Armendariz v. City of Colorado Springs
This text of Armendariz v. City of Colorado Springs (Armendariz v. City of Colorado Springs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 1 FILED United States Court of Appeals PUBLISH Tenth Circuit
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS February 24, 2026
Christopher M. Wolpert FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT Clerk of Court _________________________________
JACQUELINE ARMENDARIZ; CHINOOK CENTER,
Plaintiffs - Appellants,
v. No. 24-1201
CITY OF COLORADO SPRINGS; DANIEL SUMMEY, in his individual capacity; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; B.K. STECKLER, in his individual capacity; JASON S. OTERO, in his individual capacity; ROY A. DITZLER, in his individual capacity; FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION,
Defendants - Appellees.
----------------------------------------
CENTER FOR DEMOCRACY & TECHNOLOGY; ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION; ELECTRONIC PRIVACY INFORMATION CENTER; KNIGHT FIRST AMENDMENT INSTITUTE,
Amici Curiae. _________________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Colorado (D.C. No. 1:23-CV-01951-SKC-MDB) _________________________________ Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 2
Theresa Wardon Benz of Davis Graham & Stubbs LLP, Denver, Colorado (Jacqueline V. Roeder and Kylie L. Ngu, of Davis Graham & Stubbs LLP, Denver, Colorado, Timothy R. Macdonald, Sara R. Neel, Anna I. Kurtz, Mark Silverstein, and Laura Moraff, of American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Colorado, Denver, Colorado, with her on the briefs), for Plaintiffs- Appellants.
Marissa R. Miller, Assistant United States Attorney (Matthew T. Kirsch, Acting United States Attorney, with her on the brief), Denver, Colorado, for Defendants-Appellees.
Anne H. Turner, Assistant City Attorney, Colorado Springs, Colorado, for Defendants-Appellees.
Samir Jain of Center of Democracy & Technology, Washington, DC, and Jennifer Lynch, Saira Hussain, and Brendan Gilligan of Electronic Frontier Foundation, San Francisco, California, filed an amicus brief on behalf of Electronic Frontier Foundation, Center for Democracy & Technology, Electronic Privacy Information Center, and Knight First Amendment Institute, in support of Plaintiffs-Appellants. _________________________________
Before BACHARACH, PHILLIPS, and FEDERICO, Circuit Judges. _________________________________
PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge. _________________________________
In July 2021, about fifty people participated in a housing-rights march in
Colorado Springs. Afterward, the Colorado Springs Police Department began to
investigate the conduct of some protesters at the march. CSPD obtained three
search warrants: two targeting Jacqueline Armendariz, who dropped or pushed
her bike in front of a running police officer during the march; and another
targeting the Chinook Center, a nonprofit that helped organize the event.
The first warrant against Armendariz allowed officers to search for and
seize her electronic devices. The second warrant went a step further, allowing
2 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 3
officers to search for and seize a variety of data stored on those devices. The
third warrant, targeting the Chinook Center, allowed officers to obtain data
from the Chinook Center’s Facebook profile, including all Facebook posts,
chats, and events from a seven-day period.
Armendariz and the Chinook Center sued the City and several officers—
Armendariz sued Detective Daniel Summey and Sergeant Roy Ditzler, and the
Chinook Center sued Detective B.K. Steckler and Sergeant Jason Otero—under
42 U.S.C. § 1983, arguing that the warrants were overbroad in violation of the
Fourth Amendment’s particularity requirement. Armendariz also sued the FBI
for retaining electronic data, seized by CSPD, in violation of the Fourth
Amendment.
The Chinook Center brought related state-law claims against the City,
Detective Steckler, and Sergeant Otero. Likewise, Armendariz brought state-
law claims against Detective Summey and Sergeant Ditzler, though the United
States later substituted itself for Detective Summey. And the Chinook Center
sued the City, Detective Steckler, and Sergeant Otero for violating the Stored
Communications Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2701–13. After four motions to dismiss, the
district court dismissed the entire complaint for failure to state a claim.
Armendariz and the Chinook Center timely appealed.
Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm the district
court’s ruling that qualified immunity protects the officers from liability for the
warrant to seize Armendariz’s electronic devices. But because Armendariz and
3 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 4
the Chinook Center plausibly alleged that the other two warrants were
overbroad in violation of their clearly established right to be free from
unreasonable searches and seizures, we reverse the grant of qualified immunity
to the officers involved with those warrants. We also reverse the dismissal of
Armendariz’s and the Chinook Center’s Fourth Amendment claims against the
City.
As for Armendariz’s Fourth Amendment claim against the FBI, she
waived any challenge to the district court’s ruling by failing to address it
properly on appeal. So we affirm the district court’s dismissal of that claim.
For the same reason, we also affirm the dismissal of Armendariz’s state-law
claim against the United States. Finally, we reverse the dismissal of
Armendariz’s state-law claim against Sergeant Ditzler; the Chinook Center’s
state-law claims against the City, Detective Steckler, and Sergeant Otero; and
the Chinook Center’s Stored Communications Act claim.
BACKGROUND
I. Factual Background
When reviewing a decision on a motion to dismiss, we accept the
complaint’s well-pleaded allegations as true and consider them “in the light
most favorable to the nonmoving party.” Johnson v. Smith, 104 F.4th 153, 167
(10th Cir. 2024) (citation omitted). We may also consider “documents referred
to in the complaint if the documents are central to the plaintiff’s claim and the
parties do not dispute the documents’ authenticity.” Gee v. Pacheco, 627 F.3d
4 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 5
1178, 1186 (10th Cir. 2010) (citation omitted). With that in mind, we recount
the facts as alleged in the first amended complaint and contained in the search-
warrant documents attached to the motions to dismiss.
A. Tensions Between CSPD and Local Activists
The CSPD has a fraught relationship with activists in Colorado Springs.
Tensions rose in the summer of 2020, when racial-justice protests erupted
throughout the country in response to the police killing of George Floyd. This
cause felt close to home; just one year earlier, a CSPD officer shot and killed
De’Von Bailey, a nineteen-year-old Black man. In response, Jon Christiansen,
Shaun Walls, and other activists founded the Chinook Center, a community hub
for activists and organizations to connect and collaborate on social-justice
projects.
In August 2020—on the anniversary of Bailey’s death—local activists
organized a protest at the home of the CSPD officer who shot Bailey. Over 100
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Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 1 FILED United States Court of Appeals PUBLISH Tenth Circuit
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS February 24, 2026
Christopher M. Wolpert FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT Clerk of Court _________________________________
JACQUELINE ARMENDARIZ; CHINOOK CENTER,
Plaintiffs - Appellants,
v. No. 24-1201
CITY OF COLORADO SPRINGS; DANIEL SUMMEY, in his individual capacity; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; B.K. STECKLER, in his individual capacity; JASON S. OTERO, in his individual capacity; ROY A. DITZLER, in his individual capacity; FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION,
Defendants - Appellees.
----------------------------------------
CENTER FOR DEMOCRACY & TECHNOLOGY; ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION; ELECTRONIC PRIVACY INFORMATION CENTER; KNIGHT FIRST AMENDMENT INSTITUTE,
Amici Curiae. _________________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Colorado (D.C. No. 1:23-CV-01951-SKC-MDB) _________________________________ Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 2
Theresa Wardon Benz of Davis Graham & Stubbs LLP, Denver, Colorado (Jacqueline V. Roeder and Kylie L. Ngu, of Davis Graham & Stubbs LLP, Denver, Colorado, Timothy R. Macdonald, Sara R. Neel, Anna I. Kurtz, Mark Silverstein, and Laura Moraff, of American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Colorado, Denver, Colorado, with her on the briefs), for Plaintiffs- Appellants.
Marissa R. Miller, Assistant United States Attorney (Matthew T. Kirsch, Acting United States Attorney, with her on the brief), Denver, Colorado, for Defendants-Appellees.
Anne H. Turner, Assistant City Attorney, Colorado Springs, Colorado, for Defendants-Appellees.
Samir Jain of Center of Democracy & Technology, Washington, DC, and Jennifer Lynch, Saira Hussain, and Brendan Gilligan of Electronic Frontier Foundation, San Francisco, California, filed an amicus brief on behalf of Electronic Frontier Foundation, Center for Democracy & Technology, Electronic Privacy Information Center, and Knight First Amendment Institute, in support of Plaintiffs-Appellants. _________________________________
Before BACHARACH, PHILLIPS, and FEDERICO, Circuit Judges. _________________________________
PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge. _________________________________
In July 2021, about fifty people participated in a housing-rights march in
Colorado Springs. Afterward, the Colorado Springs Police Department began to
investigate the conduct of some protesters at the march. CSPD obtained three
search warrants: two targeting Jacqueline Armendariz, who dropped or pushed
her bike in front of a running police officer during the march; and another
targeting the Chinook Center, a nonprofit that helped organize the event.
The first warrant against Armendariz allowed officers to search for and
seize her electronic devices. The second warrant went a step further, allowing
2 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 3
officers to search for and seize a variety of data stored on those devices. The
third warrant, targeting the Chinook Center, allowed officers to obtain data
from the Chinook Center’s Facebook profile, including all Facebook posts,
chats, and events from a seven-day period.
Armendariz and the Chinook Center sued the City and several officers—
Armendariz sued Detective Daniel Summey and Sergeant Roy Ditzler, and the
Chinook Center sued Detective B.K. Steckler and Sergeant Jason Otero—under
42 U.S.C. § 1983, arguing that the warrants were overbroad in violation of the
Fourth Amendment’s particularity requirement. Armendariz also sued the FBI
for retaining electronic data, seized by CSPD, in violation of the Fourth
Amendment.
The Chinook Center brought related state-law claims against the City,
Detective Steckler, and Sergeant Otero. Likewise, Armendariz brought state-
law claims against Detective Summey and Sergeant Ditzler, though the United
States later substituted itself for Detective Summey. And the Chinook Center
sued the City, Detective Steckler, and Sergeant Otero for violating the Stored
Communications Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2701–13. After four motions to dismiss, the
district court dismissed the entire complaint for failure to state a claim.
Armendariz and the Chinook Center timely appealed.
Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm the district
court’s ruling that qualified immunity protects the officers from liability for the
warrant to seize Armendariz’s electronic devices. But because Armendariz and
3 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 4
the Chinook Center plausibly alleged that the other two warrants were
overbroad in violation of their clearly established right to be free from
unreasonable searches and seizures, we reverse the grant of qualified immunity
to the officers involved with those warrants. We also reverse the dismissal of
Armendariz’s and the Chinook Center’s Fourth Amendment claims against the
City.
As for Armendariz’s Fourth Amendment claim against the FBI, she
waived any challenge to the district court’s ruling by failing to address it
properly on appeal. So we affirm the district court’s dismissal of that claim.
For the same reason, we also affirm the dismissal of Armendariz’s state-law
claim against the United States. Finally, we reverse the dismissal of
Armendariz’s state-law claim against Sergeant Ditzler; the Chinook Center’s
state-law claims against the City, Detective Steckler, and Sergeant Otero; and
the Chinook Center’s Stored Communications Act claim.
BACKGROUND
I. Factual Background
When reviewing a decision on a motion to dismiss, we accept the
complaint’s well-pleaded allegations as true and consider them “in the light
most favorable to the nonmoving party.” Johnson v. Smith, 104 F.4th 153, 167
(10th Cir. 2024) (citation omitted). We may also consider “documents referred
to in the complaint if the documents are central to the plaintiff’s claim and the
parties do not dispute the documents’ authenticity.” Gee v. Pacheco, 627 F.3d
4 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 5
1178, 1186 (10th Cir. 2010) (citation omitted). With that in mind, we recount
the facts as alleged in the first amended complaint and contained in the search-
warrant documents attached to the motions to dismiss.
A. Tensions Between CSPD and Local Activists
The CSPD has a fraught relationship with activists in Colorado Springs.
Tensions rose in the summer of 2020, when racial-justice protests erupted
throughout the country in response to the police killing of George Floyd. This
cause felt close to home; just one year earlier, a CSPD officer shot and killed
De’Von Bailey, a nineteen-year-old Black man. In response, Jon Christiansen,
Shaun Walls, and other activists founded the Chinook Center, a community hub
for activists and organizations to connect and collaborate on social-justice
projects.
In August 2020—on the anniversary of Bailey’s death—local activists
organized a protest at the home of the CSPD officer who shot Bailey. Over 100
people showed up, and some of them carried weapons. Plaintiffs allege that this
protest outraged CSPD officers, sparking a “campaign” to surveil and retaliate
against activists and social-justice organizations in Colorado Springs.
In fact, the day after the protest at the CSPD officer’s home, an
undercover CSPD officer contacted the Chinook Center’s leaders. Using a fake
name, the officer posed as an activist wanting to support the Chinook Center’s
work. From there, the officer regularly communicated with the Chinook
Center’s leaders and volunteered with related nonprofits. The officer gained
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access to various organizations’ membership records, email accounts, and cell
phones. CSPD then used this information to create reports on activists and
organizations connected to the Chinook Center. Plaintiffs allege that CSPD
prepared these reports as part of a program called Social Media Exploitation,
through which the FBI and local police gathered information from social media
to monitor and target activists.
B. The Housing March and Arrests
In 2021, the Chinook Center and other local activists sought to raise
public awareness of the lack of affordable housing in Colorado Springs. They
organized a housing march for July 31, 2021, to coincide with the end of the
federal eviction moratorium. But Colorado Springs had planned another event
for that day: a parade to celebrate its 150th anniversary. These dueling events
generated friction between activists and CSPD officers.
Plaintiffs allege that CSPD heard about the housing march and decided to
use it as an opportunity to arrest activists. CSPD officers expressed “general
animus” toward the Chinook Center and related activists:
• A CSPD commander described Walls and the Chinook Center as “instrumental” to the protest outside the home of the officer who killed Bailey. App. vol. I at 24. He called that protest a “riot,” even though the Chinook Center and its leaders were never charged with any crimes connected to the protest. Id.
• An officer observing the march asked “why the fuck” the media cared about it. Id. at 25. Another officer responded that CSPD “fucked up somebody from the media,” so “they care.” Id.
6 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 7
• Concerned about the march disrupting the parade, an officer quipped that CSPD should “get on that bullhorn” and tell parade attendees to “stone ‘em all to death” if they wanted “these motherfuckers to quit interrupting” the parade. Id. Another officer responded, “Call us when we need to collect the bodies.” Id.
• While reviewing photos of key activists, an officer stated, “Boot to the face. It’s going to happen.” Id. at 26. The officer later remarked, “Should we EPSO SWAT the shit outta these dudes and just throw flash-bangs at everyone?” Id. Another officer responded that they should use Stinger grenades, a less-lethal grenade often used at protests.
Against this backdrop, activists met at a local park for the housing march
as scheduled. Nearby, CSPD officers waited in their police vehicles for the
march to begin. A lieutenant told the officers that—if the protesters marched in
the street—the officers should “mak[e] contact and effect[] arrest.” Id. at 26.
Protesters soon left the park and started marching. At times, some of
them walked in the street. When officers asked the protesters to move out of the
street, the protesters complied. Even so, a CSPD commander ordered officers to
arrest those protesters for obstructing traffic.
That’s when officers tackled and arrested Walls, a leader at the Chinook
Center. He was at the front of the march carrying a white flag with the Chinook
Center’s logo. Officers also arrested Christiansen, another Chinook Center
leader. About fifty other people walked in the street, but the officers focused
specifically on the Chinook Center’s leaders.
In the meantime, Jacqueline Armendariz was walking her bike in the bike
lane near the front of the march. She wore a helmet, sunglasses, and a t-shirt
reading, “Housing is a human right.” Id. at 27. After watching the officers
7 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 8
tackle Walls, Armendariz spotted another officer running in her direction
toward the Walls fracas. At that moment, she says, she dropped her bicycle,
which landed between her and the officer. 1 The officer dodged the bicycle and
continued running past her. Officers did not arrest Armendariz at the march, but
CSPD later reviewed video footage and asserted that she had attempted to
commit second-degree assault on a police officer, a felony under Colorado law.
See Colo. Rev. Stat. §§ 18-2-101, 18-3-203.
C. The Search Warrants
After the housing march, CSPD sought three warrants: (1) a warrant to
search for and seize items from Armendariz’s apartment, including her
electronic devices; (2) a warrant to search for and seize data from those
devices; and (3) a warrant directed at Facebook to search for and seize certain
data from the Chinook Center’s Facebook page. Because these warrants lie at
the heart of this appeal, we describe each warrant and attached affidavit in
detail.
1. First Armendariz Warrant
CSPD tasked Detective Summey with investigating the bicycle incident.
After identifying Armendariz as the individual involved, Detective Summey
drafted a search warrant for Armendariz’s apartment, along with a supporting
1 As discussed below, the search-warrant affidavits describe the bicycle incident differently from the allegations in the complaint.
8 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 9
affidavit. The warrant incorporated an attachment listing the items CSPD would
search for. Mostly, the list contained items Armendariz wore during the
housing march, such as her bike helmet, t-shirt, and shoes. But the affidavit
also requested permission to search for and seize certain electronic devices:
Digital media storage devices, to include phones, computers, tablets, thumb drives, and external hard drives found to be associated with Jacqueline Armendariz.
App. vol. I at 86. The warrant stated that Detective Summey had probable cause
to believe these items were in Armendariz’s apartment and “[w]ould be
material evidence in a subsequent criminal prosecution.” Id. at 70.
The affidavit also described the bicycle incident, the housing march,
Armendariz’s background, and Detective Summey’s training and experience.
We summarize the affidavit’s discussion of each topic.
(1) Bicycle Incident: According to Detective Summey, video footage
showed Armendariz riding her bicycle at the march. As an officer ran toward
Walls, Armendariz got off her bike and threw it at the officer “with the clear
intent to strike him with it.” Id. at 72. The bike “nearly struck” the officer, who
“had to slow his sprint” to avoid the bike. Id.
The affidavit thus concluded that Armendariz likely committed attempted
second-degree assault, a class-five felony under Colorado law. The affidavit
also included photos of the incident from body-worn camera and drone footage.
(2) Housing March: According to the affidavit, protesters at the march
“immediately and intentionally walked in the roadway and obstructed traffic.”
9 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 10
Id. As a result, officers arrested several protesters affiliated with the Chinook
Center. The affidavit noted that the protesters had worn red shirts stating,
“Housing is a Human Right,” and had carried red flags. According to the
affidavit, a red flag “is a radical political symbol,” “designates this
march . . . as revolutionary and radical in nature,” and is “a symbol of
socialism and communism.” Id. The affidavit also stated that the march “was
declared unlawful.” Id.
(3) Armendariz’s Background: The affidavit later detailed information
about Armendariz that Detective Summey gathered from social media.
Armendariz’s Facebook page contained photos of her wearing the same helmet
and shoes that she wore at the housing march. The affidavit then discussed
Armendariz’s public Twitter page, which referenced “yt supremacy.” Id. at 82.
Detective Summey described Armendariz’s use of that term as “an attempt to
disparage” and “show her disdain for white people.” Id. at 83. He cited a
description of “yt” from dictionary.com, which stated that “yt” derived “from
the slang term whitey” and was “used by black Americans to disparage white
people, especially implying oppression and racial discrimination.” Id. at 82. He
noted that Armendariz had attempted to assault a white officer.
(4) Training and Experience: Finally, the affidavit explained that since
2018 Detective Summey has served as a subject-matter expert on bias-
motivated crimes and has investigated “illegal protest activity,” including by
the Chinook Center and its members. Id. at 71. The affidavit stated that, from
10 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 11
his training and experience, “people who engage in illegal protest activity
frequently carry their phones with them to take photos of their activity and
message others who are also participating in illegal protest activity.” Id. at 85.
It also stated that “phones regularly track the location of their user and can
show where a person is at a given date and time.” Id. And it explained that
people “regularly attach their phones to their computers, and use their
computers to back up their phones,” and that people “store digital data on
numerous devices, to include tablets, thumb drives, and external hard drives.”
Id.
Sergeant Ditzler internally approved this search warrant and affidavit,
and a state judge issued the warrant. About two weeks after the march, CSPD
officers searched Armendariz’s apartment. They seized the items identified in
the warrant, including three cell phones, two computers, and an external hard
drive. 2
2. Second Armendariz Warrant
Two days after the apartment search, Detective Summey drafted a second
warrant to search the electronic devices seized from Armendariz. 3 The warrant
listed the digital data that the officers intended to search for and seize:
• Photos, videos, messages (Whether they be text messages or any application on the phone or computer capable of sending
CSPD officers also obtained an arrest warrant for Armendariz and 2
arrested her during the search. 3 The search warrant specified each device and serial number. 11 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 12
messages)[,] emails, and location data, for the time period of 6/5/2021 through 8/7/2021 that are determined to be relevant to this investigation. This time period would allow for any planning leading up to the crime, the period when the crime took place, and the subsequent taking of credit for committing a violent act against a police officer.
• key word search of the devices for the following words:
Police, officer, cop, pig, bike, bicycle, attack, assault, 150 th , celebration, protest, housing, human, right, yt, Chinook, Center, Jon, Jonathan, Sam, Samantha, Christiansen, Crustyansen, Chrischeeansen, Shaun, [and] Walls, as these terms would be relevant to the investigation regardless of the time period in which they occurred.
App. vol. I at 115. 4 Detective Summey attested that the results of the keyword
search “would be material evidence in the subsequent prosecution of
Armendariz for attempting to assault” the officer at the housing march. Id. at
114.
The second search warrant’s affidavit mirrored the first’s, but with some
important additions. For one thing, the second affidavit noted that Detective
Summey spoke with Armendariz’s supervisor, who confirmed that Armendariz
attended the protest in her personal capacity. Next, the affidavit discussed
Walls—who Detective Summey believed had “a close relationship” with
Armendariz—and Walls’s alarming Facebook posts. For instance, the affidavit
included Facebook posts from Walls that supported violence against police
We note that Detective Summey’s affidavit omitted two search terms— 4
Crustyansen and Chrischeeansen—that were included in Attachment B of the warrant, which listed the items for search and seizure. 12 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 13
officers and their families, with statements such as: “The revolution has come,
off the pigs, time to pick up the guns,” and “Kill three of [the cops’] wives or
kids anywhere in the nation and watch the shit stop. Magically.” Id. at 110–11.
The affidavit also noted that Armendariz appeared on an episode of Walls’s
podcast focused on the August 2020 protest outside the CSPD officer’s home.
Finally, the affidavit connected Armendariz’s activism to her electronic
devices. It described the Chinook Center as “an anarchist or anti-government
organization,” and it stated that “people who commit illegal activity in
furtherance of the ideology or goals of anarchist or anti-government groups”
often communicate electronically before or during “group activities leading up
to the illegal activity.” Id. at 106.
Once again, Sergeant Ditzler internally approved this search warrant and
affidavit, and a state judge issued the warrant. Afterward, officers took
Armendariz’s devices to an FBI-run forensics lab. Armendariz alleges that
CSPD and the FBI still retain the data they copied from her devices.
3. Facebook Warrant
Days after the housing march, Detective Steckler applied for a warrant
directed at the Chinook Center’s Facebook page. The warrant authorized the
search and seizure of “[a]ll subscriber information tied to” the Chinook
Center’s “Facebook profile,” including “names, phone numbers, and
addresses.” Id. at 120. It also allowed the search and seizure of certain records
from a seven-day period, including the days before and after the march:
13 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 14
(1) “All Facebook posts” from the Chinook Center’s Facebook profile, (2) “All
Facebook Messenger chats tied to” the profile, and (3) “All Facebook Events”
from the profile. Id. at 28, 120.
Detective Steckler provided a supporting affidavit. Summarized below,
this affidavit recounted the housing march and its aftermath.
(1) Housing March: During the march, about sixty protesters “illegally
march[ed] northbound up” the street and “block[ed] vehicle traffic in the
process.” Id. at 118. Despite “numerous verbal warnings” from the police
lieutenant that their actions were illegal, the protesters kept blocking the road.
Id. Because Walls led the group, and “extended his middle finger toward the
police line,” the lieutenant ordered his arrest. Id. Walls “actively resist[ed] the
officers[’] attempts to control him by remaining on his feet and attempting to
pull away from officers.” Id. Officers eventually arrested him.
(2) March Aftermath: After the march, CSPD received an anonymous tip
about a Facebook post. The post—made under Walls’s name and dated the night
of the housing march—read:
Now it’s fun . . . it was work before[.] I could whoop all them pigs and they felt it too. I laid down so we could keep fighting with purpose. You can watch or help idgaf. I’m going to #Fuck12.
Id. at 118–19.
A few days later, CSPD found two other Facebook profiles with
information about the march. One of those profiles was for the Chinook Center.
Detective Steckler attested that, in his experience, “people involved in illegal
14 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 15
demonstrations use social media to organize planned events.” Id. at 119. So he
believed that information from the Facebook profile would “be material
evidence in this case.” Id.
Sergeant Otero reviewed and internally approved Detective Steckler’s
warrant application. The affidavit stated that CSPD requested the warrant under
a provision of the Stored Communications Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2703(c). A state
judge signed the warrant, which CSPD then served on Facebook. Facebook
complied without any notice to the Chinook Center.
D. CSPD’s Policies and Practices
Finally, Plaintiffs allege that the City targeted Armendariz and the
Chinook Center as part of a custom, policy, and practice. According to
Plaintiffs, CSPD uses minor offenses committed at protests to expansively
search individuals’ digital devices and social-media accounts. These warrants
allegedly target information protected under the First Amendment, rather than
evidence of suspected criminal activity. Plaintiffs allege that CSPD’s affidavits
include conclusory statements about how protesters “send and receive photos,
messages, and other information through electronic communications.” And
Plaintiffs complain that the officers rely solely on their “experience” and
“training” for these broad assertions. They cite various search warrants directed
at other activists and organizations that allegedly amount to fishing expeditions
unrelated to any criminal activity.
15 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 16
II. Procedural Background
Soon after the housing march, Armendariz was charged for the bike
incident and later pleaded guilty to obstructing a peace officer. She received a
deferred judgment and served six months of unsupervised probation.
In August 2023, Armendariz and the Chinook Center sued the City, the
CSPD officers responsible for their respective search warrants, and the FBI.
The first amended complaint raises six claims for relief, which we categorize
by type:
Claim Plaintiff Defendants (I) Fourth Amendment Claims First Claim: Unlawful Search and Seizure, in Armendariz Summey, violation of the First and Fourth Ditzler, and Amendments, 42 U.S.C. § 1983 the City Second Claim: Unlawful Search and Seizure, The Chinook Steckler, in violation of the First and Fourth Center Otero, and the Amendments, 42 U.S.C. § 1983 City Sixth Claim: Injunctive Relief under the First Armendariz FBI and Fourth Amendments, 5 U.S.C. § 702 (II) Statutory and State-Law Claims Third Claim: Unlawful Search, in violation of The Chinook Steckler, the Stored Communications Act, 18 U.S.C. Center Otero, and the § 2703(a)–(b), (d) City Fourth Claim: Deprivation of Rights, in Armendariz United States 5 violation of the Colorado constitution, Colo. and Ditzler Const. art. II, §§ 7, 10, 24; Colo. Rev. Stat. § 13-21-131 Fifth Claim: Deprivation of Rights, in The Chinook Steckler and violation of the Colorado constitution, Colo. Center Otero Const. art. II, §§ 7, 10, 24; Colo. Rev. Stat. § 13-21-131
5 The United States moved under 28 U.S.C. § 2679(d)(1) to substitute itself for Detective Summey on the fourth claim. The magistrate judge granted the request.
16 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 17
Defendants filed four motions to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
12(b)(6). 6 Combined, these motions attacked every claim in the complaint.
The district court granted the motions, dismissed the complaint, and
entered judgment. Armendariz v. City of Colo. Springs, No. 23-CV-01951, 2024
WL 2139316, at *1 (D. Colo. Apr. 10, 2024). Starting with the constitutional
claims, the district court ruled that Plaintiffs failed to allege a plausible Fourth
Amendment violation and that—even assuming a violation occurred—they
never identified any clearly established law. 7 Id. at *4–12. So the district court
held that the officers were entitled to qualified immunity for the search
warrants and dismissed the Fourth Amendment claims against them. Id. By
extension, the district court dismissed those claims against the City too. Id. at
*13.
6 The case involves four motions to dismiss: (1) Summey, the FBI, and the United States moved to dismiss the first, fourth, and sixth claims; (2) Ditzler moved to dismiss the first and fourth claims and to join the first motion; (3) Steckler and Otero moved to dismiss the second, third, and fifth claims; and (4) the City moved to dismiss the first, second, and third claims. The district court later requested and considered supplemental briefing on the officers’ qualified immunity. 7 For the first two claims, the district court also concluded that Plaintiffs failed to allege a plausible First Amendment violation. Armendariz, 2024 WL 2139316, at *12–13. On appeal, Plaintiffs clarify that they do not assert any freestanding First Amendment claims. Oral Arg. at 0:17:35–0:17:45. Rather, Plaintiffs invoke the First Amendment to reinforce their Fourth Amendment claims, arguing that “scrupulous exactitude” applies to search warrants implicating the First Amendment. Op. Br. at 29 (quoting Stanford v. Texas, 379 U.S. 476, 485 (1965)). 17 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 18
The district court then reviewed Armendariz’s claim for injunctive relief
against the FBI. Id. at *14–16. For this claim, Armendariz asserted that the
FBI’s retention of her digital data amounted to a Fourth Amendment violation
and requested that the FBI return or destroy her data. Id. at *14. The district
court disagreed, concluding that Armendariz failed to allege a plausible Fourth
Amendment violation. Id. at *15. Instead, the district court determined that
Armendariz should have moved for the FBI to return her property under Federal
Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(g). Id.
The district court also dismissed the remaining claims. For the Chinook
Center’s Stored Communications Act claim, the court held that the Act’s
requirements were no more demanding than the Fourth Amendment’s and thus
failed for the same reasons. Id. at *14. The court also dismissed Armendariz’s
state-law claim against the United States because she failed to plead that she
had exhausted the administrative process under the Federal Tort Claims Act. Id.
at *16–17. Finally, after dismissing all the federal claims, the court found no
compelling reason to exercise jurisdiction over the other state-law claims. Id. at
*17.
Plaintiffs timely appealed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo a district court’s decision to grant a motion to dismiss
for failure to state a claim. Stark v. Reliance Standard Life Ins., 142 F.4th
1252, 1256 (10th Cir. 2025). We accept all well-pleaded allegations as true and
18 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 19
view them in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs. Truman v. Orem City, 1
F.4th 1227, 1235 (10th Cir. 2021).
DISCUSSION
Plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment claims take center stage. So we start with
the unlawful-search-and-seizure claims before turning to Armendariz’s
injunctive-relief claim and Plaintiffs’ state-law and statutory claims.
I. Fourth Amendment Unlawful-Search-and-Seizure Claims (First and Second Claims)
To start, Plaintiffs appeal the district court’s dismissal of their Fourth
Amendment claims against the City and the officers involved in the search
warrants. For each of the three warrants, the court determined that arguable
probable cause supported the search and that the warrant described the search
with sufficient particularity. Armendariz, 2024 WL 2139316, at *6–11. As a
result, the court held that Plaintiffs failed to allege a plausible Fourth
Amendment violation or a violation of clearly established law. Id. at *9–11.
Thus, the district court concluded that (1) qualified immunity shielded the
officers from liability, and (2) the lack of any constitutional violation defeated
the municipal-liability claims against the City. Id. at *9–13.
On appeal, Plaintiffs argue that the district court erred in both its
qualified-immunity and municipal-liability rulings. We first review whether
qualified immunity protects the officers from liability for the Fourth
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Amendment claims, then assess whether Plaintiffs adequately alleged these
claims against the City.
A. Qualified Immunity
Qualified immunity shields officers from liability for violating a
constitutional right that wasn’t clearly established when the violation occurred.
Allstate Sweeping, LLC v. Black, 706 F.3d 1261, 1266 (10th Cir. 2013).
“Although qualified immunity defenses are typically resolved at the summary
judgment stage, district courts may grant motions to dismiss on the basis of
qualified immunity.” Thomas v. Kaven, 765 F.3d 1183, 1194 (10th Cir. 2014).
That said, defendants asserting qualified immunity through motions to dismiss
face “a more challenging standard of review than would apply on summary
judgment.” Id. (citation omitted).
To survive a qualified-immunity defense at this stage in the litigation,
“the plaintiff must [have] allege[d] facts sufficient to show (assuming they are
true) that” (1) the “defendant plausibly violated their constitutional rights,” and
(2) “those rights were clearly established at the time.” Brown v. City of Tulsa,
124 F.4th 1251, 1265 (10th Cir. 2025) (citation modified). “The plaintiff must
satisfy both prongs to overcome a qualified immunity defense . . . .” Est. of
Taylor v. Salt Lake City, 16 F.4th 744, 757–58 (10th Cir. 2021) (citation
omitted).
(1) Constitutional Violation: Plaintiffs argue that the complaint
plausibly alleged that the officers who crafted the three search warrants and
20 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 21
supporting affidavits violated the Fourth Amendment. In essence, Plaintiffs
argue that the search warrants lacked the particularity necessary to pass muster
under the Fourth Amendment.
The Fourth Amendment protects “against unreasonable searches and
seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. A search or seizure is reasonable only if the
warrant “particularly describ[es] the place to be searched, and the persons or
things to be seized.” Id. This particularity requirement prevents “a general
exploratory rummaging of a person’s belongings,” Mink v. Knox, 613 F.3d 995,
1010 (10th Cir. 2010), and “ensures that a search is confined in scope to
particularly described evidence relating to a specific crime for which there is
demonstrated probable cause,” Voss v. Bergsgaard, 774 F.2d 402, 404 (10th
Cir. 1985).
“A warrant is overly broad if it does not contain sufficiently
particularized language that creates a nexus between the suspected crime and
the items to be seized.” Mink, 613 F.3d at 1010. Without a proper nexus, a
warrant violates the Fourth Amendment by “authoriz[ing] the seizure of items
as to which there is no probable cause.” United States v. Cotto, 995 F.3d 786,
798 (10th Cir. 2021) (citation omitted). Whether a sufficient nexus exists
“necessarily depends upon the facts of each case.” United States v. Biglow, 562
F.3d 1272, 1279 (10th Cir. 2009).
(2) Clearly Established: Even if Plaintiffs alleged a plausible Fourth
Amendment violation, they still must demonstrate that “those rights were
21 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 22
clearly established at the time.” Brown, 124 F.4th at 1265 (citation omitted). In
the search-warrant context, we ask “whether there was arguable probable cause
for the challenged conduct.” Stonecipher v. Valles, 759 F.3d 1134, 1141 (10th
Cir. 2014) (citation modified). An officer has arguable probable cause for a
search warrant if his “conclusions rest on an objectively reasonable, even if
mistaken, belief that probable cause exists.” Id. And importantly, “a neutral
magistrate judge’s issuance of a warrant is the clearest indication that the
officers acted in an objectively reasonable manner or in objective good faith.”
Id. (citation modified). The issued warrant generally confers a “shield of
immunity” to the officers because “in the ordinary case, an officer cannot be
expected to question the magistrate’s probable-cause determination.”
Messerschmidt v. Millender, 565 U.S. 535, 547 (2012) (citation modified).
All that said, even when a neutral magistrate issues a warrant, an officer
may still violate clearly established law in four narrow circumstances: (1) “the
magistrate or judge in issuing a warrant was misled by information in an
affidavit that the affiant knew was false or would have known was false except
for his reckless disregard of the truth,” (2) “the issuing magistrate wholly
abandoned his judicial role,” (3) the warrant was “based on an affidavit so
lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence
entirely unreasonable,” or (4) the warrant was “so facially deficient—i.e., in
failing to particularize the place to be searched or the things to be seized—that
the executing officers [could not] reasonably presume it to be valid.” United
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States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 923 (1984) (citation modified); see
Messerschmidt, 565 U.S. at 547. In any of these circumstances, an officer
violates clearly established law by relying on the warrant. See Messerschmidt,
565 U.S. at 547; Stonecipher, 759 F.3d at 1141–42.
With this legal framework in mind, we address whether qualified
immunity protects the officers from liability for each search warrant.
1. First Armendariz Search Warrant
Armendariz argues that the complaint alleged plausible Fourth
Amendment claims against Detective Summey and Sergeant Otero in relation to
the first search warrant. This warrant allowed CSPD to search Armendariz’s
home and seize “[d]igital media storage devices, to include phones, computers,
tablets, thumb drives, and external hard drives found to be associated with
Jacqueline Armendariz.” App. vol. I at 86.
The district court found no Fourth Amendment violation, reasoning that
the warrant established probable cause for the search and seizure. Armendariz,
2024 WL 2139316, at *6. The court cited the affidavit’s description of the
alleged attempted assault, Armendariz’s active use of social media, a selfie of
Armendariz wearing the same bike gear that she wore during the housing
march, and her association with Walls. Id. Yet Armendariz asserts that the
warrant was overbroad because it did not explain why any of her digital devices
would contain evidence of the bicycle incident.
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This warrant allowed CSPD to search Armendariz’s home, a location at
the “very core” of the Fourth Amendment’s protections. Kyllo v. United States,
533 U.S. 27, 31 (2001) (quoting Silverman v. United States, 365 U.S. 505, 511
(1961)). Indeed, “physical entry of the home is the chief evil against which the
wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed.” United States v. Mora, 989
F.3d 794, 800 (10th Cir. 2021) (citations omitted).
To determine whether officers had probable cause, we ask whether “a
nexus . . . exist[ed] between suspected criminal activity and the place to be
searched.” Id. We consider factors such as “(1) the type of crime at issue,
(2) the extent of a suspect’s opportunity for concealment, (3) the nature of the
evidence sought, and (4) all reasonable inferences as to where a criminal would
likely keep such evidence.” Id. at 801. To search a house for electronic devices,
the warrant should contain facts supporting a reasonable belief (1) that the
individual possesses the devices, (2) that the devices are in the individual’s
residence, and (3) that the devices contain evidence of the suspected offense.
United States v. Griffith, 867 F.3d 1265, 1273 (D.C. Cir. 2017).
Reviewing the first search warrant and affidavit, we conclude that the
officers lacked even arguable probable cause to search for and seize
Armendariz’s electronic devices because there was no nexus established
between the bulk of the devices and the crime being investigated. In the
affidavit, Detective Summey attested to his belief that Armendariz committed
24 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 25
second-degree attempted assault, a class-five felony under Colorado law. 8 App.
vol. I at 85. Criminal attempt requires that a “person . . . act[] with the kind of
culpability otherwise required for commission of [the] offense.” Colo. Rev.
Stat. § 18-2-101(1). And to prove second-degree assault, the government must
show that the defendant acted intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly,
depending on the nature of the assault. Id. § 18-3-203.
The affidavit explained that during the housing march, Armendariz “got
off [her] bicycle and threw it at [the officer] with the clear intent to strike him
with it.” App. vol. I at 72. The affidavit then sought to connect the alleged
crime to Armendariz’s digital presence. Specifically, the affidavit included
information about her online activity from open-source social media:
• Information showing that Armendariz was “associated” with Walls on Facebook;
• A selfie dated July 3, 2021, posted on Armendariz’s Facebook profile, of Armendariz wearing a blue bike helmet;
8 The dissent concludes “[t]he probe focused on Ms. Armendariz’s possible hostility to law enforcement rather than what she had done.” Dissent at 8. We acknowledge that to prove this offense, the state would have to gather evidence of Armendariz’s mens rea at the time she dropped the bicycle, which is no different than all other crimes under investigation in Colorado. Gorman v. People, 19 P.3d 662, 665 (Colo. 2000), as modified (July 24, 2000), as corrected (May 11, 2001) (“Generally, in order to subject a person to criminal liability, there must be concurrence of the actus reus, an unlawful act, and the mens rea, a culpable mental state.” (citing People v. Torres, 848 P.2d 911, 914 (Colo. 1993))). However, the dissent’s framing of the issue and its reasoning supports Armendariz’s argument that the search warrants were overbroad because they used the criminal investigation as a pretext to inquire into her “hostility to law enforcement” rather than gather evidence of an attempted assault. 25 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 26
• A photo dated July 19, 2021, posted on Armendariz’s Facebook profile by an affiliate of the Chinook Center, of Armendariz wearing her blue bike helmet with gray Nike shoes;
• A second photo of Armendariz posted by the same nonprofit showing her in the same shoes and helmet with a bicycle;
• A podcast episode, dated July 28, 2021, during which Armendariz discussed the importance of affordable housing; and
• Active Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn profiles that suggested Armendariz was “very active politically.”
Id. at 78–84.
This information in the affidavit supports a reasonable belief that
Armendariz had an online presence on social media, a reasonable inference that
she possessed and used some electronic devices to take photos and participate
in social media and that she may have kept the devices in her home. The
affidavit also described Detective Summey’s training and experience, including
his knowledge about “people who engage in illegal protest activity,” their
phone usage, and their storage of digital data on multiple devices. Id. at 85.
Detective Summey’s training and experience thus attempted to connect
Armendariz’s devices to evidence of her conduct at the march and her intent
when she dropped or threw her bicycle. Finally, we note that a state judge
signed and issued the warrant that the officers relied on to seize the six devices.
Id. at 69, 85.
Under these circumstances, we cannot conclude that Detective Summey’s
affidavit established the required nexus between Armendariz’s suspected
26 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 27
criminal activity at the protest and the search of her home for various electronic
devices. “The Fourth Amendment allows a search for evidence when there is
probable cause to believe that the evidence sought will aid in a particular
apprehension or conviction.” Messerschmidt, 565 U.S. at 551 (citation
modified). But an officer could not reasonably believe that the information in
Armendariz’s devices, if any information existed and whatever those devices
may be, would further an investigation into the spontaneous attempted assault
that happened at a certain time and place away from her home.
For one, the affidavit supported that Armendariz was active on social
media, but it required an inference that she possessed the electronic devices
that were listed to be seized. Second, the affidavit relied solely on Detective
Summey’s “training and experience” about “people who engage in illegal
protest activity” to establish a nexus between the electronic devices and the
assault under investigation. This purported nexus is extremely flimsy and
speculative. As we said in Mora, “[a]llowing officers to search a home based
solely on an affiant’s experience and pure speculation would perpetuate that
evil (which the Fourth Amendment is directed against).” 989 F.3d at 800.
In Mora, we considered whether a search warrant established a sufficient
nexus between the suspected criminal activity and the defendant’s residence.
Id. at 800. Officers arrested the defendant for alien smuggling and found a gun
safe during a protective sweep of his home. Id. at 798. The officers then
obtained a warrant to search the house for evidence of alien smuggling and
27 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 28
possessing a firearm as a felon. Id. We determined that the protective sweep
violated the Fourth Amendment and thus reviewed whether the search
warrant—absent information about the gun safe—provided probable cause for
the search. Id. at 799–800. The government relied on conclusory statements in
the search-warrant affidavit that “alien smugglers often use electronic
communication devices, GPS devices, and electronic banking systems to
conduct operations and store records.” Id. at 801. We held that these statements
failed to provide probable cause because none were “specific to Defendant’s
crime or circumstances.” Id.
Like in Mora, the affidavit here did not contain facts connecting the
criminal activity under investigation to the electronic devices. The affidavit
included information about Armendariz’s active online presence; her public
postings about her social-justice activism; photos of her at an event posted by a
nonprofit affiliated with the Chinook Center; and her Facebook connection to
Walls. At most, the officers had reason to believe by inference that Armendariz
had a cell phone on her possession at the protest (which is reasonable given the
ubiquity of cellphones and the “selfies” she posted online), so it also may
contain evidence of her presence at the housing march and possibly her mens
rea during the bicycle incident.
But the warrant went well beyond seizing the phone. It allowed officers
to seize a long list of electronic devices on the theory that Detective Summey
“is also aware that people regularly attach their phones to their computers, and
28 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 29
use their computers to back up their phones, or transfer photos from their
phones to save space on their phones. Your Affiant knows that people store
digital data on numerous devices, to include tablets, thumb drives, and external
hard drives.” App. vol. I at 85. This justification is entirely speculative, relying
on purported knowledge—entirely without foundation—of how “people,” in
general, act. Further, it relies on an antiquated view of how people use their
cell phones with other electronic devices. Regardless, it is insufficient to
establish the nexus between all the electronic devices and the crime under
investigation, as the law demands.
Similarly in Griffith, officers investigated the defendant for a year-old
gang-related homicide. 867 F.3d at 1268. Officers obtained a warrant to search
his apartment and seize any cell phones and electronic devices found there. Id.
at 1269–70. The D.C. Circuit concluded that the warrant was overbroad. To
begin, the affidavit never explained that the defendant likely owned a cell
phone. Id. at 1272–73. Nor did it explain whether a cell phone “would be
located in the home and would contain incriminating evidence about [the]
suspected offense.” Id. at 1273. Plus, the warrant permitted the seizure of any
electronic device regardless of who owned it. Id. at 1276. The D.C. Circuit
highlighted how these electronic devices were lawful items, not contraband,
and cautioned against “a blanket authorization” to seize “innocuous objects.”
Id. (citation modified).
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Though the warrant here did identify Armendariz as a social media user,
it contained the same infirmities as the Griffith affidavit and was in essence “a
blanket authorization” to seize all electronic devices without any showing they
may contain evidence of the crime under investigation. As the Griffith court
noted, “there is no commonsense reason simply to presume that individuals
own a computer or a tablet. Those sorts of devices do not approach cell phones
in their ubiquity[.]” Id. at 1272.
The dissent’s reasoning rests heavily upon a factual predicate that
Armendariz possessed a cellphone, which it then uses as the gateway to all the
other electronic devices listed in the warrant. But this conclusion assumes that
the warrant is severable and that we could or should break it apart based upon
the items listed in the warrant to be searched for and seized. The parties did not
argue or discuss severability of the warrant, so the dissent’s assumption is
molded from its own clay. Moreover, as best we can tell, this court has never
held the severability doctrine applies in a civil case.
In Cassady v. Goering, we declined to decide whether the doctrine
applied in a civil case because the court concluded that the severability doctrine
would not apply to that case even if it were an appeal from a criminal
suppression hearing. 567 F.3d 628, 637 (10th Cir. 2009). The court then
proceeded through a lengthy analysis of the severability doctrine as if
considering a criminal case. Here, the parties did not argue the severability
30 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 31
doctrine, which the dissent raises. The dissent simply concludes that the
doctrine applies and that the warrant is severable.
In the criminal context, courts apply the severability doctrine in
determining the scope of the exclusionary rule. United States v. Sells, 463 F.3d
1148, 1155 (10th Cir. 2006). But in the civil context, the exclusionary rule is
not at issue. Instead, a jury is tasked at the liability phase to make a binary
determination of whether the warrant violated the Fourth Amendment at all. We
decline to adopt the dissent’s approach or to consider whether there are valid
parts of the warrant here (for instance, the dissent mentions severing the
cellphone) from the invalid parts of the warrant.
For these reasons, we conclude that the officers lacked even arguable
probable cause to seize Armendariz’s electronic devices that were listed in the
search warrant. And so, Armendariz has alleged a clearly established Fourth
Amendment violation related to the first warrant. See Stonecipher, 759 F.3d at
1141.
Even with that conclusion, we must consider whether the state judge’s
issuance of the warrant overcomes our misgivings as to its legality under the
Fourth Amendment. After all, “[a] neutral magistrate judge’s issuance of a
warrant is the clearest indication that the officers acted in an objectively
reasonable manner or in objective good faith.” Id. (citation modified). Still, we
conclude that Armendariz plausibly alleged that the officers violated clearly
established law, because the facts alleged support that the warrant was “so
31 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 32
facially deficient—i.e., in failing to particularize the place to be searched or the
things to be seized—that the executing officers c[ould not] reasonably presume
it to be valid.” Leon, 468 U.S. at 923. We therefore reverse the district court’s
ruling that qualified immunity protects Detective Summey and Sergeant Ditzler
from liability for this search warrant. 9
2. Second Armendariz Search Warrant
Armendariz also challenges the second warrant authorizing the search
and seizure of data from her electronic devices. She contends that the search-
warrant affidavit turned the warrant into a “wide-ranging fishing expedition for
political views and associations.” Op. Br. at 20. The district court concluded
otherwise, holding that the officers had at least arguable probable cause for the
search warrant and that the warrant met the particularity requirement.
Armendariz, 2024 WL 2139316, at *6–8.
We review the second search warrant under each qualified-immunity
prong. In doing so, we conclude that Armendariz alleged a plausible Fourth
9 The complaint suggests that CSPD officers had ulterior motives for obtaining the warrant. But that does not impact whether the warrant provides arguable probable cause. See Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563 U.S. 731, 739 (2011). And though the complaint suggests that the officers acted in bad faith, Plaintiffs do not argue that the officers’ alleged motives led to false statements in the search warrants. See generally Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. 154, 155– 56 (1978) (requiring the suppression of evidence obtained through false statements in a search warrant); Leon, 468 U.S. at 923 (same).
32 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 33
Amendment violation and reverse the district court’s dismissal of this part of
her claim.
a. Constitutional Violation
As discussed, the Fourth Amendment requires that a warrant “particularly
describ[e] the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”
U.S. Const. amend. IV. “A warrant is overly broad if it does not contain
sufficiently particularized language that creates a nexus between the suspected
crime and the items to be seized.” Mink, 613 F.3d at 1010. We focus on
“practical accuracy rather than technical precision” when considering whether a
search warrant satisfies the particularity requirement. United States v. Otero,
563 F.3d 1127, 1132 (10th Cir. 2009) (citation omitted). And at bottom, “[t]he
‘touchstone’ of the Fourth Amendment is ‘reasonableness.’” Biglow, 562 F.3d
at 1279 (quoting Samson v. California, 547 U.S. 843, 855 n.4 (2006)).
In the context of digital searches, we have recognized that “enormous
amounts of information and relevant evidence can be stored” on digital devices.
United States v. Palms, 21 F.4th 689, 698 (10th Cir. 2021). It follows that
searching these devices can provide significant access to an individual’s private
affairs. Otero, 563 F.3d at 1132. To protect against unwarranted intrusions,
“the Fourth Amendment requires warrants for computer searches to
affirmatively limit the search to evidence of specific crimes or specific types of
material.” Palms, 21 F.4th at 698 (citation modified). In other words, warrants
to search digital devices must contain a “limiting principle” that “establish[es]
33 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 34
practical guidelines about what can be searched and seized, leaving nothing to
the discretion of the officers executing the warrant.” Id. (citation omitted).
For the second search warrant, Armendariz contends that two aspects of
the warrant violated the Fourth Amendment’s particularity requirement: the
keyword search and the file search. We consider each in turn.
(1) Keyword Search: Armendariz argues that the warrant’s keyword
search lacked particularity because it was overbroad. The warrant allowed
officers to search Armendariz’s six devices for these keywords:
Police, officer, cop, pig, bike, bicycle, attack, assault, 150 th , celebration, protest, housing, human, right, yt, Chinook, Center, Jon, Jonathan, Sam, Samantha, Christiansen, Crustyansen, Chrischeeansen, Shaun, [and] Walls, as these terms would be relevant to the investigation regardless of the time period in which they occurred.
App. vol. I at 115.
We agree with Armendariz that this keyword search failed to include
sufficient limits under the Fourth Amendment’s particularity requirement. We
detect several problems with the keyword search that contribute to the
warrant’s overbreadth.
First, the keyword search failed to limit the search and seizure to
evidence related to the crime under investigation. Consider the type of
information that would fall within this search warrant’s scope:
• Discussions about any “protest,” without reference to which protest or what is being protested;
34 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 35
• Discussions about any “officer,” “cop,” or “pig,” regardless of whether the terms refer to police brutality or an actual animal;
• Armendariz’s communications with or about any of the Chinook Center’s founders and with or about anyone who shares their names;
• Any reference to the word “right,” regardless of whether the communication refers to a human right or simply expresses agreement; and
• Any reference to an assault, regardless of which one.
Certainly, the keyword search allowed officers to search for and seize
data completely unrelated to any crime. The warrant’s failure to limit the
search to evidence of the attempted assault contributes to its lack of
particularity. See, e.g., Mink, 613 F.3d at 1010–11 (holding that a search
warrant was overbroad because it failed to limit the search to evidence of a
specific crime); cf. United States v. Burgess, 576 F.3d 1078, 1091 (10th Cir.
2009) (holding that a search warrant met the particularity requirement in part
because it limited the search of computer records to evidence of drug
trafficking); United States v. Brooks, 427 F.3d 1246, 1252–53 (10th Cir. 2005)
(same, where the warrant “naturally” limited the search of digital devices to
evidence of child pornography).
Second, the officers had enough information to narrow the search
warrant’s scope but chose not to do so. “Failure to employ the specificity
available will invalidate a general description in a warrant.” United States v.
Leary, 846 F.2d 592, 605 (10th Cir. 1988) (citation omitted). In Leary, officers
obtained a search warrant while investigating the defendants’ illegal export
35 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 36
scheme. Id. at 594. The warrant allowed officers to search for and seize “a long
list of business records typical of the documents kept by an export company” so
long as the records “relate[d] to the purchase, sale and illegal exportation of
materials in violation of the federal export laws.” Id. at 600–01 (citation
modified). We held that the warrant was facially overbroad in part because
“information was available to the government to make the description of the
items to be seized much more particular.” Id. at 604. For instance, the
government could have narrowed the search to documents related to the suspect
transaction, companies suspected of illegal export activity, or countries that
were part of the export route. Id.
Like the warrant in Leary, the warrant’s keyword search failed to
sufficiently narrow the data to be searched and seized. For example, though the
crime under investigation dealt with a discrete incident occurring on July 31,
2021, the keyword search specifically disclaimed any temporal limit on the data
for search and seizure. True, the warrant stated that the keywords “would be
relevant to the investigation regardless of the time period in which they
occurred.” App. vol. I at 115. Yet the affidavit did not explain why all data
involving these keywords—including communications made years before the
housing march—would be relevant to the alleged attempted assault. What’s
more, the keyword search identified individuals unrelated to the alleged assault,
such as Jon and Samantha Christiansen. Granted, these individuals were
affiliated with the Chinook Center and the housing march. But the absence of
36 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 37
any other limiting principle connecting their names to the attempted assault
renders these search terms overbroad. All in all, the officers did not narrow the
keyword search using available information, making the warrant overbroad. See
United States v. Blakeney, 942 F.2d 1001, 1027 (6th Cir. 1991) (concluding that
a warrant was overbroad when it described the items for seizure as “jewelry”
when the officers had a specific inventory of stolen items from the jewelry
store).
Third, the keyword search failed to distinguish between the data officers
could search for and the data officers could seize. The warrant allowed officers
to seize any data responsive to the keyword search—even if the search returned
data unrelated to the crime under investigation. We cannot endorse such a
broad authorization. Doing so would transform minor crime investigations into
opportunities to seize a wide range of information unrelated to the conduct at
issue. See Leary, 846 F.2d at 602 (holding that warrants must “allow the
executing officers to distinguish between items that may and may not be
seized”); United States v. Russian, 848 F.3d 1239, 1245–46 (10th Cir. 2017)
(holding that a warrant was overbroad for not identifying what material the
officers could seize).
In United States v. Zelaya-Veliz, the Fourth Circuit addressed the
“distinction between what may be searched and what can be seized” in the
context of warrants for digital data. 94 F.4th 321, 337 (4th Cir. 2024). It
endorsed a two-step approach for maintaining that distinction. Id. at 337–38
37 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 38
(citing Fed. R. Crim. P. 41(e)(2)(B) advisory committee’s note to 2009
amendment). At step one—the search—officers may obtain and sift through a
broader array of digital data. Id. at 338. Like any search, the officers will
encounter information irrelevant to the crime. Id. At step two—the seizure—the
officers may “seize only the fruits, evidence, or instrumentalities of the crimes
for which they had established probable cause.” Id.
But here, the warrant never distinguished between the search and the
seizure. Instead, it allowed officers to seize all data responsive to the keyword
search. Given the broad scope of the search—which encompassed any message
with “right,” “bike,” or “housing”—the search would inevitably return data
unrelated to the attempted assault. Without any principle limiting the data
officers could seize, the warrant failed to protect against serious intrusions into
Armendariz’s privacy. This failure adds to the warrant’s overbreadth.
Defendants make several arguments against finding a Fourth Amendment
violation. None are persuasive. First, Defendants argue that Detective
Summey’s affidavit identified the crime at issue and explained how Armendariz
became a suspect. So according to Defendants, incorporating the affidavit
remedied any lack of specificity. We agree that a properly incorporated
affidavit can cure a warrant’s lack of particularity. But that’s not the case here.
An affidavit can remedy a defective search warrant if “(1) the warrant
and the affidavit [are] attached; and (2) the warrant . . . expressly
incorporate[s] the affidavit.” United States v. Suggs, 998 F.3d 1125, 1135 (10th
38 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 39
Cir. 2021). But when a warrant is overbroad, the incorporated affidavit must
introduce a limiting principle. See United States v. Sadlowski, 948 F.3d 1200,
1205 (10th Cir. 2020) (concluding that a search warrant met the particularity
requirement where it permitted a search of the residence “described in the
affidavit” (citation modified)); United States v. Kahre, 737 F.3d 554, 566–67
(9th Cir. 2013) (same, where a search warrant for “all records” incorporated an
affidavit that limited the search to “records” from “the period January 1, 1992,
until December 31, 1993; and January 1, 1997 to present date”).
The affidavit attached to the second warrant provided no such limiting
principle. The warrant attached and expressly incorporated Attachments A and
B. See Suggs, 998 F.3d at 1135. Attachment A was the supporting affidavit;
Attachment B identified the file search and keyword search. App. vol. I at 91,
115. But despite incorporating both attachments, the warrant identified only
Attachment B for the “property or thing(s) [that] will be searched for and, if
found, seized.” Id. at 87.
At no point did the warrant or Attachment B state that the affidavit
limited the scope of the search or seizure. See Sadlowski, 948 F.3d at 1205
(warrant expressly incorporated the affidavit’s description of the residence as
the place to be searched); Kahre, 737 F.3d at 566–67 (same for the affidavit’s
timeframe, which limited the records to be searched). Instead, the warrant made
clear that Attachment B, not the affidavit, defined the boundaries of the search
and seizure.
39 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 40
Plus, even considering the affidavit, we fail to see how descriptions of
the bicycle incident and various social-media posts amounted to a clear limiting
principle on the scope of the search. Instead, the affidavit merely recounted the
evidence that the officers believed formed the probable cause necessary for the
search and seizure. That did not limit the scope of the keyword search, such
that “nothing [was] left to the discretion of the officer executing the warrant.”
Stanford v. Texas, 379 U.S. 476, 485 (1965) (citation omitted).
Besides missing a limiting principle, parts of the affidavit directly
contradicted the scope of the keyword search as stated in Attachment B. For
example, the affidavit focused on the timeframe surrounding the attempted
assault on July 31, 2021. But the keyword search disregarded this limit, stating
that the search “terms would be relevant to the investigation regardless of the
time period in which they occurred.” App. vol. I at 115. To accept Defendants’
argument that the affidavit limited the scope of the search and seizure would be
to condone searches with murky boundaries and nebulous scopes. That result
would frustrate the Fourth Amendment’s proscription against warrants that
allow “exploratory rummaging,” Mink, 613 F.3d at 1010, or “authorize[] the
seizure of items as to which there is no probable cause,” Cotto, 995 F.3d at 798
40 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 41
(citation omitted). In sum, the affidavit fails to narrow the warrant’s broad
scope. 10
Next, Defendants argue that the particularity requirement doesn’t even
apply to the keyword search. According to Defendants, the keyword search
merely limited how officers could conduct the search. Put differently, they
argue that the keyword search was only a search strategy, which need not meet
the Fourth Amendment’s particularity requirement.
Again, Defendants correctly state the law but misapply it to the warrant
at issue. To comply with the Fourth Amendment, “a warrant must describe with
particularity the items sought on a computer,” but “need not include a
particularized computer search strategy.” United States v. Wagner, 951 F.3d
1232, 1247 (10th Cir. 2020) (citation modified); see Russian, 848 F.3d at 1245
n.1 (rejecting a “search methodology requirement” that would require law
enforcement “to specify an ex ante search protocol before a warrant could
issue” for digital devices). Thus, a preauthorized computer-search strategy does
not affect whether a warrant meets the Fourth Amendment’s particularity
requirement.
Defendants point to the affidavit’s statement that the keyword search 10
“would be material evidence in the subsequent prosecution of Armendariz for attempting to assault [the] [o]fficer.” App. vol. I at 114. They claim that this language limited the scope of the search to evidence of the attempted assault. Yet the cited language did not restrict the keyword search. It merely commented on the materiality of the evidence responsive to the search. So we reject Defendants’ position that this language cures the warrant’s overbreadth. 41 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 42
Here, though, Defendants improperly equate the items for seizure with a
computer-search strategy. The record belies this position. The warrant itself
listed the keyword search under “property or thing(s) [that] will be searched for
and, if found, seized.” App. vol. I at 87; see id. at 115. Nowhere did the
warrant state that officers should perform the keyword search and then cabin
the items seized to evidence of the attempted assault. 11 Instead, the warrant
authorized the seizure of all data responsive to the keyword search. With this in
mind, we decline to characterize the keyword search as a computer-search
strategy. 12
11 We considered whether we could construe the keyword search as a computer-search strategy that controlled how the officers went about the file search. But the keyword search’s language directly contradicts this reading. Though the warrant limited the file search to data “for the time period of 6/5/2021 through 8/7/2021,” the keyword search specified that the “terms would be relevant to the investigation regardless of the time period in which they occurred.” App. vol. I at 115. So the warrant’s plain language establishes that the keyword search was separate from—rather than a search methodology for—the file search. 12 Defendants also argue that Armendariz should have challenged the reasonableness of the search instead of the warrant’s particularity. They assert that, by never raising reasonableness, Armendariz forfeited her challenge to the keyword search. True enough, this argument carries weight if the keyword search was a search methodology. In that case, Armendariz should have challenged the reasonableness of the search, not the warrant’s particularity. See Palms, 21 F.4th at 700–01 & n.12. But because we determine that the keyword search described the items to be searched and seized, not how to conduct the search, we conclude that Armendariz properly challenged the warrant’s particularity. 42 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 43
For all these reasons, we conclude that Armendariz has plausibly alleged
that the keyword search was overbroad. Though the keyword search alone
violates the Fourth Amendment, we review the warrant’s file search as well.
(2) File Search: Armendariz also asserts that the warrant’s file search
was overbroad. That part of the warrant allowed the search and seizure of
certain files:
Photos, videos, messages (Whether they be text messages or any application on the phone or computer capable of sending messages)[,] emails, and location data, for the time period of 6/5/2021 through 8/7/2021 that are determined to be relevant to this investigation. This time period would allow for any planning leading up to the crime, the period when the crime took place, and the subsequent taking of credit for committing a violent act against a police officer.
From the start, we note that many of the problems with the keyword
search plague the file search as well. And so, like the keyword search, the file
search was overbroad. We highlight several aspects of this search that
contribute to its overbreadth.
First, the warrant sought location data from June 5, 2021, through August
7, 2021. But neither the warrant nor the affidavit explained why probable cause
existed to search for and seize any data beyond Armendariz’s location at the
time of the attempted assault. Cf. United States v. Barajas, 710 F.3d 1102, 1109
(10th Cir. 2013) (doubting that an affidavit’s description of the defendant’s
cell-phone use for a drug-trafficking conspiracy would provide sufficient
43 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 44
probable cause to search for GPS data). The Supreme Court has recognized the
sensitive nature of location data: it “provides an intimate window into a
person’s life, revealing not only [her] particular movements, but through them
[her] familial, political, professional, religious, and sexual associations.”
Carpenter v. United States, 585 U.S. 296, 311 (2018) (citation modified).
Because the officers knew the date and time of the alleged assault, it is unclear
why the officers had probable cause to search for and seize location data from a
two-month period. Cf. Leary, 846 F.2d at 605.
Similarly, the file search encompassed photos, videos, messages, and
emails during the specified timeframe. Again, despite the brief interaction
between Armendariz and the officer she allegedly tried to assault, the warrant
authorized the search and seizure of a wide range of files outside the timeframe
of the interaction. The affidavit did not explain why a two-month period would
be needed for this alleged attempted assault. Without additional limits on the
scope of the search and seizure, we conclude that this two-month period was
overbroad.
Defendants retort that the file search included certain qualifying phrases
limiting the search’s scope. They emphasize that the warrant referred to files
“that are determined to be relevant to this investigation,” and that the
timeframe “would allow for any planning leading up to the crime . . . and the
subsequent taking of credit for committing a violent act against a police
44 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 45
officer.” App. vol. I at 115 (emphasis added). Thus, Defendants argue that these
statements limited the search and seizure to evidence of the attempted assault.
We disagree. We acknowledge that the first phrase—items “that are
determined to be relevant to this investigation”—limited the file search to “this
investigation.” But the affidavit did not sufficiently dispel the ambiguity
inherent in the term “investigation.” Though Defendants argue that the
“investigation” related to the attempted assault, the affidavit reflected a broader
investigation into the Chinook Center, individuals associated with the Chinook
Center, and Armendariz’s background and political views. See id. at 92, 102–
05. Rather than limit the scope of the file search, the affidavit confirms its
expansive reach.
The other mentions of the search’s timeframe also did not limit the
warrant’s scope. The warrant’s use of “the crime” and “committing a violent
act against a police officer” adds to the confusion because the affidavit also
referenced “illegal protest activity” and an “unlawful” march. Id. at 92, 105.
And so, the search warrant allowed officers to seize evidence related to the
housing march overall, not just the attempted assault.
Thus, under “a common sense and realistic” reading of the warrant and
affidavit, the warrant allowed a search and seizure of evidence beyond that of
the attempted assault. See United States v. Grimmett, 439 F.3d 1263, 1270
(10th Cir. 2006); Suggs, 998 F.3d at 1133 (rejecting a warrant as overbroad that
permitted the search and seizure of “any item identified as being involved in
45 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 46
the [crime]” (citation omitted)). We reject Defendants’ invitation to treat this
ambiguous language as sufficient to guard against overbreadth. Doing so would
give undue discretion to the officer executing the warrant. See Stanford, 379
U.S. at 485.
We aren’t persuaded by Defendants’ other arguments, either. They argue
that we should narrowly construe words or expressions in warrants that might
be read expansively. But in the cases Defendants rely on, the warrants all
contained other language that limited the scope of the authorized searches—
unlike here.
In Burgess, we upheld the validity of a search warrant for “computer
records” because other language in the warrant limited the search to “pay-owe
sheets, address books, rolodexes,” and “personal property which would tend to
show conspiracy to sell drugs.” 576 F.3d at 1091 (citation omitted). Likewise,
in Wagner, we upheld a search warrant that delineated sixteen categories of
items for seizure, even though some of the categories were open-ended. 951
F.3d at 1248. We reasoned that the warrant “contained sufficiently
particularized language requiring a nexus with child pornography” to restrict
those few categories that did not reference a specific subject matter. Id.
(citation omitted).
Even better, the warrants’ opening language in Brooks, Palms, and
United States v. Christie expressly limited the searches and seizures to
evidence of criminal activity. Brooks, 427 F.3d at 1252 (permitting a search of
46 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 47
two computers and some disks “for evidence of child pornography” (citation
omitted)); Palms, 21 F.4th at 694, 697–98 (similar, for “evidence of human
trafficking” (citation modified)); Christie, 717 F.3d 1156, 1165 (10th Cir.
2013) (similar, for “all records and information relating to the murder, neglect,
and abuse” of a specific person between specific dates (citation modified)). By
contrast, the second warrant here contained no comparable language limiting
the search and seizure to evidence of the attempted assault.
We therefore hold that Armendariz alleged a plausible Fourth
Amendment violation for the second search warrant. At bottom, this warrant
authorized a far-reaching search and seizure of digital data for an alleged
assault that occurred at a known, specific moment in time. We decline to permit
“wide-ranging exploratory searches” of digital data merely because a minor
crime with an intent requirement occurred at a protest. 13 Palms, 21 F.4th at 698
b. Clearly Established
Though Armendariz has alleged a plausible Fourth Amendment violation,
Detective Summey and Sergeant Ditzler argue that qualified immunity still
protects them from liability because they did not violate a clearly established
13 For this warrant, Armendariz also argues that the First Amendment requires “scrupulous exactitude” when analyzing her Fourth Amendment claims, because the search targeted her political speech. Because we conclude that Armendariz pleaded a plausible Fourth Amendment violation, we need not consider the First Amendment’s implications in this appeal.
47 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 48
right. The district court agreed. Armendariz, 2024 WL 2139316, at *9–10. On
appeal, Armendariz contends that the district court was mistaken. 14
We rely on four cases to conclude that the officers violated clearly
established law: Mink, Leary, Voss, and Cassady. To begin, in Mink we held
that “it was . . . clearly established that warrants must . . . meet the particularity
requirement of the Fourth Amendment in order to be constitutionally valid.”
613 F.3d at 1011. Indeed, “[g]iven that the particularity requirement is set forth
in the text of the Constitution, no reasonable officer could believe that a
warrant that plainly did not comply with that requirement was valid.” Groh v.
Ramirez, 540 U.S. 551, 563 (2004). Mink thus leaves little doubt that the Fourth
Amendment’s particularity requirement is clearly established law. See 613 F.3d
at 1011.
Next, Leary, Voss, and Cassady underscore that no officer could have
“reasonably presume[d]” the warrant here “[was] valid.” Leon, 468 U.S. at 923.
All three cases held that warrants without sufficient limiting principles lack
particularity. See Leary, 846 F.2d at 602, 605–06; Voss, 774 F.2d at 404–05;
14 The dissent concludes that Armendariz waived her appellate argument about a clearly established violation because she did not “address the clarity of a violation involving the provisions in the first warrant to allow the seizure of the digital devices.” Dissent at 7. In other words, as we understand the dissent, Armendariz needed to argue how the law was clearly established for each device mentioned in the warrant to avoid appellate waiver. This again depends on the warrants being severable, a point unraised by the defendants and thus subject to waiver. We disagree with the dissent’s finding waiver by the plaintiff based on an invalid legal premise waived by the defendants. 48 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 49
Cassady, 567 F.3d at 636. And as explained, that’s the case here. The second
search warrant failed to “establish practical guidelines about what can be
searched and seized, leaving nothing to the discretion of the officers executing
the warrant.” Palms, 21 F.4th at 698. Instead, it allowed officers to search and
seize an array of data unconnected to the attempted assault. Our caselaw
therefore supports that Armendariz has alleged a plausible violation of her
clearly established rights.
Defendants argue that our decisions in Brooks, Palms, and Christie
should sway us otherwise. But as we already explained, all three cases are
distinguishable for the same reason: those warrants limited the searches and
seizures to evidence of the crime at hand. See Brooks, 427 F.3d at 1252; Palms,
21 F.4th at 697–98; Christie, 717 F.3d at 1165. Again, the warrant here
contained no such limit.
As in Cassady, “[i]n light of our conclusion that the warrant was
impermissibly overbroad, the clearly established prong is easily satisfied.” 567
F.3d at 643–44. We conclude that Armendariz plausibly alleged that Detective
Summey and Sergeant Ditzler violated her clearly established right to be free
from unreasonable searches and seizures.
3. Facebook Search Warrant
We turn now to the Facebook warrant directed at the Chinook Center,
which allowed officers to search and seize certain categories of Facebook data.
The district court held that the Chinook Center failed to allege any plausible
49 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 50
Fourth Amendment violation for this warrant. Armendariz, 2024 WL 2139316,
at *11–12. Alternatively, the district court concluded that any Fourth
Amendment violation did not violate clearly established law. Id. at *11. On
appeal, the Chinook Center contends that the district court erred on this issue
and asks us to reverse the dismissal of its Fourth Amendment claim. 15 We first
review the alleged constitutional violation and then turn to whether that
violation was clearly established.
The Chinook Center argues that this warrant was overbroad because the
warrant failed to establish a nexus between the Chinook Center’s Facebook
account and any crime. 16 As discussed, the search warrant targeted certain
information from the Chinook Center’s Facebook account:
All subscriber information tied to Facebook profile: https:www.facebook.com/chinookcenter to include names, phone numbers, and addresses.
15 Defendants do not challenge the Chinook Center’s Fourth Amendment standing. And because Fourth Amendment “standing” is not jurisdictional, we need not address the issue. United States v. White, 584 F.3d 935, 952 n.7 (10th Cir. 2009). 16 The Chinook Center also argues that the warrant did not identify a crime under investigation or establish that illegality pervaded the housing march. We disagree. First, the affidavit specified the crimes under investigation: “Obstructing Passage or Assembly, and Resisting, Interference with a Public Official.” App. vol. I at 118. Second, the affidavit provided a factual basis for the allegedly pervasive illegality at the march by asserting that the “60 protesters illegally march[ed],” ignored “numerous verbal warnings” to move out of the street, and “block[ed] vehicle traffic.” Id. 50 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 51
All Facebook posts for profile: https:www.facebook.com/chinookcenter from 07/27/21 to 08/02/21.
All Facebook Messenger chats tied to Facebook profile: https:www.facebook.com/chinookcenter from 07/27/21 to 08/02/21.
All Facebook Events for profile: https:www.facebook.com/chinookcenter from 07/27/21 to 08/02/21.
App. vol. I at 120. The district court concluded that this warrant was
“sufficiently particular” because it limited the search to evidence from a seven-
day period and “involv[ed] specific arrests for specific infractions all occurring
on July 31, 2021.” Armendariz, 2024 WL 2139316, at *11.
We disagree and conclude that this warrant, too, violates the Fourth
Amendment for overbreadth. As discussed, warrants to search computers and
other digital devices present significant Fourth Amendment dangers. In effect,
digital devices “store and intermingle a huge array of one’s personal papers in a
single place.” Otero, 563 F.3d at 1132. To prevent unwarranted intrusions into
these devices, we have instructed that “warrants for computer searches must
affirmatively limit the search to evidence of specific federal crimes or specific
types of material.” Id. (citation omitted).
Some courts have expressed heightened concern when warrants involve
Facebook. See, e.g., United States v. Blake, 868 F.3d 960, 974 (11th Cir. 2017);
United States v. Shipp, 392 F. Supp. 3d 300, 308 (E.D.N.Y. 2019). And rightly
so. Facebook warrants risk significant Fourth Amendment intrusions.
51 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 52
First, “Facebook provides a single window through which almost every
detail of a person’s life is visible.” Shipp, 392 F. Supp. 3d at 308. Users
“voluntarily entrust information” to Facebook on “just about every aspect of
their lives,” and Facebook “proactively collects and aggregates information
about its users.” Id. Put differently, Facebook may have more data about its
users than those users voluntarily store for themselves.
Second, unlike hard drives or other digital devices, Facebook carefully
categorizes and sorts the user’s data. Id. at 309. That eliminates certain
compelling reasons for a broad data search. Id. “The means of hiding evidence
on a hard drive—obscure folders, misnamed files, encrypted data—are not
currently possible in the context of a Facebook account.” Blake, 868 F.3d at
974. Also, a digital-device warrant often entails a time-consuming search of
digital data with special forensic equipment. Id. A Facebook search, on the
other hand, requires only that the government request the desired data from
Facebook. Id.
Because of these differences in storing, categorizing, and searching data,
broad requests to search and seize Facebook data merit particular scrutiny.
With these principles in mind, we turn to the warrant at issue here.
To start, the warrant permitted the search and seizure of all subscriber
information tied to the Chinook Center’s Facebook profile, including names,
phone numbers, and addresses. App. vol. I at 120. Yet even the Stored
Communications Act contemplates disclosure of this information. See 18
52 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 53
U.S.C. § 2703(c). We see no Fourth Amendment issue with the request for
subscriber information on these facts, nor does the Chinook Center argue
otherwise.
Next, the warrant requested the search and seizure of all Facebook posts,
Facebook Messenger chats, and Facebook Events from July 27, 2021, to August
2, 2021 (the days just before and after the march). App. vol. I at 120. As the
district court recognized, including a timeframe significantly narrows the scope
of the search and seizure. See Armendariz, 2024 WL 2139316, at *11; Blake,
868 F.3d at 974 (“[T]he warrants should have requested data only from the
period of time during which [the defendant] was suspected of taking part in the
[crime].”).
At the same time, the warrant allowed CSPD to search for and seize all
Facebook posts, Facebook Messenger chats, and Facebook Events, regardless of
their relation to the crimes at issue. Despite the difficulty of sorting and
searching through data, various cases show that officers can particularize their
requests for information from Facebook. For example, the officers could have
narrowed the search by limiting “the request to messages sent to or from
persons suspected” of committing the crimes, Blake, 868 F.3d at 974, or to
“evidence, fruits, and instrumentalities of the specified offenses,” United States
v. Ulbricht, 858 F.3d 71, 104 (2d Cir. 2017) (citation modified), overruled on
other grounds by Carpenter, 585 U.S. 296. Given the information available to
53 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 54
CSPD, we conclude that the warrant “[f]ail[ed] to employ the specificity
available,” making the warrant insufficiently particular. Leary, 846 F.2d at 605.
Yet the district court concluded that the affidavit sufficiently narrowed
the scope of the warrant to evidence of specific arrests and infractions.
Armendariz, 2024 WL 2139316, at *11. We think otherwise. As discussed, “the
particularity of an affidavit may cure an overbroad warrant” where (1) the
affidavit and search warrant are “physically connected,” and (2) the search
warrant expressly refers to and incorporates the affidavit “using suitable words
of reference.” Leary, 846 F.2d at 603 (citation omitted). The Facebook warrant
properly incorporated the affidavit. But the affidavit does little to clarify the
scope of the search and seizure. In fact, the affidavit muddies the water by
contradicting the warrant’s plain language.
The warrant specifically permitted the search of “[a]ll” Facebook posts,
Facebook Messenger chats, and Facebook Events. App. vol. I at 120. That term
left no ambiguity about the scope of the items sought. All, Merriam-Webster,
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/all (last visited Oct. 6, 2025)
(defining “all” as, among other things, “the whole amount, quantity, or extent
of,” “every member or individual component of,” and “every”). The warrant’s
language thus failed to limit the search and seizure to evidence of the identified
crimes. See Leary, 846 F.2d at 605. Instead, the Facebook warrant allowed
officers to search for and seize completely unrelated information. For example,
the warrant could have covered Facebook messages as varied as discussions
54 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 55
about other marches to exchanges about favorite dinner recipes. Adopting the
officers’ position—that the affidavit limited the warrant to evidence of specific
crimes—would mean disregarding the word “all” in the warrant itself. That’s a
leap too far.
As a result, we hold that an affidavit cannot save an insufficiently
particularized warrant where the affidavit’s language directly contradicts the
warrant’s language. In those cases, the affidavit does not merely “clarify an
ambiguity on the face of the warrant.” United States v. Beaumont, 972 F.2d
553, 561 (5th Cir. 1992) (emphasis and citation omitted). Instead, the district
court reads the affidavit to change the warrant’s clear meaning. That type of
direct contradiction leaves too much discretion to the executing officers. See
Palms, 21 F.4th at 698. The Fourth Amendment does not allow officers to
choose between conflicting interpretations of the warrant and affidavit.
None of Defendants’ other arguments change our minds. Detective
Steckler and Sergeant Otero focus on the facts contained in the affidavit and
argue that they established probable cause. That argument misses the mark.
Sure, the affidavit articulated probable cause for at least some of the
information in the broad search-and-seizure categories. But as we have
explained, the availability of information to craft a more particularized warrant
renders these broad categories deficient. Leary, 846 F.2d at 604–05.
The officers also cite various cases to argue against the warrant’s
overbreadth. None are persuasive. In United States v. Purcell, the Second
55 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 56
Circuit upheld a broad warrant that identified twenty-four categories of
Facebook data for seizure. 967 F.3d 159, 180–81 (2d Cir. 2020). Importantly,
the Second Circuit determined that this broad search satisfied the particularity
requirement because the incorporated affidavit made clear that “the suspected
criminal activity pervaded [the] entire [Facebook] account.” Id. at 181 (citation
modified). By contrast, the affidavit here never established that the alleged
illegality “pervaded” the Chinook Center’s Facebook account. The rationale
justifying the broad Facebook search in Purcell does not apply in this case.
Defendants’ reliance on United States v. Turner, No. 21-cr-00013, 2022
WL 195083 (D. Nev. Jan. 21, 2022), and United States v. Liburd, No. 17-CR-
296, 2018 WL 2709199 (E.D.N.Y. June 5, 2018), is similarly misplaced. In
both cases, the warrants incorporated affidavits that significantly narrowed the
scopes of their respective searches. In Turner, the warrant and affidavit
“explain[ed] with detail the particular crimes for which evidence was sought
and provide[d] objective standards for segregating the responsive material from
the non-responsive material.” 2022 WL 195083, at *6. And the affidavit listed
examples of items for seizure, including Facebook posts, a video showing a
false driver’s license, and a post with prices for forged documents. Id.
Similarly, in Liburd, the warrant stated that the government “sought to seize
information related to the existence of, and communications among, the
[criminal organization] and evidence regarding [its crimes].” 2018 WL
56 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 57
2709199, at *2. But here, neither the warrant nor the affidavit narrowed the
aims of the search and seizure.
With all this in mind, the Chinook Center plausibly alleged that the
Facebook warrant is overbroad.
Because we conclude that the Facebook warrant violates the Fourth
Amendment for lack of particularity, we adopt the same clearly-established-law
analysis that we applied to the second warrant directed at Armendariz. Contrary
to the officers’ assertions, we need not point to a case considering a Facebook
warrant to find a clearly established right here. See Mink, 613 F.3d at 1001
(“There need not be precise factual correspondence between earlier cases and
the case at hand, because general statements of the law are not inherently
incapable of giving fair and clear warning.” (citation omitted)). The cases we
identified earlier establishing that the second warrant violated clearly
established law apply just as well for the warrant targeting the Chinook Center.
See id. at 1011; Leary, 846 F.2d at 602, 605–06; Voss, 774 F.2d at 404–05;
Cassady, 567 F.3d at 636, 643–44.
We therefore reverse the district court’s dismissal of the Chinook
Center’s Fourth Amendment claims against Detective Steckler and Sergeant
Otero.
57 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 58
B. Municipal Liability
Plaintiffs also challenge the district court’s dismissal of their Fourth
Amendment claims against the City. The district court ruled against Plaintiffs
on these claims because it determined that Plaintiffs did not allege a plausible
Fourth Amendment violation against the City’s officers. Armendariz, 2024 WL
2139316, at *13.
The district court’s reason for dismissing these claims no longer exists.
Because we reverse the court’s dismissal of the Fourth Amendment claims
against the officers, we also reverse the district court’s dismissal of these
claims against the City. We remand these claims for the district court to
determine whether Plaintiffs plausibly alleged municipal liability.
II. Fourth Amendment Injunctive-Relief Claim (Sixth Claim)
Setting aside the search warrants, Armendariz alleged another Fourth
Amendment violation—this time against the FBI for retaining her digital data. 17
She argues that the FBI must return or destroy its copies of the digital data that
CSPD unlawfully seized from her. But the district court determined that
Armendariz did not plead a plausible Fourth Amendment violation, because
“[t]he appropriate claim appears to be one for return of property under Fed. R.
Armendariz asserts in a footnote that the district court erred by 17
construing her Fourth Amendment injunctive-relief claim “against only the FBI” and not the City as well. Setting aside that parties waive arguments made only in footnotes, Griffith v. El Paso County, 129 F.4th 790, 825 (10th Cir. 2025), the complaint lists the FBI as the only defendant on this claim. As a result, the district court did not err in limiting this claim to the FBI. 58 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 59
Crim. P. 41(g).” Armendariz, 2024 WL 2139316, at *15; see generally Fed. R.
Crim. P. 41(g) (“A person aggrieved by an unlawful search and seizure of
property or by the deprivation of property may move for the property’s
return.”).
Armendariz’s opening brief did not challenge the district court’s
rationale for dismissing this claim. “Our law is clear: The first task of an
appellant is to explain to us why the district court’s decision was wrong.”
United States v. Martinez, 92 F.4th 1213, 1265 (10th Cir. 2024) (citation
modified); see also Nixon v. City & Cnty. of Denver, 784 F.3d 1364, 1366 (10th
Cir. 2015) (noting that counsel must “explain what was wrong with the
reasoning that the district court relied on in reaching its decision”). Armendariz
failed to complete that task.
True, Armendariz argues that the district court erred in dismissing this
claim because retaining seized property “can raise independent Fourth
Amendment concerns.” Op. Br. at 41. But her opening brief never mentions, let
alone challenges, the court’s conclusion that Rule 41 is the proper avenue for
relief. So Armendariz waived any argument challenging the district court’s
rationale for dismissing this claim. See Martinez, 92 F.4th at 1265. We
therefore affirm the district court’s ruling without reaching the merits. See id.
III. Statutory and State Claims (Third, Fourth, and Fifth Claims)
Finally, Plaintiffs assert that the district court erred by dismissing their
Stored Communications Act and state-law claims. They contend that the district
59 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 60
court improperly premised its decision on their failure to allege any
constitutional violation.
We agree, with one exception: Armendariz brought an FTCA claim
against the United States for an alleged violation of her rights under the
Colorado constitution. See generally Colo. Const. art. II, §§ 7, 10, 24; Colo.
Rev. Stat. § 13-21-131. The district court dismissed this claim because
Armendariz failed to plausibly allege that she exhausted administrative
procedures under the FTCA. Armendariz, 2024 WL 2139316, at *16–17 (citing
28 U.S.C. § 2675(a)). On appeal, Armendariz does not challenge this rationale.
Because this waives her argument on that point, we affirm the dismissal of her
state-law claim against the United States. See Martinez, 92 F.4th at 1265.
On all other claims, Plaintiffs correctly argue for reversal. The district
court dismissed the Stored Communications Act claim for the same reasons it
dismissed the unlawful-search-and-seizure claims. See Armendariz, 2024 WL
2139316, at *14. And after dismissing the federal claims, the court declined to
exercise jurisdiction over the remaining state-law claims. Id. at *17 (citing 28
U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3)). Because we conclude that Plaintiffs have alleged
plausible Fourth Amendment violations, the district court’s reasoning no longer
applies. So we reverse the dismissal of these claims too.
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of
(1) Armendariz’s Fourth Amendment claim for injunctive relief against the
60 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 61
FBI, and (2) Armendariz’s state-law claim against the United States. We
reverse on all other claims.
61 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 62
No. 24-1201, Armendariz, et al. v. City of Colorado Springs, et al. BACHARACH, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.
This appeal involves application of the Fourth Amendment to three
search warrants for digital devices or their contents. These kinds of
warrants might sometimes lack evidentiary support regardless of whether
the information is stored in a paper file or in a digital form. An example is
the third warrant, where constitutionality turned on established principles
of probable cause.
For the other two warrants, however, application of Fourth
Amendment principles proved difficult because our case law hadn’t kept up
with technological advances. See David Walker, Privacy in the Digital
Age: Encryption Policy–A Call for Congressional Action, 1999 Stan. Tech.
L. Rev. 3 at *3 (“The courts have historically had difficulty applying the
strictures of the Fourth . . . amendment[] to new and emerging technology
and have had a tendency to apply existing legal tests created at a time
when the new technology was inconceivable.”). Without meaningful
guidance in the case law, law enforcement officers needed to apply
eighteenth-century concepts to the rapidly developing world of digital
data. Reasonable officers could differ in how to apply these concepts to the
digital devices and their contents.
Reasonable judges could disagree, too. Here, for example, two state
judges issued the search warrants and a federal judge concluded that these Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 63
warrants had satisfied the Fourth Amendment. Today, however, the
majority concludes that those three judges were wrong. Even if the
majority is correct, however, the law enforcement officers didn’t violate a
clearly established right when relying on the approval of two state judges.
Background and Standard of Review
1. This case grew out of searches based on three warrants as the police investigated possible crimes involving a housing protest.
Execution of the three warrants led Ms. Jacqueline Armendariz and
the Chinook Center to sue
• four law enforcement officers who had participated in preparing affidavits to support issuance of the warrants,
• the city employing these officers (the City of Colorado Springs), and
• the federal agency (the FBI) that had allegedly retained digital data seized in the searches.
In the suit, Ms. Armendariz and the Chinook Center sued under 42 U.S.C.
§ 1983, asserting violation of the Fourth Amendment, the Stored
Communications Act ( 18 U.S.C. § 2703 et seq. ), and state law. The district
court dismissed the federal causes of action for failure to state a claim on
which relief could be granted. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).
2. We review the rulings based on the standard for dismissal.
We conduct de novo review over a dismissal for failure to state a
valid claim. Casanova v. Ulibarri, 595 F.3d 1120, 1124 (10th Cir. 2010).
2 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 64
Conducting this review, we determine whether the complaint stated a
plausible basis for relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Brown v. Montoya, 662
F.3d 1152, 1162–63 (10th Cir. 2011).
Personal-Capacity Claims Against the Four Officers
1. The personal-capacity claims turn on qualified immunity.
Ms. Armendariz has sued the two officers who participated in
obtaining the first two warrants: Detective Daniel Summey and Sergeant
Roy Ditzler. And the Chinook Center sued the two officers who
participated in seeking the third warrant: Detective B.K. Steckler and
Sergeant Jason Otero. The district court dismissed the claims against the
four officers based on their defenses of qualified immunity.
To overcome the defense of qualified immunity, Ms. Armendariz and
the Chinook Center needed to show the violation of a clearly established
constitutional right. Truman v. Orem City, 1 F.4th 1227, 1235 (10th Cir.
2021). For purposes of qualified immunity, a right is clearly established if
the Supreme Court, the Tenth Circuit, or a consensus of out-of-circuit
authority has
• held that “materially similar conduct was unconstitutional” or
• identified a rule that applies “‘with obvious clarity’” to the facts.
Buck v. City of Albuquerque, 549 F.3d 1269, 1290 (10th Cir. 2008) (quoting
United States v. Lanier, 520 U.S. 259, 271 (1997)). A right is clearly
3 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 65
established only if every reasonable law enforcement officer would have
realized that the search warrants violated the Fourth Amendment. Mullenix
v. Luna, 577 U.S. 7, 11–12 (2015).
To assess what every reasonable officer would have realized, we
consider the specific circumstances. E.g., City of Tahlequah v. Bond, 595
U.S. 9, 12 (2021); White v. Pauly, 580 U.S. 73, 79 (2017). The need for
specificity is heightened when the alleged violation involves the Fourth
Amendment. D.C. v. Wesby, 583 U.S. 48, 64 (2018). When the Fourth
Amendment is involved, we generally regard a neutral judge’s approval of
a search warrant as “the clearest indication that the officers acted in an
objectively reasonable manner, or in objective good faith.” Messerschmidt
v. Millender, 565 U.S. 535, 546 (2012) (cleaned up). After all, the officers
would generally regard the judges as better qualified to apply the Fourth
Amendment. Malley v. Briggs, 475 U.S. 335, 346 n.9 (1986).
2. Detective Summey and Sergeant Ditzler are entitled to qualified immunity for their roles in obtaining the first two warrants.
a. These warrants grew out of an investigation into interference with a police officer.
The first two warrants grew out of a housing protest by a group
called the Chinook Center. The attendees included Ms. Armendariz, who
walked her bicycle as a police officer tried to arrest one of the protest
leaders. Ms. Armendariz dropped her bicycle between herself and the
4 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 66
police officer. The police suspected that Ms. Armendariz had intentionally
dropped the bicycle to prevent the officer from catching the protest leader.
The suspicion triggered an investigation of Ms. Armendariz for an
attempt to commit aggravated assault against a police officer. The
investigation spurred Detective Summey to apply for two search warrants.
The first warrant would allow seizure of Ms. Armendariz’s digital devices.
The second warrant would allow two digital searches:
1. a search of all seized devices for photos, videos, messages, emails, and location data over a period of roughly two months (June 5, 2021, to August 7, 2021) and
2. a key word search for 26 key terms.
Sergeant Ditzler approved both applications, and state judges issued the
warrants.
b. First warrant: Seizure of the devices didn’t violate a clearly established right.
The issue surrounding the first warrant involves constitutional
restrictions when a law enforcement officer seeks digital devices. This
issue arises because the warrant allowed the police to enter
Ms. Armendariz’s residence and seize her cellphones, laptops, external
hard drives, and thumb drives.
i. The devices could contain information bearing on Ms. Armendariz’s intent.
Ms. Armendariz argues that the devices wouldn’t have yielded
relevant evidence about the events themselves, pointing out that she had
5 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 67
admittedly dropped the bicycle as a police officer ran toward one of the
protest leaders. But the devices could have shed light on Ms. Armendariz’s
intent: Had she accidentally dropped the bicycle, or had she tried to
impede the officer? Given the issue of intent, Detective Summey obtained a
warrant to seize Ms. Armendariz’s digital devices.
In requesting the warrant, the detective included evidence of
Ms. Armendariz’s
• active use of social media and
• political involvement.
The detective also relied on his knowledge that people regularly
• attach their phones to computers and use the computers to back up their phones and
• store digital data on numerous devices, including tablets, thumb drives, and external hard drives.
ii. Ms. Armendariz waived her appellate argument about a clearly established violation.
Ms. Armendariz denies probable cause to believe that she
• had relevant information on her devices or
• transferred information from a cellphone to another digital device.
For the sake of argument, we can assume that Ms. Armendariz is right.
With this assumption, qualified immunity would turn on whether the Fourth
Amendment violation had been clearly established. Ms. Armendariz argues
6 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 68
in her reply brief that the case law clearly established a lack of probable
cause to seize a laptop, external thumb drive, or external hard drive. But
Ms. Armendariz waived this argument.
In her opening appeal brief, Ms. Armendariz made a general
argument involving a clearly established violation. But as to specific
deficiencies, Ms. Armendariz addressed only the use of key words in the
second warrant. Nowhere in this brief did Ms. Armendariz address the
clarity of a violation involving the provisions in the first warrant to allow
the seizure of digital devices. She did add this argument in her reply brief,
but that was too late. See WildEarth Guardians v. EPA, 770 F.3d 919, 933
(10th Cir. 2014). Ms. Armendariz thus waived this argument. See Campbell
v. City of Spencer, 777 F.3d 1073, 1080 (10th Cir. 2014).
iii. Ms. Armendariz’s appellate argument also fails on the merits.
Even if Ms. Armendariz hadn’t waived this argument, it would have
failed on the merits. The underlying constitutional challenge requires us to
ask if there was probable cause to believe that pertinent information
existed in a cellphone, laptop, thumb drive, or external hard drive.
Ms. Armendariz questions reliance on Detective Summey’s opinion
regarding transfers of information between digital devices. For the sake of
argument, we can disregard Detective Summey’s opinion. Still, however,
probable cause could arise from “practical considerations of everyday
7 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 69
life.” United States v. Biglow, 562 F.3d 1272, 1280 (10th Cir. 2009)
(quoting Anthony v. United States, 667 F.2d 870, 874 (10th Cir. 1981)).
The resulting question is whether practical considerations of
everyday life allow a reasonable inference that Ms. Armendariz transferred
digital content among her devices. To answer that question, the issuing
judge would have encountered uncertainty because of the nature of the
expected information and a dearth of relevant case law.
The probe focused on Ms. Armendariz’s possible hostility to law
enforcement rather than what she had done. Everyone knew that
Ms. Armendariz had impeded a law enforcement officer by dropping her
bicycle; the question was why she had dropped the bicycle. Did she drop it
by accident or because she wanted to impede the officer?
To investigate that question, Detective Summey requested a warrant
for Ms. Armendariz’s digital devices. 1 The issuing judge could issue the
requested warrant if practical considerations of everyday life created
1 Ms. Armendariz argues that “it [would have been] unreasonable to believe that a person would incriminate themselves on one device and then transfer that data to every device in her home.” Appellants’ Opening Br. at 16–17. This argument apparently assumes that the government was seeking evidence of a plan to interfere with the police. But the government was investigating possible hostility to law enforcement, not a plan to interfere with the police. Ms. Armendariz doesn’t explain why she would have regarded hostility to the police as incriminating before the housing protest.
8 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 70
probable cause that Ms. Armendariz had transferred pertinent data between
her digital devices. Id.
In considering these practical considerations, the issuing judge
couldn’t draw meaningful guidance from precedents because neither our
court nor the Supreme Court had addressed the issue. In fact, the only
circuit to address the issue (the Fifth Circuit) had rejected a similar
challenge to a search warrant for a computer, reasoning that a suspect
could have used his cellphone to transfer information to a computer. United
States v. Contreras, 905 F.3d 853, 859 (5th Cir. 2018).
The majority questions this conclusion based on its perception of
typical practices involving the syncing of information among thumb drives
and external hard drives. Maj. Op. at 29. But Ms. Armendariz hasn’t
questioned whether it’s common to sync information to these devices. If
the majority is right, the resulting question would be whether the practice
of syncing information among devices was so antiquated that a police
officer should have instantly recognized that no one could reasonably rely
on the issuing judge’s legal conclusion. See D.C. v. Wesby, 583 U.S. 48, 63
(2018). I would answer that question no and conclude that any possible
violation wouldn’t have been clearly established.
The issuing judge implicitly concluded that probable cause existed
for seizure of a cellphone, laptop, thumb drive, and external hard drive. In
my view, a reasonable officer could competently rely on this resolution of
9 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 71
a debatable question of law. As a result, the alleged violation wouldn’t
have been clearly established.
iv. The case law didn’t clearly establish a requirement for particularized information about the likely presence of multiple devices.
The majority also concludes that the officers violated a clearly
established right by assuming that (1) Ms. Armendariz possessed the
devices that were listed to be seized and (2) those devices would have the
relevant information. Maj. Op. at 27–30. But Ms. Armendariz never made
this argument. Absent an argument by Ms. Armendariz, I would decline to
reverse on this basis. See United States v. Tee, 881 F.3d 1258, 1269 (10th
Cir. 2018) (stating that we reverse sua sponte only sparingly and only when
exceptional circumstances exist and the parties have obtained an
opportunity to address the issue). Even if Ms. Armendariz had made this
argument, however, it wouldn’t support a clearly established violation.
The affidavit contained evidence of Ms. Armendariz’s use of social
media and political activism. Together, these statements could lead a
reasonable officer to believe that
• Ms. Armendariz had owned a cellphone and
• it would have contained pertinent evidence of her intent.
Would that belief stretch the bounds of reasonableness for purposes
of qualified immunity? And does an officer have to provide the same basis
for every device sought in a warrant? For this issue, the inquiry would 10 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 72
begin with the case law in existence when the state judge issued the search
warrant. McWilliams v. Dinapoli, 40 F.4th 1118, 1128 (10th Cir. 2022). But
when the search warrant was issued, no meaningful guidance existed in our
court or in nine of the other ten regional circuits.
The only regional circuit to address the issue was the D.C. Circuit,
which decided United States v. Griffith, 867 F.3d 1265 (D.C. Cir. 2017).
There the court held that a search warrant for digital information was
unconstitutional without any information that the homeowner had even
owned a digital device. Id. at 1272–73. Despite the D.C. Circuit’s holding
in Griffith, we’ve never based a clearly established constitutional right on
a single out-of-circuit opinion. See Quintana v. Santa Fe Cnty. Bd. of
Comm’rs, 973 F.3d 1022, 1032 n.4 (10th Cir. 2020) (stating that “we
cannot endorse the suggestion that one out-of-circuit authority” has created
a clearly established right); see also Avant v. Doke, 104 F.4th 203, 211
(10th Cir. 2024) (concluding that two out-of-circuit opinions would not
create a clearly established right); Panagoulakos v. Yazzie, 741 F.3d 1126,
1130–31 (10th Cir. 2013) (concluding that a legal standard adopted by two
other circuit courts and two district courts hadn’t clearly established the
underlying right). Under our past cases, Griffith alone wouldn’t clearly
establish a constitutional requirement for particularized information about
the devices likely to be found in Ms. Armendariz’s home.
11 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 73
In fact, the D.C. Circuit and other circuits have repeatedly
distinguished Griffith based on its particular facts. See United States v.
Sueiro, 59 F.4th 132, 139–41 (D.C. Cir. 2023) (distinguishing Griffith
when the search warrant included computers and cellphones and the
suspect had used some form of “an electronic communications device” to
commit the alleged crime); United States v. Smith, 108 F.4th 872, 879
(D.C. Cir. 2024) (distinguishing Griffith based on evidence that the suspect
and victim had used cellphones); United States v. Vizcarra-Millan, 15 F.4th
473, 505 (7th Cir. 2021) (distinguishing Griffith given the relative
weakness of the application for a warrant in that case); United States v.
Davis, 126 F.4th 610, 616–17 (8th Cir. 2025) (distinguishing Griffith
because there the application had lacked any evidence involving the use of
digital information). In addition, the D.C. Circuit has upheld search
warrants after Griffith
• for computers and cellphones when the only evidence of a digital device consisted of information including a threat through email, Sueiro, 59 F.4th at 139–41 (D.C. Cir. 2023), and
• for cellphones, computers, digital storage devices, and thumb drives when the only evidence involved the use of cellphones and an investigator ’s experience, Smith, 108 F.4th at 878–79.
Even in the D.C. Circuit, then, it’s not clear that the court would apply
Griffith to the search for Ms. Armendariz’s digital devices in light of her
apparent possession of a cellphone. 12 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 74
Detective Summey obtained the search warrant with sworn statements
demonstrating Ms. Armendariz’s use of digital devices. These statements
involved Ms. Armendariz’s
• photos posted by an affiliate of the Chinook Center and
• use of social media to communicate with other protesters.
Detective Summey could reasonably question whether similar statements
would have changed the outcome in Griffith. So Detective Summey didn’t
violate a clearly established right even if the issuing judge had lacked
probable cause for the presence of multiple digital devices.
c. Second warrant: Authorization of the search and seizure of the contents didn’t violate a clearly established right.
The second warrant specified the data that the police could duplicate
from Ms. Armendariz’s digital devices. The parties disagree over three
aspects of the second warrant:
1. The subject-matter
2. The use of key words
3. The historical location data
Limit of the subject-matter
The first aspect involved a reference in the warrant to this
investigation. Ms. Armendariz characterizes this reference as vague,
allowing a search for anything that the officers wanted to view.
13 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 75
The issuing judge disagreed, concluding that the warrant satisfied the
Fourth Amendment. We may assume for the sake of argument that
• the issuing judge was wrong and
• the officers shouldn’t have relied on the issuing judge’s legal conclusion.
Still, Detective Summey and Sergeant Ditzler would enjoy qualified
immunity unless every reasonable officer would have realized the
inadequacy of the reference to this investigation. D.C. v. Wesby, 583 U.S.
48, 63 (2018).
The reference to this investigation didn’t exist in a vacuum:
Detective Summey explained that Ms. Armendariz had dropped a bicycle as
a police officer ran toward one of the protest leaders. Given this
explanation, Detective Summey could reasonably assume that the term this
investigation referred to the inquiry involving Ms. Armendariz’s intent
when she dropped her bicycle.
Assume that Detective Summey conducted his own legal research
before deciding whether he and Sergeant Ditzler could rely on the warrant.
They would have come up empty, as we have, because no precedents
existed on the sufficiency of a limit involving relevance to the existing
investigation. Given the lack of precedent on this issue, a law enforcement
officer could reasonably rely on the warrant’s limitation to this
investigation.
14 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 76
Use of key words
The second disagreement involves the use of key words.
A digital device contains a massive amount of information, and only
a fraction would bear on this investigation. For example, investigators
would have little use for Ms. Armendariz’s digital messages about social
engagements and birthdays. So Detective Summey proposed the use of 26
key words to narrow the review of digital information:
police, officer, cop, pig, bike, bicycle, attack, assault, 150th, celebration, protest, housing, human, right, yt, Chinook, Center, Jon, Jonathan, Sam, Samantha, Christiansen, Crustyansen, Chrischeeansen, Shaun, Walls.
Appellants’ App’x vol. 1, at 115. Ms. Armendariz argues that the key
words didn’t adequately constrain the officers. The issuing judge
disagreed, concluding that the key words provided a constitutionally
sufficient limit on the officers’ discretion.
We may again assume that Ms. Armendariz is right and the issuing
judge was wrong. Still, Detective Summey and Sergeant Ditzler would
enjoy qualified immunity unless every reasonable officer should have
realized that the issuing judge had erred in using these key words to
constrain the search. D.C. v. Wesby, 583 U.S. 48, 63 (2018).
Assume again that Detective Summey and Sergeant Ditzler would
have conducted their own legal research to double-check the issuing judge
15 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 77
with respect to the sufficiency of these key words. The detectives would
have found two strands of case law.
The first strand consists of Tenth Circuit cases rejecting a rigid
requirement for search protocols. See United States v. Russian, 848 F.3d
1239, 1245 n.1 (10th Cir. 2017) (stating that “we have previously declined
to require a search protocol for computer searches”); United States v.
Brooks, 427 F.3d 1246, 1251 (10th Cir. 2005) (“This court has never
required warrants to contain a particularized computer search strategy.”).
Other courts had also taken the same approach, rejecting calls for search
protocols and ex ante restrictions for warrants involving computerized
data. Orin Kerr, Executing Warrants for Digital Evidence: The Case for
Use Restrictions on Nonresponsive Data, 48 Tex. Tech L. Rev. 1, 8 (2015).
The second strand of case law approves the use of key words as a
way to limit computer searches. See United States v. Carey, 172 F.3d 1268,
1276 (10th Cir. 1999) (dicta) (discussing key word searches as a way to
limit computer searches); United States v. Burgess, 576 F.3d 1078, 1092
(10th Cir. 2009) (adopting the Carey dicta on constraining searches with
methods like key word searches). 2
2 The majority downplays these cases, stating that they refer only to search methodologies while the warrant here permits seizure of the information. Maj. Op. at 42. Ms. Armendariz hasn’t drawn this distinction, and we lack briefing on the significance of the wording allowing a seizure as well as a search of the responsive documents. But even if the majority were right, its distinction crystallizes the difficulty facing the issuing 16 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 78
These two strands of case law reflect the challenge facing law
enforcement officers as they applied case law involving conventional
searches to the ever-changing world of digital data. The difficulty was
magnified with algorithms and cloud technology, creating uncharted
challenges for officers seeking relevant information among the limitless
data on a typical digital device.
Confronting that challenge, Detective Summey proposed 26 key
words to constrain the review of the digital devices. Sergeant Ditzler and
the issuing judge approved the key words. If Detective Summey and
Sergeant Ditzler had double-checked the issuing judge by doing their own
legal research, they would have found little basis in the case law to
question the validity of the warrant.
Granted, an error would be obvious if the search warrant had omitted
any limiting principles. See, e.g., Mink v. Knox, 613 F.3d 995, 1010–11
(10th Cir. 2010) (addressing a warrant that referred only to a general
provision permitting the seizure of property that was material to a later
criminal prosecution); Cassady v. Goering, 567 F.3d 628, 632, 637 (10th
Cir. 2009) (addressing a warrant that allowed the search and seizure of “all
evidence of any crime”); United States v. Leary, 846 F.2d 592, 605–06
judge and the officers: They lacked any case law addressing the sufficiency of key words as limits on the seizure of documents appearing on digital devices. 17 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 79
(10th Cir. 1988) (addressing a warrant that covered all communications
involving a violation of federal export laws); Voss v. Bergsgaard, 774 F.2d
402, 405–06 (10th Cir. 1985) (addressing a warrant that authorized the
seizure of any information pertaining to any federal crime). But the search
warrant did contain limiting principles through the 26 key words. With
these key words, Detective Summey lacked any case law suggesting a
failure to adequately constrain the search. Absent such case law, a possible
violation of the Fourth Amendment wouldn’t have been obvious.
Ms. Armendariz also criticizes some of the key words, invoking a
doctrine known as scrupulous exactitude. This doctrine could apply when a
search warrant targets materials protected by the First Amendment. A
classic example arose in Stanford v. Texas, 379 U.S. 476 (1965). There
officers searched a house and seized over 300 books because they involved
suspected connections to the Communist Party of Texas. Id. at 477–79. The
Supreme Court pointed to a need for “scrupulous exactitude” because the
warrant had targeted information protected by the First Amendment. Id. at
485.
Ms. Armendariz characterizes the second warrant as authorization of
a search targeting protected information. For this characterization,
Ms. Armendariz refers to the key words reflecting hostility to the police
(such as pig, cop, and police).
18 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 80
The issuing judge rejected this characterization, but we may again
assume for the sake of argument that the issuing judge was wrong. With
this assumption, qualified immunity would apply unless every reasonable
officer should have characterized the key words as code words for
information protected by the First Amendment. D.C. v. Wesby, 583 U.S. 48,
63 (2018).
Assume again that Detective Summey and Sergeant Ditzler had
conducted their own legal research. They again would have come up empty,
as we have, because no precedents had addressed the interplay between the
First and Fourth Amendments when a warrant targets evidence of hostility
toward the police.
Perhaps the issuing judge had erred in overlooking potential parallels
to Stanford. Even so, obvious differences also existed: There the police
targeted information bearing on connections to a communist party because
those connections had constituted the underlying crime. Stanford, 379 U.S.
at 476–77. Here the officers were investigating why Ms. Armendariz had
dropped her bicycle: Was it an accident or an effort to impede the police?
Answering that question involved intent, and hostility to the police might
suggest an intent to impede an officer. See Colo. Rev. Stat. § 18-3-203
(stating that intent to cause bodily injury is an element of second-degree
assault); People v. Banks, 983 P.2d 102, 107 (Colo. App. 1999) (stating that
an element of § 18-3-203(c), second-degree assault on a police officer, is
19 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 81
an intent “to cause bodily injury to prevent a police officer from
performing a lawful duty”).
Ms. Armendariz downplays the difference, and perhaps she’s right to
do so. But the issuing judge and the officers lacked any meaningful case
law on the applicability of Stanford when the protected information relates
to evidence of intent. Absent meaningful guidance in the case law, a
reasonable officer could rely on the issuing judge’s legal analysis. So I
would reject Ms. Armendariz’s reliance on scrupulous exactitude in
connection with the search warrant.
Absence of a temporal limitation involving the key words
Despite the use of key words, the warrant didn’t include a temporal
limitation. Ms. Armendariz argues that the lack of a temporal limitation
violated a clearly established constitutional right. For the sake of
argument, we can assume that the key words should have contained a
temporal limitation. In my view, though, the absence of a temporal
limitation didn’t render a constitutional violation clearly established.
The key words didn’t expand the search—they narrowed it. See
United States v. Carey, 172 F.3d 1268, 1276 (10th Cir. 1999) (dicta)
(discussing the use of key words as a way for officers to avoid searching
irrelevant material on a digital device); United States v. Burgess, 576 F.3d
1078, 1092–93 (10th Cir. 2009) (adopting the Carey dicta regarding the use
of key words as a method to constrain searches). The digital data contained
20 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 82
a limitless trove of information, and the key words targeted data suggesting
hostility to the police.
Ms. Armendariz points out that her act was undisputed: She
admittedly dropped her bicycle in the path of an officer running toward one
of the protest leaders. So the investigation naturally focused on her intent:
Did she accidentally drop the bicycle or try to interfere with an officer?
The answer could come from the digital information reflecting
Ms. Armendariz’s attitude toward the police.
But Ms. Armendariz suggests that the information obviously lost any
relevance at some point. We can assume that Ms. Armendariz is right. But
neither the Supreme Court nor our court has ever required a temporal
limitation on search warrants containing limits involving key words. And
one other circuit has resisted efforts to mandate temporal limitations on
search warrants for digital data. See United States v. Zelaya-Veliz, 94 F.4th
321, 340 (4th Cir. 2024) (declining “to mandate a temporal restriction in
every compelled disclosure of social media account data” given the
inability to “anticipate all future circumstances”). 3 Given the sparsity of
pertinent case law, the lack of a temporal limit didn’t violate a clearly
established right.
3 There the Fourth Circuit declined to require suppression of account data from a social media account, reasoning that the “unsettled nature” of requirements involving temporal limitations would allow an officer with reasonable training to rely on the search warrant. 94 F.4th at 340–41. 21 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 83
Historical data involving Ms. Armendariz’s location
The second warrant also allowed officers to seize digital data about
Ms. Armendariz’s location over a period of roughly two months. She
argues that officers had no reason to investigate her whereabouts before the
day of the protest. We assume for the sake of argument that
Ms. Armendariz is right. But she still had the burden to show that a
constitutional violation would have been clearly established. See p. 3,
above.
On appeal, Ms. Armendariz doesn’t argue that a violation would have
been clearly established. In her opening brief, she addresses the
requirement of a clearly established violation, but only as to the use of key
words. For the historical location data, she makes no argument about a
clearly established violation. So she has waived that argument. See Kobach
v. U.S. Election Assistance Comm’n, 772 F.3d 1183, 1192 n.5 (10th Cir.
2014) (stating that an argument is waived when omitted in the appellant’s
briefs).
22 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 84
3. Detective Steckler and Sergeant Otero are not entitled to qualified immunity for their roles in obtaining the third warrant.
Detective Steckler obtained a third search warrant, which involved
the Facebook account for the organization sponsoring the protest (the
Chinook Center). 4
The investigation included potential crimes when protesters allegedly
blocked city streets. For this investigation, Detective Steckler requested a
warrant identifying
• all subscribers to the Chinook Center ’s Facebook page and messenger chats,
• Facebook Events, and
• Facebook posts for the four-day period preceding the protest and the two days following the protest.
A state judge approved the warrant, and officers carried out the search. The
Chinook Center argues that the warrant obviously failed to establish
probable cause for the requested information.
Detective Steckler and Sergeant Otero argue that the search warrant
was designed to uncover evidence bearing on plans to block city streets.
But Detective Steckler obtained the warrant without presenting any reason
to believe that the Facebook materials would include a plan to block the
streets.
4 Sergeant Otero approved the application before it was presented to the state judge.
23 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 85
The majority concludes that the warrant was overbroad, Maj. Op. at
49–57, and the Chinook Center argues that we should view the warrant with
scrupulous exactitude. In my view, however, we need not address
overbreadth or the need for scrupulous exactitude because the warrant
lacked any arguable nexus to evidence of a crime.
To obtain the warrant, Detective Steckler presented an affidavit
stating that
• the Chinook Center had organized the protest on a Facebook page,
• a tipster had told the police that someone owned a Facebook account with pictures and videos of the protest and the arrest of a protest leader,
• a leader of the protest had posted Facebook messages hostile to the police, and
• a police officer had experience showing that illegal demonstrators use social media to plan events.
The affidavit referred to particular crimes, but didn’t say why the Chinook
Center’s Facebook page would contain information bearing on the blockage
of city streets.
24 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 86
The officers argue that the Facebook page could help identify masked
protesters. 5 But the affidavit didn’t provide a reason to expect information
identifying the masked protesters.
Granted, Detective Steckler referred to his experience with the use of
social media to plan illegal protests. But the affidavit didn’t say why that
experience would suggest the presence of digital information bearing on
(1) a plan to block the streets or (2) the identification of masked protesters
blocking the streets.
Detective Steckler and Sergeant Otero also point out that they lacked
meaningful guidance from the case law on Facebook searches. The lack of
such guidance could affect the inquiry on overbreadth, but the need for
probable cause doesn’t turn on the novelty of social media sites like
Facebook. For example, suppose that the search warrant had targeted the
Chinook Center ’s paper files rather than a digital site like Facebook. For
paper files, Detective Steckler would need a reason to believe that the
search would yield evidence of a plan for protesters to block the streets.
The same is true for a search warrant targeting a digital site like Facebook.
Despite the relative novelty of Facebook, Detective Steckler provided
no reason to believe that the Chinook Center ’s Facebook account would
5 The officers also say that the Facebook information would bear on a separate prosecution involving one of the protest leaders. But the officers don’t develop this statement into a meaningful argument.
25 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 87
reflect planning to block the streets. As a result, the scarcity of case law
involving Facebook wouldn’t entitle Detective Steckler and Sergeant Otero
to qualified immunity for their roles in obtaining the third warrant.
4. The dismissal of state claims should be reversed in light of the majority’s conclusion on the federal claims.
The remaining claims against the individual officers arise under
Colorado’s constitution and laws. Colo. Const. art. II, §§ 7, 10, 24; Colo.
Rev. Stat. § 13-21-131. The district court declined to exercise jurisdiction
over these claims after dismissing the federal claims.
The majority concludes that Ms. Armendariz and the Chinook Center
have alleged plausible federal claims. Based on this conclusion, the
majority reverses the dismissal of the state claims against the officers. The
reversal is appropriate in light of the majority’s conclusions on the federal
claims.
Liability of the City Under the First and Fourth Amendments and the Stored Communications Act
Ms. Armendariz and the Chinook Center challenge dismissal of the
claims against the City of Colorado Springs for violating the First and
Fourth Amendments and the Stored Communications Act (18 U.S.C. § 2703
et seq.). The district court dismissed these claims based on the lack of a
constitutional violation, and the majority concludes that municipal
employees violated the Constitution in obtaining the three warrants. Given
that conclusion, the majority remands for the district court to reconsider
26 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 88
the claims against the city under the First and Fourth Amendments and the
Stored Communications Act. This remand is appropriate in light of the
majority’s conclusion that Ms. Armendariz and the Chinook Center have
adequately pleaded constitutional violations. 6
Claim for Damages Against the Federal Government
Ms. Armendariz also sued the federal government under the Federal
Tort Claims Act, seeking damages based on violations of Colorado’s
constitution and laws. Colo. Const. art. II, §§ 7, 10, 24; Colo. Rev. Stat.
§ 13-21-131. The district court dismissed these claims, concluding that
Ms. Armendariz had failed to satisfy the statutory requirements. The
majority concludes that Ms. Armendariz waived her appellate arguments on
this claim by failing to challenge the district court’s reasoning. Maj. Op. at
60. I agree with the majority and would affirm the dismissal of her claim
against the federal government for violating Colorado’s constitution and
6 On the claims involving municipal liability, the city argues in the alternative that Ms. Armendariz and the Chinook Center failed to adequately plead an unconstitutional policy or custom. The district court didn’t reach this issue, and the preferred approach is to remand for the district court to address this issue in the first instance. See Rife v. Okla. Dep’t of Pub. Safety, 854 F.3d 637, 649 (10th Cir. 2017); Greystone Constr., Inc. v. Nat’l Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 661 F.3d 1272, 1290 (10th Cir. 2011).
Given this preference, the majority remands for the district court to resolve this issue in the first instance. I agree with this remand in light of the majority’s determination that Ms. Armendariz and the Chinook Center adequately pleaded constitutional violations.
27 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 89
laws. See Nixon v. City & Cnty. of Denver, 784 F.3d 1364, 1366 (10th Cir.
2015).
Claims Against the FBI for an Injunction
Ms. Armendariz sought an injunction that would require the FBI to
return or destroy copies of the digital data obtained in the searches. The
district court dismissed this claim, reasoning that (1) a remedy otherwise
existed under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(g) and (2)
Ms. Armendariz did not plead a plausible Fourth Amendment violation.
The majority correctly upholds this dismissal based on waiver. Maj. Op. at
58–59.
The district court reasoned that Ms. Armendariz and the Chinook
Center had an available remedy under Rule 41(g). But Ms. Armendariz and
the Chinook Center don’t address this reasoning in their opening brief.
They do address this rationale in their reply brief. But the reply brief
was too late. See WildEarth Guardians v. EPA, 770 F.3d 919, 933 (10th Cir.
2014). Because Ms. Armendariz and the Chinook Center waived their
challenge to the district court’s reliance on Rule 41(g), I too would affirm
the dismissal of this claim. See Reedy v. Werholz, 660 F.3d 1270, 1275
(10th Cir. 2011).
The investigations into Ms. Armendariz and the Chinook Center
included searches based on three warrants. In my view, Detective Summey
28 Appellate Case: 24-1201 Document: 79 Date Filed: 02/24/2026 Page: 90
and Sergeant Ditzler enjoyed qualified immunity for their roles in
obtaining the first two search warrants. For the third warrant, however, I
agree with the majority as to the denial of qualified immunity on the
claims against Detective Steckler and Sergeant Otero.
For the claim against the FBI for destruction of the seized data, I
believe that Ms. Armendariz and the Chinook Center waived their
challenge to the district court’s reliance on the availability of another
remedy. So I would affirm the grant of the FBI’s motion to dismiss.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
Armendariz v. City of Colorado Springs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armendariz-v-city-of-colorado-springs-ca10-2026.