D.Conn.: Police using an iPhone camera to see through a car’s window tinting did not violate any REP

Police using an Apple iPhone camera to see through a car’s window tinting did not violate any reasonable expectation of privacy. United States v. Poller, 2023 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 121262 (D. Conn. July 14, 2023):

This is a case that arises at the intersection of the Fourth Amendment and the technological capabilities of an Apple iPhone. The defendant Christopher Poller allegedly stashed two guns and illegal drugs on the front seat of his car. He parked the car on a road in front of his apartment and then went inside. Because the windows of the car were heavily tinted, he probably thought no one could see inside. But he was mistaken. The police came along and–by holding up an iPhone to the window of the car and activating the iPhone’s camera viewfinder function–they could clearly see the guns and drugs inside the car.

Poller moves to suppress the guns and drugs on the ground that the police’s use of the iPhone amounted to a warrantless “search” in violation of the Fourth Amendment. I do not agree. First, I conclude that Poller had no reasonable expectation of privacy against the police’s use of sense-enhancing technology like the camera function of an iPhone that is in general public use. Second, to the extent that the police placed the iPhone against the window of the car, I conclude that this physical trespass was incidental because it was not necessary to the ability of the iPhone to expose what was inside. Accordingly, I will deny the motion to suppress.

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