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RE: US v. Romm

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RE: US v. Romm
by Mike the Usurper at 3:56 pm EDT, Aug 1, 2006

Decius wrote:

The routine border search of Romm’s laptop was reasonable, regardless whether Romm obtained foreign contraband in Canada or was under “official restraint.”

Finally, and for the first time in his reply brief, Romm argues the search of his laptop was too intrusive on his First Amendment interests to qualify as a “routine” border search. See generally Okafor, 285 F.3d at 846 (noting the difference between routine and non-routine searches). We decline to consider this issue here because “arguments not raised by a party in its opening brief are deemed waived.” See Smith v. Marsh, 194 F.3d 1045, 1052 (9th Cir. 1999). Therefore, evaluating the border search of Romm’s laptop solely as a routine search, we hold the district court correctly denied Romm’s motion to suppress.

Here the 9th blows right past the question of whether laptop searches are "routine." They assume it is. Romm's lawyers raise some questions about that, and the 9th refuses to consider them for a technical reason. They are underestimating the implications of their decision.

No, they're leaving that as an avenue for someone else to explore. Appellate courts are rather odd in some ways. The basic rules are that either an argument made was not given correct weight or that some other part of the issue was incorrect, but at the bottom line, the questions raised at the appellate level are the same ones raised at the trial level. In this case they assume the search is routine because it was not an issue originally raised. Based on past decisions by the 9th Circuit, I would guess that had the issue been raised at the trial level, the 9th would have jumped all over it and ruled it not a routine seach.

That leaves a completely different question, which then becomes, would a non-routine search be reasonable? That question can go either direction, but if I had to guess what they would decide (and just for fun, let's) I would say that they would rule it "reasonable" so long as it did not place undue strain upon the party in question, meaning, if they could search the laptop in say half an hour or an hour, that would be fine, but if they took the laptop and weren't going to return it for a month, that would be ruled an unreasonable seizure.

This is some very fuzzy territory, and the 9th is known for its warm fuzzyness.

RE: US v. Romm


 
 
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