Courts Close the Loophole Letting the Feds Search Your Phone at the Border
Customs and Border Protection insists that it can search electronics without a warrant. A federal judge just said it can't.

The Fourth Amendment still applies at the border, despite the feds' insistence that it doesn't.
For years, courts have ruled that the government has the right to conduct routine, warrantless searches for contraband at the border. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has taken advantage of that loophole in the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches and seizures to force travelers to hand over data from their phones and laptops.
But on Wednesday, Judge Nina Morrison in the Eastern District of New York ruled that cellphone searches are a "nonroutine" search, more akin to a strip search than scanning a suitcase or passing a traveler through a metal detector.
Although the interests of stopping contraband are "undoubtedly served when the government searches the luggage or pockets of a person crossing the border carrying objects that can only be introduced to this country by being physically moved across its borders, the extent to which those interests are served when the government searches data stored on a person's cell phone is far less clear," the judge declared.
Morrison noted that "reviewing the information in a person's cell phone is the best approximation government officials have for mindreading," so searching through cellphone data has an even heavier privacy impact than rummaging through physical possessions. Therefore, the court ruled, a cellphone search at the border requires both probable cause and a warrant. Morrison did not distinguish between scanning a phone's contents with special software and manually flipping through it.
And in a victory for journalists, the judge specifically acknowledged the First Amendment implications of cellphone searches too. She cited reporting by The Intercept and VICE about CPB searching journalists' cellphones "based on these journalists' ongoing coverage of politically sensitive issues" and warned that those phone searches could put confidential sources at risk.
Wednesday's ruling adds to a stream of cases restricting the feds' ability to search travelers' electronics. The 4th and 9th Circuits, which cover the mid-Atlantic and Western states, have ruled that border police need at least "reasonable suspicion" of a crime to search cellphones. Last year, a judge in the Southern District of New York also ruled that the government "may not copy and search an American citizen's cell phone at the border without a warrant absent exigent circumstances."
Wednesday's ruling involves defending the rights of an unsympathetic character. U.S. citizen Kurbonali Sultanov allegedly downloaded a sketchy Russian porn trove, including several images of child sex abuse, which landed him on a government watch list. When Sultanov was on the way back from visiting his family in Uzbekistan, agents from the Department of Homeland Security pulled him aside at the airport and searched his phone, finding the images.
Morrison suppressed the evidence from the phone search but not Sultanov's "spontaneous" statement admitting to downloading the videos. And her order would not have prevented the police from getting Sultanov's phone the old-fashioned way. Sultanov had allegedly downloaded the porn while in the United States, and his name popped up on the watch list two months before his return flight. And, in fact, the feds did obtain a court order to search Sultanov's spare phone.
The Southern District of New York ruling last year also involved an unsympathetic character. Jatiek Smith, a member of the Bloods gang, was being investigated for a "violent and extortionate takeover" of New York's fire mitigation industry. When Smith flew home from a vacation in Jamaica, the FBI took advantage of the opportunity to search Smith's phone at the border.
A judge suppressed the evidence from the phone search, but Smith was convicted anyway. In both cases, the feds could have gotten a warrant for the suspects' phones; they saw the border loophole as a way to skip that step.
In fact, CBP Officer Marves Pichardo admitted that these searches are often warrantless fishing expeditions. CBP searches U.S. citizen's phones if they're coming from "countries that have political difficulties at this point in time and that we're currently looking at for intelligence and stuff like that," Pichardo testified during an evidence suppression hearing. He asserted that CBP agents can "look at pretty much anything that's stored on the phone" and that passengers are usually "very compliant."
Because of the powers the government was claiming, civil libertarians intervened in the Sultanov case. The Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press filed an amicus brief in October 2023 arguing that warrantless phone searches are a "grave threat to the Fourth Amendment right to privacy as well as the First Amendment freedoms of the press, speech, and association." Morrison heavily cited that brief in her ruling.
"As the court recognized, letting border agents freely rifle through journalists' work product and communications whenever they cross the border would pose an intolerable risk to press freedom," Grayson Clary, staff attorney at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, said in a statement sent to reporters. "This thorough opinion provides powerful guidance for other courts grappling with this issue, and makes clear that the Constitution would require a warrant before searching a reporter's electronic devices."
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The Fourth Amendment still applies at the border, despite the feds' insistence that it doesn't.
So they can search my trunk, search my entire vehicle, search any coolers I have stored IN the vehicle, but because they can't search my phone, the 4th amendment remains tanned, rested and ready at the border?
Absolutely.
Just like the fourth and second amendment still apply at airports.
Don’t they consider a certain radius around an airport to be the “border”.
SCOTUS has said that the border extends 100 miles inwards. I wouldn't be surprised if that's half the population.
Right around there. Not so much at the top and bottom, but around the coasts, fuck yes. I'm guessing like, literally all of Maine.
The "border within 100 miles" I think also includes navigable waters, so the great lakes and the Mississippi river
I believe the doctrine now is the border extends all the way into the center point of the country-- and you haven't crossed-it-crossed-it even when you're getting off a plane in Kansas.
Just remember the phrase "extraordinary rendition" and the practices associated therewith. The same government that punishes relations between people legal only in other countries claims the right to torture their subject of interest without following any legitimate US law so long as it occurs in non-US territories, black sites, or torture flights.
civil libertarians intervened in the Sultanov case.
Of course they did. Gotta protect the pedophile.
LGBT Pedo Chase Oliver 2024, am I right guys?
Don't you think it's weird that you couldn't find any sympathetic cases where this was a problem? You could only find the pedo and the violent gangbanger?
If it wasn't for child rapists, child mutilators, bldm, and illegals committing crimes the "civil libritarians" would have nothing to stand for
LGBT Pedo Chase Oliver 2024
Huh, I have been told over and over that the objections to Chase Oliver had nothing to do with his sexual orientation. Nothing at all. Weird.
It doesn't have anything to do with his sexual orientation. It has to do with the fact that he's a member and enabler of a pedophile cult.
If he's attracted to other dudes, then so be it. Live and let live. The rest of us would never ever know it. But he does the Pride thing too. He does the lifestyle - by volition. Which puts him squarely in the groomer/pedo bloc.
Just to be clear, being openly gay equals pedophilia? Just checking.
Yes. They're enablers.
Are you old enough to remember when the line was, "What happens in the privacy of our bedroom is our own business?"
But then they had to make it everyone's business. And they preyed upon tolerance and acceptance to do it. And in doing so, they ushered in compounding depravity. Which they now scream must also be tolerated and accepted, lest they undermine the tolerance and acceptance to date.
And then they revealed their endgame - which everyone with a functioning brain has always known: they're after the kids.
Did you see the frogs across the pond opened the Olympics with a scene of a child, hands splayed on the table, surrounded by cross-dressing perverts? Perfect example. And they did it with a tableau intended to mock Christ and His Apostles.
Why? Because this is their new religion.
Yes. The LGBT - their pride, their "openly gay" lifestyle" - YES, IT EQUALS PEDOPHILIA.
No, it does not.
There are plenty of gay men who want absolutely nothing to do with children, prepubescent youth, or even even effeminate males, or even recognizably male men outside of their own generation. And plenty of gay men who are seeking nothing more than to have that one special guy to spend their life with, to the exclusion of all others.
Gay does NOT equal pedophilia.
Well then you think they'd be the #1 demographic with the loudest voice denouncing trans, LGBT school groomer curriculum, "gender transition"/mutilation, drag queen events, etc. Gay men have EASILY got the most to lose from all that degenerate perverted crap.
But they're not denouncing them, are they. Not in any show of organized force. They're right there in the same parade, waving the flag, and showing them support. Showing their Pride.
Because they're enablers. They're so afraid of losing what they've got, that they're all in on all the pedophiles and gender benders that have usurped their cause.
The LGBT is a pedophile cult. Period.
I fail to see how your argument supports its conclusion with rational arguments.
You began by asking if we were aware of what people say. A rational argument would be consistent with what people do.
Yes, we see what they do. What they say IS what they do. It all about empowering and normalizing pedophilia. Literally every word and deed out of the LGBT pedos for the last half decade have been openly geared towards this.
There's no hiding this anymore, or pretending otherwise. The cat's out of the bag. LGBT is a pedo cult dedicated to one thing and one thing only: grooming and raping children.
What happens when they do it anyway? Same thing that happens to cops who arrest people for flipping them the bird. Nothing.
What about cops given medals for shooting unarmed women?
acabettsr
All cops are bastards except those that shoot republicans
I think the man indulges in a logical fallacy.
See, anyone may search your electronic device by utilizing a technique called "polling," which is not an unrestricted search technique.
Polling all devices by way of a wi-fi protocol procedure can turn up whether your device has its wi-fi network on (I.e., broadcasting).
Calling an electronic device likewise entails a form of polling, creating a response potential in your device.
Utilizing an RFID scan can also potentially be used to acquire data from an electronic device, such as any credit card that uses an RFID chip, so that contactless payment method can be applied. Some electronic devices can apparently also be polled for RFID info.
It's like stating that they have a right to perform a contactless search of your body or anything that you carry. The word "search" can be used as loosely as could possibly be imagined but can also refer to the recognized legal definition or legal parameters of the word.