You Have The Right To Remain Silent… And Refrain From Giving The Police Your Phone Passcode!
By: Joshua D. Hill
The Third Circuit’s recent decision in United States v. Curry, 2025 WL 2647753, (Sept. 16, 2025) limits the scope of a defendant’s Fifth Amendment protections in the digital age. The Court addressed whether evidence seized from a suspect’s cell phone must be suppressed after police obtained her passcode despite her clear request for counsel.
Case Overview
Defendant Curry was arrested in New Jersey on heroin and fentanyl charges. After being advised of her Miranda rights, she unequivocally invoked her right to counsel. Detectives acknowledged her request, but continued to ask her for the passcode to her cell phone. When Curry resisted, officers warned that if they were forced to obtain a warrant, their search of her phone could potentially erase her phone’s data. She subsequently relented and provided the passcode. Incriminating text messages were recovered from the phone and were used at trial which resulted in Curry’s conviction.
On appeal, Curry argued that both her passcode and the derivative evidence from her phone should have been suppressed under the Fifth Amendment and Edwards v. Arizona (once a suspect has invoked the right to counsel, all police-initiated interrogation must cease until counsel is made available.)
The Majority’s Analysis
Judge Matey, joined by Judge Krause, declined to suppress the phone evidence, reasoning that Miranda and Edwards provide prophylactic protections but do not create constitutional rights themselves. The Court went on to state that the Fifth Amendment bars only compelled testimony; whereas here, Curry voluntarily provided her passcode. The Court concluded that since there was no constitutional violation, the exclusionary rule from Wong Sun v. United States (the exclusionary rule extends not only to evidence obtained directly from an unconstitutional act, but also to derivative evidence) did not apply. The Court expressly refused to create a new rule excluding derivative evidence obtained after an Edwards violation.
The Dissent
Judge Restrepo dissented, arguing that once Curry invoked her right to counsel, Edwards made any further questioning a direct Fifth Amendment violation, not a mere procedural misstep. By eliciting her passcode, after a request for counsel, police exploited that violation. Under Wong Sun, both the passcode and the phone’s contents should have been suppressed.
Judge Restrepo highlighted the unique privacy implications of a search of one’s smartphone “the sum of an individual’s private life,” and cautioned that the majority’s approach invites police to ignore invocations of counsel, knowing that the derivative evidence will remain admissible.
Practical Implications
Most Americans routinely carry phones packed with sensitive communications, often blurring the line between personal and professional. Judge Restrepo’s dissent provides a roadmap for future challenges to the admission of cellphone evidence, particularly as the Supreme Court may be called upon to reconcile Edwards, Wong Sun, and modern digital privacy concerns.