D.Mass.: Wikileak border laptop seizure reasonable at inception but 49 day seizure likely too long; First Amendment claim survives

Plaintiff was a part of the Bradley Manning/Wikileaks support network, and his computer was seized in Chicago by DHS after he passed through Customs and was waiting for a flight to Boston and he was questioned about his connection to Manning. The court concludes the seizure was valid, but the 49 day detention stated a claim for unreasonableness of the seizure. Also, his First Amendment claim survives a motion to dismiss. House v. Napolitano, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 42297 (D. Mass. March 28, 2012):

Considering these factors in light of Supreme Court precedent, it cannot be said that the search and seizure of House’s laptop and other electronic devices was so intrusive as to require any particularized suspicion. House contends that the search of a laptop and electronic devices implicates one’s “dignity and privacy interests,” not because there was any disrobing, physical search of his person, force used or exposure to pain or danger, but because such devices contain information concerning one’s thoughts, ideas and communications and associations with others. However, such a search of a laptop computer or other electronic devices does not involve the same “dignity and privacy interests” as the “highly intrusive searches of the person” found to require some level of suspicion such as strip searches or body cavity searches. Flores-Montano, 541 U.S. at 152. The Supreme Court has not explicitly held that all property searches are routine or that such searches are categorically incapable of implicating the “dignity and privacy interests of the person being searched,” Id., but the search of one’s personal information on a laptop computer, a container that stores information, even personal information, does not invade one’s dignity and privacy in the same way as an involuntary x-ray, body cavity or strip search of person’s body or the type of search that have been held to be non-routine and require the government to assert some level of suspicion.

ACLU’s page on case; ACLU press release on order.

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