In the en banc majority opinion, the name “Kerr” appeared 13 times. That’s why. The underlying dispute harkens back to the Magistrates’ Revolt, where some mags refused to sign off on warrants for computers because the government neglected to mention what they planned to do about the problem of all that evidence seized for which no probable cause existed, that failed to meet the particularity requirement.
Volokh Conspirator and computer crime scholar extraordinaire, Orin Kerr, argued that it fell under the most beloved of legal theories, “no harm, no foul.” (Yes, I’m being just a wee bit sarcastic here, Orin. Cut me a break, will ya?) His point was that there was no provision for the mags to look beyond whether probable cause existed, and whatever collateral problems arose from the excessive seizure could be remedied post hoc, when evidence came before the court after the search and seizure were done.
As an example of how this should, and actually does, work, he noted Judge Denny Chin’s opinion for the majority of the panel in United States v. Ganias.
The Second Circuit has handed down a very important new Fourth Amendment case, United States v. Ganias. In an opinion by Judge Chin, the court held that the government violates the Fourth Amendment when it indefinitely retains computer files that were seized pursuant to a search warrant but are not responsive to the warrant.
