Respondent was convicted in 1966 of narcotics violations
following a trial where evidence was admitted of certain
incriminating statements of respondent that were overheard by
warrantless electronic eavesdropping by Government agents by means
of a transmitter which an informer consented to wear during his
meetings with respondent. The informer could not be located at
trial, and the trial court overruled objections to the testimony of
the agents who conducted the electronic surveillance. Reading
Katz v. United States, 389 U. S. 347
(1967), as overruling
On Lee v. United States,
343 U. S. 747
(1952), the Court of Appeals held that the agents' testimony was
impermissible under the Fourth Amendment, and reversed respondent's
conviction.
Held: The judgment is reversed. Pp.
401 U. S.
748-756.
405 F.2d 838, reversed.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, joined by THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE
STEWART, and MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, concluded that:
1. The Government's use of agents who themselves may reveal the
contents of conversations with an accused does not violate the
Fourth Amendment, and this Court's decision in
Katz v. United
States, supra, does not disturb the rationale of
On Lee,
supra, in this respect, and require a different result because
the agent uses electronic equipment to transmit the conversations
to other agents. Pp.
401 U. S.
748-754.
2. The unavailability of the informant as a witness does not
create any Fourth Amendment issue. Pp.
401 U. S.
753-754.
3. Since the decision in
Katz v. United States, supra,
was not retroactive,
Desist v. United States, 394 U.
S. 244, the Court of Appeals erred in not adjudicating
this case by the pre-
Katz law established by
On
Lee to the effect that the electronic surveillance did not
involve a Fourth Amendment violation. P.
401 U. S.
754.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK concurred in the judgment for the reasons set
forth in his dissent in
Katz v. United States,
389 U. S. 347,
389 U. S. 364.
P.
401 U. S.
754.
Page 401 U. S. 746
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, to the extent that he joined in the Court's
judgment, concluded that
Desist v. United States, supra,
requires reversal of the Court of Appeals' judgment. P.
401 U. S.
755.
WHITE, J., announced the Court's judgment, and delivered an
opinion in which BURGER, C.J., and STEWART and BLACKMUN, JJ.,
joined. BLACK, J., filed a statement concurring in the judgment,
post, p.
401 U. S. 754.
BRENNAN, J., filed an opinion concurring in the result,
post, p.
401 U. S. 755.
DOUGLAS, J.,
post, p.
401 U. S. 756,
HARLAN, J.,
post, p.
401 U. S. 768,
and MARSHALL, J.,
post, p.
401 U. S. 795,
filed dissenting opinions.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE announced the judgment of the Court and an
opinion in which THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE STEWART, and MR.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN join.
In 1966, respondent James A. White was tried and convicted under
two consolidated indictments charging various illegal transactions
in narcotics violative of 26 U.S.C. § 4705(a) and 21 U.S.C. § 174.
He was fined and sentenced as a second offender to 25-year
concurrent sentences. The issue before us is whether the Fourth
Amendment bars from evidence the testimony of governmental agents
who related certain conversations which had occurred between
defendant White and a government informant, Harvey Jackson, and
which the agents
Page 401 U. S. 747
overheard by monitoring the frequency of a radio transmitter
carried by Jackson and concealed on his person. [
Footnote 1] On four occasions, the
conversations took place in Jackson's home; each of these
conversations was overheard by an agent concealed in a kitchen
closet with Jackson's consent and by a second agent outside the
house using a radio receiver. Four other conversations -- one in
respondent's home, one in a restaurant, and two in Jackson's car --
were overheard by the use of radio equipment. The prosecution was
unable to locate and produce Jackson at the trial, and the trial
court overruled objections to the testimony of the agents who
conducted the electronic surveillance. The jury returned a guilty
verdict, and defendant appealed.
The Court of Appeals read
Katz v. United States,
389 U. S. 347
(1967), as overruling
On Lee v. United States,
343 U. S. 747
(1952), and interpreting the Fourth Amendment to forbid the
introduction of the agents' testimony in the circumstances of this
case. Accordingly, the court reversed, but without adverting to the
fact that the transactions at issue here had occurred before
Katz was decided in this Court. In our view, the Court of
Appeals misinterpreted both the
Katz case and the Fourth
Amendment and, in any event, erred in applying the
Katz
case to events that occurred before that decision was rendered by
this Court. [
Footnote 2]
Page 401 U. S. 748
I
Until
Katz v. United States, neither wiretapping nor
electronic eavesdropping violated a defendant's Fourth Amendment
rights
"unless there has been an official search and seizure of his
person, or such a seizure of his papers or his tangible material
effects, or an actual physical invasion of his house 'or curtilage'
for the purpose of making a seizure."
Olmstead v. United States, 277 U.
S. 438,
277 U. S. 466
(1928);
Goldman v. United States, 316 U.
S. 129,
316 U. S.
135-136 (1942). But where "eavesdropping was
accomplished by means of an unauthorized physical penetration into
the premises occupied" by the defendant, although falling short of
a "technical trespass under the local property law," the Fourth
Amendment was violated, and any evidence of what was seen and
heard, as well as tangible objects seized, was considered the
inadmissible fruit of an unlawful invasion.
Silverman v. United
States, 365 U. S. 505,
365 U. S. 509,
511 (1961);
see also Wong Sun v. United States,
371 U. S. 471
(1963);
Berger v. New York, 388 U. S.
41,
388 U. S. 52
(1967);
Alderman v. United States, 394 U.
S. 165,
394 U. S.
177-178 (1969).
Katz v. United States, however, finally swept away
doctrines that electronic eavesdropping is permissible under the
Fourth Amendment unless physical invasion of a constitutionally
protected area produced the challenged evidence. In that case,
government agents, without petitioner's consent or knowledge,
attached a listening device to the outside of a public telephone
booth and recorded the defendant's end of his telephone
conversations. In declaring the recordings inadmissible in evidence
in the absence of a warrant authorizing the surveillance, the Court
overruled
Olmstead and
Goldman and held that the
absence of physical intrusion into the telephone booth did not
justify using electronic devices in listening to and recording
Katz' words, thereby violating
Page 401 U. S. 749
the privacy on which he justifiably relied while using the
telephone in those circumstances.
The Court of Appeals understood
Katz to render
inadmissible against White the agents' testimony concerning
conversations that Jackson broadcast to them. We cannot agree.
Katz involved no revelation to the Government by a party
to conversations with the defendant, nor did the Court indicate in
any way that a defendant has a justifiable and constitutionally
protected expectation that a person with whom he is conversing will
not then or later reveal the conversation to the police.
Hoffa v. United States, 385 U.
S. 293 (1966), which was left undisturbed by
Katz, held that, however strongly a defendant may trust an
apparent colleague, his expectations in this respect are not
protected by the Fourth Amendment when it turns out that the
colleague is a government agent regularly communicating with the
authorities. In these circumstances, "no interest legitimately
protected by the Fourth Amendment is involved," for that amendment
affords no protection to "a wrongdoer's misplaced belief that a
person to whom he voluntarily confides his wrongdoing will not
reveal it."
Hoffa v. United States, at
385 U. S. 302.
No warrant to "search and seize" is required in such circumstances,
nor is it when the Government sends to defendant's home a secret
agent who conceals his identity and makes a purchase of narcotics
from the accused,
Lewis v. United States, 385 U.
S. 206 (1966), or when the same agent, unbeknown to the
defendant, carries electronic equipment to record the defendant's
words and the evidence so gathered is later offered in evidence.
Lopez v. United States, 373 U. S. 427
(1963).
Conceding that
Hoffa, Lewis, and
Lopez
remained unaffected by
Katz, [
Footnote 3] the Court of Appeals nevertheless
Page 401 U. S. 750
read both
Katz and the Fourth Amendment to require a
different result if the agent not only records his conversations
with the defendant, but instantaneously transmits them
electronically to other agents equipped with radio receivers. Where
this occurs, the Court of Appeals held, the Fourth Amendment is
violated, and the testimony of the listening agents must be
excluded from evidence.
To reach this result, it was necessary for the Court of Appeals
to hold that
On Lee v. United States was no longer good
law. In that case, which involved facts very similar to the case
before us, the Court first rejected claims of a Fourth Amendment
violation because the informer had not trespassed when he entered
the defendant's premises and conversed with him. To this extent,
the Court's rationale cannot survive
Katz. See
389 U.S. at
389 U. S.
352-353. But the Court announced a second and
independent ground for its decision; for it went on to say that
overruling
Olmstead and
Goldman would be of no
aid to
On Lee, since he
"was talking confidentially and indiscreetly with one he
trusted, and he was overheard. . . . It would be a dubious service
to the genuine liberties protected by the Fourth Amendment to make
them bedfellows with spurious liberties improvised by far-fetched
analogies which would liken eavesdropping on a conversation, with
the connivance of one of the parties, to an unreasonable search or
seizure. We find no violation of the Fourth Amendment here."
343 U.S. at
343 U. S.
753-754. We see no indication in
Katz that the
Court meant to disturb that understanding of the Fourth Amendment
or to disturb the result reached in the
On Lee case,
[
Footnote 4] nor are we now
inclined to overturn this view of the Fourth Amendment.
Page 401 U. S. 751
Concededly. a police agent who conceals his police connections
may write down for official use his conversations with a defendant
and testify concerning them without a warrant authorizing his
encounters with the defendant and without otherwise violating the
latter's Fourth Amendment rights.
Hoffa v. United States,
385 U.S. at
385 U. S.
300-303. For constitutional purposes, no different
result is required if the agent, instead of immediately reporting
and transcribing his conversations with defendant, either (1)
simultaneously records them with electronic equipment which he is
carrying on his person,
Lopez v. United States, supra; (2)
or carries radio equipment which simultaneously transmits the
conversations either to recording equipment located elsewhere or to
other agents monitoring the transmitting frequency.
On Lee v.
United States, supra. If the conduct and revelations of an
agent operating without electronic equipment do not invade the
defendant's constitutionally justifiable expectations of privacy,
neither does a simultaneous recording of the same conversations
made by the agent or by others from transmissions received from the
agent to whom the defendant is talking and whose trustworthiness
the defendant necessarily risks.
Our problem is not what the privacy expectations of particular
defendants in particular situations may be or the extent to which
they may, in fact, have relied on the discretion of their
companions. Very probably, individual defendants neither know nor
suspect that their colleagues have gone or will go to the police or
are carrying recorders or transmitters. Otherwise, conversation
would cease, and our problem with these encounters would be
nonexistent, or far different from those now
Page 401 U. S. 752
before us. Our problem, in terms of the principles announced in
Katz, is what expectations of privacy are constitutionally
"justifiable" -- what expectations the Fourth Amendment will
protect in the absence of a warrant. So far, the law permits the
frustration of actual expectations of privacy by permitting
authorities to use the testimony of those associates who, for one
reason or another, have determined to turn to the police, as well
as by authorizing the use of informants in the manner exemplified
by
Hoffa and
Lewis. If the law gives no
protection to the wrongdoer whose trusted accomplice is or becomes
a police agent, neither should it protect him when that same agent
has recorded or transmitted the conversations which are later
offered in evidence to prove the State's case.
See Lopez v.
United States, 373 U. S. 427
(1963).
Inescapably, one contemplating illegal activities must realize
and risk that his companions may be reporting to the police. If he
sufficiently doubts their trustworthiness, the association will
very probably end, or never materialize. But if he has no doubts,
or allays them, or risks what doubt he has, the risk is his. In
terms of what his course will be, what he will or will not do or
say, we are unpersuaded that he would distinguish between probable
informers, on the one hand, and probable informers with
transmitters, on the other. Given the possibility or probability
that one of his colleagues is cooperating with the police, it is
only speculation to assert that the defendant's utterances would be
substantially different or his sense of security any less if he
also thought it possible that the suspected colleague is wired for
sound. At least there is no persuasive evidence that the difference
in this respect between the electronically equipped and the
unequipped agent is substantial enough to require discrete
constitutional recognition,
Page 401 U. S. 753
particularly under the Fourth Amendment, which is ruled by fluid
concepts of "reasonableness."
Nor should we be too ready to erect constitutional barriers to
relevant and probative evidence which is also accurate and
reliable. An electronic recording will many times produce a more
reliable rendition of what a defendant has said than will the
unaided memory of a police agent. It may also be that. with the
recording in existence. it is less likely that the informant will
change his mind, less chance that threat or injury will suppress
unfavorable evidence, and less chance that cross-examination will
confound the testimony. Considerations like these obviously do not
favor the defendant, but we are not prepared to hold that a
defendant who has no constitutional right to exclude the informer's
unaided testimony nevertheless has a Fourth Amendment privilege
against a more accurate version of the events in question.
It is thus untenable to consider the activities and reports of
the police agent himself, though acting without a warrant, to be a
"reasonable" investigative effort and lawful under the Fourth
Amendment, but to view the same agent with a recorder or
transmitter as conducting an "unreasonable" and unconstitutional
search and seizure. Our opinion is currently shared by Congress and
the Executive Branch, Title III, Omnibus Crime Control and Safe
Streets Act of 1968, 82 Stat. 212, 18 U.S.C. § 2510
et
seq. (1964 ed., Supp. V), and the American Bar Association.
Project on Standards for Criminal Justice, Electronic Surveillance
§ 4.1 (Approved Draft 1971). It is also the result reached by prior
cases in this Court.
On Lee, supra; Lopez v. United States,
supra.
No different result should obtain where, as in
On Lee
and the instant case, the informer disappears and is
unavailable
Page 401 U. S. 754
at trial; for the issue of whether specified events on a certain
day violate the Fourth Amendment should not be determined by what
later happens to the informer. His unavailability at trial and
proffering the testimony of other agents may raise evidentiary
problems or pose issues of prosecutorial misconduct with respect to
the informer's disappearance, but they do not appear critical to
deciding whether prior events invaded the defendant's Fourth
Amendment rights.
II
The Court of Appeals was in error for another reason. In
Desist v. United States, 394 U. S. 244
(1969), we held that our decision in
Katz v. United States
applied only to those electronic surveillances that occurred
subsequent to the date of that decision. Here, the events in
question took place in late 1965 and early 1966, long prior to
Katz. We adhere to the rationale of
Desist, see
Williams v. United States, ante, p.
401 U. S. 646. It
was error for the Court of Appeals to dispose of this case based on
its understanding of the principles announced in the
Katz
case. The court should have judged this case by the
pre-
Katz law and under that law, as
On Lee
clearly holds, the electronic surveillance here involved did not
violate White's rights to be free from unreasonable searches and
seizures.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed.
It is so ordered.
Page 401 U. S. 755
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, while adhering to his views expressed in
Linkletter v. Walker, 381 U. S. 618,
381 U. S. 640
(1965), concurs in the judgment of the Court for the reasons set
forth in his dissent in
Katz v. United States,
389 U. S. 347,
389 U. S. 364
(1967).
[
Footnote 1]
White argues that Jackson, though admittedly "cognizant" of the
presence of transmitting devices on his person, did not voluntarily
consent thereto. Because the court below did not reach the issue of
Jackson's consent, we decline to do so. Similarly, we do not
consider White's claim that the Government's actions violated state
law.
[
Footnote 2]
A panel of three judges on March 18, 1968, reversed the
conviction, one judge dissenting. A rehearing en banc was granted,
and, on January 7, 1969, the full court followed the panel's
decision, three judges dissenting. 405 F.2d 838.
[
Footnote 3]
It follows from our opinion that we reject respondent's
contentions that
Lopez should be overruled.
[
Footnote 4]
Other courts of appeals have considered
On Lee viable
despite
Katz. Dancy v. United States, 390 F.2d
370 (CA5 1968);
Long v. United States, 387 F.2d 377 (CA5
1967);
Koran v. United States, 408 F.2d 1321 (CA5 1969).
See also United States v. Kaufer, 406 F.2d 550 (CA2),
aff'd per curiam, 394 U. S. 458
(1969);
United States v. Jackson, 390 F.2d 317 (CA2 1968);
Doty v. United States, 416 F.2d 887 (CA10 1968),
id. at 893 (rehearing 1969).
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, concurring in the result.
I agree that
Desist v. United States, 394 U.
S. 244 (1969), requires reversal of the judgment of the
Court of Appeals. Therefore, a majority of the Court supports
disposition of this case on that ground. However, my Brothers
DOUGLAS, HARLAN, and WHITE also debate the question whether
On
Lee v. United States, 343 U. S. 747
(1952), may any longer be regarded as sound law. My Brother WHITE
argues that
On Lee is still sound law. My Brothers DOUGLAS
and HARLAN argue that it is not. Neither position commands the
support of a majority of the Court. For myself, I agree with my
Brothers DOUGLAS and HARLAN. But I go further. It is my view that
the reasoning of both my Brothers DOUGLAS and HARLAN compels the
conclusion that
Lopez v. United States, 373 U.
S. 427 (1963), is also no longer sound law. In other
words, it is my view that current Fourth Amendment jurisprudence
interposes a warrant requirement not only in cases of third-party
electronic monitoring (the situation in
On Lee and in this
case) but also in cases of electronic recording by a government
agent of a face-to-face conversation with a criminal suspect, which
was the situation in
Lopez. For I adhere to the dissent in
Lopez, 373 U.S. at
373 U. S.
446-471, in which, to quote my Brother HARLAN,
post at
401 U. S. 778
n. 12, "the doctrinal basis of our subsequent Fourteenth Amendment
decisions may be said to have had its genesis."
Katz v. United
States, 389 U. S. 347
(1967), adopted that "doctrinal basis" and thus, it seems to me,
agreed with the argument in the
Lopez dissent that
"subsequent decisions and subsequent experience have sapped
whatever vitality [
On Lee] may once have had; that it
should now be regarded as overruled,"
and that the situation in
Lopez "is rationally
indistinguishable." 373 U.S. at
373 U. S. 447.
The reasons in support of those conclusions are set forth fully in
the
Lopez
Page 401 U. S. 756
dissent, and need not be repeated here. It suffices to say that,
for those reasons, I remain of the view that the Fourth Amendment
imposes the warrant requirement in both the
On Lee and
Lopez situations.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting.
I
The issue in this case is clouded and concealed by the very
discussion of it in legalistic terms. What the ancients knew as
"eavesdropping" we now call "electronic surveillance," but to
equate the two is to treat man's first gunpowder on the same level
as the nuclear bomb. Electronic surveillance is the greatest
leveler of human privacy ever known. How most forms of it can be
held "reasonable" within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment is a
mystery. To be sure, the Constitution and Bill of Rights are not to
be read as covering only the technology known in the 18th century.
Otherwise its concept of "commerce" would be hopeless when it comes
to the management of modern affairs. At the same time, the concepts
of privacy which the Founders enshrined in the Fourth Amendment
vanish completely when we slavishly allow an all-powerful
government, proclaiming law and order, efficiency, and other benign
purposes, to penetrate all the walls and doors which men need to
shield them from the pressures of a turbulent life around them and
give them the health and strength to carry on.
That is why a "strict construction" of the Fourth Amendment is
necessary if every man's liberty and privacy are to be
constitutionally honored.
When Franklin D. Roosevelt, on May 21, 1940, authorized
wiretapping in cases of "fifth column" activities and sabotage and
limited it "insofar as possible to aliens," he said that,
"under ordinary and normal circumstances,
Page 401 U. S. 757
wiretapping by Government agents should not be carried on, for
the excellent reason that it is almost bound to lead to abuse of
civil rights."
See 401
U.S. 745app1|>Appendix I to this dissent. Yet as Judge
Ferguson said in
United States v. Smith, 321 F.
Supp. 424, 429:
"[T]he government seems to approach these dissident domestic
organizations in the same fashion as it deals with unfriendly
foreign powers. The government cannot act in this manner when only
domestic political organizations are involved, even if those
organizations espouse views which are inconsistent with our present
form of government. To do so is to ride roughshod over numerous
political freedoms which have long received constitutional
protection. The government can, of course, investigate and
prosecute criminal violations whenever these organizations, or
rather their individual members, step over the line of political
theory and general advocacy and commit illegal acts."
Today no one perhaps notices, because only a small, obscure
criminal is the victim. But every person is the victim, for the
technology we exalt today is everyman's master. Any doubters should
read Arthur R. Miller's The Assault On Privacy (1971). After
describing the monitoring of conversations and their storage in
data banks, Professor Miller goes on to describe "human monitoring"
which he calls the "ultimate step in mechanical snooping" -- a
device for spotting unorthodox or aberrational behavior across a
wide spectrum.
"Given the advancing state of both the remote sensing art and
the capacity of computers to handle an uninterrupted and synoptic
data flow, there seem to be no physical barriers left to shield us
from intrusion."
Id. at 46.
When one reads what is going on in this area today, our judicial
treatment of the subject seems as remote from
Page 401 U. S. 758
reality as the well known Baron Parke was remote from the social
problems of his day.
See Chapman, "Big Brother" in the
Justice Department, The Progressive, April 1971, p. 27.
II
We held in
Berger v. New York, 388 U. S.
41, that wiretapping is a search and seizure within the
meaning of the Fourth Amendment, and therefore must meet its
requirements,
viz., there must be a prior showing of
probable cause, the warrant authorizing the wiretap must
particularly describe "the place to be searched, and the persons or
things to be seized," and that it may not have the breadth,
generality, and long life of the general warrant against which the
Fourth Amendment was aimed.
In
Katz v. United States, 389 U.
S. 347, we held that an electronic device, used without
trespass onto any given enclosure (there a telephone booth), was a
search for which a Fourth Amendment warrant was needed. [
Footnote 2/1] MR. JUSTICE STEWART, speaking
for the Court, said: "Wherever a man may be, he is entitled to know
that he will remain free from unreasonable searches and seizures."
Id. at
389 U. S.
359.
As a result of
Berger and of
Katz, both
wiretapping and electronic surveillance through a "bug" or other
device are now covered by the Fourth Amendment.
There were prior decisions representing an opposed view. In
On Lee v. United States, 343 U. S. 747,
an
Page 401 U. S. 759
undercover agent with a radio transmitter concealed on his
person interviewed the defendant whose words were heard over a
radio receiver by another agent down the street. The idea,
discredited by
Katz, that there was no violation of the
Fourth Amendment because there was no trespass, was the core of the
On Lee decision.
Id. at
343 U. S.
751-754.
Lopez v. United States, 373 U.
S. 427, was also pre-
Berger and
pre-
Katz. The government agent there involved carried a
pocket wire recorder which the Court said
"was not planted by means of an unlawful physical invasion of
petitioner's premises under circumstances which would violate the
Fourth Amendment."
Id. at
373 U. S.
439.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, dissenting, stated the philosophy of
Katz soon to be adopted:
"[T]here is a qualitative difference between electronic
surveillance, whether the agents conceal the devices on their
persons or in walls or under beds, and conventional police
stratagems such as eavesdropping and disguise. The latter do not so
seriously intrude upon the right of privacy. The risk of being
overheard by an eavesdropper or betrayed by an informer or deceived
as to the identity of one with whom one deals is probably inherent
in the conditions of human society. It is the kind of risk we
necessarily assume whenever we speak. But as soon as electronic
surveillance comes into play, the risk changes crucially. There is
no security from that kind of eavesdropping, no way of mitigating
the risk, and so not even a residuum of true privacy. . . ."
". . . Electronic aids add a wholly new dimension to
eavesdropping. They make it more penetrating, more indiscriminate,
more truly obnoxious to a free
Page 401 U. S. 760
society. Electronic surveillance, in fact, makes the police
omniscient; and police omniscience is one of the most effective
tools of tyranny."
373 U.S. at
373 U. S.
465-466.
It is urged by the Department of Justice that
On Lee be
established as the controlling decision in this field. I would
stand by
Berger and
Katz and reaffirm the need
for judicial supervision [
Footnote
2/2] under the Fourth Amendment of the use of electronic
surveillance which, uncontrolled, promises to lead us into a police
state.
These were wholly prearranged episodes of surveillance. The
first was in the informant's home to which respondent had been
invited. The second was also in the informer's home, the next day.
The third was four days later, at the home of the respondent. The
fourth was in the informer's car two days later. Twelve days after
that, a meeting in the informer's home was intruded upon. The sixth
occurred at a street rendezvous. The seventh was in the informer's
home, and the eighth in a restaurant owned by respondent's
mother-in-law. So far as time is concerned, there is no excuse for
not seeking a warrant. And while there is always an effort involved
in preparing affidavits or other evidence in support of a showing
of probable cause, that burden was given constitutional sanction in
the Fourth Amendment against the activities of the agents of George
III. It was designed not to protect criminals, but to protect
everyone's privacy.
On Lee and
Lopez are of a vintage opposed to
Berger and
Katz. However they may be explained,
they are
Page 401 U. S. 761
products of the old common law notions of trespass.
Katz, on the other hand, emphasized that, with few
exceptions,
"searches conducted outside the judicial process, without prior
approval by judge or magistrate, are
per se unreasonable
under the Fourth Amendment. . . ."
389 U.S. at
389 U. S. 357.
Camara v. Municipal Court, 387 U.
S. 523, put administrative searches under the Fourth
Amendment. We held that administrative actions, like other
searches, implicated officials in an invasion of privacy, and that
the Fourth Amendment was meant to guard against the arbitrariness
of any such invasion. We said:
"We simply cannot say that the protections provided by the
warrant procedure are not needed in this context; broad statutory
safeguards are no substitute for individualized review,
particularly when those safeguards may only be invoked at the risk
of a criminal penalty."
Id. at
387 U. S.
533.
In
Chimel v. California, 395 U.
S. 752, in considering the constitutionality of a search
incident to an arrest we held that, while the area in the immediate
reach of an arrestee is "reasonable" though made without a warrant,
a search beyond that zone may generally be made "only under the
authority of a search warrant."
Id. at
395 U. S. 763.
And in two "stop and frisk" cases,
Terry v. Ohio,
392 U. S. 1, and
Davis v. Mississippi, 394 U. S. 721, we
held that any restraint of the person, however brief, was subject
to judicial inquiry on "reasonableness" 392 U.S. at
392 U. S. 19, and
that "the Fourth Amendment governs all intrusions by agents of the
public upon personal security. . . ."
Id. at
392 U. S. 18 n.
15.
We have moved far away from the rationale of
On Lee and
Lopez, and only a retrogressive step of large dimensions
would bring us back to it.
The threads of thought running through our recent decisions are
that these extensive intrusions into privacy
Page 401 U. S. 762
made by electronic surveillance make self-restraint by law
enforcement officials an inadequate protection, that the
requirement of warrants under the Fourth Amendment is essential to
a free society. [
Footnote 2/3]
Monitoring, if prevalent, certainly kills free discourse and
spontaneous utterances. Free discourse -- a First Amendment value
-- may be frivolous or serious, humble or defiant, reactionary or
revolutionary, profane or in good taste; but it is not free if
there is surveillance. [
Footnote
2/4]
Page 401 U. S. 763
Free discourse liberates the spirit, though it may produce only
froth. The individual must keep some facts concerning his thoughts
within a small zone of people. At the same time, he must be free to
pour out his woes or inspirations or dreams to others. He remains
the sole judge as to what must be said and what must remain
unspoken. This is the essence of the idea of privacy implicit in
the First and Fifth Amendments as well as in the Fourth.
The philosophy of the value of privacy reflected in the Fourth
Amendment's ban on "unreasonable searches and seizures" has been
forcefully stated by a former Attorney General of the United
States:
"Privacy is the basis of individuality. To be alone and be let
alone, to be with chosen company, to say what you think, or don't
think, but to say what you will, is to be yourself. Solitude is
imperative, even in a high rise apartment. Personality develops
from within. To reflect is to know yourself. Character is formed
through years of self-examination. Without this opportunity,
character will be formed largely by uncontrolled external social
stimulations. Americans are excessively homogenized already."
"Few conversations would be what they are if the speakers
thought others were listening. Silly, secret, thoughtless and
thoughtful statements would all be affected. The sheer numbers in
our lives, the anonymity of urban living and the inability to
influence things that are important are depersonalizing and
dehumanizing factors of modern life. To penetrate the last refuge
of the individual, the precious little privacy that remains, the
basis of individual dignity, can have meaning to the quality of our
lives that we cannot foresee. In terms of present values, that
meaning cannot be good. "
Page 401 U. S. 764
"Invasions of privacy demean the individual. Can a society be
better than the people composing it? When a government degrades its
citizens, or permits them to degrade each other, however beneficent
the specific purpose, it limits opportunities for individual
fulfillment and national accomplishment. If America permits fear
and its failure to make basic social reforms to excuse police use
of secret electronic surveillance, the price will be dear indeed.
The practice is incompatible with a free society."
R. Clark, Crime in America 287 (1970). Now that the discredited
decisions in
On Lee and
Lopez are resuscitated
and revived, must everyone live in fear that every word he speaks
may be transmitted or recorded [
Footnote 2/5] and later repeated to the entire world? I
can
Page 401 U. S. 765
imagine nothing that has a more chilling effect on people
speaking their minds and expressing their views on important
matters. The advocates of that regime should spend some time in
totalitarian countries and learn first-hand the kind of regime they
are creating here. [
Footnote
2/6]
Page 401 U. S. 766
III
The decision not to make
Katz retroactive to any
electronic surveillance which occurred prior to December 18, 1967
(the day we decided
Katz), is not, in my view, a tenable
one for the reasons stated by MR. JUSTICE HARLAN and me in our
dissents in
Desist v. United States, 394 U.
S. 244,
394 U. S. 255,
394 U. S.
256.
|
401
U.S. 745app1|
APPENDIX I TO OPINION OF DOUGLAS, J., DISSENTING
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
rj:
May 21, 1940
lj:
CONFIDENTIAL
MEMORANDUM FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
I have agreed with the broad purpose of the Supreme Court
decision relating to wiretapping in investigations. The Court is
undoubtedly sound both in regard to the use of evidence secured
over tapped wires in the prosecution of citizens in criminal cases;
and is also right in its opinion that, under ordinary and normal
circumstances, wiretapping by Government agents should not be
carried on for the excellent reason that it is almost bound to lead
to abuse of civil rights.
However, I am convinced that the Supreme Court never intended
any dictum in the particular case which it decided to apply to
grave matters involving the defense of the nation.
It is, of course, well known that certain other nations have
been engaged in the organization of propaganda of so-called "fifth
columns" in other countries and in preparation for sabotage, as
well as in actual sabotage.
Page 401 U. S. 767
It is too late to do anything about it after sabotage,
assassinations and "fifth column" activities are completed.
You are, therefore, authorized and directed in such cases as you
may approve, after investigation of the need in each case, to
authorize the necessary investigation agents that they are at
liberty to secure information by listening devices directed to the
conversation or other communications of persons suspected of
subversive activities against the Government of the United States,
including suspected spies. You are requested furthermore to limit
these investigations so conducted to a minimum, and to limit them
insofar as possible to aliens.
[SEAL] /s/ F. D. R.
|401 U.S. 701app2|
APPENDIX II TO OPINION OF DOUGLAS, J., DISSENTING
ADMINISTRATIVELY CONFIDENTIAL
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
rj:
June 30, 1965
lj:
MEMORANDUM FOR THE HEADS OF
EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS
AND AGENCIES
I am strongly opposed to the interception of telephone
conversations as a general investigative technique. I recognize
that mechanical and electronic devices may sometimes be essential
in protecting our national security. Nevertheless, it is clear that
indiscriminate use of those investigative devices to overhear
telephone conversations, without the knowledge or consent of any of
the persons involved, could result in serious abuses and invasions
of privacy. In my view, the invasion of privacy of communications
is a highly offensive practice which should be engaged in only
where the national security is at
Page 401 U. S. 768
stake. To avoid any misunderstanding on this subject in the
Federal Government, I am establishing the following basic
guidelines to be followed by all government agencies:
(1) No federal personnel is to intercept telephone conversations
within the United States by any mechanical or electronic device,
without the consent of one of the parties involved, (except in
connection with investigations related to the national
security).
(2) No interception shall be undertaken or continued without
first obtaining the approval of the Attorney General.
(3) All federal agencies shall immediately conform their
practices and procedures to the provisions of this order.
Utilization of mechanical or electronic devices to overhear
non-telephone conversations is an even more difficult problem,
which raises substantial and unresolved questions of Constitutional
interpretation. I desire that each agency conducting such
investigations consult with the Attorney General to ascertain
whether the agency's practices are fully in accord with the law and
with a decent regard for the rights of others.
Every agency head shall submit to the Attorney General within 30
days a complete inventory of all mechanical and electronic
equipment and devices used for or capable of intercepting telephone
conversations. In addition, such reports shall contain a list of
any interceptions currently authorized and the reasons for
them.
rj:
/s/ Lyndon B. Johnson
lj:
[
Footnote 2/1]
See Greenawalt, The Consent Problem in Wiretapping
& Eavesdropping: Surreptitious Monitoring With the Consent of a
Participant in a Conversation, 68 Col.L.Rev. 189; Kitch,
Katz
v. United States: The Limits of the Fourth Amendment, 1968
Sup.Ct.Rev. 133; Note, Police Undercover Agents: New Threat to
First Amendment Freedoms, 37 Geo.Wash.L.Rev. 634; Comment,
Electronic Surveillance: The New Standards, 35 Brooklyn L.Rev.
49.
The relaxing of constitutional requirements by the Executive
Branch is apparent from the
401
U.S. 745app1|>Appendices to this dissent.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Osborn v. United States, 385 U.
S. 323, was held to be in that tradition, as the federal
district judges, prior to the use of the recording device by the
agent and with full knowledge of the alleged law violation
involved, "authorized the use of a recording device for the narrow
and particularized purpose of ascertaining the truth" of the
charge.
Id. at
385 U. S.
330.
[
Footnote 2/3]
The tyranny of surveillance that is not supervised in the Fourth
Amendment manner is told by Judge Gesell in
United States v.
Jones, 292
F. Supp. 1001, 1008-1009, where the competition between
agencies and the uncontrolled activities of subordinates ended up
with Government itself playing an ignoble role.
Cf. American Bar Association, Project on Standards for
Criminal Justice, Electronic Surveillance §§ 4.1, 5.2 (Approved
Draft 1971).
[
Footnote 2/4]
Congressman Mikva of Illinois, in speaking of the spread of
military surveillance of civilians -- another facet of the problem
in the instant case -- recently said:
"At one point, they referred to 'infiltrating public meetings'
at which Senator Stevenson and I spoke, and I wondered how you
'infiltrate' a public meeting. Perhaps they wanted to compile
evidence to be used in some future military court -- evidence that
I was disloyal to the military establishment because I suggested
that we cut manpower by ten percent last year, or because I voted
against their appropriations in the two years I've been here."
"
* * * *"
"When they start investigating political figures, there is no
place you can draw the line and maintain any kind of civilian
control. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"We have become a fearful people. There was a time when we
feared only our enemies abroad. Now we seem to be as fearful of our
enemies at home, and, depending on whom you talk to, those enemies
can include people under thirty, people with foreign names, people
of different races, people in the big cities. We have become a
suspicious nation, as afraid of being destroyed from within as from
without."
"Unfortunately, the manifestations of that kind of fear and
suspicion are police-state measures."
A Nation in Fear, The Progressive, Feb.1971, pp. 1, 19-20.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Senator Edward Long, who intensively investigated wiretapping
and "bugging" said:
"You would be amazed at the different ways you can now be
'bugged.' There is today a transmitter the size of an aspirin
tablet which can help transmit conversations in your room to a
listening post up to 10 miles away."
"An expert can devise a bug to fit into almost any piece of
furniture in your room. And even if you find the bug, you will have
no evidence of who put it there. A United States Senator was bugged
by a transmitter secretly placed into a lamp which his wife was
having fixed at the shop. When experts searched for the
transmitter, it was gone."
"A leading electronics expert told my Subcommittee last year
that wiretapping and bugging in industrial espionage triples every
year. He said that new bugging devices are so small and cleverly
concealed that it takes search equipment costing over one hundred
thousand dollars and an expert with 10 years of field experience to
discover them. Ten years ago, the same search for bugs could have
been done with equipment costing only one-fourth as much."
"In California, we found a businessman who had been so
frightened by electronic eavesdropping devices which had been
concealed in his office, that he is now spending thousands of
dollars having his office searched each day, taking his phone apart
every morning, and stationing a special guard outside his office 24
hours a day."
"He is one of a growing number of men in industry who live in
constant fear that what they say is being listened to by their
competitor."
19 Adm.L.Rev. 442, 444.
And see E. Long, The Intruders
(1966).
[
Footnote 2/6]
"A technological breakthrough in techniques of physical
surveillance now makes it possible for government agents and
private persons to penetrate the privacy of homes, offices, and
vehicles; to survey individuals moving about in public places; and
to monitor the basic channels of communication by telephone,
telegraph, radio, television, and data line. Most of the 'hardware'
for this physical surveillance is cheap, readily available to the
general public, relatively easy to install, and not presently
illegal to own. As of the 1960's, the new surveillance technology
is being used widely by government agencies of all types and at
every level of government, as well as by private agents for a
rapidly growing number of businesses, unions, private
organizations, and individuals in every section of the United
States. Increasingly, permanent surveillance devices have been
installed in facilities used by employees or the public. While
there are defenses against 'outside' surveillance, these are so
costly and complex and demand such constant vigilance that their
use is feasible only where official or private matters of the
highest security are to be protected. Finally, the scientific
prospects for the next decade indicate a continuing increase in the
range and versatility of the listening and watching devices, as
well as the possibility of computer processing of recordings to
identify automatically the speakers or topics under surveillance.
These advances will come just at the time when personal contacts,
business affairs, and government operations are being channeled
more and more into electronic systems such as data-phone lines and
computer communications."
A. Westin, Privacy and Freedom 365-366 (1967).
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting.
The uncontested facts of this case squarely challenge the
continuing viability of
On Lee v. United States,
343 U. S. 747
(1952). As the plurality opinion of MR. JUSTICE
Page 401 U. S. 769
WHITE itself makes clear, important constitutional developments
since
On Lee mandate that we reassess that case, which has
continued to govern official behavior of this sort in spite of the
subsequent erosion of its doctrinal foundations. With all respect,
my agreement with the plurality opinion ends at that point.
I think that a perception of the scope and role of the Fourth
Amendment, as elucidated by this Court since
On Lee was
decided, and full comprehension of the precise issue at stake lead
to the conclusion that
On Lee can no longer be regarded as
sound law. Nor do I think the date we decided
Katz v. United
States, 389 U. S. 347
(1967), can be deemed controlling both for the reasons discussed in
my dissent in
Desist v. United States, 394 U.
S. 244,
394 U. S. 256
(1969), and my separate opinion in
Mackey v. United States
(and companion cases),
ante, p.
401 U. S. 675
(the case before us being here on direct review), and because, in
my view, it requires no discussion of the holding in
Katz,
as distinguished from its underlying rationale as to the reach of
the Fourth Amendment, to comprehend the constitutional infirmity of
On Lee.
I
Before turning to matters of precedent and policy, several
preliminary observations should be made. We deal here with the
constitutional validity of instantaneous third-party electronic
eavesdropping, conducted by federal law enforcement officers,
without any prior judicial approval of the technique utilized, but
with the consent and cooperation of a participant in the
conversation, [
Footnote 3/1]
Page 401 U. S. 770
and where the substance of the matter electronically overheard
[
Footnote 3/2] is related in a
federal criminal trial by those who eavesdropped as direct, not
merely corroborative, evidence of the guilt of the nonconsenting
party. The magnitude of the issue at hand is evidenced not simply
by the obvious doctrinal difficulty of weighing such activity in
the Fourth Amendment balance, but also, and more importantly, by
the prevalence of police utilization of this technique. Professor
Westin has documented in careful detail the numerous devices that
make technologically feasible the Orwellian Big Brother. Of
immediate relevance is his observation that
"'participant recording,' in which one participant in a
conversation or meeting, either a police officer or a cooperating
party, wears a concealed device that records the conversation or
broadcasts it to others nearby . . . is used tens of thousands of
times each year throughout the country, particularly in cases
involving extortion, conspiracy, narcotics, gambling, prostitution,
corruption by police officials . . . and similar crimes. [
Footnote 3/3] "
Page 401 U. S. 771
Moreover, as I shall undertake to show later in this opinion,
the factors that must be reckoned with in reaching constitutional
conclusions respecting the use of electronic eavesdropping as a
tool of law enforcement are exceedingly subtle and complex. They
have provoked sharp differences of opinion both within and without
the judiciary, and the entire problem has been the subject of
continuing study by various governmental and nongovernmental
bodies. [
Footnote 3/4]
Page 401 U. S. 772
Finally, given the importance of electronic eavesdropping as a
technique for coping with the more deep-seated kinds of criminal
activity, and the complexities that are encountered in striking a
workable constitutional balance between the public and private
interests at stake, I believe that the courts should proceed with
specially measured steps in this field. More particularly, I think
this Court should not foreclose itself from reconsidering doctrines
that would prevent the States from seeking, independently of the
niceties of federal restrictions as they may develop, solutions to
such vexing problems,
see Mapp v. Ohio, 37 U.
S. 643 (1961), and
Ker v. California,
374 U. S. 23
(1963), and
see also Berger v. New York, 388 U. S.
41 (1967);
Baldwin v. New York, 399 U. S.
66,
399 U. S. 117
(1970) (dissenting opinion);
California v. Green,
399 U. S. 149,
399 U. S. 172
(1970) (concurring opinion). I also think that, in the adjudication
of federal cases, the Court should leave ample room for
congressional developments.
Page 401 U. S. 773
II
On these premises, I move to the problem of third-party
"bugging." To begin by tracing carefully the evolution of Fourth
Amendment doctrine in post-
On Lee decisions has proved
useful in several respects. It serves to cast in perspective both
the issue involved here and the imperative necessity for
reconsidering
On Lee afresh. Additionally, a full
exposition of the dynamics of the decline of the trespass rationale
underlying
On Lee strikingly illuminates the deficiencies
of the plurality opinion's retroactivity analysis.
A
On Lee involved circumstances virtually identical to
those now before us. There, Government agents enlisted the services
of Chin Poy, a former friend of Lee, who was suspected of engaging
in illegal narcotics traffic. Poy was equipped with a "minifon"
transmitting device which enabled outside Government agents to
monitor Poy's conversations with Lee. In the privacy of his
laundry, Lee made damaging admissions to Poy which were overheard
by the agents and later related at trial. Poy did not testify. Mr.
Justice Jackson, writing for five Justices, held the testimony
admissible. Without reaching the question of whether a conversation
could be the subject of a "seizure" for Fourth Amendment purposes,
as yet an unanswered if not completely open question, [
Footnote 3/5] the
Page 401 U. S. 774
Court concluded that, in the absence of a trespass, [
Footnote 3/6] no constitutional violation
had occurred. [
Footnote 3/7]
The validity of the trespass rationale was questionable even at
the time the decision was rendered. In this respect,
On
Lee rested on common law notions, and looked to a waning era
of Fourth Amendment jurisprudence. Three members of the Court
refused to join with Justice Jackson, and, within 10 years, the
Court expressly disavowed an approach to Fourth Amendment questions
that looked to common law distinctions.
See, e.g., Jones v.
United States, 362 U. S. 257
(1960);
Silverman v. United States, 365 U.
S. 505 (1961);
Lanza v. New York, 370 U.
S. 139 (1962).
It is, of course, true that the opinion in
On Lee drew
some support from a brief additional assertion that "eavesdropping
on a conversation, with the connivance of one of the parties"
raises no Fourth Amendment problem. 343 U.S. at
343 U. S. 754.
But surely it is a misreading of that opinion to view this
unelaborated assertion as a wholly independent ground for decision.
At the very least, this
Page 401 U. S. 775
rationale needs substantial buttressing if it is to persist in
our constitutional jurisprudence after the decisions I discuss
below. Indeed, the plurality opinion in the present case, in
greatly elaborating the point, tacitly recognizes the analytic
inability of this bare hypothesis to support a rule of law so
profoundly important to the proper administration of justice.
Moreover, if this was the true rationale of
On Lee from
the outset, it is difficult to see the relevance of
Desist
to the resolution of the instant case, for
Katz surely
does not speak directly to the continued viability of that ground
for decision.
See Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. at
389 U. S. 363
n. (WHITE, J., concurring).
By 1963, when we decided
Lopez v. United States,
373 U. S. 427,
four members of the Court were prepared to pronounce
On
Lee and
Olmstead v. United States, 277 U.
S. 438 (1928), dead. [
Footnote 3/8] The pyre, they reasoned, had been stoked
by decisions like
Won Sun v. United States, 371 U.
S. 471 (1963), which, on the one hand, expressly brought
verbal communication within the sweep of the Fourth Amendment,
[
Footnote 3/9] and, on the other,
reinforced
Page 401 U. S. 776
our
Silverman and
Jones decisions which
"refused to crowd the Fourth Amendment into the mold of local
property law," 373 U.S. at
373 U. S. 460 (BRENNAN, J., dissenting).
Although the Court's decision in
Lopez is cited by the
Government as a reaffirmation of
On Lee, it can hardly be
thought to have nurtured the questionable rationale of that
decision or its much-criticized ancestor,
Olmstead. To the
discerning lawyer
Lopez could only give pause, not
comfort. While the majority opinion, of which I was the author,
declined to follow the course favored by the dissenting and
concurring Justices by sounding the death knell for
Olmstead and
On Lee, our holding, despite an
allusion to the absence of "an unlawful . . . invasion of a
constitutionally protected area," 373 U.S. at
373 U. S.
438-439, was bottomed on two premises: the corroborative
use that was made of the tape recordings, which increased
reliability in the factfinding process, and the absence of a "risk"
not fairly assumed by petitioner. The tape recording was made by a
participant in the conversation and the opinion emphasized this
absence of a third-party intrusion, expressly noting that there was
no "electronic eavesdropping on a private conversation which
government agents could not otherwise have overheard." 373 U.S. at
373 U. S. 440.
[
Footnote 3/10] As I point out in
401 U. S. S.
777� of this opinion, it is one thing to subject the average
citizen to the risk that participants in a conversation with him
will subsequently divulge its contents to another, but quite a
different matter to foist upon him the risk that unknown third
parties may be simultaneously listening in.
While
Lopez cited
On Lee without disavowal of
its holding, 373 U.S. at
373 U. S. 438,
it is entirely accurate to say that we did not there reaffirm it.
[
Footnote 3/11] No decision since
Lopez gives a breath of life to the reasoning that led to
the
On Lee and
Olmstead results, and it required
little clairvoyance to predict the demise of the basic rationale of
On Lee and
Olmstead foreshadowed by our
subsequent opinions in
Osborn v. United States,
385 U. S. 323
(166), and
Berger v. New York, 388 U. S.
41 (1967).
Only three years after
Lopez, MR. JUSTICE STEWART
writing for the Court in
Osborn v. United States, supra,
expressly abjured reliance on
Lopez and, instead, approved
identical conduct based on the "circumstances under which the tape
recording was obtained in [that] case," facts that involved
"using [a recorder] under the most precise and discriminate
circumstances, circumstances which fully met the 'requirement of
particularity'
Page 401 U. S. 778
which the dissenting opinion in
Lopez found
necessary."
Osborn v. United States, 385 U.S. at
385 U. S. 327,
385 U. S. 329.
[
Footnote 3/12]
Since
Osborn, our decisions have shown no tolerance for
the old dividing lines resting, as they did, on fiction and common
law distinctions without sound policy justification in the realm of
values protected by the Fourth Amendment. Thus, in abolishing the
"mere evidence rule," we announced that "the principal object of
the Fourth Amendment is the protection of privacy, rather than
property," and once again noted the trend to discard "fictional and
procedural barriers rested on property concepts."
Warden v.
Hayden, 387 U. S. 294,
387 U. S. 34
(1967). That same Term, the Court demonstrated the new flexibility
in Fourth Amendment doctrine when it held that the warrant
protections would be applied to administrative searches.
Camara
v. Municipal Court, 387 U. S. 523
(1967).
Certainly if
Osborn, Warden, and
Camara did
not plainly draw into question the vigor of earlier precedents,
Berger v. New York, 388 U. S. 41, did,
and expunged any remnants of former doctrine which might have
been
Page 401 U. S. 779
thought to have survived
Osborn and
Warden.
[
Footnote 3/13] There, the Court,
following a path opened by Mr. Justice Brandeis' dissent in
Olmstead, and smoothed in
Osborn and
Camara, expressed concern about scientific developments
that have put within the reach of the Government the private
communications of "anyone in almost any given situation," 388 U.S.
at
388 U. S. 47; it
left no doubt that, as a general principle, electronic
eavesdropping was an invasion of privacy, and that the Fourth
Amendment prohibited unsupervised "bugging." Disturbed by the
extent of intrusion which, "[b]y its very nature, . . . is broad in
scope," and noting that "[f]ew threats to liberty exist which are
greater than that posed by the use of eavesdropping devices,"
id. at
388 U. S. 63,
the Court brought to life the principle of reasonableness
adumbrated in
Osborn. Mr. Justice Clark, writing for the
majority, reiterated the new approach:
"[T]he 'indiscriminate use of such [bugging] devices in law
enforcement raises grave constitutional questions under the Fourth
and Fifth Amendments,' and imposes 'a heavier responsibility on
this Court in its supervision of the fairness of procedures. . .
.'"
388 U.S. at
388 U. S. 56,
quoting from
Osborn v. United States, 385 U.
S. 323,
385 U. S. 329
n. 7. Nor did the Court waver in resolve in the face of
respondent's dire prediction that "neither a warrant nor a statute
authorizing eavesdropping can be drawn so as to meet the Fourth
Amendment's requirements." [
Footnote
3/14] It
Page 401 U. S. 780
was said that "[i]f that be true then the
fruits' of
eavesdropping devices are barred under the Amendment." 388 U.S. at
388 U. S. 63.
[Footnote 3/15]
If
Berger did not flatly sound a dirge for
Olmstead, it articulated principles that led MR. JUSTICE
DOUGLAS, by way of concurrence, to comment on its quiet burial. 388
U.S. at
388 U. S. 64.
While it was left to
Katz to perform the last rites, that
decision inevitably followed from
Osborn and
Berger. The
Berger majority's affirmative
citation of
On Lee for the principle that, "under specific
conditions and circumstances," eavesdropping may be lawful, 388
U.S. at
388 U. S. 63,
serves only to underscore the emerging operative assumptions: that
the particular circumstances of each case will be scrutinized to
the end of ascertaining the reasonableness of the search, and that
will depend in large measure on whether prior judicial
authorization, based on a particularized showing, has been
obtained.
Katz v. United States, supra.
Viewed in perspective, then,
Katz added no new
dimension to the law. At most, it was a formal dispatch of
Olmstead and the notion that such problems may usefully be
resolved in the light of trespass doctrine, and, of course, it
freed from speculation what was already evident, that
On
Lee was completely open to question.
B
But the decisions of this Court since
On Lee do more
than demonstrate that the doctrine of that case is wholly open for
reconsideration, and has been since well before
Katz was
decided. They also establish sound general principles for
application of the Fourth Amendment that were either dimly
perceived or not fully worked out
Page 401 U. S. 781
at the time of
On Lee. I have already traced some of
these principles in Part
401 U. S.
supra: that verbal communication is protected by the
Fourth Amendment, that the reasonableness of a search does not
depend on the presence or absence of a trespass, and that the
Fourth Amendment is principally concerned with protecting interests
of privacy, rather than property rights.
Especially when other recent Fourth Amendment decisions, not
otherwise so immediately relevant, are read with those already
discussed, the primacy of an additional general principle becomes
equally evident: official investigatory action that impinges on
privacy must typically, in order to be constitutionally
permissible, be subjected to the warrant requirement. Particularly
significant in this regard are
Camara v. Municipal Court,
387 U. S. 523
(1967);
Terry v. Ohio, 392 U. S. 1 (1968),
and
Chimel v. California, 395 U.
S. 752 (1969).
In
Camara, the Court brought under the Fourth Amendment
administrative searches that had once been thought to be without
its sweep. In doing so, the opinion emphasized the desirability of
establishing in advance those circumstances that justified the
intrusion into a home and submitting them for review to an
independent assessor, [
Footnote
3/16] principles that this Court has always deemed to be at the
core of Fourth Amendment protections. [
Footnote 3/17]
Page 401 U. S. 782
In bringing such searches within the ambit of the warrant
requirement,
Camara rejected the notion that the "less
hostile" nature of the search relegated this invasion of privacy to
the "periphery" of Fourth Amendment concerns. 387 U.S. at
387 U. S. 530.
The central consideration was, the Court concluded, that these
administrative actions, no less than the typical search, involved
government officials in an invasion of privacy, and that it was
against the possible arbitrariness of invasion that the Fourth
Amendment with its warrant machinery was meant to guard.
Berger and
Katz built, as noted earlier, on
Osborn v. United States, supra, and
Camara, and
gave further expression to the principle. [
Footnote 3/18] It was not enough that government agents
acted with restraint, for reasonableness must in the first instance
be judged in a detached realm. [
Footnote 3/19]
Page 401 U. S. 783
The scope and meaning of the rule have emerged with even greater
clarity by virtue of our holdings setting the boundaries for the
exceptions. Recently, in
Chimel v. California,
395 U. S. 752
(1969), we reiterated the importance of the prior independent
determination of a neutral magistrate, and underscored its
centrality to the reasonableness requirement of the Fourth
Amendment, and abandoned the holdings of
Harris v. United
States, 331 U. S. 145
(1947), and
United States v. Rabinowitz, 339 U. S.
56 (1950). We were concerned by the breadth of searches
occasioned by the
Rabinowitz rule which frequently proved
to be an invitation to a hunting expedition. Searches incident to
arrest, we held, must be confined to a locus no greater than
necessary to prevent injury to the arresting officer or destruction
of evidence. 395 U.S. at
395 U. S. 763,
767;
cf. Terry v. Ohio, 392 U. S. 1
(1968).
To complete the tapestry, the strands of doctrine reflected in
the search cases must be interwoven with the Court's other
contemporary holdings. Most significant
Page 401 U. S. 784
are
Terry v. Ohio, supra, and
Davis v.
Mississippi, 394 U. S. 721
(1969), which were also harbingers of the new thrust in Fourth
Amendment doctrine. There, the Court rejected the contention that
only an arrest triggered the "incident to arrest" exception to the
warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment, and held that any
restraint of the person, however brief and however labeled, was
subject to a reasonableness examination. 392 U.S. at
392 U. S. 19. The
controlling principle is
"to recognize that the Fourth Amendment governs all intrusions
by agents of the public upon personal security, and to make the
scope of the particular intrusion, in light of all the exigencies
of the case, a central element in the analysis of
reasonableness."
392 U.S. at
392 U. S. 18 n.
15.
See also Davis v. Mississippi, 394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 727.
[
Footnote 3/20]
III
A
That the foundations of
On Lee have been destroyed does
not, of course, mean that its result can no longer stand. Indeed,
the plurality opinion today fastens upon our decisions in
Lopez, Lewis v. United States, 385 U.
S. 206 (1966), and
Hoffa v. United States,
385 U. S. 293
(1966), to resist the undercurrents of more recent cases
emphasizing the warrant procedure as a safeguard to privacy. But
this category provides insufficient support. In each of these
cases, the risk the general populace faced was different from that
surfaced by the instant case. No surreptitious third ear was
present, and, in each opinion, that fact was carefully noted.
Page 401 U. S. 785
In
Lewis, a federal agent posing as a potential
purchaser of narcotics gained access to petitioner's home and there
consummated an illegal sale, the fruits of which were admitted at
trial along with the testimony of the agent. Chief Justice Warren,
writing for the majority, expressly distinguished the third-party
overhearing involved, by way of example, in a case like
Silverman v. United States, supra, noting that
"there, the conduct proscribed was that of eavesdroppers,
unknown and unwanted intruders who furtively listened to
conversations occurring in the privacy of a house."
385 U.S. at
385 U. S. 212.
Similarly in
Hoffa, MR. JUSTICE STEWART took care to
mention that "surreptitious" monitoring was not there before the
Court, and so too in
Lopez, supra.
The plurality opinion seeks to erase the crucial distinction
between the facts before us and these holdings by the following
reasoning: if A can relay verbally what is revealed to him by B (as
in
Lewis and
Hoffa), or record and later divulge
it (as in
Lopez), what difference does it make if A
conspires with another to betray B by contemporaneously
transmitting to the other all that is said? The contention is, in
essence, an argument that the distinction between third-party
monitoring and other undercover techniques is one of form, and not
substance. The force of the contention depends on the evaluation of
two separable but intertwined assumptions: first, that there is no
greater invasion of privacy in the third-party situation, and,
second, that uncontrolled consensual surveillance in an electronic
age is a tolerable technique of law enforcement, given the values
and goals of our political system. [
Footnote 3/21]
Page 401 U. S. 786
The first of these assumptions takes as a point of departure the
so-called "risk analysis" approach of
Lewis and
Lopez and, to a lesser extent,
On Lee, or the
expectations approach of
Katz. See discussion in
401 U. S.
supra. While these formulations represent an advance over
the unsophisticated trespass analysis of the common law, they too
have their limitations, and can, ultimately, lead to the
substitution of words for analysis. [
Footnote 3/22] The analysis must, in my view, transcend
the search for subjective expectations or legal attribution of
assumptions of risk. Our expectations, and the risks we assume, are
in large part reflections of laws that translate into rules the
customs and values of the past and present.
Since it is the task of the law to form and project, as well as
mirror and reflect, we should not, as judges, merely recite the
expectations and risks without examining the desirability of
saddling them upon society. The critical question, therefore, is
whether, under our system of government, as reflected in the
Constitution, we should impose on our citizens the risks of the
electronic listener or observer without at least the protection of
a warrant requirement.
This question must, in my view, be answered by assessing the
nature of a particular practice and the likely extent of its impact
on the individual's sense of security balanced against the utility
of the conduct as a technique of law enforcement. For those more
extensive intrusions that significantly jeopardize the sense of
security which is the paramount concern of Fourth Amendment
liberties, I am of the view that more than self-restraint by law
enforcement officials is required, and, at the least, warrants
Page 401 U. S. 787
should be necessary.
Cf. Terry v. Ohio, supra; Davis v.
Mississippi, supra.
B
The impact of the practice of third-party bugging, must, I
think, be considered such as to undermine that confidence and sense
of security in dealing with one another that is characteristic of
individual relationships between citizens in a free society. It
goes beyond the impact on privacy occasioned by the ordinary type
of "informer" investigation upheld in
Lewis and
Hoffa. The argument of the plurality opinion, to the
effect that it is irrelevant whether secrets are revealed by the
mere tattletale or the transistor, ignores the differences
occasioned by third-party monitoring and recording which insures
full and accurate disclosure of all that is said, free of the
possibility of error and oversight that inheres in human
reporting.
Authority is hardly required to support the proposition that
words would be measured a good deal more carefully and
communication inhibited if one suspected his conversations were
being transmitted and transcribed. Were third-party bugging a
prevalent practice, it might well smother that spontaneity --
reflected in frivolous, impetuous, sacrilegious, and defiant
discourse that liberates daily life. [
Footnote 3/23] Much off-hand exchange is easily
forgotten,
Page 401 U. S. 788
and one may count on the obscurity of his remarks, protected by
the very fact of a limited audience, and the likelihood that the
listener will either overlook or forget what is said, as well as
the listener's inability to reformulate a conversation without
having to contend with a documented record. [
Footnote 3/24] All these values are sacrificed by
Page 401 U. S. 789
a rule of law that permits official monitoring of private
discourse limited only by the need to locate a willing
assistant.
It matters little that consensual transmittals are less
obnoxious than wholly clandestine eavesdrops. This was put forward
as justification for the conduct in
Boyd v. United States,
116 U. S. 616
(1886), where the Government relied on mitigating aspects of the
conduct in question. The Court, speaking through Mr. Justice
Bradley, declined to countenance literalism:
"Though the proceeding in question is divested of many of the
aggravating incidents of actual search and seizure, yet, as before
said, it contains their substance and essence, and effects their
substantial purpose. It may be that it is the obnoxious thing in
its mildest and least repulsive form, but illegitimate and
unconstitutional practices get their first footing in that way,
namely, by silent approaches and slight deviations from legal modes
of procedure."
116 U.S. at
116 U. S.
635.
Finally, it is too easy to forget -- and, hence, too often
forgotten -- that the issue here is whether to interpose a search
warrant procedure between law enforcement agencies engaging in
electronic eavesdropping and the public generally. By casting its
"risk analysis" solely in terms of the expectations and risks that
"wrongdoers" or "one contemplating illegal activities" ought to
bear, the plurality opinion, I think, misses the mark entirely.
On Lee does not simply mandate that criminals must daily
run the risk of unknown eavesdroppers prying into their private
affairs; it subjects each and every law-abiding member of society
to that risk. The very purpose of interposing the Fourth Amendment
warrant requirement is to redistribute the privacy risks throughout
society in a way that produces the results the plurality opinion
ascribes to the
On Lee rule. Abolition of
On Lee
would
Page 401 U. S. 790
not end electronic eavesdropping. It would prevent public
officials from engaging in that practice unless they first had
probable cause to suspect an individual of involvement in illegal
activities and had tested their version of the facts before a
detached judicial officer. The interest
On Lee fails to
protect is the expectation of the ordinary citizen, who has never
engaged in illegal conduct in his life, that he may carry on his
private discourse freely, openly, and spontaneously without
measuring his every word against the connotations it might carry
when instantaneously heard by others unknown to him and unfamiliar
with his situation or analyzed in a cold, formal record played
days, months, or years after the conversation. Interposition of a
warrant requirement is designed not to shield "wrongdoers," but to
secure a measure of privacy and a sense of personal security
throughout our society.
The Fourth Amendment does, of course, leave room for the
employment of modern technology in criminal law enforcement, but in
the stream of current developments in Fourth Amendment law, I think
it must be held that third-party electronic monitoring, subject
only to the self-restraint of law enforcement officials has no
place in our society.
IV
I reach these conclusions notwithstanding seemingly contrary
views espoused by both Congress and an American Bar Association
study group. [
Footnote 3/25] Both
the ABA
Page 401 U. S. 791
study and Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe
Streets Act of 1968, 82 Stat. 212, 18 U.S.C. § 2510
et
seq. (1964 ed., Supp. V), appear to reflect little more than
this Court's prior decisions. Indeed, the comprehensive provisions
of Title III are evidence of the extent of congressional concern
with the impact of electronic surveillance on the right to privacy.
This concern is further manifested in the introductory section of
the Senate Committee Report. [
Footnote 3/26] Although § 2511(2)(c) exempts consensual
and participant monitoring by law enforcement agents from the
general prohibitions against surveillance without prior judicial
authorization and makes the fruits admissible in court,
see § 2515, congressional malaise with such conduct is
evidenced by the contrastingly limited endorsement of consensual
surveillance carried out by private individuals. [
Footnote 3/27] While individual Congressmen
expressed concern about and criticized the provisions for
unsupervised consensual electronic surveillance contained in §
2511, [
Footnote 3/28] the Senate
Committee Report comment, to the effect that "[i]t [§ 2511(2)(c)]
largely reflects existing law," S.Rep. No. 1097, 90th Cong., 2d
Sess., 994 (1968), followed by citations to
On Lee and
Lopez, [
Footnote 3/29]
strongly suggests that the provisions represent not intractable
approval of these practices, but rather an intention to adopt these
holdings and to leave to the courts the task of determining their
viability in
Page 401 U. S. 792
light of later holdings such as
Berger, Osborn, and
Katz. [
Footnote
3/30]
I find in neither the ABA study nor Title III any justification
for ignoring the identifiable difference -- albeit an elusive one
in the present state of knowledge -- between the impact on privacy
of single-party informer bugging and third-party bugging, which, in
my opinion, justifies drawing the constitutional line at this
juncture between the two as regards the necessity for obtaining a
warrant. Recognition of this difference is, at the very least,
necessary to preserve the openness which is at the core of our
traditions and is secure only in a society that tolerates official
invasion of privacy simply in circumscribed situations.
The Fourth Amendment protects these traditions, and places
limitations on the means and circumstances by which the Government
may collect information about its citizens by intruding into their
personal lives. The
Page 401 U. S. 793
spirit of the principle is captured by the oft-quoted language
of
Boyd v. United States, 116 U.S. at
116 U. S.
630:
"The principles laid down in this opinion [speaking of
Entick v. Carrington, 19 How.St.Tr. 1029 (1765)] affect
the very essence of constitutional liberty and security. They reach
farther than the concrete form of the case then before the court,
with its adventitious circumstances; they apply to all invasions on
the part of the government and its employes of the sanctity of a
man's home and the privacies of life. It is not the breaking of his
doors, and the rummaging of his drawers, that constitutes the
essence of the offence; but it is the invasion of his indefeasible
right of personal security. . . ."
What this means is that the burden of guarding privacy in a free
society should not be on its citizens; it is the Government that
must justify its need to electronically eavesdrop.
V
Not content to rest upon the proposition that
On Lee
remains sound law, the plurality opinion would also hold that the
Court of Appeals erred further in disposing "of this case based on
its understanding of the principles announced in the
Katz
case,"
ante at
401 U. S. 754,
because
Desist v. United States, 394 U.
S. 244 (1969), held that
Katz governed only
governmental conduct occurring after the decision in
Katz.
It is difficult to know where to begin to analyze such a truly
extraordinary assertion respecting the operation of the judicial
process.
Because this case is here on direct review, even were the issues
squarely controlled by
Katz, I would unhesitatingly apply
here the rule there adopted, for the reasons first expressed in my
dissent in
Desist, 394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 256,
and elaborated in my separate opinion in
Mackey
Page 401 U. S. 794
v. United States (and companion cases),
ante,
p.
401 U. S. 675.
I see no purpose in repeating at this point the analysis I set
forth in those opinions. Suffice it to say that, in
Desist, I went to some length to point out, by discussing
a hypothetical proposition, that the failure to apply any new
decision by this Court to cases which had not yet run their course
on direct review was inconsistent with the case-by-case approach to
constitutional decision and with the proper relationship of this
Court to the lower federal courts. In particular, I noted that the
logic of
Desist suggested that it would constitute error
for a lower federal court to adopt a new constitutional rule which
this Court subsequently approved. 394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 259.
Today's opinion stands as eloquent evidence of that defect.
Indeed, I find this decision even more troubling than
Desist. For the errors of
Desist are not merely
repeated here; they are plainly compounded. Upon the plurality
opinion's own analysis of the instant case, it is clear that
Katz has no direct relevance to the present viability of
On Lee.
"
Katz involved no revelation to the Government by a
party to conversations with the defendant, nor did the Court
indicate in any way that a defendant has a justifiable and
constitutionally protected expectation that a person with whom he
is conversing will not then or later reveal the conversation to the
police."
Ante at
401 U. S. 749.
As I have already shown, one need not cite
Katz to
demonstrate the inability of
On Lee to survive recent
developments without at least substantial reformulation. To hold,
then, that a mere citation of
Katz, or drawing upon the
philosophical underpinnings of that case in order to employ a
general constitutional approach in tune with that of the decisions
of this Court, conflicts with the holding of
Desist is to
let this obsession with prospectivity run riot.
Page 401 U. S. 795
Apparently
Desist is now to be understood as holding
that all lower federal courts are disabled from adjudicating on
their merits all allegations of Fourth Amendment error not squarely
supported by a prior decision of this Court. If so, one wonders
what purpose is served by providing intermediate appellate review
of constitutional issues in the federal criminal process. We must
not forget that this Court is not the only tribunal in the entire
federal system charged with a responsibility for the nurture and
development of the Fourth Amendment. It is one thing to disable all
federal courts, including this Court, from applying the settled law
of the land to cases and controversies before them -- as
Desist does with
Katz -- and at least another
giant step backward to preclude lower courts from resolving wholly
disparate controversies in the light of constitutional principles.
Can it be seriously contended, as the plurality opinion necessarily
implies, that the Court of Appeals should not be reversed today on
these alternative grounds had it simply omitted to discuss
Katz. To force lower federal courts to adjudicate
controversies either mechanistically or disingenuously is, for me,
indefensible. Yet this is precisely what the plurality opinion does
with its assertion that it is error for lower courts to "dispose"
of a case based on their "understanding of the principles
announced" in
Katz for the next year or so.
I would hold that
On Lee is no longer good law, and
affirm the judgment below.
[
Footnote 3/1]
I agree with the plurality opinion,
ante at
401 U. S. 747
n. 1, that the issue of the informer's consent to utilization of
this technique is not properly before us. Whether persons can,
consistent with constitutional prohibitions, be tricked or coerced
into transmitting their conversations, with or without prior
judicial approval, and, if not, whether other parties to the
conversation would have standing to object to the admission against
them of evidence so obtained,
cf. Alderman v. United
States, 394 U. S. 165
(1969), are questions upon which I express no opinion.
[
Footnote 3/2]
In the case at hand, agents were also surreptitiously placed in
respondent's home at various times. No testimony by these agents
was offered at trial.
[
Footnote 3/3]
A. Westin, Privacy and Freedom 131 (1967). This investigative
technique is also used to unearth "political" crimes.
"Recordings of the private and public meetings of suspect groups
[have] been growing. Police in Miami, Florida, used a hidden
transmitter on a police agent to record statements made at meetings
of a right-wing extremist group suspected of planning acts of
terrorism. In 1964, a police undercover agent obtained recordings
of incendiary statements by the leader of a Communist splinter
movement in Harlem, at private meetings and at a public rally,
which served as the basis for his conviction for attempting to
overthrow the state government."
Ibid.
[
Footnote 3/4]
Prior to
Osborn v. United States, 385 U.
S. 323 (1966), and
Katz, the issue before us,
if raised, was usually dismissed in a routine fashion with a
citation to
On Lee, buttressed by a citation to
Lopez
v. United States, 373 U. S. 427
(1963), with no attempt to distinguish the two cases despite the
narrow rationale of the latter.
See, e.g., United States v.
Pasquinzo, 334 F.2d 74, 75 (CA6 1964);
Maddox v. United
States, 337 F.2d 234 (CA5 1964);
but cf. United States v.
Stone, 232 F.
Supp. 396 (ND Tex.1964). The few authorities post-dating
Katz have divided on the continued viability of the
On
Lee result,
compare, e.g., United States v.
Jones, 292 F.
Supp. 1001 (DC 1968), and cases cited therein, 292 F. Supp. at
1008,
with Dancy v. United States, 390 F.2d 370 (CA5 1968)
(Judge Fahy dissenting);
United States v. Kaufer, 406 F.2d
550 (CA2 1969);
People v. Fiedler, 30 App.Div.2d 476, 294
N.Y.S.2d 368 (1968) (Justices Goldman and Bastow dissenting),
aff'd without opinion, 24 N.Y.2d 960, 250 N.E.2d 75
(1969). Perhaps the most comprehensive treatments, examining both
the case law and policy considerations underlying the precise issue
-- electronic surveillance with the consent of one of the parties
-- are by Professor Greenawalt, The Consent Problem in Wiretapping
& Eavesdropping: Surreptitious Monitoring With the Consent of a
Participant in a Conversation, 68 Col.L.Rev. 189 (1968), and
Professor Kitch,
Katz v. United States: The Limits of the
Fourth Amendment, 1968 Sup.Ct.Rev. 133. For an interesting analysis
of the impact of nonconsensual bugging on privacy and the role of
prior judicial authorization,
see Spritzer, Electronic
Surveillance By Leave of the Magistrate: The Case in Opposition,
118 U.Pa.L.Rev. 169 (1969). In addition,
see American Bar
Association, Project on Standards for Criminal Justice, Electronic
Surveillance § 4.1 (Approved Draft 1971); J. Landynski, Search and
Seizure and the Supreme Court 198-244 (1966); Schwartz, The
Legitimation of Electronic Eavesdropping: The Politics of "Law and
Order," 67 Mich.L.Rev. 455, 495-496 (1969); S. Dash, R. Schwartz,
& R. Knowlton, The Eavesdroppers 421-441 (1959); Comment,
Eavesdropping, Informers, and the Right of Privacy: A Judicial
Tightrope, 52 Cornell L.Q. 975 (1967); King, Electronic
Surveillance and Constitutional Rights: Some Recent Developments
and Observations, 33 Geo.Wash.L.Rev. 240 (1964); Note, Wiretapping
and Electronic Surveillance -- Title III of the Crime Control Act
of 1968, 23 Rutgers L.Rev. 319 (1969); Blakey & Hancock, A
Proposed Electronic Surveillance Control Act, 43 Notre Dame Law.
657 (1968); Kamisar, The Wiretapping-Eavesdropping Problem: A
Professor's View, 44 Minn.L.Rev. 891 (1960); Note, From Private
Places to Personal Privacy: A Post-
Katz Study of Fourth
Amendment Protection, 43 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 968, 973-974 (1968); Scoular,
Wiretapping and Eavesdropping Constitutional Development from
Olmstead to
Katz, 12 St. Louis L.J. 513 (1968);
20 Syracuse L.Rev. 791 (1969); 14 Vill.L.Rev. 758 (1969).
[
Footnote 3/5]
See Goldman v. United States, 316 U.
S. 129 (1942).
Silverman v. United States,
365 U. S. 505
(1961), made explicit that which was still unclear after
Goldman: words overheard by trespass are subject to Fourth
Amendment protection.
See also Won Sun v. United States,
371 U. S. 471
(1963).
[
Footnote 3/6]
Mr. Justice Jackson rejected petitioner's contention that Poy's
deception vitiated Lee's consent to his entry on the premises. 343
U.S. at
343 U. S.
752.
[
Footnote 3/7]
343 U.S. at
343 U. S.
751-752:
"The conduct of Chin Poy and agent Lee did not amount to an
unlawful search and seizure such as is proscribed by the Fourth
Amendment. In
Goldman v. United States, 316 U. S.
129, . . . the agents had earlier committed a trespass
in order to install a listening device within the room itself.
Since the device failed to work, the Court expressly reserved
decision as to the effect on the search and seizure question of a
trespass in that situation. Petitioner in the instant case has
seized upon that dictum, apparently on the assumption that the
presence of a radio set would automatically bring him within the
reservation if he can show a trespass."
"But petitioner cannot raise the undecided question, for here no
trespass was committed. Chin Poy entered a place of business with
the consent, if not by the implied invitation, of the
petitioner."
[
Footnote 3/8]
Both Chief Justice Warren, in concurrence, 373 U.S. at
373 U. S. 441,
and MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, who wrote a dissenting opinion in which he
was joined by JUSTICES DOUGLAS and Goldberg, 373 U.S. at
373 U. S. 446,
were of the view that
Olmstead and
On Lee should
be overruled.
Cf. United States v. Stone, 232 F.
Supp. 396 (ND Tex.1964).
[
Footnote 3/9]
While
Silverman v. United States, 365 U.
S. 505, would seem to have eliminated any lingering
uncertainty on this score,
cf. Goldman v. United States,
316 U. S. 129,
Won Sun articulated the unspoken premise of
Silverman.
"The exclusionary rule has traditionally barred from trial
physical, tangible materials obtained either during or as a direct
result of an unlawful invasion. It follows from our holding in
Silverman v. United States, 365 U. S.
505, that the Fourth Amendment may protect against the
overhearing of verbal statements as well a against the more
traditional seizure of 'papers and effects.' Similarly, testimony
as to matters observed during an unlawful invasion has been
excluded in order to enforce the basic constitutional policies.
[Citation omitted.] Thus, verbal evidence which derives so
immediately from an unlawful entry and an unauthorized arrest as
the officers' action in the present case is no less the 'fruit' of
official illegality than the more common tangible fruits of the
unwarranted intrusion."
371 U.S. at
371 U. S. 485.
While I joined Mr. Justice Clark's dissenting opinion, 371 U.S. at
371 U. S. 498,
our differences with the majority involved only their analysis of
probable cause.
[
Footnote 3/10]
"Stripped to its essentials, petitioner's argument amounts to
saying that he has a constitutional right to rely on possible flaws
in the agent's memory, or to challenge the agent's credibility
without being beset by corroborating evidence that is not
susceptible of impeachment. For no other argument can justify
excluding an accurate version of a conversation that the agent
could testify to from memory. We think the risk that petitioner
took in offering a bribe to Davis fairly included the risk that the
offer would be accurately reproduced in court, whether by faultless
memory or mechanical recording."
373 U.S. at
373 U. S.
439.
[
Footnote 3/11]
The Chief Justice and dissenters, concerned with the
possibility that "the majority opinion
may be
interpreted as reaffirming
sub silentio the result in
On Lee v. United States," expressly repudiated it. 373
U.S. at
373 U. S. 441
(first emphasis added).
[
Footnote 3/12]
In a footnote, the Court in
Osborn outlined a new
approach, foreshadowed by MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN's
Lopez
dissent, in which the doctrinal basis of our subsequent Fourth
Amendment decisions may be said to have had its genesis:
"The requirements of the Fourth Amendment are not inflexible, or
obtusely unyielding to the legitimate needs of law enforcement. It
is at least clear that 'the procedure of antecedent justification
before a magistrate that is central to the Fourth Amendment,'
[citations omitted] could be made a precondition of lawful
electronic surveillance. . . ."
Osborn v. United States, 385 U.
S. 323,
385 U. S. 330
n. 9, quoting MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN's dissenting opinion in
Lopez
v. United States, 373 U.S. at
373 U. S.
464.
Judge Gesell, in reviewing the precedents, has recently
concluded that it was
Katz, read in conjunction with
Osborn, that buried
On Lee. United States v.
Jones, 292 F. Supp. 1101, 1008 (DC 1968).
[
Footnote 3/13]
See Schwartz, The Legitimation of Electronic
Eavesdropping: The Polities of "Law and Order," 67 Mich.L.Rev. 455,
458-459 (1969).
[
Footnote 3/14]
My principal disagreement with the Court in
Berger
involved the wisdom of reviewing the New York statute on its face,
rather than focusing on the facts and circumstances of the
particular case, and the exposition of the appropriate application
of warrant principles to eavesdropping situations. 388 U.S. at
388 U. S.
96-106.
[
Footnote 3/15]
Cf. Spritzer, Electronic Surveillance By Leave of the
Magistrate: The Case in Opposition, 118 U.Pa.L.Rev. 169 (1969).
[
Footnote 3/16]
See Beck v. Ohio, 379 U. S. 89,
379 U. S. 96
(1964), where the Court emphasized the importance of "an objective
predetermination" uncomplicated by a presentation not "subtly
influenced by the familiar shortcomings of hindsight judgment."
[
Footnote 3/17]
The classic exposition of the purposes and importance of the
warrant requirement is to be found in the opinion of Mr. Justice
Jackson in his opinion for the Court in
Johnson v. United
States, 333 U. S. 10,
333 U. S. 13-14
(1948):
"The point of the Fourth Amendment, which often is not grasped
by zealous officers, is not that it denies law enforcement the
support of the usual inferences which reasonable men draw from
evidence. Its protection consists in requiring that those
inferences be drawn by a neutral and detached magistrate instead of
being judged by the officer engaged in the often competitive
enterprise of ferreting out crime. . . . The right of officers to
thrust themselves into a home is . . . a grave concern, not only to
the individual, but to a society, which chooses to dwell in
reasonable security and freedom from surveillance. When the right
of privacy must reasonably yield to the right of search is, as a
rule, to be decided by a judicial officer, not by a policeman or
government enforcement agent."
See also Terry v. Ohio, 392 U. S.
1 (1968);
United States v. Ventresca,
380 U. S. 102
(1965);
Aguilar v. Texas, 378 U.
S. 108 (1964);
Won Sun v. United States,
371 U. S. 471
(1963);
Chapman v. United States, 365 U.
S. 610 (1961);
Jones v. United States,
362 U. S. 257
(1960);
Jones v. United States, 357 U.
S. 493 (1958);
Giordenello v. United States,
357 U. S. 480
(1958);
United States v. Jeffers, 342 U. S.
48 (1951);
McDonald v. United States,
335 U. S. 451
(1948);
Trupiano v. United States, 334 U.
S. 699 (1948);
United States v. Lefkowitz,
285 U. S. 452
(1932);
Agnello v. United States, 269 U. S.
20 (1925).
[
Footnote 3/18]
See 401 U. S.
supra. See United States v. Jones, 292 F.
Supp. 1001 (DC 1968).
[
Footnote 3/19]
"'Over and again, this Court has emphasized that the mandate of
the [Fourth] Amendment requires adherence to judicial processes,'
United States v. Jeffers, 342 U. S.
48,
342 U. S. 51, and that
searches conducted outside the judicial process, without prior
approval by judge or magistrate, are
per se unreasonable
under the Fourth Amendment -- subject only to a few specifically
established and well delineated exceptions."
Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. at
389 U. S.
356-357,
The warrant procedure need not always entail an inquiry into the
existence of probable cause in the usual sense.
Cf. Camara v.
Municipal Court. For example, where an informer is being sent
in to investigate a dangerous crime, and there is reason to believe
his person would be in danger, monitoring might be justified and a
warrant issued even though no probable cause existed to believe the
particular meeting would provide evidence of particular criminal
activity.
Cf. Warden v. Hayden, 387 U.
S. 294,
387 U. S. 298
(1967);
McDonald v. United States, 335 U.S. at
335 U. S.
455-456;
Johnson v. United States, 333 U.S. at
333 U. S. 14-15;
Ker v. California, 374 U. S. 23
(1963);
Trupiano v. United States, 334 U.
S. 699 (1948), all taking the view that exceptions to
the warrant requirement may be made in narrowly defined special
circumstances.
[
Footnote 3/20]
I do not consider
Chambers v. Maroney, 399 U. S.
42 (1970), a retreat from the general proposition
established by
Katz and
Chimel. While I disagreed
with the Court,
see my separate opinion, 399 U.S. at
399 U. S. 55,
moving vehicles have always presented a special Fourth Amendment
problem.
Compare Carroll v. United States, 267 U.
S. 132 (1925),
with Agnello v. United States,
269 U. S. 20
(1925).
[
Footnote 3/21]
Professor Westin has observed:
"It is obvious that the political system in each society will be
a fundamental force in shaping its balance of privacy, since
certain patterns of privacy, disclosure, and surveillance are
functional necessities for particular kinds of political regime.
This is shown most vividly by contrasting privacy in the democratic
and the totalitarian state."
Westin,
supra, 401
U.S. 745fn3/3|>n. 3, at 23.
[
Footnote 3/22]
See Kitch,
supra, 401
U.S. 745fn3/3|>n. 4, at 141-142, 150-152.
[
Footnote 3/23]
Greenawalt,
supra, 401
U.S. 745fn3/4|>n. 4; Comment, Eavesdropping, Informers, and
the Right of Privacy: A Judicial Tightrope, 52 Cornell L.Q. 975,
983 (1967); Westin,
supra, 401
U.S. 745fn3/3|>n. 3, at 390.
Professor Westin, in projecting the consequences of unsupervised
participant monitoring, has observed:
"[E]avesdropping with the consent of one party . . . has been
the basic charter for private detective taps and bugs, for 'owner'
eavesdropping on facilities that are used by members of the public,
and for much freelance police eavesdropping. Allowing eavesdropping
with the consent of one party would destroy the statutory plan of
limiting the offenses for which eavesdropping by device can be used
and insisting on a court-order process. And as technology enables
every man to carry his micro-miniaturized recorder everywhere he
goes and allows every room to be monitored surreptitiously by
built-in equipment, permitting eavesdropping with the consent of
one party would be to sanction a means of reproducing conversation
that could choke off much vital social exchange."
See also separate views of Senator Hart set forth in
S.Rep. No. 1097, 90th Cong., 2d Sess., 175 (1968); Proposed
Legislation on Wiretapping and Eavesdropping after
Berger v.
New York and
Katz v. United States, 7 Bull. No. 2 of
the Association of the Bar of the City of New York 1, 3, 22-26
(Aug.1968).
[
Footnote 3/24]
From the same standpoint, it may also be thought that electronic
recording by an informer of a face-to-face conversation with a
criminal suspect, as in
Lopez, should be differentiated
from third-party monitoring, as in
On Lee and the case
before us, in that the latter assures revelation to the Government
by obviating the possibility that the informer may be tempted to
renege in his undertaking to pass on to the Government all that he
has learned. While the continuing vitality of
Lopez is not
drawn directly into question by this case, candor compels me to
acknowledge that the views expressed in this opinion may impinge
upon that part of the reasoning in
Lopez which suggested
that a suspect has no right to anticipate unreliable testimony. I
am now persuaded that such an approach misconceives the basic
issue, focusing as it does on the interests of a particular
individual, rather than evaluating the impact of a practice on the
sense of security that is the true concern of the Fourth
Amendment's protection of privacy. Distinctions do, however, exist
between
Lopez, where a known Government agent uses a
recording device, and this case which involves third-party
overhearing. However unlikely that the participant recorder will
not play his tapes, the fact of the matter is that, in a
third-party situation, the intrusion is instantaneous. Moreover,
differences in the prior relationship between the investigator and
the suspect may provide a focus for future distinctions.
See Greenawalt,
supra, 401
U.S. 745fn3/4|>n. 4.
[
Footnote 3/25]
See ABA Project,
supra, 401
U.S. 745fn3/4|>n. 4. The commentary states at the outset:
"This standard reflects the prevailing law." The drafters
apparently take as their starting point the risk analysis approach,
relying on cases holding that contents of letters may be revealed
where otherwise lawfully obtained.
Stroud v. United
States, 251 U. S. 15
(1919);
Ex parte Jackson, 96 U. S.
727,
96 U. S. 737
(1878);
see also Blakey & Hancock, A Proposed
Electronic Surveillance Control Act,
supra, 401
U.S. 745fn3/4|>n. 4, at 663, n. 11. The various state
provisions are set forth in Greenawalt,
supra, 401
U.S. 745fn3/4|>n. 4, at 207-211.
[
Footnote 3/26]
See S.Rep. No. 1097, 90th Cong., 2d Sess., 69
(1968).
[
Footnote 3/27]
See § 2511(2)(d), which prohibits nongovernmental
recording and listening when the
"communication is intercepted for the purpose of committing any
criminal or tortious act in violation of the Constitution or laws
of the United States or of any State or for the purpose of
committing any other injurious act."
[
Footnote 3/28]
See S.Rep. No. 1097,
supra, 401
U.S. 745fn3/26|>n. 26, at 175 (remarks of Sen. Hart); 114
Cong.Rec. 11598-11599, 14470-14472.
[
Footnote 3/29]
S.Rep. No. 1097,
supra, 401
U.S. 745fn3/26|>n. 26, at 93-94.
[
Footnote 3/30]
Indeed, the plain thrust of Title III appears to be to
accommodate the holdings of
Berger and
Katz, and
provides considerable reassurance to me in adopting the views
expressed herein which would doubtless, without more, cast a cloud
upon the constitutionality of § 2511. Since the Title III question
has been neither briefed nor argued, as this case arose prior to
its enactment, I would expressly reserve judgment should it prove
upon further study that Congress had an affirmative intention to
restrict warrant requirements to nonconsensual surveillance. We
would then have to face the question, summarily dealt with in
another context in
Katzenbach v. Morgan, 384 U.
S. 641,
384 U. S. 651
n. 10 (1966), what deference should be given a congressional
determination that certain procedures not plainly violations of due
process, should be permitted.
See Greenawalt,
supra, 401
U.S. 745fn3/4|>n. 4, at 232 n. 207. Whether Congress may
place restrictions on bugging by local law enforcement not mandated
by the Fourteenth Amendment is also an unanswered question.
See Spritzer,
supra, 401
U.S. 745fn3/15|>n. 15, at 177 n. 46.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL, dissenting.
I am convinced that the correct view of the Fourth Amendment in
the area of electronic surveillance is one that brings the
safeguards of the warrant requirement to bear on the investigatory
activity involved in this case. In this regard, I agree with the
dissents of MR. JUSTICE
Page 401 U. S. 796
DOUGLAS and MR. JUSTICE HARLAN. In short, I believe that
On
Lee v. United States,
343 U. S. 747
(1952), cannot be considered viable in light of the constitutional
principles articulated in Katz
v. United States,
389 U. S. 347
(1967), and other cases. And for reasons expressed by Mr. Justice
Fortas in dissent in
Desist v. United States, 394 U.
S. 244,
394 U. S. 269
(1969), I do not think we should feel constrained to employ a
discarded theory of the Fourth Amendment in evaluating the
governmental intrusions challenged here.