For the first time, a federal judge has suppressed evidence
obtained without a warrant by U.S. law enforcement using a stingray, a
surveillance device that can trick suspects' cell phones into revealing their
locations, reported Reuters.
U.S. District Judge William Pauley in Manhattan ruled that defendant Raymond Lambis' rights were violated when the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration used such a device without a warrant to find his
Washington Heights apartment.
The DEA had used a stingray to identify Lambis' apartment as
the most likely location of a cell phone identified during a drug-trafficking
probe. Pauley said doing so constituted an unreasonable search.
"Absent a search warrant, the government may not turn a
citizen's cell phone into a tracking device," Pauley wrote.
The ruling marked the first time a federal judge had
suppressed evidence obtained using a stingray, according to the American Civil
Liberties Union, which like other privacy advocacy groups has criticized law
enforcement's use of such devices.
"This opinion strongly reinforces the strength of our
constitutional privacy rights in the digital age," ACLU attorney Nathan
Freed Wessler said in a statement.
It was unclear whether prosecutors would seek to appeal. A
spokeswoman for Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, whose office was
prosecuting the case, declined to comment.
Stingrays, also known as "cell site simulators,"
mimic cell phone towers in order to force cell phones in the area to transmit
"pings" back to the devices, enabling law enforcement to track a
suspect's phone and pinpoint its location.
Critics of the technology call it invasive and say it has
been regularly used in secret to catch suspect in violation of their rights
under the U.S. Constitution.
The ACLU has counted 66 agencies in 24 states and the
District of Columbia that own stingrays but said that figure underrepresents
the actual number of devices in use given what it called secrecy surrounding
their purchases.
A Maryland appeals court in March became what the ACLU said
was the first state appellate court to order evidence obtained using a stingray
suppressed. Pauley's decision was the first at the federal level.
The U.S. Justice Department in September changed its
internal policies and required government agents to obtain a warrant before
using a cell site simulator.
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