Court Opinion

ID: 4697692
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-06-22 21:08:28.178114+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:05:48.178286
License: Public Domain

06/22/2021

                                SYNOPSIS OF THE CASE
                                                                                           Case Number: DA 19-0731

2021 MT 151, DA 19-0731: STATE OF MONTANA, Plaintiff and Appellee,
v. TRAVIS STAKER, Defendant and Appellant.1

In a unanimous decision, the Montana Supreme Court today affirmed a 2019 conviction of
a Bozeman man for patronizing prostitution, a misdemeanor, by concluding that the
Montana Eighteenth Judicial District Court, Gallatin County, correctly denied a motion to
suppress his unwitting text message conversation with an undercover federal agent posing
as a sex worker under a fake internet advertisement for sexual services. The man responded
to the false ad by text message and then unwittingly engaged in a text conversation with a
cloaked federal agent, posing as a sex worker known only as “Lily.” The text message
conversation culminated in the man’s arrest at a Bozeman hotel where he found law
enforcement officers lying in wait for him when he arrived for the negotiated sexual
transaction.

Analogizing his case to those where the Court has invalidated the use of warrantless
government monitoring and recording of seemingly private conversations by surreptitious
electronic means, the man moved for suppression of all evidence against him on the
asserted ground that the warrantless use of a cloaked government agent under a fake
internet ad similarly violated his reasonable expectation of privacy in violation of his
Montana constitutional rights to privacy and to be free from unreasonable government
searches and seizures. The Court noted, however, that his case did not involve any use of
warrantless government monitoring and recording of private conversations by separate
surreptitious electronic means, but rather hinged on the man’s blind trust and reliance under
the circumstances that he was texting with a sex worker rather than a law enforcement
officer. The Court thus held that government action did not intrude upon any
constitutionally protected interest because the man had no objectively reasonable
expectation in the privacy of text messages he knowingly and voluntarily sent to the cell
phone of another, with no reasonably reliable basis upon which to trust and rely that the
other was in fact the person he thought she was, or that she would not thereafter disclose
or share their seemingly private communications with others including law enforcement.

1
 This synopsis is for public convenience only. It is not part of the Court’s Opinion and may not
be cited as precedent.