CA6: Even if SW was issued without PC, it was still in good faith

Even if the warrant here was lacking probable cause, it was obtained and executed in good faith, so the suppression order is reversed. United States v. Tanzil, 2025 U.S. App. LEXIS 30653 (6th Cir. Nov. 20, 2025)*:

Jameel Tanzil is a convicted felon suspected of involvement in new crimes. Federal law enforcement personnel secured a warrant to search Tanzil’s cell phone for evidence of those crimes. After a grand jury indicted Tanzil for being a felon in possession of ammunition, he challenged the validity of the warrant and sought to suppress the fruits of the resulting search. The district court agreed with Tanzil that the warrant lacked probable cause and granted his motion to suppress.

The government appealed. Its appeal sits at the center of a Fourth Amendment dispute this court has not resolved: What is the required probable-cause “nexus” for a warrant to search a cell phone? But we decline to resolve that issue here, because the officers who executed the warrant did so in good faith. Accordingly, we reverse on that basis and remand for further proceedings.

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