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Doyle, Presiding Judge. After the State indicted Kody Black with one count of rape, Black filed a series of motions to suppress evidence obtained from his cell phone pursuant to a search warrant. The trial court granted the motion in part, and in Case No. A23A0939, the State appeals that order, contending that the trial court erred by ruling that the warrant application failed to establish probable cause to search Black’s cell phone for information outside of his communications with the alleged victim. In Case No. A23A0940, Black appeals the same order, contending that the trial court erred by failing to grant his motion to suppress in its entirety because (1) the State was not authorized to initially seize his cell phone; (2) the warrant application failed to authorize any search of his phone; and (3) there was an unreasonable delay between the seizure of his phone and the issuance of the warrant. For the reasons that follow, we affirm in part and reverse in part in Case No. A23A0939, and we affirm in Case No. A23A040. In reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a defendant’s motion to suppress evidence, the trial court’s decision with regard to questions of fact and credibility must be accepted unless clearly erroneous; we will not disturb the trial court’s findings based on conflicting evidence if there is any evidence to support them. The trial court’s legal conclusions are reviewed de novo, however.[1] So viewed, the record shows that police were called due to an allegation of rape by B. G. She explained that she met Black on the Tinder dating app, and they exchanged phone numbers. Sometime in early August 2021, they began communicating on Snapchat as well as text messaging. Late in the evening on or about August 15, 2021, B. G. was at a party with friends and had been drinking alcohol. Black came to the party separately and socialized with B. G. and others. At some point, B. G., who was heavily intoxicated, asked Black to take her home; rather than take her to her residence, Black took her to his own. B. G. was too incapacitated to recognize her surroundings, but she found a bed and went to sleep. At approximately 3:00 a.m., B. G. awoke and realized her vagina was sore, she was naked, and she could not recall the night’s events. She put on her clothes and went outside to call a friend for a ride home, but Black came outside to check on B. G., who “played it off as if nothing was wrong” and went back to bed with Black. She later woke up at approximately 1:00 p.m. and went to an IHOP restaurant with a friend. While they were at the restaurant, B. G. received text and Snapchat messages from Black discussing the night. He explained that he had a security camera in his bedroom to watch his dog, but he had deleted certain footage because B. G. was undressed. B. G. told Black she was sore, and Black tried to call her several times and messaged her. Black was adamant that he “didn’t do anything,” and he said that B. G. used a sex toy on herself. B. G. later reported her experience to police. The next day, police spoke to Black, who voluntarily came to the police department to give his version of the events. During that interview, Black explained to an investigator that he and B. G. had been “Facebook dating,” and he went to the party after recognizing B. G.’s surroundings in a Snapchat photo and messaging her. According to Black, when he arrived, B. G. was intoxicated and lying face-down on the kitchen floor. B. G. asked Black for a ride to a friend’s house, but she changed her mind and asked Black to take her to his house. Black said B. G. was “annoying,” but he socialized with her and played a farming simulator game until approximately 5:45 a.m. During the interview, Black periodically showed the investigator videos from his security camera and messages on his phone to corroborate his story, and he denied having intercourse with B. G. As the interview progressed, Black eventually gave conflicting versions of having sexual contact with B. G., ultimately stating that he briefly had intercourse with B. G. but stopped because “it didn’t feel right.” After Black stated that he had had intercourse with B. G., the investigator left the room to get a Miranda[2] waiver form, and while he was left alone, Black used his phone to type messages. Throughout the interview, Black had possession of his phone and was periodically using it to explain his story to the police investigator. Shortly after Black admitted to having intercourse with B. G., police informed Black that they were going to seize his phone to preserve it while they obtained a warrant to search it. The interview ended when Black was placed under arrest. Based on the interviews with B. G. and Black, police prepared the first of two applications for a search warrant — this one to search all of the data on Blacks phone — and a magistrate issued that warrant on August 18, 2021 (“the First Warrant”), two days after Black’s arrest and the seizure of his phone. On November 18, 2021, Black moved to suppress any evidence taken from his phone pursuant to the First Warrant on the ground that the warrant was overly broad and lacked a nexus between the phone and the alleged criminal conduct. On December 6, 2021, police obtained a second warrant to search Black’s phone (“the Second Warrant”), which sought to search all data on Black’s phone from August 10 to August 18, 2021, i.e., the time frame pertinent to Black’s interactions with B. G.[3] Black moved to suppress the evidence obtained pursuant to the Second Warrant in August 2022, arguing that it violated his Fourth Amendment rights because it was the fruit of an earlier unauthorized search, that it lacked a nexus between the phone data and the crime of rape, and that the four month delay in issuing the Second Warrant was unreasonable. Following a November evidentiary hearing that included testimony from the interviewing investigator as well as playing a video recording of Black’s interview, the trial court ruled from the bench as follows: I will suppress anything that’s not relevant to communications between Mr. Black and [B. G.]. You can have [the latter]. And I will allow anything you find that records the bedroom on the night in question and the next day in question. I think that is very relevant because it may be exculpatory. It may not be. Okay? You can get that information. And I’ll find that the search — you can have a search based on that, but I’ll suppress everything else. What he texted his roommate or his mom during this interview, he was not in custody. You can’t get ahold of that. That’s . . . I’m not going to allow that. When the State asked for clarification, asserting that the suppression hearing was focused on Fourth Amendment violations instead of evidentiary concerns such as relevance or hearsay, the trial court clarified that the phone contents could be used to impeach witnesses who testify at trial, including communications beyond Black and B. G. The following month, the trial court entered a written order on Black’s motion to suppress, stating: The [Second Warrant] failed to provide probable cause to search Black’s entire cell phone. The search warrant affidavit sought seizure of all contents on the phone, but the Court found that there was only probable cause to seize the communications between the accuser and Black. Therefore, the government is limited to only using those communications between the accuser and Black[,] and all other evidence is suppressed. The trial court also ruled that the First Warrant failed as a whole to establish probable cause to search Black’s phone. Each party now appeals from that order in these companion cases. Case No. A23A0939 1. Scope of the items to be searched under the Second Warrant. The State contends that the trial court erred in its written order[4] by ruling that police lacked probable cause to search Black’s phone for anything other than communications between Black and B. G. We agree. In Georgia, a search warrant shall only issue upon facts sufficient to show probable cause that a crime is being committed or has been committed. OCGA § 17521 (a). The magistrate’s task in determining if probable cause exists to issue a search warrant is simply to make a practical, commonsense 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 contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place. The trial court then examines the issue as a first level of review, guided by the Fourth Amendment and the principle that substantial deference must be accorded a magistrate’s decision to issue a search warrant based on a finding of probable cause. We then review the search warrant to determine the existence of probable cause using the totality of the circumstances analysis. The duty of the appellate courts is to determine if the magistrate had a “substantial basis” for concluding that probable cause existed to issue the search warrant. In reviewing the trial court’s grant or denial of a motion to suppress, we apply the wellestablished principles that the trial court’s findings as to disputed facts will be upheld unless clearly erroneous and the trial court’s application of the law to undisputed facts is subject to de novo review, keeping in mind that a magistrate’s decision to issue a search warrant based on a finding of probable cause is entitled to substantial deference by a reviewing court. When considering whether the magistrate had a substantial basis to find probable cause, we look at the circumstances as they existed when the search warrant was issued, and [whether] the defendant[ will be] ultimately found to have been engaging in criminal activity is . . . of no consequence for purposes of our analysis, which is grounded in the safeguards afforded by the Fourth Amendment.[5] Here, the State has accused Black of raping B. G. in his bedroom while she was too intoxicated to consent. The warrant application presented to the issuing magistrate outlined the following facts pertinent to the State’s indictment: Black and B. G. first met virtually, and Black communicated with B. G. about the events in question in a variety of ways using his phone; Black also communicated with others about the relevant events, including with his mother and with his roommate during and after the relevant events; Black recorded video of activities in his bedroom during the relevant evening, and he told B. G. that he had deleted videos of her while she was undressed; and Black used photos and videos saved on his phone during the police interview to corroborate his story to police. The legal standard for issuing the warrant is not a hyper-technical one,[6] and the totality of the circumstances demonstrated a fair probability that Black’s phone would have various types of evidence relevant to proving the rape alleged in the indictment.[7] For example, as the trial court recognized, Black’s communications with B. G. would shed light on his state of mind during the night as well as B. G.’s condition and consent or lack thereof. But beyond that, videos and photos of Black’s bedroom, including any that are deleted and recovered through a forensic search of Black’s phone, would also reveal evidence of B. G.’s and Black’s conduct that night. Further, Black specifically referenced his own social media use as well as communications between Black and others besides B. G., including his roommate who was present during the evening. But the trial court’s written order suppressed this potentially relevant evidence that the warrant application explicitly connected to the alleged offense.[8] The warrant application’s descriptions of the various ways in which Black used his phone during the relevant events and police interview supported the magistrate’s determination that probable cause existed to search Black’s cell phone for various types of data beginning on the day Black and B. G. first began communicating and ending seven days later when Black spoke to police.[9] Anything outside of that time frame would not be searchable. Accordingly, the trial court erred by suppressing all data except for communications between Black and B. G. 2. Black’s overbreadth argument. In his response brief, Black makes the argument that suppression of his phone data was correct[10] because the data sought in the Second Warrant application was not sufficiently particular, citing State v. Wilson.[11] To the extent that the trial court implicitly disagreed by not suppressing all data sought under the Second Warrant, we affirm that aspect of the trial court’s order. The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution requires that a search warrant particularly describe the article or articles sought. In addition to requiring that officers have enough guidance to locate and seize only those items the warrant authorizes them to seize, this particularity requirement also prevents general searches — that general, exploratory rummaging in a person’s belongings by the government that has been rejected since the founding as a violation of fundamental rights. The particularity requirement is applied with a practical margin of flexibility, depending on the type of property to be seized, and a description of property will be acceptable if it is as specific as the circumstances and nature of activity under investigation permit.[12] Based on these principles, in Wilson, the Supreme Court of Georgia addressed a scenario where a magistrate issued a warrant to make an unrestricted forensic search of a cell phone belonging to the defendant, based on the following facts: On January 28, 2021, Bradly Jordan was shot and killed while performing pest control services at an apartment complex. After conducting an investigation at the crime scene, officers determined that the shooter was a “black male” driving a teal green “[1990]s model Ford Aerostar van” with a missing hubcap. Utilizing a license plate tracking system, officers located a van matching this description a few miles from the incident location. Wilson was listed as the registered owner of the vehicle. Officers conducted a traffic stop on the Ford Aerostar and spoke with Wilson, who was in the driver’s seat. After answering some questions, Wilson was arrested and officers impounded his vehicle, which was later searched pursuant to a warrant. During that search, officers located, among other things, two cell phones, both of which belonged to Wilson.[13] As recounted by the Supreme Court, there was no particularity in the information sought or its connection to the alleged crime.[14] It was, in essence, rummaging through the entirety of the data on Wilson’s cell phone, hoping to find something that might tie Wilson to the shooting, despite the absence of any information as to how the phone might do that.[15] The Supreme Court held that this was a fatally overbroad warrant and authorized a general search in violation of the Fourth Amendment’s particularity requirement.[16] Here, by contrast, there was a great deal of specific factual information in the warrant application that justified the magistrate’s determination that Black’s cell phone data from August 10 to August 17 would have evidence relevant to his conduct on the night in question. This data explicitly included voice calls, text messaging, communication with multiple people on multiple applications, photos and videos recorded and saved to Black’s phone (including deleted data), and activity on social media and dating apps that both Black and B. G. used. Further, the search was restricted to data from the week-long period during which Black and B. G. began their relationship and which culminated in the alleged rape, and the warrant application sought to search for data “[w]hich is evidence that a crime has been . . . committed, to wit: OCGA § 16-6-1 (a) (1) Rape.”[17] In other words, the police knew what they were searching for, why it was connected to the alleged offense, and what time period in which to look.[18] This was not a request to rummage through Black’s phone hoping to find inculpatory data that may or may not exist; instead, it was looking for the digital artifacts of the events as described to police by Black and B. G. and recounted with particularity in the warrant application.[19] Therefore, reading the application as a whole and in light of the specific factual basis and limited time period, the warrant application at issue satisfied the Fourth Amendment’s particularity requirement. Case No. A23A0940 In this case, Black cross-appeals and asserts that the trial court should have suppressed everything on his cell phone because (a) the initial seizure of his cell phone was unauthorized, and (b) there was an undue delay between the seizure of his phone and the issuance of the Second Warrant.[20] We disagree. 3. Seizure of Black’s cell phone. Black contends that the initial seizure of his phone was unauthorized because he had not been arrested at the time police seized his phone, and police did not have a warrant. The seizure occurred during the police interview Black voluntarily engaged in. Throughout the interview, Black occasionally used his phone to show police photos, videos, and other information in an effort to provide a time line of the evening and corroborate his version of events. Once or twice, police held the phone to view information Black showed them, and they passed it back or put it on the table near Black as they continued speaking. Black admitted to B. G. and police that he already had deleted at least one video from his bedroom security camera, purportedly to protect B. G.’s modesty, and the video recording of Black’s police interview shows him repeatedly displaying photos and videos to the interviewer as they spoke. Accordingly, there was ample reason to believe that Black (or anyone else) could delete or alter highly relevant data if the phone was not secured. The record shows that Black “voluntarily gave officers the cell phone, not once, but twice [at least]. And when officers observed [Black] manipulating the phone later during the interview, they seized it until they could obtain a search warrant[, which they did within two days.]“[21] This was a “reasonable preventative step to preserve evidence,”[22] and based on the circumstances of this case and Black’s police interview, we discern no error. 4. Delay of the Second Warrant. Black also contends that the trial court should have granted the motion to suppress because there was an unreasonable delay between the initial seizure of his phone at the time of his arrest and the issuance of the Second Warrant four months later.[23] We disagree. As a general matter, [a] seizure that is lawful at its inception can nevertheless violate the Fourth Amendment due to subsequent events that unreasonably infringe upon a person’s possessory interests in the seized property. Delay in obtaining a warrant to search a seized item is one example of conduct that can unlawfully interfere with a defendant’s possessory interests. The reasonableness of the delay in getting a warrant is determined on a casebycase basis, in the light of all of the facts and circumstances. We have adopted a fourfactor test for balancing governmental and private interests in this context, considering (1) the significance of the interference with the person’s possessory interest; (2) the duration of the delay; (3) whether or not the person consented to the seizure; and (4) the government’s legitimate interest in holding the property as evidence.[24] Here, “the State had a legitimate interest in holding the electronic devices as evidence,”[25] but Black’s possessory interest in his phone was significant, given the importance of phones as “unique possessions in which individuals may have a particularly powerful possessory interest.”[26] It does not appear that Black consented to the seizure, but the record does not demonstrate that after it was seized, Black requested to have it returned.[27] Instead, police obtained the First Warrant within two days of seizing it. This was not an unreasonably long period of time to obtain a warrant. What Black focuses on here is the additional time police took to obtain the Second Warrant, which was more narrow, able to withstand scrutiny on a motion to suppress, and eventually authorized the search at issue. During this time, police had the First Warrant, which was unchallenged until Black moved to suppress the phone evidence in mid-November 2021, approximately three months after police seized Black’s phone on August 16, 2021.[28] Black did request his phone at a hearing in November, but the State had been operating under the First Warrant, and the trial court had not resolved Black’s challenge to it. Further, on December 6, 2021, the State obtained the Second Warrant authorizing the more narrow search, which was one day after the trial court’s ruling that the First Warrant did not authorize a search. Based on this procedural history, the State did not unreasonably deprive Black of his phone, because the State did obtain the First Warrant in a timely manner, had demonstrated a legitimate need to preserve the evidence on the phone based on the facts of the case, and quickly obtained the Second Warrant when the trial court ruled that the First Warrant failed as a whole.[29] Accordingly, this enumeration is without merit.[30] Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part in Case No. A23A0939; affirmed in Case No. A23A0940. Rickman and Gobeil, JJ. concur.

 
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