IN: Cell phone and social media SW in murder case had nexus

Defendant was involved in two connected murders, 13½ months apart, one likely retaliation for the other. The state showed probable cause for the warrant for his cell phone and social media accounts. While part was a close call, the requirement warrants be sustained if possible requires that this one be upheld. Flippins v. State, 2025 Ind. App. LEXIS 271 (Aug. 21, 2025). Defendant’s social media supported probable cause:

P20 In looking at the facts and reasonable inferences contained in the affidavits, the police sought a warrant to search the iPhone and Flippins’s Facebook account for evidence of the crime of murder. The officer who submitted the affidavits explained that he investigated the murder of Patterson at 5060 Broadway that occurred on March 12, 2023. He explained how he had observed multiple spent bullet casings at the scene and that the videos from security cameras in the area had allowed officers to identify a green Equinox as having been used by the suspects of Patterson’s murder during the shooting. The affidavits identified how Patterson had been suspected of killing Hughes almost a year prior on March 6, 2022, and how the police believed that Patterson’s murder may have been retaliation for Hughes’s murder. The affidavits then detailed how law enforcement had identified Flippins as a suspect since he was Hughes’s half-brother, had made public posts on Facebook in reference to Hughes and his death, and was the registered owner of a green Equinox. In one of the public posts from April 22, 2022, about a month after Hughes was killed, Flippins posted, “Not one day goes by without me shedding tears ever since I got that call … can’t wait to make mufuckas [sic] feel the way I do.” Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 pp. 59, 81. Additionally, on March 13, 2023, the day after Patterson was murdered, Flippins posted a broken heart emoji with the words “LL Big Slab,” which the police knew to mean “Long Live Big Slab,” referring to Hughes by his nickname. Id.

This entry was posted in Cell phones, Social media warrants. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.