State Appeals Court Says Flying A Drone Over Someone's Property Violates The Fourth Amendment
from the not-going-to-allow-the-4th-Amendment-to-be-left-behind-by-tech-developments dept
Lots of plain view jurisprudence relies on the fact that if it can be observed by random people -- not just by law enforcement -- then there's no Fourth Amendment issue. If airplanes can pass over someone's land, surely police helicopters can do the same thing without undoing expectations of privacy.
Some of this judicial thought process has been altered by persistent surveillance from law enforcement cameras -- ones that don't just observe, but also record and provide officers with searchable footage of residences investigators are interested in. Then there's the incidental aspect. If a cop enters a home to perform community caretaking functions and spots contraband, this is legal as it's not the point of the cop's entry. If the cop is there solely to look for contraband, a warrant and probable cause is needed.
But a brief overflight generally isn't a Constitutional issue, no matter how high a fence those under investigation have constructed. A flyover isn't persistent or invasive surveillance. But tech advances have altered how flyovers by government agencies are conducted. In this case, via FourthAmendment.com, the Michigan Court of Appeals has found in favor of a defendant who moved to suppress evidence gathered by the city with its drone.
And this is still very much law enforcement activity, even if it wasn't related to the sort of crime we normally associate with constitutional violations. From the decision [PDF]:
In this zoning dispute, defendants appeal by leave granted the order of the trial court denying their motion to suppress evidence. At issue is the legality of the use of a drone by plaintiff Long Lake Township to take aerial images of defendants’ property without defendants’ permission or any other specific legal authorization. Plaintiff relied on those aerial photographs to commence suit against defendants, alleging that defendants were in violation of a zoning ordinance, nuisance law, and a prior settlement agreement between the parties. We reverse the trial court’s May 16, 2019 order denying defendants’ motion to suppress evidence, and we remand for entry of an order suppressing all photographs taken of defendants’ property from a drone and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
The township had plenty of options at its disposal if it wanted to settle a zoning dispute. It could have asked for consent to view the property. It could have approached a judge and asked for permission to perform this act, possibly using an administrative warrant. It could have sent city personnel out and made it clear it had authority to act on zoning disputes. Instead, it chose to fly a drone over the disputed property to gather evidence against the alleged violator of zoning laws.
The township claimed the defendant was keeping too much "junk" on their property, a tipping point that apparently could only be determined by circling overland. The defendant claimed the drone flight over their land violated the Fourth Amendment, along with FAA regulations on drone flights.
The township replied that there was no expectation of privacy in anything capable of being viewed from the air and denied it had violated FAA regulations. The trial court sided with the township. It also declared that even if FAA regulations had been violated, they had no bearing on the Fourth Amendment assertions.
The state appeals court disagrees. And it says that even though this wasn't necessarily a criminal investigation since it only involved code enforcement, the Fourth Amendment is still relevant due to the government's involvement in the aerial "search" of the property.
Considering the great historical importance placed on the freedom to use one’s own property, and the fact that the consequences of this action may entail far more than merely the imposition of money damages, we conclude that this is the kind of proceeding to which the Fourth Amendment may apply.
The court cites a couple of Supreme Court cases. One involves the encroachment of law enforcement into the "curtilage" without a warrant or consent (Florida v. Jardines) and the use of possibly invasive tech tools to obtain information law enforcement wouldn't have been able to obtain without it (Kyllo v. United States and its discussion of thermal imaging tech). It also adds the more recent Carpenter decision to the mix -- the one that said warrants are needed for obtaining cell site location info.
Critically for the instant matter, the Court opined that mere existence and availability of technological advancements should not be per se determinative of what privacy expectations society should continue to recognize as reasonable. Kyllo, 533 US at 33-35. Although again discussing only privacy within the home, the Court emphasized that the homeowner should not be “at the mercy of advancing technology” that might eventually be able to see directly through walls outright. Id. at 35-36. The development of historically-novel ways to conduct unprecedented levels of surveillance at trivial expense does not per se reduce what society and the law will recognize as a reasonable expectation of privacy.
And, although the court says FAA rules have no bearing on Fourth Amendment claims, the rules are a solid indicator that courts shouldn't treat drone flights as substantially similar to flights over private property conducted by airplanes or helicopters.
The FAA regulations, 14 CFR part 107,5 require drone operators to keep drones within visual observation at all times, fly drones no higher than 400 feet, refrain from flying drones over human beings, and obtain a certification. Such rules reflect the fact that drones are qualitatively different from airplanes and helicopters: they are vastly smaller and operate within little more than a football field’s distance from the ground. A drone is therefore necessarily more intrusive into a person’s private space than would be an airplane overflight. Furthermore, unlike airplanes, which routinely fly overhead for purposes unrelated to intentionally-targeted surveillance, drone overflights are not as commonplace, as inadvertent, or as costly. In other words, drones are intrinsically more targeted in nature than airplanes and intrinsically much easier to deploy. Furthermore, given their maneuverability, speed, and stealth, drones are—like thermal imaging devices—capable of drastically exceeding the kind of human limitations that would have been expected by the Framers not just in degree, but in kind.
The court goes on to point out the township had better options but chose to ignore these in favor of testing the Fourth Amendment limits of drone surveillance. That it lost on this roll of the judicial dice is its own fault.
We also observe that plaintiff’s warrantless surveillance was totally unnecessary. The parties could easily have—and likely should have—included a monitoring or inspection provision in their settlement agreement. Aside from that, as the United States Supreme Court observed, the quantum of evidence necessary to establish probable cause to conduct an administrative inspection is more than “none,” but is less than what might be required to execute a criminal search warrant. Camara, 387 US 528-539. By plaintiff’s own account, it had concrete evidence, in the form of unrelated site inspection photographs and complaints from defendants’ neighbors, that defendants were violating the settlement agreement, violating the zoning ordinance, and creating a nuisance.
And this decision is unlikely to disrupt legitimate law enforcement activity, no matter what the township may claim will be the result of forbidding these unmanned flights over private property.
Our holding today is highly unlikely to preclude any legitimate governmental inspection or enforcement action short of outright “fishing expeditions.” If a governmental entity has any kind of nontrivial and objective reason to believe there would be value in flying a drone over a person’s property, as did plaintiff here, then we trust the entity will probably be able to persuade a court to grant a warrant or equivalent permission to conduct a search.
That's the risk the government takes when it decides to take its chances on unsettled case law. Sometimes the settling of the law results in a win for the governed. If government agencies want to fly drones over private property in this state, they'll need more judicial input than the Long Lake Township chose to seek in this case.
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Filed Under: 4th amendment, flyovers, michigan, surveillance
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If airplanes can pass over someone's land, surely police helicopters can do the same thing without undoing expectations of privacy.
Pass over, sure. Most planes don't fly so low or have glass floors or high-powered cameras. Cop choppers might show up very low, hover, and have all manner of intrusive imaging equipment. Without a warrant or real emergency, not really cool at all.
Drone spying over a hoarding ordinance when there are a multitude of ways to check the site in a clearly legal manner - what the hell were they even thinking?
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24 color glossy photos
... we had to pick up the trash
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Re: what the hell were they even thinking?
They were thinking they were the Govt and they could do what ever the hell they wanted.
Dollars to donuts it never even crossed their mind that a court would question it.
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Re:
interesting comment . this can be useful for bots and of course this is exactly what is needed to pass as human
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Missing the underlying point
If the excess "junk" can't be seen and photographed from the street, sidewalk, or any neighboring public or private property, but only from a drone hovering overhead, it cannot be considered an "eyesore" to anyone, nor can it even be considered a violation of some snowflake's imagined "rights," therefore it shouldn't be any of the government's damn business!
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Parsons the interruption
but prog rock really nailed another one.
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Re: Re: what the hell were they even thinking?
"Dollars to donuts..." This is the problem. Too many doughnuts.
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FAA
this if nothing more then the blue lies mafia using and abusing there authority!
when drones became popular the FAA came up with a set of rules because they being used for nefarious purposes. when the blue lies mafia got one the FAA told them they can only use it for "search and rescue". fast forward to now, some how they got some kind of waver letting them "use and abuse" drones for anything from traffic stops to to spying on WE THE PEOPLE!
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Re: Missing the underlying point
My thought is the township was looking for a legal way to harass an unpopular property owner. They needed an excuse to harass him that seemed viable. Violating zoning ordinances is a way to do this. But they forgot to check with the courts before flying a drone over the property.
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Re: Missing the underlying point
Only thing I can think of is that it can be seen from neighboring second floor windows. I assume it would be legal for police to take photos from a neighbor's house (with their consent of course).
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Re: Re:
Lol well now the comment I was replying to was removed so this one makes no sense, oh well. I was parodying a generic nonsense comment some bot left.
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Re:
If you're really that paranoid, which you rightfully should be, than there's a laser gun that detects cameras and shoot a strong laser at the camera sensor chip, destroying it in the progress. It's fully automated and can be put on a roof or on tactical positions to cover your whole property. Have to mention they can get confused by eyes and shoot at eyes too if you mess with the default settings.
The fun thing is the default settings also targets pilots eyes in helicopters. Not sure why though but I'm sure there's a legitimate reason behind it. Police always try to bend the rules and lie when they break them. I'm sure it have something to do with that.
For drones specifically you can set up frequency jammers. Drones fly in to your property but they don't fly out unless the drone have go-to-home when signal lost function but you can prevent that too by blocking GPS too.
So technology do exist to protect yourself. You just need to get off your lazy ass and install it.
You can make the frequency jammer smart too by only activating the jamming when the drone is inside the jamming range which will make it too late for the drone operator to turn back. I've got a fine collection of drones. Even without the controller they sell for good money. If the drone operator even tries to step a foot onto my property I have a shotgun loaded and ready. Non-lethal. That's enough to get them to back off.
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