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Taking the Fifth-A Criminal Law Blog
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  • PROBABLE CAUSE FOR COMPUTER SEARCH FOR CHILD PORN??

    Posted on February 8th, 2011 zshapiro No comments

    In United States v. Krupa the Ninth Circuit had to answer the question of what constitutes probable cause to search computers for child porn. Their answer is that it doesn’t take much. The facts of the case is that the mother of two young children got nervous when her kids were not on the scheduled train returning from a visit to their father who was a sergeant stationed at Edwards Air Force Base.

    She called the military police. they went to the sergeant’s on base residence and found the kids under the supervision of a civilian, Peter Krupa. Her husband was in the Philippines, scheduled to return in nine days. 1 They found the house in considerable disarray and they found thirteen computer towers in the house.

    They requested and received permission to search the computers. The officer assigned to the job became ill after finding one picture that appeared to be a nude girl between 15 and 17, with the caption “www.nude-teens.com.” Before the officer got well Velasco and Krupa withdrew the consent.

    The government then got a search warrant to complete the search of the computers. The Ninth Circuit upheld the search.

    Previously the Ninth Circuit had ruled that one picture of a nude teenager was insufficient to find probable cause. After all many works of art show nude teenagers. 2 Furthermore pictures of nudes can only be considered porn if they are lascivious and there was no evidence of that. None of the other “facts” are relevant since they do not make it more likely that a criminal act occurred.

    Perhaps the conservative position is a reaction to the Supreme Court’s reversal of five consecutive Ninth Circuit opinions over the past month. Hopefully the case will be considered en banc and reversed. As the dissent points out the affidavit supporting the request for a search warrant was totally lacking any evidence of criminal behavior

    Notes:

    1. Sergeant Velasco’s being in the Philippines was not in the search warrant affidavit.
    2. The criticisms are largely based upon the dissent by Judge Berzon.

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