IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
STATE OF DELAWARE, )
)
v. )
) C.A. No. 1904007242
ELGIN WILSON, )
)
Defendant. )
Submitted: December 3, 2020
Decided: January 29, 2021
Upon Defendant Elgin Wilson’s Motions to Suppress: DENIED
The defendant, Elgin Wilson, is charged with first degree murder in
connection with a shooting that occurred in downtown Wilmington. During the
course of their investigation into the murder, police obtained surveillance footage
that suggested the defendant was present near the scene at the time of the shooting
and fled the area immediately afterward. Police also spoke to witnesses and were
shown text messages that indicated the defendant was texting and calling witnesses
immediately before and after the shooting. Police therefore sought and obtained
warrants to search the defendant’s phone for data and digital information within six
enumerated categories, including text messages, call logs, and location information.
The warrants temporally limited the search to the day before, the day of, and the day
after the murder.
The defendant argues the Court must suppress the evidence obtained from
those warrants because the warrants were unconstitutionally vague and overbroad.
1
The pending motions to suppress require the Court to determine whether warrants
that authorize police to search a specified phone for “data and digital information”
within six enumerated categories over a three-day time period lack the requisite
particularity to satisfy the United States and Delaware constitutions. The motions
to suppress are denied because I conclude (i) the challenged warrants were particular
as to the time period of the search and the items to be searched and seized, and (ii)
the scope of the authorized searches did not exceed the probable cause on which they
were based.
FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
1. On October 25, 2018, police responded to reports of shots fired in the
999 block of Spruce Street. There, they found the victim lying in the street with
multiple gunshot wounds. Medical personnel pronounced the victim dead at the
scene. On October 30, 2018, Defendant Elgin Wilson was arrested on an unrelated
drug charge. When Defendant was taken into custody, he possessed one gold and
one silver iPhone; the police seized both phones.
2. On November 12, 2018, Detective Devon Jones applied for a search
warrant on the gold phone (the “November 12th Warrant”). A Magistrate of the
Justice of the Peace Court approved the application that same day. The November
12th Warrant sought five categories of data: call logs, text messages, MMS, any
applications (“apps”) used to send and receive text messages, and subscriber
2
information. Detective Jones simultaneously obtained a nearly identical warrant on
the silver phone. On November 24, 2018, Detective Jones applied for a second
search warrant on the gold phone (the “November 24th Warrant”). The November
24th Warrant sought the same five categories of data as the November 12 th Warrant
but added a sixth category: GPS information and other location information.
Specifically, the State sought to use the iPhone’s “location services” function to
determine if Defendant (or at least his phone) was in the area of the shooting on
October 25, 2018.1 Once again, a Magistrate approved the application on the same
day. Both Warrants limited the authorized search to the three-day period between
October 24, 2018 and October 26, 2018.
3. Before obtaining the November 12th Warrant, the police developed
Defendant as a suspect through video surveillance footage and witness statements.
Video surveillance from local businesses showed that, minutes before the shooting,
a light-colored Buick Lucerne parked close to the block where the victim was
murdered.2 Surveillance footage from a gas station approximately two hours earlier
showed Defendant exiting the driver’s side of a silver Buick Lucerne, and the police
later found a vehicle at Defendant’s address matching that description.3
1
D.I. 28, Ex. A. (herein after cited as “Nov. 24th Aff.”), at ¶ 20.
2
D.I. 27, Ex. A. (hereinafter cited as “Nov. 12th Aff.”), at ¶ 6.
3
Id. at ¶ 13.
3
4. The police also gathered statements from three witnesses. One witness
(“Witness 1”) reported hearing Defendant saying he was going to get revenge for his
brother’s murder.4 The victim in this case was the mother of the man who pleaded
guilty to killing Defendant’s brother.5 The witness also viewed surveillance footage
that showed a person believed to be the gunman walking south on Spruce Street
shortly before the shooting and later running away in the opposite direction.6
Witness 1 identified the suspect as Defendant.7 A second witness (“Witness 2”)
reported seeing a person with a mask over his face walking in the area shortly before
the shooting.8 That witness then heard several gunshots and saw the same person
flee towards where the Buick Lucerne was parked.9 Witness 2 insisted Defendant
was not in the area at the time of the shooting and consented to a search of their cell
phone.10 In Witness 2’s cell phone, the police found text messages and voicemails
from Defendant stating he left the area earlier that evening.11 Defendant also called
the witness immediately following the shooting, asking what happened and
declaring that he was at home at the time.12 A third witness (“Witness 3”) was
4
Id. at ¶ 7.
5
Id. at ¶¶ 7, 10.
6
Id. at ¶ 6.
7
Id. at ¶ 8.
8
Id. at ¶ 9.
9
Id.
10
Id. at ¶¶ 10, 11.
11
Id. at ¶ 11
12
Id. at ¶ 12.
4
present during this phone call and heard Defendant say he was home at the time of
the shooting.13
5. On April 15, 2019, a grand jury indicted Defendant on charges of
Murder First Degree, Possession of a Firearm during the Commission of a Felony,
and Possession of a Firearm by a Person Prohibited. On June 2, 2020, Defendant
filed two Motions to Suppress challenging the constitutionality of the November 12th
and November 24th Warrants for the gold iPhone.14 The State filed an omnibus
opposition, and the Court held oral argument. During argument, the parties
requested an opportunity to submit supplemental briefing. On November 6, 2020,
Defendant filed a supplemental letter regarding the location information sought by
the November 24th Warrant, and on December 3, 2020, the State filed its
supplemental response on that issue.
PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
6. Defendant argues the Warrants15 did not establish a sufficient nexus
between the murder and the phone because the State’s allegations are based on
13
Id.
14
Defendant also filed a third motion to suppress evidence retrieved from the silver phone. The
State, however, did not find anything responsive on the silver phone, and that motion therefore is
moot. See D.I. 29, 36.
15
Defendant’s two Motions contain language and arguments that virtually are identical. Unless
otherwise specified, the November 12th Warrant and the November 24th Warrant will be referred
to collectively as “the Warrants.”
5
generalized suspicion and speculation.16 Specifically, Defendant takes issue with
the Warrants’ assertion that “it is common for individuals to use their cellular devices
to take pictures/videos of themselves with friends and associates.” Defendant
contends this statement is too general to establish a nexus between his phone and the
murder investigation.17 Defendant also asserts the Warrants were unconstitutionally
broad because they sought “data and digital information,” without stating the
specific types of data and digital information the State believed were pertinent to the
investigation. According to Defendant, this broad language covered “in essence
everything on the phone” during the relevant time period and authorized an
unconstitutional top-to-bottom search of the phone.18 With respect to the November
24th Warrant, Defendant further argues the term “location information” lacked
particularity as to how the information was created within the phone.19 Defendant
asserts the location services function of an iPhone accesses numerous applications
(“apps”), thereby effectively permitting the State to gather digital information from
an unlimited number of apps.20 Accordingly, Defendant contends the November
16
Def. Mot. 1, D.I. 27, at 8-9 (Nov. 12th Warrant); see also Def. Mot. 2, D.I. 28, at 8-9 (Nov. 24th
Warrant).
17
Def. Mot. 1, at 9; see also Def. Mot. 2 at 9.
18
Def.’s Mot. 1, at 9-10; see also Def.’s Mot. 2, at 9-10.
19
Def.’s Supp. Letter, D.I. 43, at 2.
20
Id.
6
24th Warrant was overly broad and failed to specify with particularity what evidence
the State was seeking within the phone.21
7. The State maintains the averments in the affidavit of probable cause
supporting the November 12th Warrant sufficiently establish a nexus between the
murder and Defendant’s phone because the November 12th Warrant outlines specific
facts linking Defendant and his phone to the victim’s murder.22 The State points to
several witness statements that it contends support the inference that Defendant used
his phone to communicate his whereabouts and form an alibi on the night of the
murder.23 The State asserts the November 12th Warrant also sufficiently was
particular because it sought five specified categories of data.24 The State contends
that, contrary to Defendant’s allegations, the November 12th Warrant did not contain
language that would authorize an impermissible top-to-bottom search of
Defendant’s phone.25
8. The State argues the November 24th Warrant nearly was identical to the
November 12th Warrant, except that the November 24th Warrant added “location
information” as a category of data to be searched.26 The State reasons the November
24th Warrant adequately established a nexus between Defendant, the crime, and the
21
Id. at 3.
22
State’s Resp., D.I. 36, at 8, 10.
23
Id. at 10-13.
24
Id. at 16.
25
Id. at 15.
26
Id. at 19.
7
evidence sought by (i) detailing witness statements and surveillance video that
pieced together Defendant’s suspected travel path around the time of the murder,
and (ii) explaining how Defendant’s location could be ascertained by reviewing the
location services function on his phone.27 As to particularity, the State maintains
that the November 24th Warrant contained substantially the same language as the
November 12th Warrant and similarly lacked language authorizing a top-to-bottom
search of the phone.28 The State asserts that the November 24th Warrant specifically
sought access to the iPhone’s “location services” function. The State contends that
function can be accessed without reviewing other apps, contrary to Defendant’s
assertion that the search allowed the State access an unlimited number of apps.29
DISCUSSION
9. The United States Constitution’s Fourth Amendment guarantees “[t]he
right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
unreasonable searches and seizures[.]”30 A defendant who challenges the validity of
a search warrant bears the burden of establishing by a preponderance of the evidence
27
Id. at 19-21.
28
Id. at 22.
29
State’s Supp. Letter, D.I. 48, at 2.
30
U.S. Cost. Amend. IV. Similarly, Article I, § 6 of the Delaware Constitution provides: “The
people shall be secure in their persons, houses, papers and possessions, from unreasonable
searches and seizures; and no warrant to search any place, or to seize any person or thing, shall
issue without describing them as particularly as may be; nor then, unless there be probable cause
supported by oath or affirmation.”
8
that the search violated his Constitutional rights.31 A search warrant only may be
issued upon a showing of probable cause, which is determined based on a totality of
the circumstances.32 A warrant is valid if its supporting affidavit contains facts
adequate for a judicial officer to form a reasonable belief that the items to be seized
will be found in a particular place. In other words, there must be a “logical nexus
between the items being sought and the place to be searched.”33 Additionally, the
warrant must describe with sufficient particularity the things to be searched and the
persons or items to be seized.34 The warrant must be no broader than the probable
cause on which it is based.35
A. The Warrants were supported by probable cause.36
10. In assessing probable cause, a reviewing court considers only the
information contained in the application’s four corners and gives great deference to
the magistrate’s initial finding that there was probable cause to issue the warrant.37
31
State v. Jones, 2016 WL 10998979, at *3 (Del. Super. June 2, 2016) (citing State v. Holton,
2011 WL 4638781, at *2 (Del. Super. Sept. 22, 2011)).
32
Fink v. State, 817 A.2d 781, 786-87 (Del. 2003); U.S. Const. Amend. IV; Del. Const. art. 1, §
6.
33
State v. Reese, 2019 WL 1277390, at *2 (Del. Super. March 18, 2019) (quoting State v.
Westcott, 2017 WL 283390, at *2 (Del. Super. Jan. 23, 2017)).
34
U.S. v. Grubbs, 547 U.S. 90, 97 (2006).
35
Wheeler v. State, 135 A.3d 282, 299 (Del. 2016) (citing United States v. Zimmerman, 277 F.3d
426, 432 (3d Cir.2002)).
36
Defendant challenged probable cause in his Motions but effectively conceded the issue at oral
argument. Because it is relevant to the particularity analysis, however, the Court nonetheless will
address the issue of probable cause. Defendant confirmed the mootness of the third motion
(relating to the silver iPhone) at oral argument.
37
Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 236 (1983).
9
Generalized suspicions, however, do not form a substantial basis for finding
probable cause.38 The Supreme Court has found unpersuasive general statements to
the effect that “criminals often communicate through cell phones.”39
11. Here, the affidavits of probable cause supporting the Warrants
established a nexus between Defendant, the alleged crime, and Defendant’s cell
phone. The affidavits contain statements by several witnesses linking Defendant
and his phone to the shooting and indicating Defendant was using his phone around
the time of the shooting.
12. First, the affidavit contained specific facts supporting the Magistrate’s
determination that there was probable cause to believe Defendant committed the
crime. Witness 1 told the police that Defendant was in the area near the crime and
Defendant stated he was “going to get revenge for his brother’s murder.”40 During
the homicide investigation, the police also obtained video surveillance that allowed
them to piece together the suspect’s path to and from the scene of the shooting. The
video surveillance showed a light-colored Buick Lucerne driving northbound and
ultimately parking on 10th and Church Streets.41 Defendant was linked to a vehicle
of the same make and color and was seen driving that vehicle on the day of the
38
State v. Johnson, 2019 WL 6903997, at *7 (Del. Super. Dec. 18, 2019).
39
Id.
40
Nov. 12th Aff. at ¶ 7.
41
Id. at ¶ 6.
10
shooting.42 Witness 2 reported seeing the suspected gunman wearing a mask and
walking from Church Street onto 10th Street and then down an alleyway.43 Moments
later, Witness 2 reported hearing gunshots coming from the alleyway and seeing the
suspect fleeing back down 10th Street toward Church Street.44 When the police
showed the surveillance footage to Witness 1, the witness said with absolute
certainty that the suspect in the video was Defendant.45
13. Second, the affidavits supported the Magistrate’s determination that
there was a nexus between the murder and Defendant’s iPhone. The affidavits
averred that Witness 2 texted Defendant throughout the day of the murder.46 With
consent, Detective Jones searched Witness 2’s cell phone and reviewed the text
messages from the day of the crime. The messages included Defendant texting
Witness 2 at approximately 3 am and placing several calls to Witness 2 within ten
minutes after the murder.47 Witness 3 was with Witness 2 near the crime scene when
Defendant called and asked what happened.48 According to Witness 3, Defendant
told Witness 2 he was home at the time of the shooting. 49 The State alleges this
statement was Defendant’s attempt to create an alibi. Witness 3 also identified
42
Id. at ¶ 13.
43
Id. at ¶ 9.
44
Id.
45
Id. at ¶ 8.
46
Id. at ¶ 11.
47
Id.
48
Id. at ¶ 12.
49
Id.
11
Defendant when shown a six-photograph lineup by the police.50 Based on these
witness statements and the evidence on Witness 2’s phone, the reviewing Magistrate
reasonably could infer that the evidence the police sought could be found on
Defendant’s phone.
14. With regards to the location information sought in the November 24th
Warrant, the police averred that the cell phone’s location services function may have
collected data from Defendant’s communications and could pin down Defendant’s
movements around the time of the shooting.51 The affidavit supporting the
November 24th Warrant set out locations where Defendant may have been that
evening, the existence of video surveillance, and communications made from his
phone during the time of the shooting, including Defendant’s statements shortly after
the shooting regarding where he had been when the crime occurred. These
allegations did more than “a minimal amount of work” and went beyond the vague,
general statements previously ruled insufficient.52 A magistrate presented with the
affidavit reasonably could have found a basis to believe that data reflecting
Defendant’s location during the shooting would be on the phone. Accordingly, the
Warrants were supported by probable cause.
50
Id.
51
Nov. 24th Aff. at ¶ 21.
52
Buckham v. State, 185 A.3d 1, 17 (Del. 2018).
12
B. The Warrants were sufficiently particular and were not constitutionally
overbroad.
15. Even when a warrant is supported by probable cause, it also must be
sufficiently particular and narrow in scope to satisfy the Fourth Amendment.53
These additional requirements ensure that searches are as limited as possible and
help guard against the authorities engaging in an “exploratory rummaging in a
person’s belongings.”54 To meet this standard, a warrant must describe the items to
be searched with sufficient particularity and must be no broader than the probable
cause on which the warrant is based.55 “Warrants directed to digital information
present unique challenges in satisfying the particularity requirement, given the
unprecedented volume of private information stored on devices containing such
data.”56 Accordingly, a warrant must describe with as much specificity as possible
what the investigating officers believe will be found during the digital search.57
i. The November 12th Warrant
16. Defendant argues the November 12th Warrant was insufficiently
particular and unconstitutionally overbroad, contending it was similar to the warrant
rejected by the Delaware Supreme Court in Buckham v. State.58 But the November
53
Wheeler v. State, 135 A.3d 282, 298-99 (Del. 2016).
54
Id. at 298.
55
Id. at 299.
56
Id.
57
Id. at 304.
58
185 A.3d 1 (Del. 2018).
13
12th Warrant and the Buckham warrant differ in key respects. In Buckham, the State
sought a variety of data from the cell phone that was found in Buckham’s possession
when he was arrested several weeks after the crime.59 The warrant did not limit the
search to any relevant time frame and used the broad term “including but not limited
to” when describing the categories of data sought.60 The Delaware Supreme Court
ruled that the broad language and lack of temporal limitation made the warrant
improperly vague and broader than the probable cause on which it arguably was
based.61 Importantly, in Buckham, the only possible nexus between the phone and
the crime was the possibility the phone would reveal GPS location data regarding
Buckham’s whereabouts during and after the crime.62 Even that inference, however,
was a stretch because the affidavit did not contain any specific facts indicating
Buckham had his phone in his possession at the time of the crime.63 Given the nexus
issue, the broad search authorized in Buckham could not satisfy the constitutional
requirements for particularity and breadth.
17. Similarly, in Wheeler v. State,64 another case on which Defendant
relies, the police obtained warrants to search Wheeler’s entire digital portfolio found
59
Id. at 15.
60
Id.
61
Id. at 19.
62
Id. at 4, 19.
63
Id. at 17.
64
135 A.3d 282 (Del. 2016).
14
on personal computers, cell phones, digital cameras, and video cameras.65 The
search also was not limited to any relevant time frame and permitted searches for
data far beyond the written communications police were seeking to support their
investigation into witness tampering.66 The Delaware Supreme Court ruled the
warrants permitted broad, exploratory searches and therefore failed the particularity
requirement.67
18. Unlike the Buckham and Wheeler warrants, the November 12th Warrant
did not seek any and all data or digital information; instead, it sought only five
enumerated categories of digital information. The November 12th Warrant did not
contain language that would suggest an impermissibly broad scope such as “any and
all” or “including but not limited to.” The categories limited the search to call logs,
subscriber information, and various forms of messaging. The November 12th
Warrant described what the officers believed would be found on the phone with
specificity68 and thereby satisfied an important metric in judging particularity.69
Further, the November 12th Warrant was limited to a three-day period around the
65
Id. at 289.
66
Id. at 304-05, 307.
67
Id. at 307.
68
See Nov. 12th Aff. at ¶¶ 17-18 (seeking call history, text messages, social media messages,
photographs, and videos).
69
See Wheeler, 135 A.3d at 304 (“The guiding metric applied by the court [is] that ‘officers must
describe what they believe will be found . . . with as much specificity as possible under the
circumstances[,]’ and that ‘[t]his will enable the searcher to narrow his or her search to only the
items to be seized.’”) (quoting State v. Castagnola, 46 N.E.3d 638, 659 (Ohio 2015)).
15
shooting, unlike the warrants in Wheeler and Buckham that lacked any temporal
limitations. The affidavit supporting the November 12th Warrant contained
probable cause to believe this particular evidence would be found in the phone.
Accordingly, the November 12th Warrant described the items to be searched with
sufficient particularity, and the scope of the search did not exceed the probable cause
on which it was based.
ii. The November 24th Warrant
19. The November 24th Warrant differed from the November 12th Warrant
in only a few respects. First, in addition to the five categories of information
previously authorized, the Warrant sought location data as a sixth category. Second,
the Warrant added two paragraphs providing background on the November 12 th
Warrant and some of the evidence obtained through that search.70 Third, the
November 24th Warrant added two paragraphs defining the term “location
information” and identifying precisely what evidence police were seeking.
Specifically, the affidavit stated:
Your affiant can truly state that Apple I-Phones have “location
services” on the cell phone that is used to track the users [sic]
movements and determine your approximate location. Location
services allow apps and websites (including Maps, Camera, Weather,
and other apps) to use information from cellular, WiFi, Global
Positioning System (GPS) networks . . . . “Location services” on the
cell phone will show areas that are frequent destinations of the user . . .
. By viewing the “location services,” this investigator will be able to
70
See Nov. 24th Aff. at ¶¶ 18-19.
16
see if [Defendant] and the cell phone were in the area of the murder on
October 25, 2018.71
20. As to the first five categories in the warrant, the Court already has
concluded the particularity standard was met. The November 24th Warrant neither
deleted nor altered any of the categories of information previously sought by the
November 12th Warrant. Defendant, however, argues the November 24th Warrant
only sought location data and therefore the inclusion of the other five categories
impermissibly broadened the scope of the warrant beyond that for which there was
probable cause to search. This argument falters because, as explained above, the
Warrant was supported by sufficient probable cause to search for the five previous
categories. The inclusion of previously authorized categories did not somehow taint
the request for location information.72
21. Defendant further asserts the location information request lacked
particularity because there are an unlimited number of applications (“apps”) on a
cell phone from which location data can be gathered. Defendant argues the term
71
Id. at ¶ 20.
72
Even if, hypothetically, the November 24th Warrant was unconstitutional, evidence obtained
under the first five categories would survive under the independent source doctrine. Under this
doctrine, evidence obtained without authorization does not become inaccessible if the evidence
also was gained from an independent source. Johnson, 2019 WL 6903997, at *8. Accordingly,
facts obtained through an invalid warrant need not be suppressed if they also are obtained
through a lawful warrant that did not rely on anything obtained in the tainted warrant. Id. As
discussed above, the November 12th Warrant was supported by probable cause, was sufficiently
particular, and was not overbroad. Accordingly, any facts obtained through the November 12th
Warrant (i.e., the five categories of information) need not be suppressed even if the November
24th Warrant was unconstitutional.
17
“location information” is so broad that it would allow the sort of top-to-bottom
search that courts prohibit.73 Defendant is incorrect, however, because the
November 24th Warrant limited the meaning of “location information” solely to data
that would use the phone’s location services function to identify the location of the
cell phone at the time a given communication was made.74 Additionally, the request
for location information had the same limitation in scope as the other five categories.
The authorization to search for location information was limited to the same three-
day period, and the term is not nearly as inclusive as phrases such as “any and all”
or “including but not limited to,” which typically run afoul of constitutional
requirements regarding particularity and breadth. The fact that location services data
is compiled when a user accesses various apps does not render the warrant overbroad
or insufficiently particular. The warrant described with as much specificity as
possible what the police believed would be found on the phone.75 Accordingly, the
November 24th Warrant was constitutional.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Defendant Elgin Wilson’s Motions to Suppress are
DENIED. IT IS SO ORDERED.
73
See, e.g., Buckham, 185 A.3d at 18.
74
Nov. 24th Warrant at ¶ 20
75
See Wheeler, 135 A.3d at 304 (“A key principle distilled from the jurisprudence in this area is
that warrants, in order to satisfy the particularity requirement, must describe what investigating
officers believe will be found on electronic devices with as much specificity as possible under
the circumstances.”).
18
Original to Prothonotary
cc: Cynthia Hurlock, Deputy Attorney General
Martin O’Connor, Deputy Attorney General
Brian J. Chapman, Esquire
19