message is actually made or received by the user. When required by court order, AT&T
    provides a spreadsheet listing the historical information and using that and a list of the
    company’s tower locations, law enforcement experts can map the approximate location of an
    individual’s phone over a given time period.
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    of strengthening the case against appellant. During his investigation, Officer Wright learned that
    appellant lived in Pennsylvania and traveled extensively for work in his own vehicle, including
    trips to Virginia. Appellant’s parents lived in Fairfax County, and appellant’s vehicle
    registration and driver’s license listed his parents’ address.
    On February 26, 2011, admittedly without consultation with the Commonwealth’s
    attorney and without a warrant or other court sanction, Officer Wright placed a GPS tracking
    device on appellant’s vehicle while it was in a parking lot in Maryland. For twelve days, Officer
    Wright monitored appellant’s travel through Virginia, Maryland, New York, and Pennsylvania
    using the GPS information. Officer Wright testified that the GPS could update him as to
    appellant’s location in as little as fourteen-second increments through emails sent to him and to
    Arlington County Police Detective Chris Dengeles. However Officer Wright, to preserve the
    battery life of the GPS, set the GPS to provide less frequent updates. Officer Wright used a
    computer interface to adjust the GPS settings and to alert him when appellant’s vehicle entered
    Virginia.
    D. The Second, Real-Time Cell-Site Information Court Order and appellant’s Arrest
    Around midnight the morning of March 9, 2011, Officer Wright received a notification
    from the GPS that appellant traveled into Virginia and to his parents’ house in Fairfax County.
    Officer Wright contacted the Arlington County Tactical Unit (“TAC unit”) supervisor at
    approximately 7:00 a.m. to request a TAC unit go to appellant’s parents’ house to visually
    confirm that appellant’s vehicle was there. The TAC unit arrived at appellant’s parents’ house at
    approximately 8:30 a.m. and around the same time, appellant left the house in his vehicle and
    drove to the Tysons Corner area of Fairfax. The TAC unit followed appellant and observed him
    park and leave his vehicle and get in another car with four other individuals. The separate
    vehicle left the scene and, on Officer Wright’s instructions to stay with appellant’s vehicle, the
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    TAC unit did not follow. Meanwhile, around 9:30 a.m. Officer Wright obtained a warrant to
    arrest appellant for felony hit and run.
    The TAC unit stayed with appellant’s vehicle until approximately 4:00 p.m. when Officer
    Wright testified they “started to determine what [they] were going to do next.” Officer Wright
    testified that, armed with a felony arrest warrant, he determined that there was a need to take
    appellant into custody and to that end, he and Detective Don Fortunato, also of the Arlington
    County Police Department, drafted a court order to obtain “real-time” cell-site data from
    appellant’s phone through AT&T (the “March order”).4 The March order required AT&T to
    ping appellant’s cell phone for its location. Once drafted, Officer Wright and Detective
    Fortunato took the March order to Arlington County Circuit Court, where a judge signed it
    around 4:00 p.m. or 5:00 p.m. The March order authorized AT&T to “ping” appellant’s phone
    every fifteen minutes and provide its physical location data to Officer Wright. Beginning at
    approximately 7:00 p.m., AT&T sent four electronic signals in fifteen-minute increments to
    appellant’s phone. The ping signals registered with cell towers near appellant’s phone and
    provided the phone’s approximate GPS coordinate location information to AT&T, which AT&T
    then forwarded to Officer Wright via email. Officer Wright entered the coordinates into a
    computer program to determine appellant’s approximate location and direction of travel.
    4
    The cell-site data sought in the March order was “real-time” location data obtained by
    “pinging” a user’s phone rather than historical data, as required by the January order. Agent
    Banks testified at appellant’s trial that AT&T’s “pinging” technology works via a combination of
    GPS and cell tower communication. The ping signal sent by AT&T to the phone causes the cell
    phone to “talk” to a nearby cell tower, while GPS satellites also “talk” with the tower. Based on
    the speed of communication between the phone, tower, and satellite, a mathematical formula
    generates the GPS location of the mobile phone. According to Agent Banks, a mobile phone
    user may only block ping signals initiated by police surveillance if the user turns the phone off.
    AT&T does not otherwise send ping signals in the course of operating its cellular network.
    Agent Banks testified that the reason cell phones have the ability to talk to cell towers via ping
    signals is because of law enforcement’s need to locate victims in distress for 911 emergency
    responses.
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    The information from AT&T, however, was neither timely nor accurate enough to
    determine appellant’s precise location and, therefore, the TAC unit remained with appellant’s
    vehicle. The final ping result reached Officer Wright after appellant had returned to his vehicle,
    still under surveillance by the TAC unit, in Tysons Corner. When appellant entered his vehicle
    and drove away, the TAC unit followed him and in conjunction with Fairfax County police,
    stopped and arrested appellant on Interstate 495. Upon appellant’s arrest, police impounded and
    searched appellant’s vehicle, in which they found a laptop computer and two cell phones. Search
    warrants were later obtained and executed on the laptop computer and cell phones.
    E. The Trial
    At trial, Officer Wright testified, as did individuals who both saw and spoke with
    appellant the night of the accident. The witness who observed appellant’s car after the accident
    also testified. Additionally, Agent Banks testified as to how both historical and real-time
    cell-site data is obtained and how that data was mapped to provide physical location information
    of both appellant’s and his father’s phones to Officer Wright. The historical information was
    used to determine the individuals appellant was with the night of December 29-30, 2010, as well
    as where appellant’s and his father’s phones were geographically located at times that night.
    Further, Detective Luis Ordonez, who executed the search of appellant’s laptop
    computer, testified that the computer showed past internet searches for websites including
    “hitandrunaccident.com,” “your rights if arrested,” “how long police can hold one in custody,”
    “how long after a hit-and-run will you get caught,” a “hit and run” keyword search, an article
    about the accident in question, and “how often hit-and-run drivers get caught by license plate.”
    On July 26, 2012, a jury found appellant guilty of felony hit and run and DWI maiming.
    On October 5, 2012, the trial court denied appellant’s motion to set aside the verdict and
    sentenced appellant to three years’ and three months’ incarceration on the felony hit-and-run
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    conviction and twelve months’ incarceration on the DWI maiming conviction. This appeal
    followed.
    II. Analysis
    A. Standard of Review
    Appellant’s claim that evidence was seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment
    presents a mixed question of law and fact that this Court reviews de novo on appeal. McCain v.
    Commonwealth, 
    275 Va. 546
    , 551, 
    659 S.E.2d 512
    , 515 (2008) (citing Murphy v.
    Commonwealth, 
    264 Va. 568
    , 573, 
    570 S.E.2d 836
    , 838 (2002)). In making such a
    determination, we give deference to the factual findings of the trial court, but independently
    determine whether the manner in which the evidence was obtained meets the requirements of the
    Fourth Amendment. Id. at 552, 
    659 S.E.2d at 515
    ; Bass v. Commonwealth, 
    259 Va. 470
    , 475,
    
    525 S.E.2d 921
    , 924 (2000).
    B. The GPS Tracking
    Appellant first asserts that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence
    seized as a result of the Arlington County Police Department’s unlawful attachment of a GPS
    unit to appellant’s vehicle in Maryland without a search warrant and for purpose of arrest.
    At the outset, we note that this holding does not turn on Officer Wright’s decision to go
    into Maryland and attach a GPS tracking device to appellant’s vehicle without a warrant. As the
    United States Supreme Court held in United States v. Jones, 
    132 S. Ct. 945
     (2012), the
    placement of a GPS tracking device on an individual’s vehicle constitutes a “search” within the
    meaning of the Fourth Amendment as it is a physical occupation of (in this case appellant’s)
    private property. 
    Id. at 950-51
    . As Jones had not been decided when Officer Wright placed the
    GPS tracking device on appellant’s car on February 26, 2011, the parties argued on brief, based
    on prior precedent, whether the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule applied in this case.
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    While it may be problematic in light of Jones to conclude that Officer Wright acted in good faith
    when he, without a warrant, traveled into another jurisdiction and placed a GPS unit on
    appellant’s car, it is unnecessary to our holding as to this assignment of error for us to engage in
    this analytical exercise. To put it simply: No evidence derived from the GPS was used in the
    affidavit to obtain the arrest warrant for appellant or was introduced at trial. Therefore, even if
    the exclusionary rule applied to evidence obtained from the GPS, there would have been nothing
    for the trial court to suppress as a result.
    Appellant argues that because Officer Wright learned appellant was at his parents’ house
    in Virginia from the GPS tracking information, and because he did not disclose that in his
    affidavit for the March order and Detective Fortunato likewise did not disclose it in his affidavit
    for the search warrants for items seized from appellant’s vehicle, all evidence obtained as a result
    should have been suppressed. In other words, appellant argues that because Officer Wright knew
    appellant was in Virginia because of the GPS, anything that occurred or was obtained after that
    point was tainted or “fruit of the poisonous tree.” See e.g. Warlick v. Commonwealth, 
    215 Va. 263
    , 265, 
    208 S.E.2d 746
    , 748 (1974) (holding that “[t]he exclusionary rule operates not only
    against evidence seized and information acquired during an unlawful search or seizure but also
    against derivative evidence discovered because of the unlawful act”). The fatal flaw in
    appellant’s argument is that the Fourth Amendment violation in this case yielded no “fruit” at all.
    The evidence offered at trial was that Officer Wright identified appellant as his suspect
    and decided to arrest him prior to placing the GPS unit on his vehicle. Indeed, the entire purpose
    of placing the GPS on appellant’s vehicle was to aid in his apprehension once he re-entered
    Virginia. When Officer Wright learned appellant was in Virginia, he sent a TAC unit to obtain
    visual confirmation of appellant’s location. Once the TAC unit obtained visual confirmation, it
    stayed with appellant’s vehicle until his arrest. Meanwhile, a neutral and detached magistrate
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    issued a warrant for appellant’s arrest based on probable cause that he committed felony hit and
    run. Significantly, appellant never challenged the validity of the arrest warrant.
    Once appellant returned to his vehicle on March 9, 2011, the TAC unit effectuated a stop
    and arrested appellant pursuant to the lawful arrest warrant. Officers then conducted a search of
    appellant’s vehicle incident to arrest. Subsequently, Detective Fortunato obtained search
    warrants for appellant’s laptop computer and cell phones. The GPS information – the fact that
    appellant traveled to his parents’ house in Virginia the morning of March 9, 2011 - did not
    contribute to or invalidate the probable cause findings to arrest appellant, search his vehicle
    incident to that arrest, or search items found in his vehicle pursuant to valid warrants. Therefore,
    we hold that the trial court did not err in denying appellant’s motion to suppress as to evidence
    obtained from the GPS unit.
    C. The January and March Cell-Site Data Orders
    Appellant next assigns error to the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence
    seized as a result of the cell-site information orders. This swiftly-emerging area of Fourth
    Amendment law involves federal and state companion legislation pursuant to which the court
    orders in this case were issued. Therefore, before discussing the constitutionality of evidence
    obtained as a result of the January and March orders, it is important to understand the statutory
    framework through which they were issued.
    The Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, Pub. L. No. 99-508, 
    100 Stat. 1848
    (1986), consists of three titles, the second of which is the Stored Communications Act, 
    18 U.S.C. § 2701
     et seq. (“SCA”). The SCA sets forth the statutory privacy rights for customers and
    - 10 -
    subscribers of electronic communications service providers. Relevant to this case, 
    18 U.S.C. § 2703
    (d)5 provides:
    Requirements for court order. A court order for disclosure under
    subsection (b) or (c) may be issued by any court that is a court of
    competent jurisdiction and shall issue only if the governmental
    entity offers specific and articulable facts showing that there are
    reasonable grounds to believe that the contents of a wire or
    electronic communication, or the records or other information
    sought, are relevant and material to an ongoing criminal
    investigation. . . .
    (Emphasis added).
    In 1988, the Virginia legislature enacted a companion statute to codify the means and
    methodology by which law enforcement could obtain records from electronic communications
    service providers. Code § 19.2-70.3 provides in relevant part:
    A. A provider of electronic communication service . . . shall
    disclose a record or other information pertaining to a subscriber
    to or customer of such service, excluding the contents of electronic
    communications, to an investigative or law-enforcement officer
    only pursuant to:
    *      *       *       *      *        *      *
    5
    Section 2703 distinguishes between “contents” and non-content
    “records.” If the government seeks content information about a
    communication, that is “information concerning the substance,
    purport, or meaning of that communication,” paragraphs (a) and
    (b) apply. 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 2510
    (8), 2703(a)-(b), 2711. If the
    government seeks non-content records, . . . paragraph (c) controls,
    and provides different procedural protections.
    In Re Application of the United States, 
    830 F. Supp. 2d 114
    , 127-28 (E.D. Va. 2011). The
    January and March orders were for non-content records pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. § 2703
    (c) and (d)
    as the location information collected and maintained by the cellular services providers does not
    include the “content” of emails, text messages, or voicemails and thus does not constitute
    “information concerning the substance, purport, or meaning” of a communication. See 
    18 U.S.C. § 2510
    (8) (defining “contents” with respect to wire, oral, or electronic communications).
    Furthermore, “It is well established that Section 2703(c)(1)(B) of the [SCA] applies to historical
    cell site location data.” United States v. Graham, 
    846 F. Supp. 2d 384
    , 396 (D. Md. 2012)
    (citations omitted).
    - 11 -
    3. A court order for such disclosure issued as provided in this
    section;
    *       *       *       *       *      *       *
    B. A court shall issue an order for disclosure under this section
    only if the investigative or law-enforcement officer shows that
    there is reason to believe the records or other information sought
    are relevant and material to an ongoing criminal investigation
    ....
    (Emphasis added). Because the statutory scheme only requires a showing of “specific articulable
    facts showing that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the . . . records or other
    information sought, are relevant and material to an ongoing criminal investigation” to obtain a
    court order, it clearly requires a lower burden of proof than is necessary to establish probable
    cause for a warrant to issue. See e.g., In re Application of the United States for Historical Cell
    Site Data, 
    724 F.3d 600
    , 606 (5th Cir. 2013) (“The ‘specific and articulable facts’ standard is a
    lesser showing than the probable cause standard that is required by the Fourth Amendment to
    obtain a warrant.” (citing U.S. Const. amend. IV; In re Application of the United States, 
    620 F.3d 304
    , 315 (3rd Cir. 2010); United States v. Warshak, 
    631 F.3d 266
    , 291 (6th Cir. 2010))). This
    discrepancy has generated dozens of cases across the country in which defendants have argued
    that searches pursuant to SCA court orders and not warrants supported by probable cause violate
    their Fourth Amendment rights. Courts have reached varying results.6 Though this salient issue
    6
    Compare In re Application of the United States, 
    809 F. Supp. 2d 113
     (E.D.N.Y. 2011)
    (holding that the Fourth Amendment is implicated when the government monitors historical
    cell-site location data over a sufficiently long, though undefined period of time); In re
    Application of the United States, 
    736 F. Supp. 2d 578
     (E.D.N.Y. 2010); with In re Application of
    the United States for Historical Cell Site Data, 
    724 F.3d 600
     (holding that the Fourth
    Amendment is not implicated by government monitoring of historical cell-site data, pursuant to a
    court order, based on the third party doctrine and because cellular service providers maintain
    historical cell-site data for their own business purposes); accord United States v. Ruby, 
    2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18997
     (S.D. Cal. February 12, 2013); United States v. Graham, 
    846 F. Supp. 2d 384
     (D. Md. 2012); In Re Application of the United States, 
    830 F. Supp. 2d 114
    ; United
    States v. Dye, No. 10CR221, 
    2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 42787
     (N.D. Ohio 2011); United States v.
    Velasquez, 
    2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 118045
     (N.D. Cal. 2010); United States v. Benford, 2010
    - 12 -
    is one that a Virginia appellate court may have to resolve in an appropriate case, the facts of this
    case dictate that we need not, and therefore we will not, decide it at this time. See Luginbyhl v.
    Commonwealth, 
    48 Va. App. 58
    , 64, 
    628 S.E.2d 74
    , 77 (2006) (“‘It is a well recognized
    principle of appellate review that constitutional questions should not be decided if the record
    permits final disposition of a cause on non-constitutional grounds.’ . . . ‘A congruent principle is
    one that an appellate court decides cases ‘on the best and narrowest ground available.’” (citations
    omitted)).
    In this case, both the January and March orders stated: “IT BEING SHOWN that there is
    probable cause to believe that a crime has been committed, that the information requested herein
    is in the possession of AT&T Wireless and that the information sought is relevant and material to
    a legitimate law enforcement inquiry . . . .” (Emphasis added). This language reflects that,
    despite the fact that the SCA and Virginia’s companion statute only require the government show
    “specific and articulable facts” that the information requested is “relevant and material to an
    ongoing criminal investigation,” in this case, a judge of the Arlington County Circuit Court
    found probable cause to issue the orders for the cell-site data. Both the January and March
    orders, therefore, met and exceeded the statutory standard and did not violate appellant’s Fourth
    Amendment rights.
    7 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29453
     (N.D. Ind. 2010); United States v. Suarez-Blanca, 
    2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 111622
     (N.D. Ga. 2008); and In re Application of the United States, 
    509 F. Supp. 2d 76
    ,
    80-81 (D. Mass. 2007). See also United States v. Navas, 
    640 F. Supp. 2d 256
    , 262 (S.D.N.Y.
    2009) (defendant did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in real-time cell-site data
    because he used his phone on public roads, law enforcement did not monitor defendant in a
    private residence, defendant was not a subscriber to the phone, and if he wanted to keep his
    location private, he could have turned off his phone).
    7
    Because the January and March orders were supported by a probable cause finding, we
    do not reach the issue of whether appellant had a reasonable expectation of privacy in his
    historical or real-time cell-site data and if so, whether the statutory standard of “specific and
    articulable facts” that the information requested is “relevant and material to an ongoing criminal
    investigation” violated that expectation.
    - 13 -
    We also note that with respect to the March order for “real-time” cell-site data of
    appellant’s phone, just as with the GPS tracking data, no information obtained from the March
    order was introduced as evidence at trial. In fact, neither the TAC unit nor Officer Wright
    learned any information from the March order that led directly or indirectly to appellant’s arrest
    or subsequent conviction. The TAC unit visually observed appellant or his vehicle beginning at
    approximately 8:30 a.m. on March 9, 2011. AT&T began pinging appellant’s phone around
    7:00 p.m. Officer Wright testified that he received the final ping result “right at the same time”
    the TAC unit resumed visual surveillance of appellant when he returned to his vehicle. The TAC
    unit then followed appellant and arrested him pursuant to a valid arrest warrant. As discussed,
    the laptop and cell phones found in appellant’s car were seized pursuant to a valid search
    incident to arrest and then searched pursuant to valid search warrants. The location information
    obtained as a result of the March order was simply inconsequential to appellant’s arrest or
    conviction.
    For these reasons, we hold that the trial court did not err in denying appellant’s motion to
    suppress evidence obtained from the GPS unit or from either cell-site data court order.
    Affirmed.
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