A recent filing (pdf) in the case of one Jan. 6 defendant revealed that Google provided the FBI with location data for 5,723 cellular devices that were determined to be near the U.S. Capitol that day.
Filed on Oct. 17 on behalf of defendant David Rhine, the motion urged the court to suppress Google location history evidence, and โthe fruits of that evidence,โ that had been submitted by the government on the grounds that the information had been obtained by a โmodern-day general warrantโ in violation of the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures.
โThe โgeofence warrantโ searched and seized Google โLocation Historyโ data belonging to thousands of people,โ the motion states. โMr. Rhine had a Fourth Amendment interest in his Location History data, and the warrant was overbroad and lacking particularity under the Fourth Amendment.โ
A geofence warrant permits law enforcement to search a database of digital location data to find mobile devicesโand by extension, their ownersโthat were active within a specified area.
According to the filing, the government โcompelledโ Google to search all accounts for those with location data that fell within a four-acre area around the Capitol between 2 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. on Jan. 6, 2021.
While the governmentโs application for the geofence warrant and the warrant itself remain sealed, Rhineโs lawyers noted that the application relied on the assumption that, โbecause of the pandemic, the security surrounding the Capitol in preparation for the Inauguration, the security surrounding the Capitol for the protests of the Certification, and the limited scope of the geographic area covered by this warrant, there will probably be no tourists or bystanders to be found in any of this data.โ
In other words, the government claimed that those located within four acres of the Capitol on Jan. 6 were likely there to engage in criminal activity.
Noting that their clientโs mere presence near the Capitol was not necessarily evidence of a crime, Rhineโs attorneys continued, โThe breadth and vagaries of the items to be seized was an invitation to do a general search of the private papersโGoogle accountโof anyone who may have been in or near the geofence.โ
Byย Samantha Flom