Illinois Stingray Ruling
Illinois Stingray Ruling
Illinois Stingray Ruling
FILED
015
11/9/2
)
) No. 15 M 0021
) Iain D. Johnston
) U.S. Magistrate Judge
)
Facts
A.
Investigatory Facts
Although the investigative facts are unsurprising, the method and technology
used to obtain the cell phone number may be surprising to many people. The
United States has submitted an application for a warrant to use a cell-site
simulator to obtain this targets new cell phone number.
B.
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2014/jun/13/feds-urge-quiet-on-spyingtechology/. The Court could attempt to learn about the device on the Internet. See
Stingray Phone Tracker, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stingray_phone_tracker (last
visited October 19, 2015). But most reasonable people know to be highly skeptical
about what they read on the Internet, particularly in Wikipedia posts. United
States v. Lawson, 677 F.3d 629, 650-51 (4th Cir. 2012) (collecting federal decisions
expressing concern regarding Wikipedias reliability); Crispin v. Audigier, Inc., 717
F. Supp. 2d 965, 976 n.19 (C.D. Cal. 2010) (collecting authority noting danger of
relying on Wikipedia). 1 Cell-site simulators are also the topic of many recent law
review articles. See, e.g., Stephanie K. Pell & Christopher Soghoian, A Lot More
Than a Pen Register, and Less Than a Wiretap: What the Stingray Teaches Us About
How Congress Should Approach the Reform of Law Enforcement Surveillance
Technology, 16 Yale J.L. & Tech. 134 (2013-2014). A good overview of cell-site
simulators was recently discussed in The Champion. C. Justin Brown & Kasha M.
Leese, StingRay Devices Usher in a New Fourth Amendment Battleground, The
Indeed, the concern of Wikipedia entry accuracy is recognized in popular culture. See, e.g.,
The Big Bang Theory, The Pirate Solution (Series 3, Episode 4) (when asked by Leonard
what he was doing for six months, Raj explains that he was busy checking e-mail, updating
his Facebook status and messing up Wikipedia entries); 30 Rock, Cleveland, (Season 1,
Episode 20) (Ah, well, it must be true if its on the Interweb.) Additionally, the Court is
aware of Judge Hamiltons well-reasoned and well-stated concerns in Rowe v. Gibson, 798
F.3d 622, 638-44 (7h Cir. 2015) (Hamilton, J., dissenting in part) regarding judicial internet
research, including the reliability of internet research.
The requirements in this opinion establishing the use of a cell-site simulator do not
violate those concerns for several reasons. First, the application process is ex parte.
Second, before imposing the requirements, the Court gave the United States government
the opportunity to explain the use and technology of cell-site simulators, as well as,
importantly, the opportunity to express concerns about the requirements based upon the
Courts understanding of the use and technology. Third, the matter is in the investigative
stage, not the merits stage.
1
Champion, June 2015, at 12. But those articles often rely on secondary source
material, including the possibly untrustworthy Internet websites. Unfortunately,
the one place where a person will be unable to find much discussion of cell-site
simulators is case law. In the Matter of the Application of the United States of
America for an Order Authorizing the Installation and Use of a Pen Register and
Trap and Trace Device, 890 F. Supp. 2d 747, 752 (S.D. Tex. 2012) (Regardless of
what it is called, there is scant case law addressing the equipment.). And even
case law that discusses stingrays refers to newspaper reports as authority on these
devices. See, e.g., Wisconsin v. Tate, 849 N.W.2d 798, 802 n.8 (2014) (citing Jenifer
Valentio-DeVries, Stingray Phone Tracker Fuels Constitutional Clash, Wall Street
Journal, September 22, 2011).
Despite all the confidentiality surrounding cell-site simulators, an excellent
source of information regarding the device is published by the Department of
Justice. See Department of Justice, Electronic Surveillance Manual (June 2005),
http://www.justice.gov/criminal/foia/docs/elec-sur-manual.pdf. When presented with
an application to use a cell-site simulator, at a minimum, courts should review this
document to understand exactly what the United States is requesting of the court.
Some commentators argue that judges may be allowing the use of cell-site
simulators without possessing a complete understanding of the device and how it
works, because, in part, the information is buried in technical jargon in the
application. Pell & Soghoian, A Lot More Than a Pen Register, and Less Than a
Wiretap, 16 Yale J.L. & Tech. at 160; Brown & Leese, StingRay Devices Usher in a
New Fourth Amendment Battleground, The Champion, at 16. This Court does not
know whether that argument is accurate, in part, because of the dearth of case law
discussing these devices. 2
The Court has spent a considerable amount of time collecting information
relating to cell-site simulators. The following is the Courts understanding of the
device. A cell-site simulator goes by many different names, including, but not
limited to stingray, triggerfish and kingfish. 3 Although these devices were also
previously called digital analyzers, the moniker cell-site simulator is the most
self-explanatory. The device does exactly what the name describes: it simulates a
cell site. And by simulating a cell site, the device causes or forces cell-phones in an
area to send their signals with all the information contained therein to the cellsite simulator. Once the cell phones in the area send their signals to the cell-site
simulator, the device captures a vast array of information, including, but not
limited to, the cell phones electronic serial number (ESN) or international mobile
subscriber identification (IMSI). A cell phone need only be on for the cell-site
simulator to capture the cell phones ESN and IMSI; the cell phone need not be in
The undersigned was a friend of the late Kurt F. Schmid, the former Chicago HIDTA
Director. Kurt was a fantastic law enforcement officer and phenomenal person. Kurt
provided non-confidential information to the undersigned to attempt to corroborate the
information the undersigned collected. Kurt Schmids recent passing is a loss to those who
strived for effective and constitutional law enforcement. The undersigned is grateful to
Kurt Schmid for his friendship and help in understanding cell-site simulators, among many
other things.
3
Apparently, having exhausted the ichthyological theme, law enforcement has started
referring to cell-site simulators as superdog. Hopefully, this new moniker is an homage to
the famous drive-in restaurant, located at the intersection of Milwaukee, Devon and Nagle,
and operated by the great Berman family. See Superdawg Drive-In,
http://www.superdawg.com (last visited Oct. 19, 2015).
2
use. 4 The cell-site simulators signals penetrate structures, just as cell phones
signals penetrate most structures. Although the operator of a cell-site simulator can
use a directional antenna to direct the simulators signal toward a certain area
(sometimes referred to as directional finding), the cell-site simulator will still force
many innocent third parties cell phones to direct their signals to the simulator.
Armed with a cell-site simulator, a law enforcement officer can obtain a
targets cell phones ESN or IMSI (among many other things) by taking the device
near the physical location of the targets cell phone and then activating the device.
By activating the device, the cell phones in a geographical area will send their
signals to the device, which in turn captures the information. This process can be
repeated at a later time and different location so that the targets cell phone ESN or
IMSI can be identified among all the other cell phone telephone information
previously captured. (Basically, by process of elimination, the targets cell phone
number is identified.) According to the application submitted to the Court, with the
ESN or IMSI, the United States can subpoena the service provider to obtain the cell
phones telephone number. However, according to the Department of Justice, a cell
site simulator can collect a cell phones telephone number directly; thereby
eliminating this step.
Now possessing the targets cell phone telephone number, the United States
can return to a judicial officer with an application for a trap and trace and/or pen
Today, cell phones are essentially always on. At any given moment, even when the owner
is not speaking on the cell phone, the cell phone can be receiving emails, text messages, and
location information about their childrens cell phones, among other things. Even while
being charged, cell phones are on.
registry to obtain information regarding the use of the phone or even obtain a wiretap for that phone from a District Court Judge. See 18 U.S.C. 2518 (wiretap); 18
U.S.C. 3123 (pen registry and trap and trace).
II.
Constitutional Concerns
States or any government body. The concern over the collection of innocent third
parties information is not theoretical. It has been reported that the federal
government collects telephone numbers, maintains those numbers in a database
and then is very reluctant to disclose this information. See Defendants Motion to
Suppress Evidence at 17-19, United States v. Hassanshahi, No. 1:13-cr-00274-RC
(D.D.C. Mar. 27, 2014), ECF No. 28; Zoe Tillman, Judge Questions Feds
Mysterious Phone Database, National Law Journal, Dec. 8, 2014, at 19. Moreover,
even in the civil litigation context, third parties have more privacy interests and are
afforded more court protections than litigants. McGreal v. AT&T Corp., 892 F.
Supp. 2d 996, 1010 (N.D. Ill. 2012).
III.
When a cell-site simulator is used, the Court will impose three requirements:
the first relates to the manner in which the device is used; the second relates to the
destruction of innocent third parties data; and the third explicitly prohibits the use
of innocent third parties data. See generally Brian L. Owsley, The Fourth
Amendment Implications of the Governments Use of Cell Tower Dumps in Its
Electronic Surveillance, 16 U. Pa. J. Const. L. 1, 45-47 (2013).
First, law enforcement officers must make reasonable efforts to minimize the
capture of signals emitted from cell phones used by people other than the target of
the investigation. For example, when appropriate, law enforcement officers must
use methods available to direct the cell-site simulators signal. Moreover, law
enforcement officers must not use a cell-site simulator when, because of the location
10
By: __________________________
Iain D. Johnston
U.S. Magistrate Judge
11