New Federal and State Court Rulings Show Courts are Divided on the Scope of Cell Phone Searches Post-Riley

October 4, 2022 | By Jennifer Lynch | Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) |

This blog post was co-written with EFF Legal Intern Allie Schiele

There is no dispute that cell phones contain a lot of personal information. The Supreme Court recognized in 2014 in Riley v. California that a cell phone is “not just another technological convenience. With all they contain and all they may reveal, they hold for many Americans ‘the privacies of life’.” For this reason, the Court held that the police generally need a warrant to search one. But what happens when police do get a warrant? Can they look at everything on your phone?

Well, it depends.

Riley didn’t articulate any standards that limit the scope of cell phone searches, and courts are taking different approaches. While some courts have constrained police searches to certain types of data on the phone, specific time periods, or limited the use of the data, other courts have authorized warrants that allow the police to search the entire phone.

In August, two courts issued significant decisions that illustrate this divide—United States v. Morton from the federal Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals sitting en banc (with the full court), and Richardson v. State from the Maryland Court of Appeals (Maryland state’s highest court). EFF filed an amicus brief in Morton.

Maryland Sets Limits on Cell Phone Searches

In Richardson v. State, the Maryland Court of Appeals recognized that “the privacy concerns implicated by cell phone storage capacity and the pervasiveness of cell phones in daily life do not fade away when police obtain warrants to search cell phones.”

In this case, Richardson was involved in a fight at a local high school. After a school resource officer broke up the fight, the officer grabbed Richardson’s backpack and discovered three cellphones, a handgun, and Richardson’s school ID. Police determined one of the phones belonged to Richardson and got a warrant to search it.

The warrant was extremely broad and authorized a search for “[a]ll information, text messages, emails, phone calls (incoming and outgoing), pictures, videos, cellular site locations for phone calls, data and/or applications, geo-tagging metadata, contacts emails, voicemails, oral and/or written communication and any other data stored or maintained inside of [the phone].”

The search of the cell phone revealed messages between Richardson and a friend that detailed the planning of a robbery. After being charged, Richardson moved to suppress the information obtained from the phone, arguing the warrant was a general warrant because it authorized a search for “any and all information” and “any and all data.” The trial court denied the suppression motion, and the intermediate appellate court affirmed the denial.

The Court of Appeals reversed this, finding the warrant was impermissibly broad and therefore violated the Fourth Amendment. Because cell phones can contain vast amounts of data, the court held that officers rarely, if ever, can demonstrate probable cause to search everything on a phone, like they attempted in this case.

The court recognized there is no “one size fits all” solution for cell phone warrants, but held the officers requesting the warrant and the judge issuing it “must think about how to effectively limit the discretion of the searching officers so as not to intrude on the phone owner’s privacy interests any more than reasonably necessary.” Effective tools include temporal restrictions, limitations on the apps to be searched, or specific search protocols that agents would be directed to follow. The Court of Appeals concluded that “a search warrant for a cell phone must be specific enough so that the officers will only search for the items that are related to the probable cause that justifies the search in the first place.” Ultimately, the court did not suppress the evidence against Mr. Richardson because it found the officers relied on the warrant in good faith…

Continue reading the full article HERE.

Verizon continues to lead in network experience at NFL stadiums

September 08, 2022 by Robert Wyrzykowski | OpenSignal

With the 103rd season of the National Football League (NFL) starting on September 8, 2022 — tens of thousands of dedicated fans will come to football stadiums across the U.S. to cheer for their teams. Ahead of this new season, Opensignal is revisiting its previously published analysis, to see on which network our users had the best mobile network experience at NFL stadiums.

In this new analysis, we found that our users on Verizon’s network enjoyed the fastest 5G speeds, the best 5G and overall gaming, and top 5G and overall voice app experiences. However, T-Mobile users connected to 5G services for the highest amount of time at the 30 NFL stadiums and users on T-Mobile’s network saw the highest average overall Download Speed Experience.

Verizon users saw the fastest average 5G download speed at NFL stadiums, clocking in at a stunning score of 317.3 Mbps — 72.8% higher than the speed our users saw on T-Mobile’s network and 4.6 times more than those on AT&T’s network. Verizon also tops 5G Upload Speed, with a score of 30.2 Mbps — 8.1 Mbps ahead of T-Mobile and nearly twice as fast as AT&T.

Click here to continue reading the full article.

No Signal: The Worst Cellular Dead Zones in the US

Jul, 28 2022 | PC Mag

Driving 10,000 miles to find America’s best mobile network, we hit some pretty bad dead zones—and they weren’t all in the countryside.

Cellular coverage in the US is much better than it used to be, and the Samsung Galaxy S22+ is really good at capturing signal. But there are still locations that are black spots for all three major carriers, usually because of some combination of terrain and restrictions on where they can build their towers.

We saw dropped calls and failures nationwide. Not a lot of them, but enough to annoy you. In general, about 1% of our calls and about 7% of our data sessions were dropped, blocked, or timed out. Drops happened in every city we tested, especially with big data downloads. You know that feeling when you’re looking at a web page on your phone, you get stalled and have to hit reload, and then it loads? That’s probably a blocked data connection.

Click here to read the full article

Syracuse University to Pilot Private Cellular Network in Select Residence Halls, Academic Buildings

Jul, 16 2022 | Syracuse University News

Syracuse University, in partnership with JMA Wireless, will soon install a cutting-edge, 5G private wireless network in select residence halls and academic buildings as part of a pilot program that will run for the duration of the Fall 2022 semester. The pilot program will assess technology aimed at simplifying connectivity, improving bandwidth and increasing coverage for students, faculty and staff, inside and outside the classroom. This initial pilot program will focus on a random group of students selected to participate.

Click here to read the full article

Best Mobile Networks 2022

We drove more than 10,000 miles across the US, speed-testing AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon 4G and 5G in cities, towns, and rural areas to crown our 13th annual champion. For this year’s nationwide mobile network tests, we’ve changed everything. We drove more than 10,000 miles across the country with new software that tracks dropped calls and provides a better measure of reliability. That turned this year’s project into a search for America’s best mobile network—not just the fastest, as we’ve called this project in previous years.

Click here to read the full article