United States v. Sultanov
Court: U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York
Date Filed: Oct. 3, 2023
Background: In March 2022, U.S. Customs and Border Protection stopped Kurbonali Sultanov at John F. Kennedy International Airport as he was returning from a trip abroad, and conducted a warrantless search of his cellphone in pursuit of evidence of a crime unrelated to border control.
Sultanov filed a motion to suppress evidence the government obtained during the warrantless search, arguing that it violated the Fourth Amendment. The government countered that the search fell within the border search exception to the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement.
Our Position: The Reporters Committee and the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University argue that the district court should hold that the government’s warrantless searches of Sultanov’s cellphone violated the First and Fourth Amendments.
- Government searches of electronic devices at the border intrude on Fourth Amendment privacy interests and burden First Amendment freedoms.
- The government’s warrantless searches of Sultanov’s cellphone were unconstitutional.
Quote: “Journalists traveling across the border should not have to fear that the government could — without court approval or reason to suspect a crime — sift through the sensitive work product and confidential source communications stored on their electronic devices,” Reporters Committee Staff Attorney Grayson Clary said in a Knight Institute press release. “The Constitution requires a warrant.”
Related: The Reporters Committee has filed several friend-of-the-court briefs related to warrantless searches of electronic devices, including in Carpenter v. United States, United States v. Xiang, and Alasaad v. Wolf.
Update: On July 24, 2024, District Judge Nina R. Morrison ruled that the government must obtain a warrant to search a cellphone, even when the search takes place at the border. In her opinion, the judge cited the friend-of-the-court brief submitted by the Reporters Committee and the Knight Institute, writing that it “makes a persuasive case that warrantless searches of cell phones not only constitute an unjustified governmental intrusion into travelers’ private expressions of religion, personal associations, and journalistic endeavors — they also risk chilling the exercise of those rights.”