IN: Def couldn’t be held in contempt for refusing to unlock cell phone pleading 5A

“When Katelin Seo was placed under arrest, law enforcement took her iPhone believing it contained incriminating evidence. A detective got a warrant to search the smartphone, but he couldn’t get into the locked device without Seo’s assistance. So the detective got a second warrant that ordered Seo to unlock her iPhone. She refused, and the trial court held her in contempt. [¶] We reverse the contempt order. Forcing Seo to unlock her iPhone would violate her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. By unlocking her smartphone, Seo would provide law enforcement with information it does not already know, which the State could then use in its prosecution against her. The Fifth Amendment’s protection from compelled self-incrimination prohibits this result. We thus reverse and remand.” Seo v. State, 2020 Ind. LEXIS 485 (June 23, 2020).

Reason: Volokh Conspiracy: Indiana Supreme Court Creates a Clear Split on Compelled Decryption and the Fifth Amendment by Orin Kerr (“Next stop, the U.S. Supreme Court?”)

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