Electronic search clause is reasonable when devices were used for drug sales
People v. Flores (Cal. Ct. App., Feb. 11, 2026, No. A171602) 2026 WL 378414, at *1
Summary: Flores pleaded no contest to felony possession of fentanyl for sale and was sentenced to two years of formal probation with a condition permitting warrantless searches of Flores’s electronic devices. On appeal, Flores asked the court to strike or modify the electronics search clause as unconstitutionally overbroad and unreasonable. Because Flores used electronic devices to coordinate the sale and to obscure his identity during negotiations, the court affirmed the electronics search clause in its entirety.
In its presentencing report, the probation department recommended “a five-way search clause to include all electronic devices, and supply passwords upon request due to [Flores] using his cell phone to negotiate the sale of illicit controlled substances.” The report stated that at the time of the offense, Flores had been on formal probation in Merced for possession of a controlled substance for sale (Health & Saf. Code, § 11351), and that Flores admitted to using fentanyl and a prior gang affiliation.
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