CA2: Def’s GF using passcode to open his phone in presence of police wasn’t a governmental search

In a child pornography case, defendant’s girlfriend was not acting as an agent of the police when she used his passcode to open his phone in the presence of an officer. United States v. Hines, 2025 U.S. App. LEXIS 14336 (2d Cir. June 11, 2025):

On appeal, Hines argues that his girlfriend, K.S., acted as an agent of the police when she used his password to unlock his cellphone, observed child pornography on that cellphone, and showed those images to a police officer at the police station, and thus, that the evidence obtained during that warrantless search violated his Fourth Amendment rights and should have been suppressed. Hines further contends that, because the probable cause in the subsequent application to obtain a search warrant for his cellphone, laptop, and other electronic devices was based on the initial allegedly unconstitutional search of his phone by the police officer who was present with K.S., the evidence obtained from the execution of that warrant also should have been suppressed.

As a threshold matter, we hold that when a defendant challenges a search conducted by a private party, the burden lies with the defendant to show that the search constituted governmental action implicating the Fourth Amendment—not with the government to show the absence of governmental action. Here, we conclude that the district court did not err in determining, after conducting an evidentiary hearing, that Hines failed to meet his burden of demonstrating that his girlfriend acted as a de facto government agent when she unlocked his cellphone and showed the images of child pornography to the police officer. Moreover, because that private search of his cellphone did not implicate the Fourth Amendment, the district court correctly determined that the use of evidence derived from that private search in a subsequent search warrant application does not provide a basis to suppress evidence obtained from devices searched pursuant to that warrant.

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