United States v. Zackary Jackson

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 22, 2019
Docket16-CO-523
StatusPublished

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United States v. Zackary Jackson, (D.C. 2019).

Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 16-CO-523

UNITED STATES, APPELLANT,

V.

ZACKARY JACKSON, APPELLEE.

Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (CF3-2512-15)

(Hon. Maribeth Raffinan, Trial Judge)

(Argued October 26, 2016 Decided August 22, 2019)

Nicholas P. Coleman, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Channing D. Phillips, United States Attorney at the time the brief was filed, and Elizabeth Trosman, Chrisellen R. Kolb, Alicia M. Long, and Anwar Graves, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on the brief, for appellant.

Daniel Gonen, Public Defender Service, with whom Samia Fam and Jaclyn Frankfurt, Public Defender Service, were on the brief, for appellee.

Before BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY, * Chief Judge, GLICKMAN, Associate Judge, and WASHINGTON, † Senior Judge.

* Chief Judge Blackburne-Rigsby was an Associate Judge at the time oral argument was held on October 26, 2016. Judge Blackburne-Rigsby assumed the duties of Chief Judge on March 18, 2017. 2

GLICKMAN, Associate Judge: The United States appeals a pretrial order

suppressing appellee Zackary Jackson’s Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking

data and derivative evidence in its prosecution of Mr. Jackson for armed robbery.

The tracking data was collected and maintained by the District of Columbia Court

Services and Offender Supervision Agency (CSOSA) after it required Mr. Jackson

to wear a GPS tracking device on his ankle as a sanction for his having violated

conditions of his probation in an earlier case. CSOSA gave the police access to the

GPS data, and the data revealed to the police that Mr. Jackson was present at the

scene of the armed robbery with which he is now charged. The police used the

data to track Mr. Jackson from the location of the robbery to his home, where they

arrested him and found tangible evidence linking him to the crime.

In moving to suppress the GPS data and its fruits, Mr. Jackson argued that

CSOSA violated his Fourth Amendment rights by placing him on GPS monitoring

for purposes of law enforcement without judicial authorization and that the police

violated his Fourth Amendment rights by accessing the GPS tracking data without

(…continued) † Senior Judge Pryor, who was assigned to this case originally and at the time of oral argument, retired on May 15, 2019. Senior Judge Washington was assigned to take his place on the division. 3

a search warrant. Addressing only the latter issue, the motions judge concluded

that the police search infringed Mr. Jackson’s reasonable expectation of privacy in

his GPS data and, therefore, violated his Fourth Amendment rights.

We reverse. First, as a threshold matter, we hold that CSOSA’s imposition

of GPS monitoring on Mr. Jackson without judicial authorization was a

constitutional “special needs” search; it was constitutional because his reasonable

expectation of privacy as a convicted offender on probation was diminished and

was outweighed by the strong governmental interests in effective probation

supervision to deter and detect further criminal activity on his part and encourage

his rehabilitation. We reject, as unsupported by the record, Mr. Jackson’s claim

that CSOSA placed him on GPS monitoring as a subterfuge to enable the police to

avoid having to comply with the warrant and probable cause requirements of the

Fourth Amendment. Second, we conclude that Mr. Jackson had no objectively

reasonable expectation that CSOSA would withhold the GPS tracking data from

the police. The limited police examination of that data—which focused solely on

determining whether any monitored CSOSA supervisee was present during the

armed robbery (and if so, where that supervisee went immediately afterwards)—

therefore did not violate Mr. Jackson’s Fourth Amendment rights. 4

I.

A. Mr. Jackson’s Placement on GPS Monitoring

On December 13, 2013, Mr. Jackson pleaded guilty in Superior Court to one

count of attempted robbery. Mr. Jackson had been charged with armed robbery.

In tendering his guilty plea to the lesser offense, he admitted that he and two

accomplices put on masks inside the Benning Road Metro station and robbed the

victim of his cell phone by threatening him with a BB pistol.

Three months later, the judge sentenced Mr. Jackson to twelve months’

incarceration, with all but four months suspended in favor of one year of probation

under the supervision of CSOSA. The court-imposed conditions of his probation

included requirements that Mr. Jackson (1) “[o]bey all laws, ordinances, and

regulations”; (2) permit his Community Supervision Officer [CSO] to visit his

place of residence; (3) report to all scheduled appointments with his CSO; (4)

notify his CSO within one business day of any arrest or questioning by a law

enforcement officer; (5) submit to drug testing at the discretion of CSOSA; (6)

participate in and complete CSOSA programs as directed; and (7) “[i]n the event of

illicit drug use or other violation of conditions of probation, participate as directed 5

by [his] CSO in a program of graduated sanctions that may include periods of

residential placement or services.”

Mr. Jackson’s period of probation began in July 2014. It did not go well.

Mr. Jackson failed to report for scheduled appointments with his CSO on five

occasions, in August, December, and January; he did not pursue gainful

employment as required by CSOSA programming; and on December 23, 2014, Mr.

Jackson was re-arrested in Virginia.1

Thereafter, in January 2015, a detective with the Metropolitan Police

Department (MPD) contacted CSOSA to request that Mr. Jackson be placed on

GPS monitoring, one of the options in CSOSA’s program of graduated sanctions

for non-compliant behavior. As stated in CSOSA’s internal emails, the detective

made this request because the police believed Mr. Jackson and another named

individual “may” have been committing robberies and burglaries together at a

1 According to CSOSA’s running record of Mr. Jackson’s supervision, he was released following his new arrest and was due back in court the following month. In the hearing below on the evidence suppression motion, counsel for the United States represented that Mr. Jackson was arrested in Virginia for “a felony pickpocket.” The record on appeal does not appear to provide any additional information about the nature of the charge in Virginia or the outcome of the proceedings there. 6

particular Metro station in the District and elsewhere. The police request triggered

a review by CSOSA of Mr. Jackson’s compliance with his terms of probation to

determine whether he met the agency’s criteria for GPS monitoring. Citing Mr.

Jackson’s re-arrest, lack of employment, and failure to look for work and

participate in CSOSA programming, the agency decided he should be placed on

GPS monitoring “immediately.” 2

Mr. Jackson’s CSO met with him on January 28, 2015. She questioned him

about his missed appointments and his involvement in criminal activity (which he

denied), and she informed him that he would be placed on GPS monitoring.

According to her record of the meeting, Mr. Jackson was “visibly upset” by that

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