Nelson v. State

863 S.E.2d 61, 312 Ga. 375
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 8, 2021
DocketS21A0773
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 863 S.E.2d 61 (Nelson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson v. State, 863 S.E.2d 61, 312 Ga. 375 (Ga. 2021).

Opinion

312 Ga. 375 FINAL COPY

S21A0773. NELSON v. THE STATE.

PETERSON, Justice.

This Court granted murder defendant Corey Nelson’s

application for interlocutory appeal of the trial court’s denial of his

motion to suppress evidence. At issue is evidence extracted from his

cell phone and other electronic devices pursuant to search warrants.

Nelson argues that the delay of more than two years between the

date on which the electronic devices were seized pursuant to a

search warrant for his residence, and the dates on which the devices

were examined pursuant to subsequent search warrants for their

contents, violated his Fourth Amendment rights. Although we posed

a question to the parties regarding the significant legal question of

when a search warrant has been executed, we need not — and so do

not — answer that question to decide this case. The evidence

challenged here was extracted days after warrants issued in 2020. The only challenge Nelson now offers to this evidence is the long

delay between the 2017 seizure of the devices and the 2020 issuance

of the warrants. But his possessory interest in the devices was

greatly diminished by the combination of his incarceration for the

entire period of the delay and his failure to request the devices’

return. Thus, we conclude that the trial court did not err in denying

the motion to suppress, and we affirm.

On October 14, 2017, Cobb County police officers responded to

a report of a shooting at a residence, where they found Khristopher

Dixon dead from multiple gunshot wounds. Nelson was identified as

a suspect, in part based on a post made on the victim’s Instagram

account just minutes before the first 911 call reporting the shooting.

On October 15, 2017, Detective Philip Stoddard obtained and

executed a warrant to search Nelson’s home, including for electronic

communication devices. Pursuant to the warrant, the police seized

an iPhone, a Samsung cell phone, and a laptop computer. Nelson

was arrested on the same day. On January 4, 2018, a Cobb County

grand jury indicted Nelson for malice murder, felony murder,

2 aggravated assault, and possession of a firearm during the

commission of a felony.

On January 18, 2018, Stoddard obtained separate warrants to

search each of Nelson’s devices for electronic data related to the

crimes. On that same day, he submitted a written request for

forensic analysis of each device to what is now known as the Cobb

Police Department’s Technology Based Crimes Unit (“TBCU”). But

more than a year passed before TBCU analysts performed the

examinations: data extraction was completed for the iPhone on

February 6, 2019; the Samsung phone on January 8, 2020; and the

laptop on January 9, 2020.1

Nelson filed a motion to suppress the evidence taken from

these devices, arguing that the January 2018 warrants were void

because they had not been executed within ten days as required by

the warrants themselves and by OCGA § 17-5-25.2 At a hearing, the

1 The record indicates that the Samsung cell phone did not belong to

Nelson and had not been used since 2014. Nelson focuses on the iPhone in his appellate briefing. 2 OCGA § 17-5-25 provides: “Any search warrant not executed within ten

3 State offered various excuses for the delay, including that the TBCU

was understaffed and shifting to a new system for tracking requests

for forensic tasks, that different matters such as missing persons

cases may have taken higher priority, and that data extraction is

time consuming. On February 4, 2020, the trial court granted

Nelson’s motion to suppress on the ground that the State had failed

to comply with OCGA § 17-5-25 by not extracting the data within

ten days of the issuance of the warrants. Following that order,

Detective Stoddard applied for and was granted new search

warrants, which were issued on February 7, 2020. Within ten days,

the TBCU extracted data anew from the iPhone (on February 11,

2020), the Samsung cell phone (on February 14, 2020), and the

laptop (on February 13, 2020).3

Nelson again moved to suppress the evidence extracted from

days from the time of issuance shall be void and shall be returned to the court of the judicial officer issuing the same as ‘not executed.’” 3 The trial court found that it was undisputed that Detective Stoddard

relied on no information derived from the data extractions pursuant to the 2018 search warrants in seeking the 2020 search warrants, a finding that was supported by the record. 4 the devices. He argued among other things that the delay of more

than two years from the date on which the electronic devices were

seized until the date of the data extraction pursuant to the 2020

warrants violated his federal and state constitutional rights against

unreasonable search and seizure, as well as his federal

constitutional due process rights. The trial court denied the motion.

The trial court concluded that the 2020 search warrants were

properly issued and executed, ruling that they were supported by

probable cause and executed within ten days of issuance, and that

any delay in the filing of their returns did not render them invalid.

The court also held that the delay between the seizure of the

electronic devices and the issuance of the 2020 search warrants was

not unreasonable. The court explained that it was “satisfied with the

reason for the delay as presented by the State” in obtaining the new

warrants — identifying that reason in the order as a lack of

manpower and resources within the TBCU, as well as the necessity

of obtaining the new warrants given the suppression of the evidence

pursuant to the 2018 warrants. The trial court found no substantial

5 violation of Nelson’s rights arising from the delay, noting that he

had been in custody since October 2017.

This Court granted Nelson’s interlocutory application, which

argued that the delay between the seizure of the electronic devices

and their searches pursuant to the 2020 warrants was unreasonable

under the Fourth Amendment. We heard oral argument in the case

on August 26, 2021.4

In reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a defendant’s motion to

suppress evidence, the trial court’s decision with regard to questions

of fact and credibility must be accepted unless clearly erroneous; we

will not disturb the trial court’s findings based on conflicting

evidence if there is any evidence to support them. See State v.

Rosenbaum, 305 Ga. 442, 449 (2) (826 SE2d 18) (2019). The trial

court’s legal conclusions are reviewed de novo, however. See id. at

451 (2).

Here, the trial court decided that the warrant authorizing the

4 We thank the amicus curiae for its brief and oral argument regarding

the application of corpus linguistics to some of the questions presented. 6 seizure of the devices at issue was insufficiently particular to allow

a thorough review of the electronic data contained therein, such that

additional search warrants were required. We need not decide

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