Court Opinion

ID: 4455897
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-11-14 19:00:18.407487+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:19:45.767520
License: Public Domain

Case: 18-20729   Document: 00515198884     Page: 1   Date Filed: 11/14/2019

        IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                 FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
                                                               United States Court of Appeals
                                                                        Fifth Circuit

                                 No. 18-20729                         FILED
                                                              November 14, 2019
                                                                 Lyle W. Cayce
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                                             Clerk

             Plaintiff - Appellant

v.

ERIC BEVERLY,

             Defendant - Appellee

                Appeals from the United States District Court
                     for the Southern District of Texas

Before CLEMENT, ELROD, and DUNCAN, Circuit Judges.
STUART KYLE DUNCAN, Circuit Judge:
      Armed with a court order but no warrant, FBI agents obtained historical
cell-site location information (“CSLI”) for the phone of a suspected serial bank
robber, Eric Beverly. Before the government could use that information at trial
(to show that Beverly’s phone was at or near the banks at the time they were
robbed) the Supreme Court held in Carpenter v. United States that if the
government wants CSLI it needs a valid search warrant. 138 S. Ct. 2206, 2221
(2018). So, on the same day Carpenter was decided, federal prosecutors applied
for—and got—a search warrant for the CSLI they already had (plus quite a bit
more). Beverly moved to suppress the CSLI and other related evidence,
claiming the warrant was obtained in bad faith. The district court agreed,
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suppressing the CSLI and declaring the court order and warrant void. The
government appeals that order. Because the district court should have applied
various strands of the good-faith exception to the warrant requirement, we
reverse.
                                              I.
      In the summer of 2014, surveillance cameras across the Houston area
began capturing a string of armed bank robberies. The robberies consistently
involved a group of masked individuals, two or three of whom would enter a
bank, hold up the lobby, and empty the teller drawers—all in less than sixty
seconds—before driving off in a black Dodge Ram pickup with chrome nerf
bars 1 and two bullet holes in the back. Sometimes other vehicles were also
used, including a silver Infiniti SUV. During the holdups, the robbers would
communicate via three-way cell phone calls. They never entered the bank
vaults, but instead took money only from teller drawers. Still, the robbers
managed to steal as much as $20,000–$30,000 from some of the banks, all of
which were FDIC insured.
      The government finally caught a break in the investigation on January
24, 2015, when agents lifted a palm print from a spot where one of the robbers
had vaulted over a teller counter (as recorded in the security footage). The FBI
matched the print to Jeremy Davis, who was arrested on May 5, 2015, while
driving the black Dodge Ram seen in the videos. The truck turned out to be
registered to Davis’s mother. Davis confessed, admitting participation in
twenty bank robberies and three jewelry store smash-and-grabs. He also
named five of his accomplices, one of whom was Eric Beverly. According to
Davis, Beverly was responsible for handing out the guns, masks, and gloves

      1   Nerf bars are tubular running boards that attach to the sides of pickup trucks.
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before each robbery, and Beverly along with another accomplice did most of
the planning.
       Investigators later tied Beverly to the silver Infiniti SUV seen on some
of the surveillance tapes. They learned that Beverly had bought the vehicle
from a Craigslist seller in a Target parking lot for $9,000 but had never
changed over the registration. The government also interviewed at least two
people who indicated that Davis and Beverly were friends.
       Meanwhile, on May 28, 2015, the government applied for an order
pursuant to the Stored Communications Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2703(d), directing T-
Mobile to provide subscriber information, toll records, and historical CSLI for
Davis’s iPhone. 2 A federal magistrate judge issued the requested order that
same day. Armed with the order, the government did not seek a warrant for
Davis’s historical CSLI. The government subsequently associated four other
phone numbers with Davis’s co-conspirators and submitted a second § 2703(d)
application requesting subscriber information, toll records, and historical CSLI
for those phone numbers. The same magistrate judge issued an order for the
additional phone numbers on July 8, 2015, requiring T-Mobile to provide CSLI
for the period between January 24, 2015 and May 5, 2015. Subscriber

       2  “Subscriber information” includes the name, address, and other identifying
information for the person to whom the phone number is registered. “Toll records,” also
known as call detail records, are records of calls placed and received on the subscriber’s
account (including the time, duration, and phone number dialed, but not the content of the
calls). “Historical CSLI” consists of a series of time-stamped records created as a mobile
phone continuously pings nearby cell towers, pinpointing the location of the phone within a
relatively small area (currently a radius of about 50 meters). See Carpenter, 138 S. Ct. at
2211, 2019. CSLI should not be confused with GPS data, which is far more precise location
information derived by triangulation between the phone and various satellites. Even in 2015,
the government would have likely needed a search warrant to obtain GPS data from Beverly’s
phone, assuming such data was available. See United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. 400 (2012)
(holding that attaching a GPS device to a suspect’s car constituted a search under the Fourth
Amendment).
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information provided by T-Mobile confirmed that one of the numbers was
registered to Beverly.
      Sometime in August 2015, Beverly was arrested for an unrelated
probation violation and placed in a Texas state jail. On May 26, 2016, while
Beverly was still incarcerated in the state facility, he was charged by federal
indictment with multiple counts of conspiracy, armed bank robbery, attempted
armed bank robbery, and brandishing a firearm during a crime of violence.
Beverly was transferred into federal custody on June 1, 2016.
      On June 22, 2018, less than two months before the start of Beverly’s
federal trial, the Supreme Court handed down its decision in Carpenter, in
which the Court held that obtaining CSLI constituted a “search” under the
Fourth Amendment and therefore required a valid warrant supported by
probable cause. 138 S. Ct. at 2220–21. Out of “an abundance of caution” the
government applied for and obtained a search warrant that very day for
Beverly’s cell phone information, including historical CSLI, subscriber
information, and toll records associated with his T-Mobile account. Notably,
the government’s warrant application sought historical CSLI for the period
extending from August 25, 2014 until May 2, 2015—more than double the
amount of time covered by the previous § 2703(d) order. Although the
application omitted the fact that the government already possessed some of the
information to be searched, the issuing magistrate judge was apparently aware
of Carpenter and agreed that obtaining a search warrant was a “good idea.”
      In response to Carpenter and the government’s contemporaneous search
warrant, Beverly moved to suppress the warrant and the “numbers, cell site
information, and names” gathered as fruit of the two § 2703(d) orders. The
district court granted the motion on October 25, 2018, voiding the “warrant
and the order,” and suppressing the “cell-site location data and all evidence
that has been derived from them . . . as infected by the same virus.” The
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government timely appealed. We have appellate jurisdiction pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 1291 and 18 U.S.C. § 3731. See United States v. Wise, 877 F.3d 209,
215 (5th Cir. 2017).
                                       II.
      On appeal of a motion to suppress, legal conclusions are reviewed de novo
while factual findings are reviewed for clear error. United States v. Mendez,
885 F.3d 899, 907 (5th Cir. 2018). “A factual finding ‘is clearly erroneous if we
are left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been
committed.’” Id. (quoting United States v. Hernandez, 670 F.3d 616, 620 (5th
Cir. 2012)). “But when influenced by an incorrect view of the law or an incorrect
application of the correct legal test, a factual determination is reviewed de
novo.” United States v. Toussaint, 838 F.3d 503, 507 (5th Cir. 2016) (citing
United States v. Mask, 330 F.3d 330, 335 (5th Cir. 2003)).
      “The party seeking suppression ‘has the burden of proving, by a
preponderance of the evidence, that the evidence in question was obtained in
violation of his Fourth Amendment rights.’” United States v. Wallace, 885 F.3d
806, 809 (5th Cir. 2018) (quoting United States v. Smith, 978 F.2d 171, 176 (5th
Cir. 1992)). Evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the prevailing
party. Mendez, 885 F.3d at 907.
                                      III.
                                       A.

      The Fourth Amendment guarantees the “right of the people to be secure
in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches
and seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. The basic purpose of the Amendment “is
to safeguard the privacy and security of individuals against arbitrary invasions
by governmental officials.” Carpenter, 138 S. Ct. at 2213 (citing Camara v.
Mun. Court of City and Cty. of San Francisco, 387 U.S. 523, 528 (1967)). It
protects against government intrusion into areas where people have
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reasonable expectations of privacy. Smith v. Maryland, 442 U.S. 735, 740
(1979); Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347, 351 (1967). Where the government
seeks to intrude upon such private spheres, it generally needs a warrant
supported by probable cause. Carpenter, 138 S. Ct. at 2213.
      “The Fourth Amendment contains no provision expressly precluding the
use of evidence obtained in violation of its commands . . . .” United States v.
Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 906 (1984). The reason is that exclusion of such evidence
would not cure the wrong condemned by the Amendment: the unlawful search
or seizure itself. Id. However, courts have embraced the so-called “exclusionary
rule”—a judicially created remedy that precludes the use of evidence obtained
from an unconstitutional search or seizure—in order “to safeguard Fourth
Amendment rights generally through its deterrent effect.” Id. (citing United
States v. Calandra, 414 U.S. 338, 348 (1974)).
      An exception to the exclusionary rule exists where government
investigators acted with an objectively reasonable good-faith belief that their
conduct was lawful. Davis v. United States, 564 U.S. 229, 238 (2011). This
“good-faith exception” to the exclusionary rule is grounded in the observation
that where official action is “pursued in complete good faith . . . the deterrence
rationale loses much of its force.” Leon, 468 U.S. at 919 (quoting United States
v. Peltier, 422 U.S. 531, 539 (1975)); see also United States v. Williams, 622
F.2d 830, 840 (5th Cir. 1980) (en banc) (“[T]he exclusionary rule exists to deter
willful or flagrant actions by police, not reasonable, good-faith ones.”).
      The good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule, first articulated over
forty years ago in Leon, has been applied to a range of cases. See Davis, 564
U.S. at 238–39. In Leon itself, the exception was applied where police acted in
reliance on a warrant that was later held to be unsupported by probable cause.
Leon, 468 U.S. at 922. However, the Court in Leon recognized several

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limitations on the good-faith exception. Id. at 923. As distilled in later cases,
the good-faith exception will not apply:
   (1) When the issuing magistrate was misled by information in an
       affidavit that the affiant knew or reasonably should have known
       was false;

   (2) When the issuing magistrate wholly abandoned his judicial role;

   (3) When the warrant affidavit is so lacking in indicia of probable cause
       as to render official belief in its existence unreasonable; and

   (4) When the warrant is so facially deficient in failing to particularize
       the place to be searched or the things to be seized that executing
       officers cannot reasonably presume it to be valid.

United States v. Woerner, 709 F.3d 527, 533–34 (5th Cir. 2013) (citing United
States v. Payne, 341 F.3d 393, 399–400 (5th Cir. 2003)). For clarity and
convenience, we refer—in this opinion—to the warrant-without-probable-
cause strand of the good-faith exception as the “Leon exception.”
      The good-faith exception has also been applied to evidence obtained from
warrantless searches later held to be unconstitutional. In Illinois v. Krull, for
example, the Supreme Court applied the good-faith exception where officers
had “act[ed] in objectively reasonable reliance upon a statute authorizing
warrantless administrative searches, but where the statute [was] ultimately
found to violate the Fourth Amendment.” 480 U.S. 340, 342 (1987). The Court
reasoned that if a “statute is subsequently declared unconstitutional,
excluding evidence obtained pursuant to it prior to such a judicial declaration
will not deter future Fourth Amendment violations by an officer who has
simply fulfilled his responsibility to enforce the statute as written.” Id. at 350.
Similarly, the Supreme Court has applied the good-faith exception to a
warrantless search that complied with binding appellate precedent that was
later overruled. Davis, 564 U.S. at 232. In Davis, police conducted a vehicle
search in reasonable reliance on binding circuit precedent, but several years
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later—while the defendant’s criminal appeal was still pending—the Supreme
Court held that such searches were unconstitutional. Id. at 239. The Court
applied the good-faith exception on the ground that excluding the relevant
evidence would not foster the appropriate deterrent effect. Id. at 241.
      To distinguish it from the Leon exception, we refer to this strand of the
good-faith exception—where a warrantless search is authorized by statute or
binding precedent later ruled unconstitutional—as the “Krull exception.”
                                       B.
      In 1986, Congress enacted the Stored Communications Act (“SCA”). 18
U.S.C. §§ 2701–2711. As amended in 1994, the SCA permits a law enforcement
agency to obtain a court order compelling the disclosure of certain
telecommunications records when the agency “offers specific and articulable
facts showing that there are reasonable grounds to believe” that the records
sought “are relevant and material to an ongoing criminal investigation.” 18
U.S.C. § 2703(d). This standard, which is less stringent than the probable
cause standard generally required for a search warrant, is derived from the
Supreme Court’s decision in Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968). See United States
v. Perrine, 518 F.3d 1196, 1202 (10th Cir. 2008).
      In 2013, when the constitutionality of § 2703(d) was challenged in the
Fifth Circuit, a divided panel held that the statute was constitutional even
when applied to the disclosure of historical CSLI. In re Application of the U.S.
for Historical Cell Site Data, 724 F.3d 600, 602 (5th Cir. 2013). The majority
reasoned that CSLI records were business records of cell service providers and
that, under the third-party doctrine, cell phone users did not have a reasonable
expectation of privacy in those records. Id. at 610–12.
      Eventually the same question reached the Supreme Court, which, as
noted above, held on June 22, 2018 that § 2703(d) was unconstitutional.
Carpenter, 138 S. Ct. at 2220–21. The Court determined that obtaining CSLI
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from a wireless carrier amounts to a search under the Fourth Amendment
because an individual has “a legitimate expectation of privacy in the record of
his physical movements as captured through CSLI.” Id. at 2217. The Court
rejected the argument that because CSLI was shared with and retained by
wireless carriers, the request for such information amounted to “a garden-
variety request for information from a third-party witness.” Id. at 2219–20
(relying on the exhaustive, detailed nature of CSLI records and the
indispensable need to carry a cell phone in modern society). The Court
concluded that to acquire CSLI records “the Government must generally obtain
a warrant supported by probable cause,” id. at 2221, unless the search “falls
within a specific exception to the warrant requirement.” Id. (quoting Riley v.
California, 573 U.S. 373, 382 (2014).
                                        IV.
      In the present appeal, the United States argues that the district court
erred in suppressing Beverly’s historical CSLI because it failed to apply the
good-faith exception. Beverly responds that the good-faith exception does not
apply because investigators acted in bad faith when they sought a warrant—
the day Carpenter was decided—for CSLI they already had. Confusion arises
because each party uses the term “good-faith exception” to refer to a different
strand of the exception, without realizing that the other side is operating on a
different wavelength. The United States approaches the case under the Krull
exception and therefore focuses its good-faith arguments on the pre-Carpenter
warrantless § 2703(d) order. Beverly treats the case under the Leon exception,
devoting his attention to the post-Carpenter search warrant. As a result, the
parties’ arguments often pass in the night.
      Complicating matters, the parties treat the suppressed CSLI evidence as
a single unit, but really it is two: (1) the 102 days’ worth of CSLI records
covering January 24, 2015 through May 5, 2015 (the “2015 CSLI”), first
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authorized by the § 2703(d) order in July 2015; and (2) the 152 days’ worth of
CSLI records covering August 25, 2014 through January 23, 2015 (the “2014
CSLI”), first authorized by the post-Carpenter search warrant in 2018. 3
Because the issues differ, we deal with the two units of CSLI evidence
separately, beginning with the CSLI evidence that was obtained first—the
2015 CSLI—and then turning to the CSLI evidence that was obtained three
years later—the 2014 CSLI.
       We hold that the Krull strand of the good-faith exception properly
applies to the 2015 CSLI, since it was obtained pursuant to a pre-Carpenter
warrantless order authorized by statute. Because the government pursued the
statutory order in good faith, the CSLI should not have been suppressed. As
for the 2014 CSLI, we hold that the Leon strand of the good-faith exception
applies because those records were first sought and obtained under a post-
Carpenter search warrant. The 2014 CSLI should not have been suppressed
because the government acted in good faith when applying for the search
warrant and, even if the government did not act in good faith, the warrant was
supported by probable cause. Finally, we hold that any suppression of toll
records and subscriber information under Carpenter was erroneous because
Carpenter only applies to evidence that can be used to track a person’s physical
movements over time.

       3  The district court found, and the record indicates, that the government sought the
2014 CSLI only when it applied for the search warrant in 2018. However, the government
made statements at oral argument suggesting that it already possessed both the 2015 CSLI
and the 2014 CSLI by the time it applied for the warrant. Referring to the 2018 search
warrant, the government said, “the dates are a little bit different, but we didn’t get anything
new,” and later added, “we’re not trying to recover what we got from the search warrant
because it’s the same thing we got back in 2015.” The government’s speculation
notwithstanding, the record plainly shows that the § 2703(d) order sought only the 2015
CSLI. In any event, for purposes of resolving the issues in this appeal, we accept the district
court’s finding that the government did not seek the 2014 CSLI until the search warrant
application in 2018.
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                                              A.
        The government obtained the 2015 CSLI for Beverly’s phone pursuant
to a § 2703(d) order issued on July 8, 2015. Three years later, on the day
Carpenter was decided, the government applied for—and got—a search
warrant for this same CSLI. The district court characterized the government’s
warrant application as “meretricious” and stated that “the whole business was
feigned.” While acknowledging that the good-faith exception “allows a court to
admit       evidence   obtained      in   compliance       with    a     law   later    ruled
unconstitutional,” the court declined to apply the exception, reckoning that to
do so “would render the Fourth Amendment empty.”
        We reject the district court’s analysis because the good-faith exception—
specifically, the Krull exception—properly applies. Just like in Krull, the
investigators who obtained Beverly’s CSLI in 2015 conducted a warrantless
search authorized by a statute that was not found to be unconstitutional until
after the search—in this case, years after. 480 U.S. at 350. Furthermore, just
like in Davis, the operative statute had been deemed constitutional at the time
of the search by then-controlling judicial precedent. 564 U.S. at 235. By all
accounts, the FBI investigators acted in good faith in 2015 when they
reasonably relied on the authorization provided by § 2703(d). 4 Moreover, as in
Krull and Davis, the deterrent rationale behind the exclusionary rule is
inapplicable here: there is no reason to deter law enforcement officers from
acting pursuant to federal statutes, especially those that have been upheld as

        4The district court never considered whether investigators acted in good faith in 2015,
instead focusing exclusively on the government’s warrant application in 2018. Beverly
likewise never argues that the investigators who obtained his CSLI in 2015 acted in bad
faith. At the suppression hearing, Beverly conceded that these investigators “complied with
the law that was in effect at the particular time.” When asked at oral argument whether he
was arguing that investigators acted in bad faith when they got the § 2703(d) order in 2015,
Beverly’s counsel responded, “I have no information.”
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valid by the relevant circuit court of appeals. Davis, 564 U.S. at 231; Krull, 480
U.S. at 349.
      We find additional support for our holding in the fact that every one of
our sister courts to have considered this question since Carpenter has agreed
that the good-faith exception—specifically, the Krull exception—applies to
CSLI obtained under § 2703(d) prior to Carpenter. See United States v.
Chambers, 751 F. App’x 44, 47 (2d Cir. 2018), cert. denied, 139 S. Ct. 1209
(2019); United States v. Goldstein, 914 F.3d 200, 204 (3d Cir. 2019); United
States v. Chavez, 894 F.3d 593, 608 (4th Cir. 2018), cert. denied, 139 S. Ct. 278
(2018); United States v. Carpenter (Carpenter II), 926 F.3d 313, 317–18 (6th
Cir. 2019); United States v. Curtis, 901 F.3d 846, 848–49 (7th Cir. 2018); United
States v. Korte, 918 F.3d 750, 757–59 (9th Cir. 2019), cert. denied, --- S. Ct. ---,
2019 WL 4923188 (2019); United States v. Joyner, 899 F.3d 1199, 1204–05
(11th Cir. 2018).
      Of particular salience is the Sixth Circuit’s decision in Carpenter II. On
remand after the Supreme Court announced its new rule in Carpenter that
§ 2703(d)   was     unconstitutional,   the   Sixth   Circuit    affirmed    Timothy
Carpenter’s conviction and, citing Krull, held that the CSLI evidence obtained
pursuant to § 2703(d) was still admissible against Carpenter himself because
of the good-faith exception. Carpenter II, 926 F.3d at 317–18. The same logic
applies here: the district court should have applied the Krull strand of the
good-faith exception and denied Beverly’s motion to suppress the 2015 CSLI.
                                         B.
      The 2014 CSLI presents a slightly different issue. Unlike Beverly’s 2015
CSLI (which the government first obtained back in 2015 under the § 2703(d)
order), the record reflects that the government never sought or obtained the
2014 CSLI until it applied for the search warrant the day Carpenter came down

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in 2018. 5 Because the government never obtained the 2014 CSLI under a pre-
Carpenter statutory order, the Krull exception does not apply. Instead, we
must subject the 2014 CSLI to a separate exclusionary rule analysis, the
proper focus of which is the 2018 search warrant. 6 “We apply a two-step test to
determine whether to suppress evidence under the exclusionary rule: first, we
ask whether the good faith exception to the rule applies, and second, we ask
whether the warrant was supported by probable cause.” United States v.
Robinson, 741 F.3d 588, 594 (5th Cir. 2014) (citing United States v. Mays, 466
F.3d 335, 342–43 (5th Cir. 2006)).
       As noted earlier, the parties do not bifurcate the CSLI in their
arguments, with the result that neither party directly addresses how we should
treat the 2014 CSLI in relation to the 2018 warrant. The government argues
generally that investigators applied for the search warrant in good faith, and
that the warrant was supported by probable cause. Beverly’s refrain is that
“the government did not act in good faith” in obtaining the 2018 warrant. He
also contends that the warrant is “fruit of the poisonous tree” because the
evidence mustered in the warrant application was derived from Davis’s CSLI,
which—according to Beverly—was obtained via an unconstitutional § 2703(d)
order. 7

       5 Presumably, the government wanted the extra CSLI data to connect Beverly’s phone
to the earliest bank robberies—the ones that occurred between August 25, 2014 and January
24, 2015, the day the government lifted Davis’s handprint from the teller counter.
       6 The government’s statements at oral argument might be construed as an argument
that because the dates were only “a little bit different” no separate analysis is required. But
the dates are dramatically different, not “a little bit.” The government sought over 250 days’
worth of CSLI in its 2018 warrant application, more than double the 102 days’ worth of CSLI
it sought in the § 2073(d) order three years earlier. A separate analysis is necessary.
       7Beverly claims that the district court’s suppression order extended to the CSLI from
Davis’s phone. This is far from clear. The suppression opinion refers only to the § 2703(d)
order pertaining to Beverly’s CSLI. While Beverly is correct to say that he argued for
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      For its part, the district court interpreted the addition of the previously-
unrequested 2014 CSLI to the 2018 warrant application as an underhanded
attempt to “save” the government’s bad-faith request for evidence it already
had—namely, the 2015 CSLI. As a result, the district court suppressed the
2014 CSLI and the 2015 CSLI. But, as discussed above, the district court
misapplied the Krull exception and should not have suppressed the 2015 CSLI.
Because it was based on an error of law, we give no deference to the district
court’s finding that the government acted in bad faith in 2018. Toussaint, 838
F.3d at 507 (“But when influenced by an incorrect view of the law or an
incorrect application of the correct legal test, a factual determination is
reviewed de novo.”).
      Applying our two-step test, we hold that the good-faith exception—
specifically, the Leon exception—properly applies to the 2014 CSLI. Because
the government did not already possess the 2014 CSLI when it applied for the
search warrant in 2018, its application was made in good faith. We further hold
that even if the application was made in bad faith, the 2014 CSLI would still
be admissible because the warrant was supported by probable cause.
      The Leon strand of the good-faith exception applies here because the
government first sought and obtained the 2014 CSLI in reliance on a search
warrant, which may or may not have been supported by probable cause. See
Leon, 468 U.S. at 918. To be sure, the Leon exception comes with a number of
limitations, the first of which dictates that the good-faith exception will not
apply if the warrant application is misleading. Woerner, 709 F.3d at 534; Mays,
466 F.3d at 343. The party challenging the good-faith exception bears the
burden of establishing “that material misstatements or omissions are

suppression of the data gained from Davis’s phone, he fails to point to any language in the
suppression opinion where the district court granted his request.
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contained in the supporting affidavit and that if those statements were excised
(or the omitted information included), the affidavit would be insufficient to
support the warrant.” United States v. Signoretto, 535 F. App’x 336, 339 (5th
Cir. 2013) (per curiam) (citing United States v. Privette, 947 F.2d 1259, 1261
(5th Cir. 1991)). Beverly does not meet this burden.
      Beverly argues that the government’s warrant application was
misleading because the government “failed to disclose to the magistrate that it
already had the information for which it sought a warrant.” That argument
would be worth considering if the focus here was the 2015 CSLI, which the
government did indeed already possess. But, as discussed above, that
evidence—the 2015 CSLI—comes in separately by means of the Krull
exception, rendering the warrant irrelevant. With respect to the 2014 CSLI at
issue here, where the warrant matters, the record reflects that the government
did not already possess the information it sought. Beverly’s argument is
therefore unpersuasive, and he offers no alternative reasons for thinking that
the government’s failure to reveal its possession of the 2015 CSLI triggers the
first Leon limitation.
      But even if the government’s failure to reveal its possession of the 2015
CSLI amounted to bad faith with respect to the 2014 CSLI, the government
would still prevail under step two: probable cause. Probable cause means “facts
and circumstances within the officer’s knowledge that are sufficient to warrant
a prudent person, or one of reasonable caution, in believing, in the
circumstances shown, that the suspect has committed, is committing, or is
about to commit an offense.” Piazza v. Mayne, 217 F.3d 239, 245–46 (5th Cir.
2000) (quoting Michigan v. DeFillippo, 443 U.S. 31, 37 (1979)). A search
warrant application must show probable cause “to justify listing those items
as potential evidence subject to seizure.” United States v. Sanjar, 876 F.3d 725,
735 (5th Cir. 2017).
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                                       No. 18-20729
       Here, the government’s search warrant application satisfies the probable
cause standard. 8 The application describes the FBI’s investigation and how
Davis’s palm print was lifted from a teller counter in January 2015. It recounts
Davis’s subsequent arrest and how the Dodge Ram he was driving matched the
truck used in the bank robberies. It further describes how Davis provided
investigators with his phone number and fingered his co-conspirators,
including Beverly, saying they participated in every one of the robberies
between August 24, 2014 and May 2, 2015. The application highlights Davis’s
admission that the robbers communicated by cell phone immediately before,
during, and after the bank robberies. Finally, the application states that
“follow up investigations” confirmed Beverly’s phone number—the one for
which the government was requesting CSLI data. A prudent person looking at
these facts and circumstances would be justified in believing that Beverly
participated in the bank robberies.
       Beverly’s “fruit of the poisonous tree” response is unavailing. For one
thing, there is no poisonous tree: the CSLI obtained for Davis’s phone pursuant
to § 2703(d) would be admissible under the Krull exception, just like Beverly’s
2015 CSLI. 9 More fundamentally, though, Beverly lacks standing to assert
that the search of Davis’s phone records was unconstitutional. Beverly had no
expectation of privacy in Davis’s phone data, even if the search was

       8For this reason, the 2014 CSLI would be admissible even if, contra the district court’s
factual recounting, the government somehow came to possess the 2014 CSLI before ever
being authorized to do so, and even if that meant that its warrant application was made in
bad faith.
       9 Besides, the evidence from Davis’s phone that brought Beverly’s number into
suspicion was not Davis’s CSLI, it was Davis’s toll records. As Beverly concedes, “it appears
the Government reviewed cell phone records of alleged co-defendants who the informing
defendant called close in time to the robberies, to determine possible suspects involved.”
Beverly fails to appreciate that CSLI and toll records are different, and that toll records are
not “poisonous” under Carpenter—see part IV.C, infra.
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                                       No. 18-20729
unconstitutional as to Davis. See United States v. Powell, 732 F.3d 361, 374
(5th Cir. 2013) (“Fourth Amendment rights . . . may not be vicariously
asserted.” (quoting Alderman v. United States, 394 U.S. 165, 174 (1969)));
United States v. Ibarra, 948 F.2d 903, 905 (5th Cir. 1991) (holding that to
establish a Fourth Amendment violation, defendants must show a legitimate
expectation of privacy in the domain searched).
       In sum, the district court should have applied the Leon strand of the
good-faith exception and denied Beverly’s motion to suppress the 2014 CSLI.
Or, in the alternative, the district court should have denied the motion to
suppress because the 2018 search warrant was supported by probable cause.
                                              C.
       Finally, the government argues that the district court erred in
suppressing Beverly’s toll records and subscriber information obtained under
the § 2703(d) order. To the extent that the district court intended to suppress
this evidence, it erred. 10
       The parties agree that Carpenter’s holding only applies to evidence that
can reveal a person’s physical movements over time. See 138 S. Ct. at 2217
(holding that a person “maintains a legitimate expectation of privacy in the
record of his physical movements as captured through CSLI”). Beverly
contends that because the government “doubtless” will attempt to use his toll
records and subscriber information to track his location over time, the toll
records and subscriber information are equivalent to CSLI under Carpenter’s

       10It is not clear whether the district court intended to suppress Beverly’s toll records
and subscriber information. The suppression opinion repeatedly mentions “cell-site location
data” and never expressly refers to subscriber information or toll records. Still, the
suppression order does specify that the “warrant and the order are void,” and since both the
warrant and the order extend to subscriber information and toll records, it is at least
plausible that the district court intended to suppress this evidence along with the CSLI.

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                                 No. 18-20729
reasoning. We disagree. Beverly fails to articulate any credible grounds for
accepting the first premise of his argument: namely, that toll records and
subscriber records will be—or even can be—used to track someone’s physical
location over time. With no showing of that, Beverly’s attempt to force this
evidence into Carpenter’s holding is a nonstarter. In any event, Carpenter
cautioned that it was a “narrow” decision that did not address, among other
things, “other business records that might incidentally reveal location.” Id. at
2220. We therefore decline to expand Carpenter in the way Beverly urges.
                                      ***
      For the forgoing reasons, we hold that the district court erred in granting
Beverly’s motion to suppress.
      REVERSED.

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