State of Iowa v. Iowa District Court For Emmet County

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 10, 2024
Docket22-1703
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Iowa District Court For Emmet County (State of Iowa v. Iowa District Court For Emmet County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Iowa v. Iowa District Court For Emmet County, (iowa 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA

No. 22–1703

Submitted March 20, 2024—Filed May 10, 2024

STATE OF IOWA,

Petitioner,

vs.

IOWA DISTRICT COURT FOR EMMET COUNTY,

Respondent.

Certiorari to the Iowa District Court for Emmet County, Jeffrey A. Neary,

Judge.

State petitions for review of district court order regarding the assessment

of costs for conducting privilege review of electronic information obtained via

search warrant. WRIT SUSTAINED.

McDonald, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices

joined.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Zachary Miller (argued), Assistant Attorney General, for petitioner.

Martha J. Lucey (argued), State Appellate Defender, for respondent. 2

MCDONALD, Justice. A county sheriff’s office applied for and obtained a search warrant to seize

and search the email account of a criminal defendant in a public corruption case.

The search warrant provided that the seized materials would be turned over to

the district court to review the seized materials for communications protected by

the attorney–client privilege. The district court was unable to complete the review

as ordered in the search warrant and decided to hire a technology vendor to

assist in the privilege review. The question presented in this appeal is who is

responsible for the costs of the technology vendor hired to assist in conducting

the privilege review of the email account information: the defendant, the

prosecution, or the judicial branch? Applying the old rule, “You break it, you buy

it,” we conclude the judicial branch should be responsible for the costs of the

technology vendor hired to assist in conducting the initial privilege review under

the particular facts presented here.

I.

This dispute over the responsibility for technology vendor expenses arises

out of the public-corruption investigation and prosecution of former Armstrong

police chief Craig Juan Merrill. On April 13, 2021, Merrill was charged in a twenty-one-count trial information with ongoing criminal conduct, in violation of

Iowa Code sections 706A.1(5) and 706A2(4); theft in the first degree, in violation

of Iowa Code sections 714.1(1), 714.1(2), and 714.2(1); assault with a dangerous

weapon, in violation of Iowa Code sections 708.1, 708.2(3), and 702.7; and

nonfelonious misconduct in office, in violation of Iowa code sections 721.2(2),

721.2(3), and 721.2(5).

As part of the criminal investigation, Emmet County Sheriff Mike Martens

applied for a search warrant to seize and search Merrill’s email account. The search warrant application sought subscriber, email, messenger, and group 3

information associated with a Yahoo! Mail account that Merrill used. In the

affidavit supporting the search warrant application, Sheriff Martens stated that

it is “reasonable to believe that the [subject] account was used by Defendant

Merrill during the relevant time period and contains evidence of criminal activity,

including but not limited to the offenses already charged in the trial information.”

Cognizant that the email account may have contained privileged

communications between Merrill and his attorney, the State “tr[ied] to do the

right thing, making sure the [S]tate didn’t accidentally get anything [it] w[as]n’t

supposed to get.” In an ex parte search warrant hearing before the district court,

the State discussed the possibility of having a taint team review the seized

materials for attorney–client privileged information prior to producing the seized

materials to the investigators and prosecutors. A “taint team” or “filter team” is

comprised of attorneys or other law enforcement employees “shielded from the

investigation itself by ethical walls to ensure that there are no leaks of

information before the review process has been completed.” 2 Paul R. Rice et al.,

Attorney-Client Privilege in the United States § 11:19, Westlaw (database updated

Dec. 2023) [hereinafter Rice et al., Attorney-Client Privilege]. In this case, it was

decided that a taint team was not “an ideal route to go down,” although the reasons for deciding against the use of a taint team are not clear from the record.

Instead of using a taint team, the district court thought it “would be no big deal

for [it] to look at [the emails]” and conduct the privilege review.

The search warrant set forth the procedure by which the seized materials

would be obtained and then submitted to the district court for the initial privilege

review:

The Emmet County Sheriff or designee shall receive the material set forth for seizure by this warrant via the custodian’s Law Enforcement Portal or other means, but shall not review or disclose those items to any person. Instead, the material shall be placed on 4

an external drive and produced to this Court for en camera review. The Emmet County Sheriff or designee shall not retain any copies of the original file produced by the custodian.

This Court will review the material en camera to ensure no attorney–client privileged materials are inadvertently produced to the State of Iowa. To effectuate this review, the Court upon receipt of the material shall direct counsel for Craig Merrill to provide the Court with a written statement no later than 10 days following notice from the Court. The written statement produced by counsel must identify a general date range and associated e-mail addresses for any attorney–client privileged communications that were sent to or from the named e-mail account in relation to a criminal investigation or prosecution. Counsel shall provide the same to the State of Iowa, who may review and lodge any objection to the items designated as attorney–client privileged. The Court will resolve any dispute, with or without hearing at the Court’s election. If counsel for Craig Merrill believes no attorney–client privileged communications are contained within the seized materials, counsel shall so state and the Court will release the seized material to the Emmet County Sheriff or designee without review.

Subject to further order of this Court, the Court will remove attorney–client privileged communications that relate to a criminal investigation or prosecution from the material before releasing the material to the Emmet County Sheriff or designee. The Court may conduct this process by use of a search function or any other means the Court deems appropriate.

The initial privilege review ultimately did not proceed as ordered in the

search warrant. Pursuant to the search warrant, Merrill provided a statement

identifying email addresses for any attorney–client privileged communications that were sent to or from the named email account. Sometime afterward, Sheriff

Martens delivered to the district court a drive with the seized materials. The

district court attempted to conduct the privilege review. However, several

technological issues thwarted the court. The drive contained over 5,800 emails.

Because of the volume of emails, the district court thought it best to conduct a

name search. After conducting a name search, the district court “[didn’t] think

the search that’s within the program [was] pulling through every single e-mail.” The district court then contemplated searching through each email individually, 5

one click at a time. The district court concluded that this option would take too

much time. The judge also believed that if she opened each email individually,

she would alter the metadata and leave a forensic fingerprint. The district court

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