State v. Jeremiah J. Purtell , 358 Wis. 2d 212 ( 2014 )


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    2014 WI 101
    SUPREME COURT           OF   WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:              2012AP1307-CR
    COMPLETE TITLE:        State of Wisconsin,
    Plaintiff-Respondent-Petitioner,
    v.
    Jeremiah J. Purtell,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    REVIEW OF A DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS
    
    347 Wis. 2d 550
    , 
    830 N.W.2d 723
                                      (Ct. App. 2013 – Unpublished)
    OPINION FILED:         August 1, 2014
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:         February 5, 2014
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:              Circuit
    COUNTY:             Washington
    JUDGE:              James K. Muehlbauer
    JUSTICES:
    CONCURRED:
    DISSENTED:          BRADLEY, J., ABRAHAMSON, C.J., dissent. (Opinion
    filed.)
    NOT PARTICIPATING:
    ATTORNEYS:
    For      the    plaintiff-respondent-petitioner,   the   cause   was
    argued by Sandra L. Tarver, assistant attorney general, with
    whom on the briefs was J.B. Van Hollen, attorney general.
    For the defendant-appellant, the cause was argued by Ellen
    J. Krahn, assistant state public defender, with whom on the
    brief was Eileen A. Hirsch, assistant state public defender.
    
    2014 WI 101
                                                                       NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.       2012AP1307-CR
    (L.C. No.    2010CF86)
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                              :             IN SUPREME COURT
    State of Wisconsin,
    Plaintiff-Respondent-Petitioner,
    FILED
    v.                                                            AUG 1, 2014
    Jeremiah J. Purtell,                                                  Diane M. Fremgen
    Clerk of Supreme Court
    Defendant-Appellant.
    REVIEW of a decision of the Court of Appeals.                   Reversed.
    ¶1      MICHAEL    J.    GABLEMAN,   J.   This     is    a     review      of    an
    unpublished decision of the court of appeals1                  that reversed the
    judgment     of   the    Washington    County   Circuit       Court2       convicting
    Jeremiah      Purtell     of    four   counts   of      possession          of    child
    pornography, contrary to Wis. Stat. § 948.12(1m) (2009-10).3 The
    court of appeals held that the circuit court erred in denying
    Purtell's motion to suppress evidence seized from a warrantless
    1
    State v. Purtell, No. 2012AP1307-CR, unpublished slip op.
    (Wis. Ct. App. Mar. 7, 2013).
    2
    The Honorable James K. Muehlbauer presided.
    3
    All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    the 2009-10 version unless otherwise indicated.
    No.     2012AP1307-CR
    search of his personal computer.                    In denying Purtell's motion to
    suppress, the circuit court reasoned that the probation agent's
    search    of     Purtell's       computer      complied    with    Wis.        Admin.    Code
    § DOC     328.21(3)(a)         (Dec.       2006)4    because     she     had       reasonable
    grounds     to       believe     the       computer,     which    Purtell          knowingly
    possessed in violation of the terms of his probation, contained
    contraband.          The court of appeals concluded that the probation
    agent     improperly       searched         the     computer     under       the     mistaken
    understanding that Purtell possessed images that violated the
    terms of his probation.                Because the images were not prohibited
    under the terms of Purtell's probation or otherwise illegal to
    possess, the court of appeals held the probation agent lacked
    reasonable grounds to search the computer.
    ¶2        The question presented in this case is whether the
    warrantless probation search of Purtell's computer violated his
    constitutional rights under the Fourth Amendment to the United
    States Constitution and Article I, Section 11 of the Wisconsin
    Constitution.
    ¶3         We hold the circuit court properly denied Purtell's
    motion     to        suppress.         A     probation     agent's        search        of   a
    probationer's property satisfies the reasonableness requirement
    of the Fourth Amendment if the probation agent has "reasonable
    grounds"        to     believe     the       probationer's        property          contains
    4
    Effective July 1, 2013, Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 328 was
    repealed and recreated.      All subsequent citations to the
    Wisconsin Administrative Code will be to the 2006 version, which
    was the version in effect at the time of the search of Purtell's
    computer on April 9, 2007.
    2
    No.    2012AP1307-CR
    contraband.        Griffin v. Wisconsin, 
    483 U.S. 868
    , 872 (1987).
    The record demonstrates that the probation agent had reasonable
    grounds to believe Purtell's computer, which Purtell knowingly
    possessed     in    violation       of       the    conditions        of    his    probation,
    contained contraband.           Accordingly, we hold the probation search
    of the contents of Purtell's computer did not violate the Fourth
    Amendment     to     the    United       States       Constitution         or     Article     I,
    Section     11     of   the     Wisconsin           Constitution        and      reverse    the
    decision of the court of appeals.
    I.          BACKGROUND
    ¶4     The material facts underlying this appeal stem from
    events occurring in November 2006, when Jeremiah J. Purtell pled
    guilty to two felony counts of mistreating animals in a cruel
    manner, contrary to Wis. Stat. § 951.02 (2005-06).                                  This 2006
    guilty     plea    arose     from     events        that    transpired        after      Purtell
    began dating a veterinary technician who he met through Myspace,
    a   social-networking          website.            After    a   few    weeks      of     dating,
    Purtell moved into the technician's apartment which she shared
    with her two dogs, a Shetland sheepdog and a Scottish terrier.
    Over the next several weeks, Purtell tortured her two dogs,
    piercing     their      eyes   with      a    needle,       repeatedly        throwing      them
    against a wall, and holding them by their necks.                              He also struck
    the Scottish terrier with a pipe and cut the Shetland sheepdog
    several     times       with    scissors.             Purtell         later      admitted     to
    strangling        the      Scottish      terrier           to   death.            During     the
    investigation into the animal abuse charges, the Madison Police
    Department       examined      Purtell's       computer         and    found      over    thirty
    3
    No.   2012AP1307-CR
    images depicting bestiality, including sex acts between women
    and either dogs or horses.
    ¶5       On    March     28,    2007,   the    Dane    County       Circuit     Court5
    withheld sentence, placed Purtell on 48 months of probation, and
    imposed but stayed a sentence of 5 months and 29 days.                                  For
    purposes of his probation, Purtell's supervision was transferred
    from Dane to Washington County and his case was assigned to
    Probation Agent Kristine Anderson ("Agent Anderson"), who had a
    specialty         caseload     of      probationers            with     animal      abuse
    backgrounds.
    ¶6       Agent     Anderson       met   with        Purtell       for   his    intake
    appointment on April 6, 2007.                   At this time, Agent Anderson
    reviewed with Purtell his judgment of conviction, the general
    rules   of   community       supervision,6        and    the    conditions        she   was
    imposing that were supplemental to those imposed by the court.7
    5
    The Honorable James Martin presided.
    6
    "Probation, parole and extended supervision all involve
    persons under community supervision."   State v. Rowan, 
    2012 WI 60
    , ¶10, 
    341 Wis. 2d 281
    , 
    814 N.W.2d 854
    .     The conditions of
    community supervision are enumerated in a form entitled "Rules
    of Community Supervision," which provides a standardized list of
    rules issued by the Department of Corrections that individuals
    under community supervision must follow in addition to any other
    court-ordered conditions.
    7
    Probation agents have the authority to establish rules of
    probation that are supplemental to court-imposed conditions.
    Wis. Admin. Code, § DOC 328.04(2)(d).    The Rules of Community
    Supervision require the probationer to "follow any specific
    rules that may be issued by an agent to achieve the goals and
    objectives of your supervision.    The rules may be modified at
    any time, as appropriate."
    4
    No.    2012AP1307-CR
    Purtell objected to several of these supplemental conditions,
    including the stipulation he "not purchase, possess, nor use a
    computer, software, hardware, nor a modem without prior agent
    approval."8     Beyond the condition concerning computers, Agent
    Anderson imposed several other rules based on her knowledge of
    his criminal history.      Because his underlying conviction related
    to animal cruelty and originated from using Myspace to meet the
    veterinarian technician whose dogs he had tortured, Purtell was
    "prohibited    from   maintaining   a   Myspace.com   account"   and   from
    having   any   contact   with   animals.       Additionally,     Purtell's
    presentence investigation report9 informed Agent Anderson that he
    had a preoccupation with internet pornography and befriending
    and dating underage girls.      Accordingly, Purtell was prohibited
    from having any unsupervised contact with children.
    8
    This condition supplemented a condition that had already
    been imposed by the circuit court which provided, as a condition
    of Purtell's probation, he was "not to own or possess a
    computer," but that he could use a computer "at his place of
    business or school only."
    9
    The Dane County Circuit Court ordered a presentence
    investigation report in 2006 after Purtell pled guilty to the
    two counts of animal cruelty discussed above. While this report
    is not in the record, a second presentence investigation report
    was ordered by the Washington County Circuit Court after Purtell
    was convicted by jury trial in September 2011 of four counts of
    possessing child pornography. This 2011 report, which is in the
    record, references the 2006 report that Agent Anderson relied
    upon in assessing Purtell's treatment needs.        "The primary
    purpose of the presentence investigation report is to provide
    the sentencing court with accurate and relevant information upon
    which to base its sentencing decision."        Wis. Admin. Code
    § DOC 328.27(1). However, it also serves a helpful role for the
    probation   agent   in  "determining   levels   of   supervision,
    classification, program assignment . . . decision making[,] and
    in the overall correctional treatment" of the probationer. 
    Id. 5 No.
        2012AP1307-CR
    ¶7     During the intake meeting, Purtell disclosed to Agent
    Anderson that he had a Myspace account.                    Agent Anderson reviewed
    Purtell's    Myspace     page.         On    the   opening       page    there    was    an
    animated    video   of   a     bull    with      audible    sound       declaring      "the
    internet is for porn."           At the end of the video was a cartoon
    illustration of a man standing behind a cow.                          In front of the
    cow was an equal sign and an image of a half cow/half                                   man
    character.      Agent Anderson also observed a blog post on his
    Myspace     page    titled,      "oops . . . I           did     it     again,"     which
    indicated Purtell was pursuing a relationship with his friend's
    fifteen-year-old       sister.         Purtell     was     directed      to    close    his
    Myspace account by the end of the day.
    ¶8     Purtell     continued          to   object     to     the      supplemental
    conditions and stated he would not remove his computers unless
    the circuit court judge ordered him to do so.                           Agent Anderson
    requested    her    supervisor,        Correctional        Field      Supervisor       Chad
    Frey ("CFS Frey"), to join the meeting and reinforce the need
    for the supplemental conditions.                 CFS Frey informed Purtell that
    he had a right to correspond with the circuit court and his
    attorney regarding his objections, but clarified that until the
    circuit     court   ordered      differently,        Purtell       was      expected     to
    comply with all of the rules of his probation, including those
    imposed by Agent Anderson.
    ¶9      Purtell eventually relented and agreed to surrender
    the   two   computers     in     his    possession——a          laptop       and   desktop
    computer——to his father the next day, April 7.
    6
    No.     2012AP1307-CR
    ¶10     Later in the afternoon on April 6, Bob Adams, the
    program coordinator of the group home where Purtell resided,
    contacted Agent Anderson and reported that Purtell had returned
    from the intake meeting very disgruntled and had skipped his
    appointment for mental health counseling.              Purtell told Adams he
    had   no    intention     of   complying    with    the    conditions       of    his
    probation and would keep his computers and not close down his
    Myspace account.          Purtell explained to Adams he would simply
    hide his computers during scheduled home visits.10
    ¶11    On Monday, April 9, Adams called Agent Anderson and
    informed her that Purtell had not removed his computers from his
    room and had failed to report to the Washington County Jail to
    submit a DNA sample.           Further, Adams conveyed that Purtell had
    violated the group home's curfew on the evening of Saturday,
    April 7.       Agent Anderson responded that she planned to go to
    the group home with other probation agents and law enforcement
    officers to place Purtell in custody for failing to comply with
    the rules of his supervision.
    ¶12    Later   in    the   morning    on     April   9,     the     probation
    officers     did,    indeed,     take   Purtell     into    custody.             Agent
    Anderson, with two other probation agents, searched Purtell's
    10
    Depending on the level of supervision deemed most
    appropriate, a probation agent is typically required to make
    home visits to a probationer's home every 30 to 90 days.   See
    Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 328.04(4).  The level of supervision is
    generally based on the needs and risks of the probationer.
    § DOC 328.04(1).
    7
    No.    2012AP1307-CR
    room    and   confiscated,       among    other         things,   a     laptop,    desktop
    computer, other related computer equipment, and personal papers.
    ¶13      After    going     back       to    her    office,       Agent    Anderson
    inventoried the items confiscated in the search and found among
    Purtell's personal papers a crayon-colored picture of a kitten
    with    accompanying       notes      that,        like    his     Myspace       activity,
    suggested Purtell was attempting to engage in a relationship
    with his friend's fifteen-year-old sister.
    ¶14    Agent     Anderson      then         searched       one     of     Purtell's
    computers without a warrant.11                When she turned on the computer,
    several titles to images popped up on the screen that involved
    females engaged in sexual activity with animals and images of
    what appeared to be underage females.                      Agent Anderson notified
    her    supervisor,      CFS   Frey,      of       the   images    she     had    found   on
    Purtell's      computer.         They     contacted        local        law    enforcement
    officials, who subsequently obtained two search warrants which
    allowed them to search Purtell's computer equipment, including
    the hard drives of his laptop and desktop computers.12                                   The
    resulting search revealed several still images and videos of
    11
    The circuit court noted in its findings of fact that
    there was conflicting testimony regarding which computer was
    searched by Agent Anderson.       Agent Anderson testified she
    searched the laptop, while a police detective testified it was
    the desktop computer.     Regardless of whose recollection was
    correct, there is no dispute one of the computers was searched
    and that several images of what appeared to be child pornography
    were found.
    12
    Washington County Circuit Court, the Honorable Andrew T.
    Gonring presided.
    8
    No.    2012AP1307-CR
    children engaged in sex acts.         On March 19, 2010, based on the
    evidence   acquired   through   the   search   of   Purtell's     computers,
    Purtell was charged with eight counts           of possession of child
    pornography, contrary to Wis. Stat. § 948.12(1m).
    ¶15    Purtell moved to suppress the evidence seized from the
    computers, arguing that the evidence was obtained in violation
    of his Fourth Amendment rights.13         Purtell conceded that Agent
    Anderson had "reasonable grounds"14 to search Purtell's room to
    ascertain whether he had complied with the conditions of his
    probation, and that Agent Anderson lawfully seized his computers
    due to his non-compliance.       However, Purtell argued that Agent
    Anderson   exceeded   the   permissible    scope     of   that    search   by
    searching the contents of his computer.             According to Purtell,
    Agent Anderson lacked both a warrant and reasonable grounds to
    conduct the search, and the evidence subsequently seized should
    therefore be suppressed.
    ¶16    The Washington County Circuit Court denied Purtell's
    motion to suppress, concluding the search was justified because
    there were reasonable grounds to believe the computer contained
    13
    Purtell's motion to suppress raised a second argument in
    the alternative.    Purtell argued that if the circuit court
    determined Agent Anderson did have reasonable grounds to search
    the computer's contents, the evidence should still be suppressed
    because a police detective had improperly viewed and catalogued
    the evidence before obtaining a search warrant. This issue has
    not been raised on appeal.
    14
    Wisconsin probation regulations permit a probation agent
    to search a probationer's property "if there are reasonable
    grounds to believe that the quarters or property contain
    contraband . . . ." Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 328.21(3)(a).
    9
    No.     2012AP1307-CR
    contraband.15          On September 1, 2011, Purtell was found guilty by
    jury trial of four counts of possession of child pornography.
    ¶17         Purtell appealed from the judgment of conviction and
    order denying his motion to suppress.                            The court of appeals
    reversed        the    judgment       of   conviction,        concluding          that    Agent
    Anderson did not have reasonable grounds to believe Purtell's
    computers        contained        contraband.             State      v.     Purtell,        No.
    2012AP1307-CR, unpublished slip op., ¶14 (Wis. Ct. App. Mar. 7,
    2013).      The court reasoned that the State's argument centered
    "on the faulty assumption that Purtell's probation conditions
    prohibited        him    from    possessing         images       depicting        cruelty   to
    animals or the mutilation of animals."                            
    Id. Because images
    depicting animal cruelty or mutilation were not prohibited under
    Purtell's rules of probation, and were not otherwise illegal,
    there     was    no     basis   on    which   "to       affirm     the    circuit     court's
    denial of Purtell's suppression motion."                      
    Id. ¶18 The
    State petitioned this court for review, which we
    granted on November 20, 2013.
    II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶19        This     case     requires         us    to   address           whether     the
    warrantless           search    of    Purtell's         computer     by     his     probation
    15
    "Contraband" is defined in the Wisconsin Administrative
    Code as "[a]ny item which the client may not possess under the
    rules or conditions of the client's supervision," Wis. Admin.
    Code § DOC 328.16(1)(a), or "any item whose possession is
    forbidden by law." § DOC 328.16(1)(b).
    10
    No.    2012AP1307-CR
    officer violated his Fourth Amendment rights.16           Whether evidence
    should have been suppressed as the result of a Fourth Amendment
    violation is a mixed question of law and fact.                  We take the
    circuit    court's   findings    of    fact   as   true   unless     clearly
    erroneous, and "our application of constitutional principles to
    those facts is de novo."        State v. Sobczak, 
    2013 WI 52
    , ¶9, 
    347 Wis. 2d 724
    , 
    833 N.W.2d 59
    .
    III. DISCUSSION
    ¶20   The question before this court is whether Purtell's
    Fourth Amendment rights were violated when his probation officer
    searched the contents of his computer.17           The State argues that
    16
    Purtell challenges the search of his computer under both the
    United States and Wisconsin Constitutions.      This court has
    ordinarily interpreted the protections of the Fourth Amendment
    to the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 11 of
    the Wisconsin Constitution as coextensive. State v. Artic, 
    2010 WI 83
    , ¶28, 
    327 Wis. 2d 392
    , 
    786 N.W.2d 430
    (citing State v.
    Johnson, 
    2007 WI 32
    , ¶20, 
    299 Wis. 2d 675
    , 
    729 N.W.2d 182
    ). For
    the sake of efficiency, this opinion will expressly address only
    Purtell's Fourth Amendment challenge, but we note our analysis
    applies to Article I, Section 11 of the Wisconsin Constitution
    as well.
    17
    Purtell argues that this issue is not properly before
    this court because the constitutionality of the search was not
    raised by the State in its petition for review.    See Motion to
    Strike State's Brief Because It Addresses An Issue Not Raised In
    Its Petition For Review (Motion to Strike), filed Dec. 20, 2013.
    In our order granting the State's petition for review, we
    stated, "the plaintiff-respondent-petitioner may not raise or
    argue issues set forth in the petition for review unless
    otherwise ordered by this court."
    11
    No.    2012AP1307-CR
    the   probation       officer    had     reasonable         grounds    to    believe   the
    contents of Purtell's computers contained contraband because the
    computers themselves were contraband under the conditions of his
    probation.           We   conclude     that    the     record    demonstrates       Agent
    Anderson       had    reasonable       grounds        to    believe     the     computers
    contained contraband and, accordingly, hold the circuit court
    properly denied Purtell's motion to suppress.
    a. Fourth Amendment Principles in the Context of
    Probation
    ¶21      The    Fourth    Amendment          protects   "[t]he     right    of   the
    people    to    be    secure    in     their       persons,    houses,       papers,   and
    effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures . . . ."
    U.S. Const. amend. IV.            "A 'search' occurs when an expectation
    of privacy that society is prepared to consider reasonable is
    infringed."           United    States    v.       Jacobsen,    
    466 U.S. 109
    ,   113
    (1984).          "The      touchstone         of      the     Fourth     Amendment      is
    reasonableness," United States v. Knights, 
    534 U.S. 112
    , 118
    Once this court has accepted review of a case, however, it
    is within our "discretion to review any substantial and
    compelling issue the case presents."      Chevron Chem. Co. v.
    Deloitte & Touche, 
    176 Wis. 2d 935
    , 945, 
    501 N.W.2d 15
    (1993).
    Whether   the   search  of  Purtell's  computer   satisfied  the
    reasonableness requirement of the Fourth Amendment is a
    substantial issue that is dispositive to the question of whether
    the circuit court's denial of Purtell's suppression motion was
    proper.    Further, the question of whether Agent Anderson had
    reasonable grounds to believe that Purtell's computer contained
    contraband has been thoroughly argued and briefed by the parties
    at every stage of litigation in this case.    Therefore, we find
    it is appropriate to reach the underlying merits presented and
    consider whether the search of Purtell's computer violated his
    Fourth Amendment rights.
    12
    No.       2012AP1307-CR
    (2001), and the reasonableness of any search is considered in
    the    context       of    the     individual's        legitimate         expectations           of
    privacy.      Maryland v. King, 567 U.S. ___, 
    133 S. Ct. 1958
    , 1978
    (2013).
    ¶22    Here, a Fourth Amendment challenge is being made by a
    probationer.              The    Fourth      Amendment    affords         protection            only
    against searches that are unreasonable, and what is unreasonable
    for a probationer differs from what is unreasonable for a law-
    abiding citizen.            Law-abiding citizens are entitled to the full
    panoply      of    rights       and   protections       provided      under          the   Fourth
    Amendment.           Conversely,        citizens       convicted          of     a   crime       and
    incarcerated          have        had       their     privacy        interests             largely
    "extinguished by the judgments placing them in custody."                                    Banks
    v. United States, 
    490 F.3d 1178
    , 1186 (10th Cir. 2007) (quoting
    Green v. Berge, 
    354 F.3d 675
    , 679 (7th Cir. 2004) (Easterbrook,
    J., concurring)); see also United States v. Huart, 
    735 F.3d 972
    ,
    975 (7th Cir. 2013) ("It is well settled that prisoners have no
    reasonable expectation of privacy in the belongings they keep
    with   them.").            Somewhere        between    these    two       extremes         on   the
    "privacy continuum," 
    Banks, 490 F.3d at 1186
    , lies convicted
    felons    placed      on        conditional     release,       such       as     probation       or
    parole.           Probationers        are    entitled    to     a    certain          degree      of
    constitutional protection under the Fourth Amendment, but their
    rights       against            warrantless         searches        and        seizures          are
    significantly curtailed.                    See Samson v. California, 
    547 U.S. 843
    , 849-850 (2006) (noting that probationers "do not enjoy the
    absolute liberty to which every citizen is entitled," and that
    13
    No.     2012AP1307-CR
    probationers have "significantly diminished privacy interests")
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶23     This is so because, like incarceration, probation is
    "a form of criminal sanction imposed by a court upon an offender
    after verdict, finding, or plea of guilty."                 
    Griffin, 483 U.S. at 874
    .       Wisconsin probationers are in the legal custody18 of the
    Wisconsin Department of Corrections, where they are subject to
    the "control of the department under conditions set by the court
    and rules and regulations established by the department . . . ."
    Wis.        Stat.   § 973.10(1).        Consequently,       while     law-abiding
    citizens       enjoy   the   fundamental     rights   and   liberty     interests
    conferred by the constitution, probation has been characterized
    as   a      "conditional     liberty   [that   is]    properly      dependent   on
    observance of special [] restrictions."                 Morrissey v. Brewer,
    
    408 U.S. 471
    , 480 (1972).
    ¶24     These special restrictions are vitally important to
    the State's effective administration of its probation system.
    18
    Legal scholars have critiqued courts for deciding
    probation search cases under a "constructive custody" rationale,
    arguing that by stating in conclusory fashion a probationer is
    in "custody" while outside of prison, they create a legal
    fiction that ignores the numerous ways in which a probationer's
    life is far more akin to that of an ordinary citizen's than a
    prisoner's.    See 4 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure, A
    Treatise on the Fourth Amendment, § 10.10(a) (5th ed. 2012). To
    clarify, we do not use the term "legal custody" to equate the
    Fourth Amendment rights afforded to a probationer with those
    afforded a prisoner. Instead, we merely recognize probationers
    are in the "legal custody" of the State because, unlike ordinary
    citizens, they are still subject to State supervision to ensure
    successful reintegration into the community, lawful conduct, and
    public safety.
    14
    No.        2012AP1307-CR
    As the United States Supreme Court in                               Griffin       explained, "A
    State's operation of a probation system . . . presents 'special
    needs' beyond normal law enforcement . . . 
    ." 483 U.S. at 873
    -
    74.     The     restrictions           inherent        in     the   probation           system     are
    necessary to "assure that the probation serves as a period of
    genuine rehabilitation and that the community is not harmed by
    the    probationer's            being     at     large[]";          these       dual      goals    of
    rehabilitation           and     public        safety        "require       and     justify        the
    exercise of supervision to assure that the restrictions are in
    fact observed."           
    Id. at 875.
    ¶25    The        background        and         criminal         history           of      each
    probationer         is     different,          and      the     individual's             level      of
    supervision and corresponding privacy interests will vary.                                         It
    is    the    probation          agent's    responsibility             to    obtain        necessary
    information         about        the     probationer           to     provide           appropriate
    supervision, evaluate their needs and security risks, determine
    their goals and objectives, and establish written supplemental
    rules of supervision.               This flexibility assists in ensuring the
    "degree of impingement upon [a probationer's] privacy" is no
    greater than necessary to support rehabilitation and safeguard
    the   community          from    potential       harm.          
    Id. This case-by-case
    approach      means       that     probation          "can    itself       be     more     or     less
    confining depending upon the number and severity of restrictions
    imposed," and in certain circumstances, "the probation [agent]
    must be able to act based upon a lesser degree of certainty than
    the    Fourth       Amendment          would     otherwise          require        in     order    to
    15
    No.       2012AP1307-CR
    intervene       before         a     probationer               does    damage        to     himself       or
    society."       
    Id. at 874,
    879.
    b. The Probation Agent Had Reasonable Grounds to Search
    Purtell's Computer.
    ¶26     Wisconsin           probation         regulations           permit          a     probation
    agent     to     search        a         probationer's            property           "if       there     are
    reasonable       grounds           to    believe         that     the    quarters          or     property
    contain        contraband           .     .    .     ."           Wis.     Admin.           Code       § DOC
    328.21(3)(a).             In       Griffin          v.    Wisconsin,           the     United        States
    Supreme      Court        upheld          this       regulation,          concluding              that    it
    "satisfies          the   Fourth          Amendment's            reasonableness             requirement
    under well-established principles
    ." 483 U.S. at 873
    .                    Griffin
    held that the special needs of Wisconsin's probation system in
    effectively           supervising              probationers              and        protecting           the
    community       justified           replacing            the    standard       of     probable         cause
    with a lesser "reasonable grounds" standard.                                   The Court reasoned
    that probation officers must be permitted "to respond quickly to
    evidence       of    misconduct"              and    "the       deterrent        effect          that    the
    possibility         of    expeditious            searches"            creates       would       be    unduly
    compromised by a probable cause requirement.                                        
    Id. at 876;
    see
    also 
    Knights, 534 U.S. at 121
    ("Although the Fourth Amendment
    ordinarily requires the degree of probability embodied in the
    term    'probable            cause,'           a         lesser        degree         satisfies          the
    Constitution          when         the    balance          of     governmental             and       private
    interests makes such a standard reasonable.").
    ¶27     Purtell does not challenge the search of his residence
    (a group home) or the seizure of his computers.                                            He concedes
    16
    No.    2012AP1307-CR
    Agent Anderson had reasonable grounds to search his room and
    that his computers were "contraband" under the terms of his
    probation.         Instead, Purtell argues that, while his computers
    were lawfully seized as contraband, Agent Anderson's search of
    the computer's contents constituted an independent, governmental
    search      that    violated       his    Fourth    Amendment    privacy      interests.
    The    court       of    appeals     agreed,       concluding     that      the    State's
    argument      rested      on   the       faulty    assumption     that      Purtell    was
    prohibited from possessing images depicting cruelty to animals.
    Agent Anderson testified during the suppression hearing that she
    was concerned Purtell may have images depicting animal cruelty
    or mutilation on his computers.                     Because possessing images of
    animal cruelty was not prohibited under Purtell's conditions of
    probation, and were not otherwise illegal to possess,19 the court
    of    appeals          concluded     that     Agent      Anderson     did     not      have
    "reasonable        grounds"     to       believe    Purtell's    computer         contained
    contraband.        Purtell, No. 2012AP1307-CR, ¶14.
    ¶28    We disagree.           As a threshold matter, it is difficult
    to    imagine      a    scenario     where     a    probation     agent      would    lack
    reasonable         grounds     to    search        an   item    the   probationer       is
    explicitly prohibited from possessing. Indeed, the fact that the
    computers in question were themselves contraband is critical.
    Ordinary citizens, even citizens who are subject to diminished
    19
    In United States v. Stevens, 
    559 U.S. 460
    , 482 (2010),
    the United States Supreme Court held that a federal statute
    prohibiting the creation, sale, or possession of depictions of
    animal cruelty violated the First Amendment.
    17
    No.   2012AP1307-CR
    privacy     interests    because   they      have   been    detained,      have    a
    legitimate    expectation     of   privacy     in   the    contents      of    their
    electronic devices.        See Riley v. California, 
    134 S. Ct. 2473
    (2014); State v. Carroll, 
    2010 WI 8
    , ¶27, 
    322 Wis. 2d 299
    , 
    778 N.W.2d 1
    .     This privacy interest, however, is undercut when the
    electronic device in question is contraband.20               See United States
    v. Skinner, 
    690 F.3d 772
    , 785 (6th Cir. 2012), cert. denied, 
    133 S. Ct. 2851
         (2013) (observing that "courts have declined to
    recognize a 'legitimate' expectation of privacy in contraband
    and other items the possession of which are themselves illegal,
    such as drugs and stolen property.").
    ¶29    Thus,     Purtell's     expectation      of    privacy       in     his
    computers was diminished, not only because he was on probation,
    but   because    his    possession     and    use   of     the     computers     was
    specifically prohibited by a condition of that probation.
    20
    The dissent cites to several cases which stand for the
    proposition that the seizure of an electronic device is distinct
    from a subsequent search of its contents. Dissent, ¶¶41-48; see
    also Riley v. California, 
    134 S. Ct. 2473
    (2014) (addressing the
    warrantless search of the contents of the defendant's cell phone
    following his arrest); State v. Sobczak, 
    2013 WI 52
    , 
    347 Wis. 2d 724
    , 
    833 N.W.2d 59
    (discussing whether a third party's
    consent for law enforcement to search the defendant's home could
    validate the officer's subsequent search of the defendant's
    laptop); State v. Carroll, 
    2010 WI 8
    , 
    322 Wis. 2d 299
    , 
    778 N.W.2d 1
    (reviewing the validity of a warrantless search of the
    contents of an arrestee's cell phone).      Our case involves a
    probationer——who is already subject to diminished privacy
    interests——and the search of contraband that he knowingly
    possessed in violation of the terms of his probation. The cases
    cited by the dissent, while interesting, are of minimal
    assistance to our analysis.
    18
    No.     2012AP1307-CR
    ¶30    Conditions    of probation are imposed for a reason.21
    So, when a condition of probation prohibits the possession of a
    certain item, and the subject of the search knowingly breaks
    that    condition,     in   most    situations   a   probation     agent    would
    presumably have reasonable grounds to search the contents of the
    item.       Regardless, whether or not a probation agent would ever
    conceivably lack reasonable grounds to believe that contraband
    in a probationer's possession contains more contraband, it is
    certainly not a close question here.                 The record shows that
    Agent Anderson had reasonable grounds to conduct a probation
    search of Purtell's computer based on the factors provided in
    the Wisconsin Administrative Code.
    ¶31    The Wisconsin Administrative Code sets forth a list of
    factors      to   be   considered    in    determining   whether    there    are
    reasonable grounds to believe a probationer's property contains
    contraband:
    21
    To be constitutional, conditions must be designed to
    assist "the convicted individual in conforming his or her
    conduct to the law," and not be overly broad. Rowan, 
    341 Wis. 2d
    at ¶10. As we explained in Rowan,
    [a] condition is reasonably related to a person's
    rehabilitation if it assists the convicted individual
    in conforming his or her conduct to the law.     It is
    also appropriate for circuit courts to consider an end
    result of encouraging lawful conduct, and thus
    increased protection of the public, when determining
    what individualized probation . . . conditions are
    appropriate for a particular person.
    
    Id. (citations and
    footnotes omitted). As previously noted,
    Purtell does not challenge the propriety of the condition that
    he not own, possess, or use a personal computer.
    19
    No.     2012AP1307-CR
    (a)   The observations of staff members.
    (b)   Information provided by informants.
    (c)   The reliability of the information provided by an informant. In evaluating
    the reliability of the information, the field staff shall give attention to the
    detail, consistency and corroboration of the information provided by the
    informant.
    (d)   The reliability of the informant. In evaluating the informant's reliability,
    attention shall be given to whether the informant has supplied reliable
    information in the past and whether the informant has reason to supply
    inaccurate information.
    (e)   The activity of the client that relates to whether the client might possess
    contraband or might have used or be under the influence of an intoxicating
    substance.
    (f)   Information provided by the client that is relevant to whether the client has
    used, possesses or is under the influence of an intoxicating substance or
    possesses any other contraband.
    (g)   The experience of a staff member with that client or in a similar
    circumstance.
    (h)   Prior seizures of contraband from the client.
    (i)   The need to verify compliance with the rules of supervision and state and
    federal law.
    Wis.    Admin.    Code      § DOC      328.21(7).            As    a   condition        of     his
    probation, Purtell was "not [to] purchase, possess, nor use a
    computer, software, hardware, nor a modem without prior agent
    20
    No.    2012AP1307-CR
    approval."22           (Emphasis            added.)        Here,        Agent        Anderson        was
    justified in ascertaining the extent of Purtell's noncompliance
    with    the      rules       of   his        supervision.            Wis.    Admin.       Code     § DOC
    328.21(7)(i).             It      was       already     established           that       Purtell    had
    knowingly violated the condition against possessing a computer,
    and    it     was      unquestionably             Agent     Anderson's             prerogative        to
    ascertain whether he had further violated the conditions imposed
    on his probation by using those computers.                                     It is irrelevant
    whether       the      images          of    animal      cruelty            were    prohibited       by
    Purtell's probationary terms or otherwise illegal to possess;
    the    use       of    the     computer          was    itself        prohibited,          and     Agent
    Anderson         had     reasonable              grounds        to     believe           Purtell     had
    impermissibly used them.
    ¶32       Further,         it        is    apparent           from     Agent        Anderson's
    testimony        at    the     suppression             hearing       she     considered          several
    factors set forth in the Wisconsin Administrative Code——which
    probation        agents        are      instructed         to    consider          in     determining
    whether      a    probationer's              property      contains          contraband——in          her
    decision to search Purtell's computer:                                 (1) Purtell's Myspace
    page and personal papers indicated he was attempting to start a
    22
    The court of appeals misstated Purtell's condition of
    probation as prohibiting him from "own[ing] or possess[ing] a
    computer and that he could only use a computer 'at his place of
    business or school.'" Purtell, No. 2012AP1307CR, ¶2.        This
    condition, which was stated in Purtell's judgment of conviction,
    was originally imposed by the Dane County Circuit Court. Agent
    Anderson testified at the suppression hearing that, after
    Purtell was transferred to Washington County, the circuit court
    left it to her discretion whether the condition be modified or
    removed.
    21
    No.   2012AP1307-CR
    relationship with a fifteen-year-old girl, and Myspace is the
    same avenue he used to contact a prior victim.23           Agent Anderson
    knew of Purtell's background befriending underage girls and had
    prohibited   him   from   being   in    contact   with   children.      She
    expressed concern that he may have other Myspace accounts or be
    using other networking sites, such as Facebook, where he would
    have access to other potential victims;24 (2) Purtell's Myspace
    page had cartoon images of human/animal hybrids, which Agent
    Anderson——having an expertise in animal cruelty cases25——felt was
    a disturbing signal of potential future violence against, not
    just animals, but also people;26 (3) Purtell did not attend his
    23
    A factor that probation agents are instructed to consider
    in determining whether to search a probationer's property is
    "[t]he activity of the client that relates to whether the client
    might possess contraband . . . ."       Wis. Admin. Code § DOC
    328.21(7)(e).
    24
    Two   additional  factors  that   probation  agents are
    instructed to consider prior to conducting a search are "[t]he
    experience of a staff member with that client or in a similar
    circumstance," Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 328.21(7)(g), and "[t]he
    need to verify compliance with rules of supervision and state
    and federal law," Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 328.21(7)(i).
    25
    Agent Anderson's expertise with animal cruelty cases
    corresponds to Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 328.21(7)(g), which lists
    "[t]he experience of a staff member with that client or in a
    similar circumstance," as a factor in determining whether
    reasonable grounds exist to search a probationer's belongings.
    26
    The author of the 2006 presentence investigation report
    ordered by the Dane County Circuit Court expressed concern that
    Purtell viewed the two dogs he abused as "human," in that he
    believed the dogs could make a conscious decision to reject him.
    22
    No.     2012AP1307-CR
    scheduled mental health assessment, did not submit his court-
    ordered DNA sample, and failed to follow the residency rules of
    his group home by missing curfew;27 and (4) Purtell displayed
    extreme reluctance to surrender his computers28, and was even so
    bold as to inform the coordinator of his group home that he
    intended    to    hide       them   during    home     visits.29            Taken    in   the
    aggregate,       and       given    Purtell's       blatant     disregard           for   the
    conditions       of    his    probation,       as    well      as     Agent    Anderson's
    knowledge    of        Purtell's       background        and        those     of     similar
    probationers,         we    conclude   there      were   reasonable           grounds     for
    Agent Anderson was also aware that Purtell's history of
    torturing animals stemmed back to childhood. She testified that
    she had spoken directly with Purtell's mother regarding
    Purtell's childhood, and was informed that Purtell, as a child,
    had "disciplined" a family pet and injured the animal to such a
    degree they never had animals in the home again.
    27
    Purtell's conduct can be properly considered by Agent
    Anderson under Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 328.21(7)(e), describing
    "[t]he activity of the client that relates to whether the client
    might possess contraband" as a factor in determining whether
    reasonable grounds exist to justify a search.
    28
    The prior seizure of Purtell's computers is a relevant
    consideration for Agent Anderson under Wis. Admin. Code § DOC
    328.21(7)(h),   which   provides  that   "[p]rior  seizures   of
    contraband from the client" is pertinent in establishing
    reasonable grounds for searching a probationer's property. This
    is an especially germane fact here, given that the search of the
    seized computer's contents is at issue.
    29
    Purtell's comments to the group home coordinator relate
    to three factors probation agents are instructed to consider
    prior to searching a probationer's property: "[t]he observations
    of staff members," Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 328.21(7)(a), "[t]he
    experience of a staff member with that client,"            § DOC
    328.21(7)(g), and "the need to verify compliance with the rules
    of supervision and state and federal law," § DOC 328.21(7)(i).
    23
    No.   2012AP1307-CR
    believing   Purtell's   computers   contained    contraband,30    such   as
    correspondence   with    underage    girls31    or   additional   Myspace
    30
    We read Agent Anderson's testimony in the suppression
    hearing as providing an ample foundation for believing the
    contents of Purtell's computers contained contraband.   However,
    to the extent Agent Anderson's subjective intent to search
    Purtell's computer was motivated by concern he might possess
    still images of animal cruelty or mutilation, which was the
    basis for the court of appeals' decision,      we conclude that
    stated objective by Agent Anderson does not impact the
    lawfulness of the search. The Supreme Court has repeatedly held
    that a police officer's motive does not invalidate "objectively
    justifiable behavior under the Fourth Amendment."      Whren v.
    United States, 
    517 U.S. 806
    , 813 (1996) ("[T]he fact that the
    officer does not have the state of mind which is hypothecated by
    the reasons which provide the legal justification for the
    officer's action does not invalidate the action taken as long as
    the circumstances, viewed objectively, justify that action.")
    (internal quotation marks omitted).    See also State v. Sykes,
    
    2005 WI 48
    , ¶29, 
    279 Wis. 2d 742
    , 
    695 N.W.2d 277
    (holding the
    actual motivation of an officer does not determine the
    constitutionality of a stop).
    31
    The dissent argues that "correspondence with underage
    girls" is not contraband under the terms of Purtell's probation.
    Dissent, ¶53.   Perhaps the dissent is overlooks the terms of
    Purtell's probation, which clearly provide that Purtell is
    prohibited from having any unsupervised contact with children.
    24
    No.     2012AP1307-CR
    accounts.32    In     addition,    Agent     Anderson   was    justified    in
    ascertaining    the    extent     of   Purtell's   probation    violation   by
    determining whether he had used the computer in addition to
    possessing it, and if so, the degree of his use.                Accordingly,
    We    take   issue   with    the   dissent's    constrictive
    interpretation of "item" under the statutory definition of
    contraband, Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 328.21. We      fail to see a
    meaningful difference between a probation officer having
    reasonable grounds to believe property contains a tangible
    "item" establishing illegal conduct and reasonable grounds to
    believe property contains intangible evidence of illegal
    conduct.   Under the dissent's unduly narrow interpretation of
    the relevant statutes, a probation officer would not have
    reasonable grounds to search a probationer's property even if he
    or she was certain the property contained evidence of the
    probationer's non-compliance with the terms of his or her
    probation.    Such an interpretation is contrary to the dual
    purposes of the Fourth Amendment "special needs" exception, in
    that it would run the risk of endangering the public and state
    employees, as well as hinder the rehabilitation of probationers.
    32
    Under the terms of his probation, Purtell was "prohibited
    from maintaining a Myspace.com account."     The dissent objects
    that   "[t]his   condition  addresses   an  action   rather   than
    possession of an item. A prohibited action does not fall within
    the definition of contraband." Dissent, ¶54. If possession of
    an account——whether it be a social media account, a bank
    account, a web page, or a line of credit——is prohibited by an
    individual's probationary terms, violation of that term surely
    constitutes the possession of "contraband."        The dissent's
    characterization of social media accounts fails to embrace the
    reality of our increasingly digitized modern era.           Simply
    because an "account" cannot be held in one's hand, does not mean
    it does not exist.
    The dissent also argues that Agent Anderson did not need to
    search Purtell's computer because she "could check his Myspace
    activity 'separately because she had his password and had done
    that on her own without the computers.'"     
    Id. This fails
    to
    account for the possibility that Purtell had multiple Myspace
    accounts that had not been disclosed to his probation officer
    and would be viewable in his computer's web history.
    25
    No.    2012AP1307-CR
    we   conclude          Agent      Anderson's          warrantless          search       of   Purtell's
    computer complied with Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 328.21(3)(a) and
    did not violate Purtell's Fourth Amendment rights.
    IV.        CONCLUSION
    ¶33    We hold the circuit court properly denied Purtell's
    motion       to        suppress.            A     probation             agent's     search       of     a
    probationer's property satisfies the reasonableness requirement
    of the Fourth Amendment if the probation agent has "reasonable
    grounds"          to        believe     the       probationer's             property           contains
    contraband.            
    Griffin, 483 U.S. at 874
    .                        The record demonstrates
    that   the        probation         agent       had    reasonable          grounds       to     believe
    Purtell's         computer,           which       Purtell           knowingly       possessed          in
    violation         of        the     conditions             of     his     probation,         contained
    contraband.             Accordingly, we hold the probation search of the
    contents      of        Purtell's       computer            did     not    violate       the    Fourth
    Amendment         to     the      United        States          Constitution      or     Article       I,
    Section      11        of     the     Wisconsin            Constitution       and       reverse       the
    decision of the court of appeals.
    By    the       Court.—The       decision            of    the     court    of    appeals       is
    reversed.
    26
    No.       2012AP1307-CR.awb
    ¶34    ANN WALSH BRADLEY, J.                 (dissenting).             The       State    of
    Wisconsin seeks review of an unpublished decision of the court
    of   appeals      that     reversed         the    defendant's          conviction.           In
    reinstating the defendant's conviction, the majority rides two
    analytical horses.
    ¶35    In one, the majority frames an analysis to suggest
    that because the computer was lawfully seized as contraband, the
    contents of the computer can be searched without a warrant.
    Majority op., ¶¶28-29.               This brief discussion, set forth in a
    mere two paragraphs, is short on legal analysis but striking in
    the length of its legal reach.
    ¶36    In     its     other       analytical             approach,         the     majority
    concludes    that     the      record       demonstrates            that    the       agent   had
    reasonable grounds to believe the computer contained contraband.
    Majority    op.,    ¶20.        In    order       to    reach    this       conclusion,       the
    majority     relies      on         prohibited         actions,       rather          than    the
    possession of prohibited items.                        It fails to recognize that
    "actions" do not fall within the definition of "contraband."
    ¶37    Like the unanimous court of appeals, I determine that
    the search of the contents of the computer was not supported by
    reasonable       grounds       to    believe       that       the    computer          contained
    contraband.       Additionally, I conclude that a lawful seizure of a
    computer    as    contraband         does    not       give    license       to     search    its
    contents     without       a    warrant.               Accordingly,         I     respectfully
    dissent.
    I
    1
    No.   2012AP1307-CR.awb
    ¶38       At       issue     in    this       case      is     a       probation             agent's
    warrantless search of a probationer's computer.                                     Purtell argues
    that although his computers were lawfully seized as contraband,
    Agent Anderson's search of the contents of one of the computers
    constituted an independent, governmental search that violated
    his     Fourth       Amendment           privacy      interests.                    In        its     first
    conclusion, the majority determines that because the computer
    was    lawfully       seized        as    contraband,           its       contents             could       be
    searched without a warrant.
    ¶39     The    analysis       in    support        of    this          conclusion            is     set
    forth in a mere two paragraphs.                        At the outset, the majority
    opines    that       "it    is    difficult      to    imagine            a    scenario         where       a
    probation agent would lack reasonable grounds to search an item
    the probationer is explicitly prohibited from possessing."                                               
    Id., ¶28. It
        ends       the    analysis        with     a       conjecture            and        abrupt
    conclusion:          if    there     "would        ever        conceivably"               be        such     a
    scenario, it is not this case.                   
    Id., ¶30. ¶40
         It is unclear why the majority finds it so "difficult
    to    imagine    such       a    scenario"    and      that         it    would          be    virtually
    inconceivable.             One need look only to one of the most legally
    debated issues of the day: whether the search of the contents of
    a     legally    seized           computer    is       constitutionally                   permissible
    without a warrant.
    ¶41     The United States Supreme Court recently weighed in on
    this issue in the context of the search of the contents of a
    cellphone.       Riley v. California, 573 U.S. ___, 
    134 S. Ct. 2473
    (2014).      In a decision that is being heralded as an important
    2
    No.   2012AP1307-CR.awb
    statement on privacy rights in the digital age, the unanimous
    court concluded that "officers must generally secure a warrant
    before conducting" a search of data on cell phones.                         
    Id. at 2485.
    ¶42    Although Riley was decided in the context of a search
    of a cell phone, the court observed that the "term 'cell phone'
    is itself misleading shorthand; many of these devices are in
    fact minicomputers that also happen to have the capacity to be
    used as a telephone."          
    Id. at 2489.1
          Furthermore, "the possible
    intrusion on privacy is not limited in the same way" as a search
    of   other    physical        objects,    given     their     "immense     storage
    capacity"     which     has    "several       interrelated    consequences      for
    privacy."    
    Id. at 2489.
    ¶43    The fact that the primacy of these privacy rights has
    been recently reaffirmed, even for those with reduced privacy
    interests, makes the majority's decision all the more troubling.
    As Justice Roberts explained, Fourth Amendment rights apply also
    to   those   with     diminished   privacy       rights.     The    existence    of
    "diminished privacy interests":
    does not mean that the Fourth Amendment falls out of
    the picture entirely. Not every search "is acceptable
    1
    Likewise, the Seventh Circuit has acknowledged that
    cellphones are the equivalent of a computer.    United States v.
    Flores-Lopez, 
    670 F.3d 803
    , 805 (7th Cir. 2012) ("Judges are
    becoming aware that a computer (and remember that a modern cell
    phone is a computer) is not just another purse or address book.
    . . . computers hold so much personal and sensitive information
    touching on many private aspects of life. . . . [T]here is a far
    greater potential for the 'intermingling' of documents and a
    consequent invasion of privacy when police execute a search for
    evidence on a computer.").
    3
    No.    2012AP1307-CR.awb
    solely because a person is in custody."        To the
    contrary, when "privacy-related concerns are weighty
    enough"   a    "search   may   require    a   warrant,
    notwithstanding the diminished expectations of privacy
    of the arrestee."
    
    Id. at 2488
    (citations omitted).
    ¶44       Regardless      of    whether     the   majority's        analysis    is
    hampered       by    its   self-proclaimed     difficulty       in    imagination    or
    some other impediment, it is surprising that the majority gives
    the issue such short shrift.
    ¶45       It bears noting that all parties agree that the search
    of Purtell's residence (the group home) was permissible.                            The
    agent had reason to believe, based on communication with the
    group home, that Purtell possessed computers in violation of his
    rules     of     probation.          Computers    were    the        contraband,    and
    computers were seized.              The focus of this inquiry is not whether
    there were reasonable grounds to search the residence or seize
    the computers, but whether there were independent grounds to
    search the contents of one of the computers without a warrant.
    ¶46       The majority glosses over this analytical distinction,
    despite        our    precedent      establishing      that   under       the   Fourth
    Amendment, each warrantless search must be analyzed separately.
    State v. Carroll, 
    2010 WI 8
    , ¶16, 
    322 Wis. 2d 299
    , 
    778 N.W.2d 1
    ("[W]e assess the legality under the Fourth Amendment of each
    warrantless search or seizure that produced the evidence.").2
    2
    This framework is applicable even though a different
    Fourth Amendment standard applies to searches of probationers in
    Wisconsin. See State v. Griffin, 
    131 Wis. 2d 41
    , 57, 
    388 N.W. 2d
    535 (1986), aff'd, 
    483 U.S. 868
    (1987) ("Though a probationer
    has a diminished expectation of privacy, he still has privacy
    rights that must be respected.").
    4
    No.   2012AP1307-CR.awb
    ¶47    For example, in State v. Sobczak, 
    2013 WI 52
    , ¶30, 
    347 Wis. 2d 724
    , 
    833 N.W.2d 59
    , the court determined that although a
    third party's consent provided constitutional authority for a
    warrantless entry into a home, a separate analysis was needed to
    determine whether that third party consent allowed for a search
    of   a    laptop       in    the    home.        The       court    explained       that    "[t]o
    validate the search of an object within a home on consent, the
    government           must   satisfy       the     same      requirements       as    apply     to
    consent to enter."              
    Id., ¶31. ¶48
       This    concept      is     also      illustrated       by   Carroll.          In
    Carroll, a police officer handcuffed Carroll after a high-speed
    chase, and then grabbed a cell phone that Carroll had dropped.
    
    322 Wis. 2d 299
    , ¶¶5-6.                     While the officer had the phone, it
    rang, and the officer answered.                           The caller made a request to
    purchase cocaine.             The officer also browsed through the contents
    of the phone, including the phone's image gallery.                                  On appeal,
    this     court       addressed      the     question        of     whether   the     officer's
    warrantless            search       of     the        phone's       image      gallery        was
    constitutional.             
    Id., ¶2. The
    court determined that even though
    the seizure of the phone and subsequent phone calls that the
    officer        answered      were    constitutionally              permissible,       browsing
    through        the    phone's      image    gallery         was    improper.         
    Id., ¶33. These
         cases       demonstrate         that       a     separate    Fourth       Amendment
    analysis is required to determine if a lawfully seized item can
    be searched without a warrant.
    ¶49    Due to the personal nature of the data contained on a
    computer and the weighty privacy concerns inherent in a search
    5
    No.    2012AP1307-CR.awb
    of that data, it is particularly important that a court conduct
    a separate analysis to determine if there are reasonable grounds
    to justify the search.                   By ignoring precedent and suggesting
    that once property is seized it can be searched, the majority
    greatly reduces not only the privacy rights of probationers, but
    the privacy rights of the millions of people who own cellphones,
    computers, and similar electronic devices.
    II
    ¶50        Although the majority ultimately conducts an analysis
    of whether there were reasonable grounds to search the contents
    of the computer, after suggesting one is not necessary, its
    analysis       is    unconvincing.          The        majority      concludes          that    the
    probation       agent     in      this    case        had    "reasonable           grounds      for
    believing       Purtell's         computers       contained         contraband,          such    as
    correspondence          with        underage         girls     or    additional           Myspace
    accounts."          Majority op., ¶32.           In reaching this conclusion, the
    majority fails to take into account the definition of the word
    "contraband."
    ¶51        Wisconsin       probation         regulations         permit        a    probation
    agent     to     search       a     probationer's            property        "if       there    are
    reasonable       grounds       to    believe         that    the    quarters       or    property
    contain contraband."              Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 328.21 (Dec. 2006).
    "Contraband" is defined as "[a]ny item which the client may not
    possess        under    the       rules     or        conditions        of     the       client's
    supervision; or . . .               any item whose possession is forbidden by
    law."   Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 328.21.
    6
    No.    2012AP1307-CR.awb
    ¶52     The     majority       lists         the   relevant       conditions         of
    Purtell's supervision as follows:
        He could not purchase, possess, nor use a
    computer, software, hardware, nor a modem without
    prior agent approval;
        he was prohibited from maintaining a Myspace.com
    account;
        he was prohibited from having any contact with
    animals; and
        he was prohibited from having any unsupervised
    contact with children.
    Majority op., ¶6.             The only item that these conditions prohibit
    Purtell from possessing is a computer.
    ¶53     The    majority's       suggestion         that    the    computer      could
    contain "correspondence with underage girls" appears related to
    Agent   Anderson's           testimony     that       Purtell's    Myspace      page       and
    personal       papers        indicated     he       was   attempting       to      start    a
    relationship          with     a    fifteen-year-old         girl.          
    Id., ¶¶6-7. However,
    this is not contraband.                      Although evidence of contact
    with    teenage       girls        could   be       circumstantial       evidence     of     a
    probation violation, it is not "an item which the client may not
    possess under the rules or conditions of probation" or may not
    possess under the law.
    ¶54     The    other        items   the       majority     suggests      could      be
    contraband on Purtell's computer are "other Myspace accounts."
    
    Id., ¶32. This
    is unpersuasive for two reasons.                      First, as the
    circuit       court    noted,      Agent   Anderson       could    check    his     Myspace
    activity "separately because she had his password and had done
    that on her own without the computers."                      Second, it is far from
    7
    No.    2012AP1307-CR.awb
    clear that a Myspace.com account is "an item which the client
    may not possess under the rules or conditions of probation."
    Wis.   Admin.     Code     § DOC     328.21(3)        (emphasis      supplied).        It
    appears from the conditions of his probation that Purtell was
    prohibited      from     "maintaining       a    Myspace.com        account."        This
    condition addresses an action rather than possession of an item.
    A   prohibited     action    does     not   fall      within    the    definition      of
    contraband.
    ¶55   Accordingly,           the         majority's          assertions        are
    disconnected from Purtell's actual conditions of supervision,
    and its reliance on actions that are outside the definition of
    contraband      cannot     provide    a   legal       basis   for     the   warrantless
    search.         Contrary     to     the   majority,       I    conclude       that    the
    warrantless      search     of    Purtell's       computer     after    it    had    been
    seized    was    unreasonable       because      Agent   Anderson       did   not    have
    reasonable grounds to believe that it contained contraband.
    III
    ¶56      In sum, I conclude that the warrantless search of
    Purtell's computer violated his privacy rights under the Fourth
    Amendment of the Constitution.              The majority's analysis suggests
    that any item seized can be searched and presents an erroneous
    understanding of what constitutes contraband.
    ¶57   Because I disagree with the majority's conclusion that
    there were reasonable grounds to believe that Purtell's computer
    contained    contraband       and    with       its   assertion     that     the   lawful
    seizure of a computer gives license to search its contents, I
    respectfully dissent.
    8
    No.   2012AP1307-CR.awb
    ¶58   I am authorized to state that Chief Justice SHIRLEY S.
    ABRAHAMSON joins this dissent.
    9
    No.   2012AP1307-CR.awb
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