Appellate court says warrant needed to search cellphone found in stolen car


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  • | 12:00 p.m. December 8, 2016
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Saying the nature of information contained on a cellphone “sets it apart from other physical objects,” a South Florida appeals court Wednesday ruled police needed a warrant before searching a phone that had been left behind in a stolen car.

A three-judge panel of the 4th District Court of Appeal upheld a circuit judge’s decision to suppress evidence from an abandoned cellphone in a case involving a juvenile.

The decision stemmed from an incident in which a Lauderhill police officer stopped a vehicle that was speeding and operating without headlights at night.

Two people got out and fled, but the officer found a cellphone in the vehicle, which had been stolen in Sunrise. The officer turned over the cellphone, which was protected by a password, to Sunrise police.

A detective was able to unlock the phone, which belonged to the juvenile.  The juvenile was charged with burglary of a conveyance but sought to suppress the information found on the cell phone.

The court agreed with the juvenile’s arguments that police needed a warrant to gain access to the information.

 

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