Border Cops Try To Make an End Run Around Attorney-Client Privilege
Detroit lawyer Amir Makled has confidential client data on his phone. That didn’t stop U.S. Customs and Border Protection from trying to search it.

Attorney-client confidentiality is one of the oldest pillars of American justice. Americans not only have a right to talk with a lawyer, but also to talk privately with the lawyer. After all, what good would it be to ask for legal advice if the police could use that conversation against you?
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) asserts a very different principle: that your privacy rights disappear at the border. CBP policy gives officers the right to seize and search any electronic device that passes through customs. While the agency claims that copies of any attorney-client documents will be "destroyed" after a search, it doesn't recognize limits on its ability to collect and copy those documents in the first place.
Detroit lawyer Amir Makled got a glimpse of that policy in action while coming back from a family beach vacation in the Dominican Republic on Sunday. As first reported by the Detroit Free Press, agents held Makled for 90 minutes at the airport while they demanded to go through his phone. Eventually, he let them look at his contacts list, though he wouldn't tell them whether specific people were his friends, relatives, or clients.
CBP seemed to be waiting for Makled when he got back, he tells Reason, because staff at the passport control booth asked for a "TTRT agent," which may stand for Tactical Terrorism Response Team. Makled was then brought into a back room with a plainclothes officer who refused to give his name and told, "we know that you're an attorney, and we know that you take some high-profile cases," according to Makled.
His firm, Hall Makled, specializes in civil rights, personal injury, and criminal defense work. Makled says that the only high-profile client he can think of is Samantha Lewis, a protester charged with "resisting and obstructing police" at a Palestinian rights protest at the University of Michigan. The decision by Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, a Democrat, to charge campus protesters with felonies was a major controversy last year.
Makled claims that CBP agents didn't give any other reason for detaining him—and immediately demanded to see his phone. "Why don't you just tell me what it is you're looking for, and I can determine if I'm going to give you the answer?" Makled says he asked the officer. "And [the officer] said it doesn't work that way. I'm not going to allow you to tell me how to dictate this interview."
CBP policy calls on officers to "seek clarification, if practicable in writing, from the individual asserting this privilege as to specific files, file types, folders, categories of files, attorney or client names, email addresses, phone numbers, or other particulars" about documents protected by attorney-client privilege. And that's exactly what happened.
"They handed me a legal pad and said, you know, write down what you think is going to be privileged and we won't look at that. I said to them, what a futile exercise. How ridiculous does that sound?" Makled says. "I'm not going to spend any amount of time telling you what is privileged and what isn't. Everything is."
When a traveler asserts attorney-client privilege over an electronic device, officers are supposed to contact the agency's own lawyers, according to CBP policy. The search "will occur through the establishment and employment of a Filter Team composed of legal and operational representatives, or through another appropriate measure with written concurrence of the CBP Associate/Assistant Chief Counsel office," the policy states.
It's not clear whether CBP actually followed this procedure in Makled's interrogation. Makled says that "there was a lot of going back to the supervisor" and attempts to negotiate on what apps he would let CBP look through.
CBP Assistant Commissioner for Public Affairs Hilton Beckham confirmed to Reason that Makled was "flagged" and consented to a "limited search of his electronic device." Beckham claimed that the interrogation was a "routine, lawful" process, that "all actions were conducted in accordance with established protocols," and that Makled was spreading a "blatantly false and sensationalized" narrative.
Beckham separately explained to the Detroit Free Press that electronic "searches are conducted to detect digital contraband, terrorism-related content, and information relevant to visitor admissibility, all of which play a critical role in national security. Allegations that political beliefs trigger inspections or removals are baseless and irresponsible."
But Makled is a U.S. citizen, not a "visitor," and CBP didn't provide any reason to believe that he was suspected of involvement in smuggling or terrorism. By his account, CBP was interested in him precisely because of the attorney-client communications on his phone—which government officials otherwise couldn't look at. Just as the Trump administration has used border enforcement to get around Americans' domestic First Amendment rights, it seems to be doing the same to the Fourth Amendment.
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be smarter than to take what you believe to be privileged to the border.
When did we stop just assuming the NSA had all of our contact lists? When everybody got fired after Snowden's revelation?
Remember when a leading Presidential Candidate said "They're spying on my political campaign. They tapped my phones." and everybody, including Reason, deflected on behalf of the then-sitting administration and FBI with things like "Nobody taps copper wire lines anymore, you crazy orange Boomer!"?... Then, once he won, they impeached him on the fabricated evidence that they used to justify spying on him?... Then, when the impeachment failed to remove him from office or prevent him from running, they invented charges using nonsensical logic predicated on the information obtained by the prosecution of the spying that was performed under false premises?
Given the obviousness of the protracted rot of the system, root-to-branch, Reason's call to arms over a single leaf seems, at best, rather pointless. Even potentially subversive after decades of "What harm are all the invasive species cropping up around the system and the repeated grafts performed on the system in the name of diversity, equity, and political correctness?"
A (not exactly SFW) 'PSA' from the before times for the yutes who might think this is strictly a CBP/TSA/TTRT/Terrorism/PATRIOT Act/Trump Border issue (in the bluest county in the most Arab-friendly State in the Union).
The more I read about this the less believable the narrative as asserted becomes. Like the the 10 yr. old girl getting an abortion across state lines and the lady who was part of the OMing Cult greeting the FBI at the door with "You're here because you think it's a sex cult, don't you." except he showed up at the airport with a phone.
Remember how hard Reason pimped for Priscilla Villarreal and how they continually glossed over and even tried to hide the fact that she was factually working with a local police officer to doxx people?
yes I remember all of the things.
>>The more I read about this the less believable the narrative as asserted becomes.
absolutely.
and fwiw I'm on the fence a little bit about whether the Border Guard should be rummaging through phones but I'm not on the fence about this yo-yo foregoing his professional responsibilities to his clients by taking what he states is their privileged info (clients' privilege, not his) to a place subject to summary searches
Wow second story on this retarded shit lawyer. So rose and Koch must have told reason what to harp on today
Funny how everyone wants something from the government and doesn't think past the end of their nose.
Open boarder types: we'll hand out food, lodging, cash, and forbid them from working, we won't check their criminal records, we'll ignore their criminal records, we'll refuse to let ICE deport illegal immigrants who commit crimes. What could possibly go wrong?
Closed border types: we'll make crossing the border so much trouble that even citizens can end up in foreign prisons. We'll rejoice in the Supreme Court declaring everything within 100 miles of the border to be a rights-free zone. We'll demand obnoxious ID checks, you'll have to take your shoes off just to catch an airplane, you get to choose grope or cook. What could possibly go wrong?
Government patriots for their side and the other side are treasonous traitors. Good job, statists.
Name the citizen detained in a foreign jail.
You fell for my cunning plan. No one knows, because they didn't get hearings.
So your cunning plan was baseless, unprovable assertions? Good plan.
Taking shoes off to board a plane had nothing to do with borders.
Really? You have to do it for domestic flights too now?
Are you being retarded on purpose?
He literally identifies as "Stupid".
I'm getting to the point where it seems like some sort of tactic, method, or even AI training experiment where somebody like sarcasmic tries to elucidate how many borderline reasonable posts they have to include in their insane bullshit to keep people engaging them or prevent them from being muted.
Typical Reason-style dishonest conflation on his behalf along the lines of your post: the Open Boarders Progressives and the Closed Borders Neocons are the same TPD that Stupid would otherwise recognize and oppose (and by corollary, Biden/Harris were an extension of). If he weren't...
Dear God you're stupid. Using your logic the 9-11 hijackers had nothing to do with borders either...
Ah yes, I remember Bin Laden’s complaints about our border policies in his manifesto. And how shoe bombs can only explode while crossing borders.
Goldman, quit your bitching. You’re turning into a more sober version of Sarc.
Ahhh, po widdle twumpie, his feewings got hurt.
Here, let me do it again: Trump's an economic ignoramus.
You overestimate yourself. I have no feelings about you at all. You’re just a one note bore, and the endless bitching is getting old.
One note... and it's out of tune.
The idea that the government can target a lawyer at the boarder because of who they represent and then bully them into giving them access to their phone should scare the shit out of everyone. That is fascism.
Next they’ll be locking people up without charging them. Not that it would ever happen though.
No. You need to learn more about the words you use.
What is really wrong with your attitude is that you are only upset that a lawyer is being targeted. Why should the government have the right to look at anybody's phone or laptop for any reason, just because they are crossing the border? Searches are supposed to be for probable cause and signed off by judges. You don't seem to care about that.
Just another damned statist, only unhappy because your side is being targeted.
I also notice your Freudian slip, "boarder". You give yourself away too easily.
Molly is a dumbass.
Molly is Tony.
SGT:
"Stupid Government Tricks 2 hours ago
...
Funny how everyone wants something from the government and doesn't think past the end of their nose.
Open boarder types: ..."
Gosh you're smart. But looks like you need a repeat.
Open border types: Let anyone in, but they get no government aid, handout, assistance, nothing. And don't fly in refugees or anybody else at government expense, especially those who don't like it here and are only coming here because it's free, loaded with government assistance, and less dangerous than whatever shithole you voted for and are now fleeing.
Open boarder types: Here's all the money you want, free lodging in luxury hotels with maid service, free food, and we won't let you work. And if you get in trouble with the law, we will hide you from the mean immigration police. And if you were in trouble with the law in your home country, we'll cover that up too.
Is the ‘boarder’ near the border?
You can't read either?
Probably better than nearly everyone here. Why? Do you require instruction?
Do you know who else pierced attorney client privilege? If you guessed Reason's preferred candidate in 2020, Joe Biden, you win a tiny American flag lapel pin. Yes incredibly Biden's DOJ forced Trump's attorney's to testify against him in deposition with the full approval of our beloved DC courts. This of course after for the first time in history a former president was denied presidential privilege. Reason was of course outraged by this assault on the rule of law. Right? Oh wait. Reason thought it was all cool. It's almost like privilege is cool only for aliens. Huh. Go figure. And just fuck off with your righteous indignation.
Wow. This is a tough one.
Obnoxious lawyer .vs federal police.
Let me go see if AI can figure out a way both lose.
All I get is this:
A STRANGE GAME. THE ONLY WINNING MOVE IS NOT TO PLAY.. ... HOW ABOUT A NICE GAME OF CHESS?
greetings, Dr. Falken.
Or this idiot leftist lawyer can secure his data in a fashion that will keep it out of the hands of LE.
But then you can't fly into the bluest county in the most Arab-friendly State in the US and accuse all the Trumpistas of being anti-immigrant, anti-Palestinian, anti-free speech, and anti-Constitutional by a completely unsubstantiated innuendo of a narrative, floated and supported by a/the hostile media.
Right, I was going to say between Illegal Immigrants skirting the law, Attorneys skirting the law, and Federal Agents skirting the law, this seems like it was just a case of it being the Federal Agents' turn.
Reason-GPT: CBP agents searching peoples' contact lists is individual free speech, an act performed by Good Samaritans to decide whose speech on the internet is OK and whose gets blocked and screened as offensive.
I'm a broken record: Get a burner.
Meanwhile, in the “Shit Reason won’t cover because it makes their previous reporting look retarded” category:
NEW: Records obtained by Sens Grassley and Johnson provide further proof DOJ/FBI was in cahoots with Biden WH on "Arctic Frost" investigation, the Jan 6 case against the president.
As I reported in the docs case, Biden WH general counsel Jonathan Su also was working with DOJ and NARA separably to concoct the documents case.
Biden WH turned over govt cell phones used by Pres Trump and VP Pence.
This is from dirty Wash FBI field office official Tim Thibault to others--including WFO chief Steven D'Antuono--about obtaining the devices.
https://x.com/julie_kelly2/status/1909756498710085854
Makled says. "I'm not going to spend any amount of time telling you what is privileged and what isn't. Everything is."
That is not even a little bit true, unless the phone is exclusively and singularly used for client communications. Which it clearly wasn't, because Matt himself recognized that there was non-work related stuff there.
"They handed me a legal pad and said, you know, write down what you think is going to be privileged and we won't look at that. I said to them, what a futile exercise. How ridiculous does that sound?" Makled says.
With the exception of doing so on a legal pad, that's EXACTLY what he'd be expected to do with privileged communications. Redact the privileged stuff, create a privilege log, and then turn it over in its redacted form.
But Makled is a U.S. citizen, not a "visitor," and CBP didn't provide any reason to believe that he was suspected of involvement in smuggling or terrorism.
You literally cited to it, Matt. Quote: "the only high-profile client he can think of is Samantha Lewis, a protester charged with "resisting and obstructing police" at a Palestinian rights protest at the University of Michigan"
Meaning he's a terrorist sympathizer. And on their payroll.
and that Makled was spreading a "blatantly false and sensationalized" narrative.
Which is why Reason picked it up and ran with it, amirite?
Dearborn attorney Amir Makled was detained and questioned at Detroit Metro Airport about his clients and asked to surrender his cellphone.
I'm sure all the TSA, CBP, and TTRT agents in Detroit were probably wearing MAGA hats too.
"You don't need a formal conspiracy when interests converge."
Meaning he's a terrorist sympathizer. And on their payroll.
Even without sympathizing with terrorists. If I were Johnny Cochran taking a pro-Palestinian protester on as a client, phoning a friend at TSA, having them stop me for no reason at all and nebulously assert a right to search my phone, and hiding the whole affair behind attorney-client privilege would be a great way to poison the well.
Especially among "Sure, the FBI deleted some of the footage it had of drone surveillance of the event, but really Kyle Rittenhouse shouldn't have been there." 'libertarians'.
""the only high-profile client he can think of is Samantha Lewis, a protester charged with "resisting and obstructing police" at a Palestinian rights protest at the University of Michigan"
Meaning he's a terrorist sympathizer. And on their payroll."
This may be the dumbest take I've seen you have.
Everyone charged with a crime is guaranteed representation by a lawyer. The lawyer is not and cannot suddenly be a terrorist sympathizer, even if their client is found guilty of terrorism, just because they took them on as a client.
The whole border searches thing is nonsense. They should produce a warrant for a search, or be able to clearly articulate a reason for suspicion that would justify the search otherwise, subject to normal police rules regarding searches without warrants.
In the case of privileged information, there's no remedy when the state gets to illegally look at it, because looking at it is damage done.
Everyone charged with a crime is guaranteed representation by a lawyer.
And I would never say such a thing about a public defender.
The lawyer is not and cannot suddenly be a terrorist sympathizer, even if their client is found guilty of terrorism, just because they took them on as a client.
Because they voluntarily took them on as a client. This isn't like an attorney who looks at a list of charges and the evidence supporting them and thinks, "Y'know, I don't think the State has a case here."
It's plainly clear what Samantha Lewis was up to. It's plainly clear where her loyalties are. By taking her on, he's either with her on the subject, or happy to take her money to do it. Or both.
The whole border searches thing is nonsense.
Why?
In the case of privileged information, there's no remedy when the state gets to illegally look at it, because looking at it is damage done.
No it's not. If it was illegally obtained, it's inadmissible as evidence.
There's a reason it's called "FRUIT of the poisonous tree". Even if they were specifically after a suspected sleeper like Samantha Lewis, if they couldn't point to any basis for her BUT an illegal search of her attorney's phone, they wouldn't be able to make a case against her (absent one very extreme exception, but it's not at issue here since she is still currently walking this earth).