Trending Topics
Sponsored Content

Don’t loan your Wi-Fi to sex offenders

The court determines if statements made by a subject were voluntary and whether they require a Miranda warning

Sponsored by
GettyImages-1162758846.jpg

Be careful when you share your Wi-Fi password.

Photo/Getty Images

This article was featured in Lexipol’s Xiphos newsletter, a monthly legal-focused law enforcement newsletter authored by Ken Wallentine. Subscriptions are free for public safety officers, educators and public attorneys. Subscribe here!

UNITED STATES V. SANDELL, 2022 WL 619156 (8th Cir. 2022)

Mark Sandell moved into a new area and asked his neighbors, who were feeling neighborly, to use their Wi-Fi so he could access the internet and register his sex offender status. For regular readers of Xiphos, that would be a “clue.” The neighbors agreed. Their generosity was rewarded by investigators knocking on their door, questioning them and searching their home. After questioning the neighbors and finding no contraband in their home, the officers ruled out the neighbors as suspects. One of the residents then told the officers about sharing their Wi-Fi password with Sandell.

Officers went next door to speak with Sandell. They knocked, Sandell answered and the officers identified themselves, asking Sandell to step outside while they conducted a protective sweep of the home. Once they determined no one else was home, the officers asked Sandell where he would like to talk. He said he preferred to speak in his living room. The officers then followed Sandell into his living room and explained they were attempting to obtain a search warrant for Sandell’s home based on the information from his neighbors. An officer informed Sandell he was not under arrest and was not obligated to talk to them. Sandell refused to consent to a search of the home.

The officers again reminded Sandell he was not obligated to speak to them and told him he was free to leave. They told him that, if he chose to drive, they would ask for consent to search his car. They also told Sandell they needed to supervise his movements inside the home to ensure Sandell did not access any weapons or tamper with evidence. Sandell let his dog outside, took his medication, made coffee, used the restroom and retrieved the phone number of his probation officer from a separate floor of the home as officers watched.

Over the course of conversation during Sandell’s movements throughout the home, he admitted to downloading child pornography. He voluntarily turned over a camera and thumb drives, stating that he was likely facing 15 years’ imprisonment. Sandell would not talk about his prior conviction for a similar crime. The officers ultimately obtained a search warrant and collected Sandell’s laptop, thumb drives and DVDs. Based on the evidence from the search, Sandell was charged with distribution, receipt and possession of child pornography.

Sandell asked the court to suppress the statements made at his home. He claimed the officers questioned him without providing a Miranda warning. The trial court refused to suppress his statements and the appellate court affirmed.

The Miranda rule applies when there is both custody and interrogation (Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966)). The court held Sandell was not in custody. Thus, the officers did not need to advise Sandell of his Miranda rights. Officers informed Sandell several times he was not under arrest, that he was free to leave and that he was not obligated to speak to them. Rather, he voluntarily spoke with the officers, who did not use coercive strong-arm or deceptive tactics. Sandell was not immediately arrested and there were not so many officers (only four) in the home to create a de facto arrest.

Three things to take away from this case: First, whenever possible, remember to talk nice, think mean. The officers’ friendly tone and non-coercive investigation techniques were the major factor here. Second, be careful when you share your Wi-Fi password. It might lead to a search warrant at your house. Third, Sandell proves once again: We catch the dumb ones.

NEXT: Talk nice, think mean, seize child pornography, secure conviction

A police officer and former prosecutor, Ken Wallentine is Chief of Law Enforcement for the Utah Attorney General. Traffic detentions and passenger issues are discussed in his new book, Street Legal: A Guide to Pre-trial Criminal Procedure for Police, Prosecutors, and Defenders, published by the American Bar Association Press.
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU