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Manzione v. State
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
James David Crowe, for appellant.
Kenneth W. Mauldin, Dist. Atty., Jon Richard Forwood, Asst. Dist. Atty., for appellee.
Following a stipulated bench trial, Elton Felix Manzione was convicted of 20 counts of sexual exploitation of children after law-enforcement officers executed a search warrant and seized from his home computer various images depicting young children engaged in sexually explicit conduct. Prior to trial, Manzione unsuccessfully moved to suppress the images, arguing that the affidavit supporting the search-warrant application was legally insufficient to support a finding of probable cause. Manzione argues that the trial court erred by denying his motion to suppress. For the reasons discussed infra, we disagree and affirm.
The facts of this case (as presented at the motion-to-suppress hearing) are undisputed. In May 2005, Yahoo! Inc.—a web portal and provider of various and sundry internet services—discovered four graphical images depicting young children engaged in sexually explicit conduct that had been uploaded to one of its online discussion boards . After identifying the internet protocol (“IP”) address assigned to the computer from which the images were posted, Yahoo! utilized an internet database called “WHOIS” to establish that Charter Communications was the internet service provider supplying online access to the originating computer, and further discovered that the subject computer was located in Athens, Georgia.
In accordance with the mandates set forth in 42 U.S.C. § 13032(b)(1), 1 the custodian of records at Yahoo! reported the offensive images and its subsequent findings—including the IP address for the originating computer—to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (“NCMEC”) CyberTipline, a national clearinghouse for information about children believed to be missing or sexually exploited. As also required by 42 U.S.C. § 13032(b)(1), NCMEC placed Yahoo!'s report and supporting documentation, including copies of the offending images, onto a compact disc and forwarded it, unedited, to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (“GBI”). 2
The case was then assigned to a GBI special agent who, upon receiving and reviewing all of the information forwarded by NCMEC, concluded that the subject images contained what appeared to be child pornography. Thereafter, the agent obtained a court order directing Charter Communications to provide the subscriber information for the account associated with the IP address that Yahoo! provided. Charter Communications complied with this order, identifying Manzione as the account subscriber and supplying the GBI with Manzione's home address (as well as additional identifying information associated with the account).
At the agent's request, a GBI analyst then used the GBI database to confirm Manzione's name, address, date of birth, social security number, and driver's license number. The agent also conducted a drive-by surveillance of Manzione's residence.
Armed with the foregoing information, the agent sought a search warrant for Manzione's residence, including all electronic devices that could possibly contain child pornography. And in support of the application, the agent submitted an affidavit outlining the information that she received from NCMEC and the findings of her subsequent investigation. The warrant issued, and the accompanying search resulted in the seizure of various images depicting prepubescent children engaged in sexual acts.
Manzione filed a motion to suppress the images, which the trial court denied. The trial court thereafter convicted Manzione on 20 counts of sexual exploitation of children following a stipulated bench trial. This appeal follows.
At the outset, we note that, in accordance with the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, a search warrant may issue only upon “facts sufficient to show probable cause that a crime is being committed or has been committed ....” 3 And in determining whether probable cause exists, the issuing judge is required “simply to make a practical, common-sense decision whether, given all the circumstances set forth in the affidavit before him, including the veracity and basis of knowledge of persons supplying hearsay information, there is a fair probability that ... evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.” 4 Furthermore, in reviewing the issuance of a search warrant, we are charged with ensuring—considering the totality of the circumstances and giving substantial deference to the issuing judge's decision—that the judge had a “substantial basis” for concluding that probable cause existed.5 With these guiding principles in mind, we now turn to Manzione's arguments in support of his enumeration of error.
(a) Manzione asserts that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress because the GBI agent's affidavit was legally insufficient to establish probable cause. Specifically, Manzione argues that the agent's affidavit was premised upon inadmissible hearsay and that NCMEC was an unreliable source, requiring the agent to independently identify and verify the credibility of the Yahoo! employee who discovered and reported the images prior to seeking a warrant. In support of his argument, Manzione relies on a disclaimer purportedly contained on one of the documents forwarded to the agent, which stated that “NCMEC neither investigates nor vouches for the accuracy of the information reported” to it.6
In the challenged affidavit, the agent averred that on October 25, 2005, NCMEC notified the GBI that the custodian of records at Yahoo! Inc. reported the discovery of graphical images containing child pornography posted to a Yahoo! Group and that NCMEC “confirm[ed] the existence” of the child pornography; that Yahoo! Groups allows people with similar interests to communicate with each other and to post pictures for others to view; and that Yahoo! monitors the postings for images that appear to be child pornography and, when discovered, reports such activity to NCMEC. The affidavit also noted that the offensive postings originated from a particular IP address, which it described as “the numeric address of a computer on the Internet”; that providers of internet services maintain logs to identify which customer account is assigned to a particular IP address at a particular moment in time; and that “NCMEC indicate[d] that WHOIS ... revealed the [subject] IP address to be operating out of Athens, Georgia” with Charter Communications functioning as the internet service provider. Finally, the affidavit detailed that the agent obtained a court order requiring Charter Communications to produce the subscriber information for the account associated with the IP address on the date and time that the images were uploaded; that Charter Communications identified Manzione as the account subscriber and provided his home address and additional identifying information associated with the account; and that the agent confirmed Manzione's identity and address, and conducted drive-by surveillance of his residence.
During the motion-to-suppress hearing, the agent admitted that although she was provided the name and contact information of the Yahoo! employee who saw and reported the subject images, at no time did she communicate with that individual. The agent further admitted that she was unaware of whether anyone at the GBI confirmed the information obtained through the WHOIS database.
Consistent with NCMEC's disclaimer and the mandatory reporting statutory scheme, we agree with Manzione that NCMEC was nothing more than a pass-through entity between Yahoo! and the GBI. It follows, then, that the pertinent question is the degree to which the agent was authorized to rely on the information reported by Yahoo! and transmitted through NCMEC, unedited, to the GBI.
In considering this question, we note that this case is virtually indistinguishable from our recent opinion in James v. State,7 where we reiterated that “hearsay can be the basis for issuance of a warrant so long as there is a substantial basis for crediting the hearsay.” 8 And while the credibility of an anonymous source or a person of unknown reliability must be independently corroborated, “a law-abiding concerned citizen has a built-in credibility and is deemed to be reliable.” 9 Thus, in James we concluded that when a corporate provider of web-based services—in that case Google—makes a report of criminal activity pursuant to its statutory reporting obligation set forth in 42 U.S.C. § 13032(b)(1), it is the equivalent of one made from a law-abiding concerned citizen, and therefore is “afforded a preferred status insofar as testing the credibility of [the] information.” 10 The GBI agent's failure in James to independently verify the credibility of the individual reporting employee therefore did not in and of itself render the search warrant application insufficient.11
We reach the same result here. While the agent “could have done a more thorough job investigating the information received by the GBI,” 12 she was entitled to presume the reliability of the Yahoo! report as transmitted through NCMEC without independently verifying the credibility of the Yahoo! employee who initially viewed the offensive images. And, crediting that report and otherwise considering the totality of the circumstances, the agent's affidavit provided the issuing judge a substantial basis for concluding that probable cause existed sufficient to issue the search warrant for Manzione's residence.13
(b) Manzione further argues that the affidavit was misleading in that it created a false impression that NCMEC investigated and verified the allegations Yahoo! reported. Manzione specifically focuses on the agent's averment that NCMEC “confirm...
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