Pubdate: Thu, 22 Feb 2001 Source: Longview News-Journal (TX) Website: http://www.news-journal.com/index.html Address: P.O. Box 1792, Longview, TX 75605 Contact: 2001 Cox Interactive Media Fax: 903.757.3742 Author: Anntoinette Moore Tyler HIGH COURT DECISION BLOW TO LAW If the U.S. Supreme Court rules police need a search warrant before using devices outside a home to measure heat generated inside it, it will be a blow to law enforcement, a federal prosecutor says. "I won't say it would be devastating, because we were able to function before the technology came along, but it would certainly impede law enforcement efforts," Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard Moore said Wednesday. Moore should know. He prosecuted a similar case in East Texas in 1993. A Drug Enforcement Administration task force used two thermal imagers to collect evidence that became part of the probable cause for a search warrant for a building belonging to Rohn Martin Ishmael, Moore said. Officers found more than 640 marijuana plants growing in a hidden chamber beneath the building, located near Cushman, in Nacogdoches County, he said. "One was mounted on an airplane that flew over his property. It showed the building was radiating quite a bit of heat, for a building" out in the country, he said. The thermal imager also revealed a hot area about 20 or 30 feet outside the 40-by-80-foot building that turned out to be an exhaust vent for the chamber, Moore said. A hand-held imager showed one end of the building was hotter than the other, indicating a power generator might be located there, he said. On Tuesday, the high court heard arguments in the case of Danny Lee Kyllo, an Oregon man convicted of growing marijuana in his home. His attorney argued that the police engaged in an illegal search by using a thermal imager to detect the distinctive heat pattern made by the high-intensity lights used for marijuana cultivation. The police used the information to obtain a warrant to search the house. The underlying question is how the Constitution should take account of changing technology, and of society's changing understanding of technology's threat to privacy. Under the court's precedents, the Fourth Amendment protects only those expectations of privacy that are "reasonable." Someone who conducts business in front of an open living room window, for example, may be deemed to have forfeited any reasonable expectation of privacy. People have a reasonable expectation of privacy in what goes on behind the opaque walls of their homes, attorney Kenneth Lerner told the justices. What the thermal imager captures "really is molecular information that migrates through our walls," he said Tuesday. But Michael R. Dreeben, a deputy solicitor general representing the government, said people did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy "in the heat that's on the exterior surface of their walls." In the East Texas case, Ishmael was charged in a five-count indictment with possessing marijuana with the intent to distribute it and carrying a firearm during a drug-trafficking crime. He was sentenced Oct. 29, 1996, to 10 years in federal prison, according to court records. Moore said officers did not rely solely on the thermal imager data to obtain the search warrant. "There was quite a bit of evidence to suggest that something unique was going on there," he said. Receipts showed Ishmael had bought more concrete than he needed for the slab underneath the metal building, "which led you to believe that there was an underground structure," Moore said. Pipes ran from a small lake about 100 yards away to the building, entering it below ground level, he said. Ishmael also bought a number of huge lamps, the kind used to light football fields or grow marijuana, Moore said. "One of the most interesting things about it, we got a search warrant and got out there and could not at all figure out how to get into the underground area," Moore said. "Ultimately one of the agents found a fresh air vent, a 5-foot-square concrete tunnel. He went through it and ended up in the structure." In the hidden chamber, the agent found the marijuana plants, Moore said. A button on the wall activated an elevator that was disguised as a giant welding table on the ground floor. Ishmael's attorney "said the use of the thermal imager was itself a search, and therefore we should have gotten a search warrant to use a thermal imager," said Moore, a board member of the Law Enforcement Thermographers' Association. The organization, founded in 1995, offers training and certification in the use of the devices. "The entire case turns on the legality of the search. If the search warrant is no good, then we have no right to be there and we lose completely," he said. U.S. District Judge Robert Parker in Tyler ruled in Ishmael's favor, Moore said. But prosecutors appealed to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. "The Ishmael case was one of the first federal cases that I'm aware of that was taken to a circuit court," he said. The 5th Circuit overturned Parker and sided with prosecutors, Moore said. The case set a precedent for criminal cases in the 5th Circuit. Thermal imagers "can't see through walls. ... It's useful for measuring relative heat only. I don't think a person has an expectation of privacy in the heat that is emitted from their residence, for example," he said. "The analogies are made that this is waste heat, this is heat being dispensed from your structure. You have no more expectation of privacy from that than you do from your trash being set out on the side of the road," Moore said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth