United States v. Secord

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Armed Forces
DecidedJuly 30, 2025
Docket24-0217/AR
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Secord (United States v. Secord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Secord, (Ark. 2025).

Opinion

This opinion is subject to revision before publication

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED FORCES _______________

UNITED STATES Appellee

v.

Alex J. SECORD, Staff Sergeant United States Army, Appellant

No. 24-0217 Crim. App. No. 20210667

Argued January 28, 2025—Decided July 30, 2025

Military Judges: G. Brett Batdorff (arraignment) and Travis L. Rogers (trial)

For Appellant: Scott R. Hockenberry, Esq. (argued); Captain Amir R. Hamdoun and Daniel Conway, Esq. (on brief); Major Robert D. Luyties.

For Appellee: Captain Dominique L. Dove (argued); Colonel Richard E. Gorini (on brief); Major Patrick S. Barr.

Judge HARDY delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Judge OHLSON, Judge SPARKS, and Judge JOHNSON joined. Judge MAGGS filed a sep- arate dissenting opinion. _______________ United States v. Secord, No. 24-0217/AR Opinion of the Court

Judge HARDY delivered the opinion of the Court. The Government charged Appellant with multiple of- fenses related to alleged use of cocaine with junior enlisted soldiers and related conduct. Pursuant to a search and sei- zure authorization, the Government seized Appellant’s cell phone but was unable to access any of the cell phone’s data because the phone was encrypted and passcode protected. Citing Rule for Courts-Martial (R.C.M.) 701(a)(2), Appel- lant moved to compel the Government to give Appellant unilateral and unrestricted access to the cell phone, argu- ing that the Government had a duty to do so because the data on the cell phone was “within the possession, custody, or control of military authorities.” The military judge de- nied Appellant’s motion but offered Appellant the oppor- tunity to obtain the data if the Government was provided equal access. Appellant rejected this offer, and the parties proceeded to trial without either having access to the cell phone data. A general court-martial convicted Appellant of all the charged offenses and the United States Army Court of Criminal Appeals (ACCA) affirmed the convictions. We granted review of three issues: I. Where the Government seized and held Appel- lant’s phone pursuant to a narrow search author- ization, but could not access the data without Ap- pellant’s passcode, was the data within the possession, custody, or control of military author- ities for purposes of R.C.M. 701? II. Did the military judge err by ruling Appellant could not access the data without simultaneously providing the Government with full access to all his personal data? III. If the military judge erred, did the error con- stitute prejudicial error? United States v. Secord, 85 M.J. 195 (C.A.A.F. 2024) (order granting review). Because we agree with the military judge that R.C.M. 701(a)(2) did not require the Government to give Appellant access to the data on the seized cell phone, we answer the first granted issue in the negative and therefore

2 United States v. Secord, No. 24-0217/AR Opinion of the Court

do not reach the second and third granted issues. Accord- ingly, we affirm the decision of the ACCA. I. Background At the time of his offenses, Appellant was a staff ser- geant assigned to the same unit as MB, a junior enlisted soldier. Appellant communicated with MB via his cell phone to facilitate their use of cocaine. On three occasions in August 2020, MB paid Appellant via CashApp on her cell phone for cocaine that they used together at MB’s off-post apartment. Appellant’s CashApp account recorded the re- ceipt of funds on the same dates. At least two other junior enlisted soldiers, Specialists BA and AF, observed Appel- lant’s cocaine use at MB’s apartment in August 2020. Ap- pellant separately tested positive for cocaine use in Sep- tember 2020 and March 2021 after a command-directed urinalysis test. During the investigation into Appellant’s cocaine-re- lated activities, the Army Criminal Investigation Division (CID) seized Appellant’s cell phone pursuant to a search and seizure authorization and placed it into airplane mode. The authorization ordered a forensic search of Appellant’s cell phone for “SMS, MMS messages, photos, and videos for evidence pertaining to the wrongful use, possession and distribution of cocaine.” Despite having physical possession of Appellant’s phone, the Government’s efforts to search for digital evidence of his alleged crimes failed because the Government could not unlock his phone. Appellant’s phone was protected by a password or personal identification number (PIN), which Appellant refused to provide to the Government. The Government attempted to forcibly ex- tract the cell phone data without the PIN but was unable to do so because its extraction software was not compatible with Appellant’s iPhone. Seeking access to his own cell phone data, Appellant filed a discovery request with the Government requesting “an immediate opportunity to inspect [Appellant’s] cell phone and for the Defense’s Digital Forensic Examiner to conduct a digital extraction of [Appellant’s] cell phone within the bounds of confidentiality.” After the Govern- ment denied the request, Appellant filed a motion with the

3 United States v. Secord, No. 24-0217/AR Opinion of the Court

military judge to compel discovery of the cell phone data arguing that he was entitled to as equal an opportunity as the Government to examine the cell phone data in the prep- aration of his defense. The motion demanded that the Gov- ernment provide Appellant’s digital forensic examiner (DFE) with the cell phone to comport with the requirement that Appellant have equal opportunity to examine the de- vice for evidence that could be favorable, be used for the purposes of impeachment, or be otherwise material. Appel- lant also demanded that the defense DFE’s inspection be confidential, and that the Government not be permitted to install any tracking software on the cell phone. Appellant’s motion to compel discovery provided no facts about what specific data was on the phone or how that data might as- sist Appellant’s defense. The Government responded, arguing that it had not un- reasonably impeded access to the cell phone because the phone was evidence of criminal activity and the Govern- ment had a legitimate interest in maintaining sole custody and control over the phone. Further, the Government ar- gued that—because it could not break into the phone—both parties had equal access to the digital evidence (i.e., none), and granting the defense motion would result in Appellant having greater access to the cell phone data than the Gov- ernment. Finally, the Government argued that forcing the provision of the phone to Appellant without Appellant providing the PIN to the Government would run contrary to defense counsel’s obligation to disclose evidence. The military judge granted Appellant’s motion in part and denied Appellant’s motion in part, ruling that both parties had equal access to the data, which was no access. Additionally, he made no clear determination whether Ap- pellant had met his burden to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the data was relevant, only stating that it was “understandable that the Government would be re- luctant to completely turn over sole physical possession of that which is evidence of a crime.” The military judge then held that if Appellant provided the defense DFE with the PIN to the cell phone, then both parties’ forensic examiners could inspect the cell phone in concert, with equal and sim-

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ultaneous access to any data that would be extracted.

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