Jacob Lickers v. United States

98 F.4th 847
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 2024
Docket22-1179
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 98 F.4th 847 (Jacob Lickers v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacob Lickers v. United States, 98 F.4th 847 (7th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 22-1179 JACOB D. LICKERS, Petitioner-Appellant, v.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Respondent-Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois. No. 4:20-cv-04164-SLD — Sara Darrow, Chief Judge. ____________________

ARGUED JANUARY 8, 2024 — DECIDED APRIL 12, 2024 ____________________

Before WOOD, SCUDDER, and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges. SCUDDER, Circuit Judge. Five years ago we affirmed the conviction of Jacob Lickers for transporting and possessing child pornography. He has since moved to vacate his convic- tions under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, alleging that his trial and appel- late counsel rendered ineffective assistance in connection with an unsuccessful motion to suppress. The district court denied relief, and we affirm. Explaining why requires us to unpack a complex sequence of events involving parallel state 2 No. 22-1179

and federal investigations, two search warrant applications, two criminal prosecutions, two suppression rulings, and a di- rect criminal appeal. I A In September 2015, undercover police officers Jimmy McVey and Ryan Maricle traveled to a public park in Mon- mouth, Illinois to meet a confidential informant. When they arrived, they saw something strange. A blue car sat parked on the shoulder of a road running next to the park, half on the road and half in the grass. Inside, the car’s lone occupant, Ja- cob Lickers, “appeared excited, repeatedly looking toward the passenger seat, down at his lap, and then at a family with young children on a nearby playground.” See United States v. Lickers, 928 F.3d 609, 613 (7th Cir. 2019). From afar Officers McVey and Maricle thought that Lickers might be a drug ad- dict because his jerky movements resembled the “tweaking” that sometimes accompanies withdrawal. Id. Upon approaching the vehicle and looking inside, the of- ficers saw Lickers sitting in the driver’s seat with a red dish towel draped over his lap. His cellphone rested on the pas- senger seat. At first Officers McVey and Maricle—who were dressed in plain clothes for their undercover assignment—im- personated drug dealers and asked Lickers if he was looking for pills. When Lickers said no, McVey and Maricle changed course, disclosed that they were police, and asked Lickers for identification. Lickers obliged. By this point, Lickers appeared nervous. He was “breath- ing heavily” and furtively attempting to “knock his cellphone off the seat to the floor of the car.” Id. All the while—and No. 22-1179 3

despite “repeated requests to keep his hands visible”—Lick- ers kept his hands hidden beneath the towel. Id. Fearing the presence of a weapon, Officer Maricle ordered Lickers to re- move the towel from his lap. Lickers complied, and the reason for his panicky behavior became clear—the towel was cover- ing his exposed genitals. When Officer McVey demanded an explanation, Lickers divulged that he was looking at Craigslist and began to admit that he was “self-pleasuring” before catching himself and insisting that he was urinating into a cup. Id. Suspecting Lickers of public masturbation, Officer McVey ordered Lickers to get dressed and exit the car. When Lickers opened the door, McVey smelled marijuana emanating from within. Lickers declined the officers’ request to search the car, so they radioed for a K9 unit. The unit arrived about half an hour later and a drug dog alerted to the presence of marijuana near the passenger’s side door. A search of the car uncovered about an ounce of marijuana. When Lickers admitted that the marijuana was his, he was placed under arrest for drug pos- session. A more thorough inventory search resulted in the recov- ery of Lickers’s cell phone, a laptop computer, and a digital camera from within the car. Officer McVey obtained a state court warrant later that day authorizing the forensic exami- nation of those devices. Lickers’s phone and computer both contained child pornography. B With this evidence in hand, state prosecutors charged Lickers in Warren County Circuit Court with possessing child pornography and marijuana in violation of Illinois law. 4 No. 22-1179

Lickers retained Daniel Dalton to defend him, whose first step was to file a motion to suppress that challenged the constitu- tionality of Officer McVey and Maricle’s actions in the park. Dalton’s principal contention was that the officers lacked rea- sonable suspicion to believe that Lickers had committed a crime when they initially seized him. Alternatively, Dalton ar- gued that too much time had elapsed from when Officer McVey first smelled marijuana to when the K9 unit arrived on scene. See United States v. Robinson, 30 F.3d 774, 784 (7th Cir. 1994) (explaining that investigatory stops must be reasonable in both “scope and duration”). Dalton’s strategy proved sound. The state court agreed with both arguments and suppressed all “physical evidence seized” during the stop, along with any statements Lickers made to Officers McVey and Maricle. The prosecution then dismissed all charges, bringing the state case to a swift end. C Not keen to let Lickers go unpunished, state officials re- ferred the case for potential federal prosecution. In February 2016, FBI Special Agent Steven Telisak took possession of Lickers’s phone and laptop to conduct an additional forensic examination. Although he believed that “the FBI might al- ready have all the necessary authority” to conduct this second search, given that the devices had already been searched by state authorities, he applied in federal court for a fresh war- rant to ensure compliance with the Fourth Amendment. Agent Telisak’s supporting affidavit drew heavily on, and even attached a courtesy copy of, the affidavit Officer McVey filed in support of his state warrant application months be- fore. In one regard, however, Telisak went further than No. 22-1179 5

McVey. Aware of the results of the state search, Telisak in- formed the federal judge that Lickers’s devices had already been searched and were found to contain child pornography. At no point, though, did Agent Telisak caveat that the state court had suppressed that evidence based on a finding that Lickers’s arrest was unconstitutional. The district court issued the warrant, and federal investi- gators discovered a litany of incriminating messages Lickers had sent using the Kik messenger application. Those mes- sages were laden with requests for child pornography. In one, Lickers shared a video with another Kik user portraying the sexual abuse of an infant child. D In time, a federal grand jury indicted Lickers on counts of transporting and possessing child pornography in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252A(a)(1) and § 2252A(a)(5)(B). The federal prosecution proceeded much like the state one had. Lickers again hired Daniel Dalton, who again filed a motion to sup- press contending that the stop in the park violated the Fourth Amendment. Unlike before, however, Dalton also attacked the state search warrant (not the federal warrant as one might expect), which he contended “was so lacking in probable cause” that the state investigators could not reasonably rely on it. The district court held an evidentiary hearing on the mo- tion, at which Officer McVey testified about the events lead- ing to Lickers’s arrest and the search of his phone and laptop. Although Dalton questioned McVey about a range of topics, he did not inquire about the circumstances surrounding the referral of the case to the FBI or about what, if anything, Agent 6 No. 22-1179

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98 F.4th 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacob-lickers-v-united-states-ca7-2024.