Price v. Superior Court ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 7/3/23
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    AHMAD RAHEEM PRICE,
    Petitioner,                               E078954
    v.                                                   (Super.Ct.No. RIF2004183)
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF                                OPINION
    RIVERSIDE COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    THE PEOPLE,
    Real Party in Interest.
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS; petition for writ of prohibition. John D. Molloy,
    Judge. Petition denied.
    Steven L. Harmon, Public Defender, and Lisa M. Larson, Deputy Public Defender,
    for Petitioner.
    *  Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion
    is certified for publication with the exception of sections V and VI.
    1
    No appearance for Respondent.
    Michael A. Hestrin, District Attorney, Natalie M. Lough and W. Matthew Murray,
    Deputy District Attorneys, for Real Party in Interest.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    Defendant Ahmad Raheem Price petitions for a writ of prohibition, directing the
    superior court to grant his motion to set aside the information (Pen. Code, §§ 995, 999a)1
    charging him with the first degree, premeditated murder of Jovany R. on
    October 29, 2019 (§ 187, subd. (a); count 1), and unlawfully possessing a firearm on the
    same day (§ 29800; count 2). The information further alleges that Price personally and
    intentionally discharged a firearm causing the death in count 1 (§ 12022.53, subd. (d)),
    and that Price has two prior serious felony convictions and two prior strikes (§ 667,
    subds. (a)-(i)). We issued an order staying the criminal proceedings pending the
    resolution of the writ petition, along with an order to respondent superior court to show
    cause why the relief sought in the petition should not be granted.
    At the preliminary hearing on the felony complaint, and as part of his section 995
    motion to set aside the information, Price moved to quash, traverse, and suppress all
    evidence obtained pursuant to 11 search warrants for electronic information, including a
    geofence warrant to Google, LLC (Google). A geofence warrant, or “reverse-location”
    warrant, draws a virtual geographic fence around the location of a crime, on the date of
    the crime, and for a specified, limited time period encompassing the crime. Geofence
    1   Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    2
    warrants allow law enforcement agencies to identify suspects and witnesses to crimes by
    obtaining location data and identifying information associated with electronic devices
    traversing the geofence and carried by the suspects or witnesses. Google stores location
    data transmitted from, and has identifying information associated with, electronic devices
    that use Google’s Android operating system or any Google application. Price was
    identified as a suspect in the shooting of Jovany R. based on location data and identifying
    information returned pursuant to the geofence warrant.
    In the suppression motion, Price claimed that the geofence warrant and several of
    the other 10 warrants for electronic information (1) failed to satisfy the Fourth
    Amendment’s probable cause and particularity requirements; (2) had to be traversed
    based on material factual omissions in their affidavits; and (3) violated the particularity
    and notice requirements of the California Electronic Communications Privacy Act
    (CalECPA; §§ 1546 to 1546.5). Price also moved to suppress evidence that the gun used
    in the October 29, 2019 shooting death of Jovany R. was found in Price’s vehicle during
    a January 18, 2020 parole search. Price claimed that the gun evidence was fruit of Price’s
    unlawful detention for being lawfully parked on a private driveway.
    The magistrate at the preliminary hearing denied the suppression motion in its
    entirety and held Price to answer the murder, unlawful possession, and enhancement
    allegations of the felony complaint, including a robbery-murder special circumstance
    allegation. (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(17)). In ruling on the section 995 motion to set aside the
    information, respondent superior court dismissed the robbery-murder special
    3
    circumstance allegation but denied the section 995 motion in all other respects and denied
    the renewed suppression motion in its entirety.2
    In the writ petition, Price renews his Fourth Amendment, traversal, and CalECPA
    claims concerning the geofence warrant and other warrants for electronic information.
    He claims the geofence warrant evidence and its fruits, including the gun evidence, must
    be suppressed, along with the other warrant evidence. He maintains that, without any of
    the warrant evidence or the gun evidence, there is insufficient evidence to hold him to
    answer the charges and allegations in the information.
    In the published portion of this opinion, we address Price’s Fourth Amendment,
    traversal, and CalECPA claims concerning the geofence warrant. We conclude that the
    geofence warrant satisfied the probable cause and particularity requirements of the Fourth
    Amendment and was not overbroad; it was reasonably and narrowly drawn in geographic
    scope and time period to capture the location data of only suspects and witnesses to the
    shooting death of Jovany R, and to minimize the possibility of allowing the government
    to obtain the location data and identifying information for uninvolved individuals—
    persons who were neither suspects nor witnesses to the shooting. We also conclude that
    the good faith exception to the warrant requirement precludes the suppression of the
    geofence warrant evidence and its fruits, even if the geofence warrant is invalid under the
    Fourth Amendment. Lastly, we conclude that CalECPA does not require the suppression
    of the geofence warrant evidence despite the government’s violation of CalECPA’s
    2 The People do not challenge respondent Superior Court of Riverside County’s
    dismissal of the robbery-murder special circumstance allegation.
    4
    notice provisions (§ 1546.2). In the unpublished portion of this opinion, we reject Price’s
    claims concerning the other 10 warrants and the gun evidence. Thus, we conclude that
    the suppression motion was properly denied in its entirety, deny the writ petition, and lift
    the order staying the criminal proceedings against Price.
    II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. The Suppression Motion
    1. Overview
    On November 8, 9, and 10, 2021, Price’s motion to suppress the geofence warrant
    evidence, the other warrant evidence, and the gun evidence was heard with the
    preliminary hearing on the felony complaint charging Price with the October 29, 2019
    shooting and murder of Jovany R. and unlawful firearm possession. West Covina Police
    Officer Kyle Clifton testified about his investigatory stop and detention of Price in West
    Covina on January 18, 2020, and the subsequent parole search of Price’s vehicle during
    which the gun used in the shooting of Jovany R. was found.3
    Riverside County Sheriff’s Investigator Ryan Deanne was the lead investigator in
    the shooting death of Jovany R. and the affiant for the geofence warrant. Deanne
    testified about the investigation, the geofence warrant, and three other warrants seeking
    Price’s Google e-mail (Gmail) account data and cell phone records, issued after Price was
    identified as a suspect in the shooting based on location data and identifying information
    3 We discuss Officer Clifton’s testimony, and Price’s claims concerning the
    lawfulness of his detention and the admissibility of the gun evidence, in the unpublished
    portion of this opinion, section VI.
    5
    obtained from Google pursuant to the geofence warrant.4 Deanne also testified about his
    observations at the scene of the shooting, and his interviews with other investigating
    officers and witnesses, including Jovany R.’s brother, Samuel R., who was with Jovany
    R. at the time of the shooting and witnessed the shooting.5
    2. Investigator Ryan Deanne’s Testimony
    (a) The shooting death of Jovany R.
    Jovany R. was shot and killed in the front porch area of his Jurupa Valley home on
    October 29, 2019. An autopsy confirmed that the death was a homicide and that
    Jovany R. died from gunshot wounds to his left leg, back, and head. The forensic
    pathologist who performed the autopsy did not ascertain the caliber of the bullets that
    killed Jovany R. An unloaded, .40-caliber gun was found in Jovany R.’s waistband after
    the shooting, but no .40-caliber casings were found on or near Jovany R.’s body or at the
    scene.
    The home had a concrete front porch and patio, and an “L”-shaped walkway from
    the front porch to the driveway, which led to a garage. Six .45-caliber shell casings were
    found on the walkway and grassy area near the front porch, and there were possible
    bullet-strike marks near the front door. The garage and several rooms inside the house
    were being used to grow marijuana, indicating a “marijuana grow” on the property.
    We discuss the other warrant evidence, and Price’s claims concerning the other
    4
    warrant evidence, in the unpublished portion of this opinion, Section V.
    5At the time that he testified in November 2021, Deanne had been a peace officer
    for over 15 years, and he had been assigned to the homicide unit of the Riverside County
    Sheriff’s Department for two and one-half years.
    6
    Jovany R.’s brother, Samuel R., spoke to investigators after the shooting. Samuel
    R. said that he, Jovany R., and a friend, Edgar A., were socializing in the house during
    the evening of October 29, 2019, when the front doorbell rang or there was a knock at the
    door. Jovany R. answered the door, went outside, and spoke with the person at the door.
    Jovany R. came back inside and said that the person at the door said that his car had
    broken down and he needed assistance.6 Jovany R. then went into a bedroom, came out,
    grabbed a pair of jumper cables and a charging box, and again went outside through the
    front door. Samuel R. did not follow Jovany R. into the bedroom but followed Jovany R.
    outside because he was concerned about home invasion robberies.
    As Samuel R. and Jovany R. walked outside through the front door, Samuel R.
    saw a black male adult, whom Samuel R. did not recognize, standing a short distance
    from the door with either a gun or a knife pointed at Jovany R.’s face. The male said,
    “Don’t move.” Samuel R. described the male as five feet nine or ten inches tall, middle
    aged, in his 30s, with a beard and a muscular, stocky build, wearing gray pants and a gray
    shirt, but wearing nothing on his head.
    Just as the male said, “Don’t move,” a second black male adult, whom Samuel R.
    also did not recognize, came around the corner of the house from the garage area and
    stood near the corner of the house. Samuel R. described the second male as younger than
    the first, in his 20s, around five feet five or six inches tall, with a “skinny” build, and
    6 The magistrate admitted Jovany R.’s hearsay statement to Samuel R.—that the
    person at the door said his car had broken down and he needed assistance—for the
    limited purpose of explaining Jovany R.’s actions after making the statement.
    7
    wearing a black beanie, a black sweater, and red sweatpants. The second black male did
    not say anything. After the first male said, “Don’t move,” and the second male appeared,
    Samuel R. and Jovany R. began stepping backward toward the front door, but they did
    not turn around. Samuel R. was pushing Jovany R. toward the door. Samuel R. then
    heard two gunshots, Jovany R. fell to the ground, and the two males ran away in separate
    directions. The second male ran north on Homestead, the street in front of the house.
    Samuel R. did not see the second male get into a vehicle. The first male ran to a silver
    car parked on Homestead in front of the house, then the car proceeded south on
    Homestead. Samuel R. could not see whether anyone other than the first male was in the
    silver car. Samuel R. did not report seeing that either of the two males had a cell phone.
    After Jovany R. was shot, Samuel R. attempted to help Jovany R. and yelled to
    Edgar A. to call 911. Edgar A. did not witness the shooting. He stayed inside the house
    while Samuel R. and Jovany R. went outside; and after he heard gunshots, he hid in the
    garage. Neither of the two males, the homicide suspects, demanded money or marijuana,
    or made any reference to marijuana. “Don’t move” were the only words anyone said
    after Jovany R. and Samuel R. went outside. Samuel R. did not know whether Jovany R.
    grabbed at the gun in his waistband, or that Jovany R. even had a gun on his person, until
    officers told Samuel R. they found the gun in Jovany R.’s waistband.
    Samuel R. told Investigator Deanne that the marijuana being grown in the house
    was for personal and medicinal use, and he denied that either he or Jovany R. was selling
    the marijuana. Deanne believed Samuel R. and Jovany R. were selling marijuana, based
    on the large quantity of marijuana in the house and because Samuel R. and Jovany R. had
    8
    a social media account in which it appeared that they were advertising marijuana for sale.
    Deanne did not recall whether the address of the house on Homestead appeared on the
    social media account. Police confiscated the marijuana plants and did not find a
    marijuana grow permit. No significant amount of cash was found in the house, and
    nothing outside the house indicated that there was a large marijuana grow inside or that
    marijuana was being sold there.
    (b) Further investigation and search warrants
    Several days after the October 29, 2019 shooting death of Jovany R., investigators
    obtained surveillance video recordings from a gas station located east of the intersection
    of Homestead and Limonite, less than one-half of a mile from the scene of the shooting at
    the house on Homestead. The surveillance video showed a silver car heading east on
    Limonite, moments before it showed a patrol vehicle that was responding to the shooting
    heading west on Limonite toward Homestead. After receiving the surveillance videos,
    Investigator Deanne drafted the geofence warrant and supporting affidavit.
    In his testimony in November 2021, Deanne explained that a geofence warrant
    creates a geographical fence around a particular location, typically in the form of a circle,
    rectangle, or square, using longitude and latitude points. The geofence warrant is
    directed to Google, and Google is asked to identify any electronic devices, including
    smartphones, that Google is tracking and that were located inside the geofence at or
    around the time of the crime. Google tracks the locations of smart phones and other
    devices that use at least one Google application (e.g., Google Maps), regardless of
    whether the device runs on the Google-supported Android or Apple-supported [iOS]
    9
    operating systems. Google does not track device locations while the device is turned off,
    but a Google application does not have to be in use on a device to allow Google to track
    the device through the Google application. Deanne also explained that a geofence
    warrant should be as specific as possible in terms of the date, time, and location of the
    crime, and the device data that the geofence warrant seeks. Deanne said, “If you know
    that the person [who] committed [the] crime took this pathway to and from the crime
    scene, you would want to include that pathway and the crime scene in your geographical
    fence.”
    Google has an online portal it calls LERS (law enforcement reporting system),
    where geofence warrants are uploaded and law enforcement agencies are required to
    follow a process established by Google to receive the data the warrant seeks. Google
    releases requested data in three stages. In stage one, Google identifies all devices located
    within the geofence area, or the geofence, by anonymized numbers known as “automated
    device identifiers” or “device IDs.” The device IDs disguise the personal identities of the
    device users or subscribers. In stage two, law enforcement may ask Google to provide
    additional data, including location histories, outside the geofence, for devices identified
    in stage one. This location history data gives “a more expanded view” of the location and
    movements of the devices, or some of the devices, identified by anonymized device IDs
    in stage one. In stage three, law enforcement asks Google for information identifying the
    users or subscribers of the device IDs identified in stages one or two.
    The geofence for the geofence warrant encompassed the front yard of Jovany R.’s
    house, including the front porch area where the shooting occurred, and the street in front
    10
    of the house (Homestead) for the lengths of two houses in each direction (north and
    south), between 10:00 p.m. and 10:22 p.m. on October 29, 2019—a 22-minute period.
    Multiple 911 calls about the shooting occurred during this period, including at 10:14 p.m.
    to 10:15 p.m. The geofence warrant was issued, ordered sealed, and served on
    November 7, 2019. In addition to sealing the warrant, the issuing magistrate granted the
    government a 90-day extension of the 90-day period for notifying the identified “target”
    of the warrant of the issuance of the warrant, pursuant to CalECPA. (§ 1546.2.)
    Around January 29, 2020, Deanne received stage one information from Google,
    showing that five device IDs were located in the 22-minute geofence. Next, Deanne
    requested “stage two information” showing the locations of the five device IDs both
    before and after the 22-minute period, and Deanne received the stage two information in
    March 2020. The stage two information showed that two of the five device IDs were at
    the house on Homestead for five to seven minutes during the 22-minute period and later
    travelled east on Limonite, past the gas station where the surveillance video showed a
    silver car traveling east on Limonite after the shooting. Deanne then asked Google for
    stage three identifying information for the two device IDs that appeared to belong to the
    two suspects. On September 14, 2020, Deanne received stage three information, showing
    that the two device IDs were associated with a single device and two Gmail accounts—
    one using the phrase “Product of Music” and the other, “Be Hood Music.” Price’s name
    was associated with both Gmail accounts, and the “recovery” phone number associated
    with both Gmail accounts ended in 4481. A Gmail account subscriber provides a
    “recovery” phone number to Google for security and password recovery purposes.
    11
    Deanne then instructed another investigator to prepare a warrant to Google for data
    related to Price’s Gmail accounts, and a warrant to AT&T, the service provider, for data
    related to Price’s 4481 number.
    Using a mapping program and the location data received for the two device IDs
    associated with Price’s two Gmail accounts, a crime analyst created a map showing a
    single device using Price’s two Gmail accounts traveling on Limonite and other streets to
    Jovany R.’s house on Homestead, between 9:50 p.m. and 10:09 p.m. on
    October 29, 2019. A second map using the same Gmail account location data showed the
    device traveling to Price’s home in West Covina between 10:20 p.m. and 10:58 p.m. on
    October 29. A third map showed the device traveling from Price’s home in West Covina
    to a restaurant in Jurupa Valley, one to two miles from Jovany R.’s house, between
    8:01 p.m. and 8:49 p.m. on October 29. A fourth map, created using call records for
    Price’s 4481 number, was consistent with the program maps based on the Gmail account
    location data. The fourth map showed the device using the 4481 number traveling to and
    from Jovany R.’s house at the same times as the maps based on the Gmail account data.
    After mapping the location data returned from the geofence warrant, the Gmail
    accounts warrant, and the 4481 call-records warrant, Deanne began looking into Price’s
    background. Deanne discovered that, on November 6, 2019, eight days after the
    shooting, Price was driving a silver 2017 Ford Fusion when he was involved in a traffic
    collision in West Covina. Deanne compared three photographs: (1) a “stock”
    photograph of a 2017 Ford Fusion, (2) a screen shot of the silver car shown in the
    October 29 gas station video, and (3) a photograph of the vehicle Price was driving
    12
    during the November 6 collision, obtained using that vehicle’s license plate number.
    Deanne believed that the silver car observed in the screen shot from the gas station video
    matched the description of a 2017 Ford Fusion.
    After Deanne identified Price as a suspect in the murder, a criminal analyst made a
    six-pack photo lineup that included Price. When shown the lineup, Samuel R. excluded
    Price as the shooter and identified another male as the shooter. Deanne believed the
    photo of Price shown to Samuel R. was taken on January 18, 2020, but Deanne was
    unsure. Deanne also learned that West Covina police had arrested Price for unlawfully
    possessing a firearm on January 18, 2020. Deanne contacted the West Covina Police
    Department and learned that the firearm was a .45-caliber handgun, the same caliber as
    the six shell casings found at the scene of the October 29, 2019 shooting.
    Deanne obtained the gun from the West Covina Police Department pursuant to a
    warrant and had the gun test-fired to compare the test casings to the .45-caliber casings
    found at the scene. A firearm examiner used a machine to compare the two sets of
    casings. Based on the first test results, the examiner concluded that the casings did not
    match. Deanne asked that the gun be retested, the examiner performed a second test, and
    concluded that the casings matched. It was discovered during the second test that the test
    casings were incorrectly put into the machine during the first test. A third test
    reconfirmed that the casings matched.
    Deanne then obtained a second warrant to AT&T, referred to as a “ping data in
    real time warrant” seeking Price’s real-time cell phone location data for the 4481 number,
    along with 4481 call records, for September 15, 2020 through November 25, 2020.
    13
    Deanne believed that Price was still using the 4481 number in September 2020 and
    wanted to track Price’s location through the 4481 number.
    Deanne then asked Price’s parole officer to arrange a meeting with Price. In early
    December 2020, investigators tracked Price’s 4481 phone in real time and saw that the
    phone traveled from Las Vegas to Pomona where Price was scheduled to meet with his
    parole officer. Price was arrested at the meeting. When Price was arrested, Deanne gave
    Price “service copies” of the four warrants issued during the investigation that sought
    electronic information “related to” Price—namely, the geofence warrant, the Gmail
    accounts warrant, the 4481 call-records warrant, and the 4481 ping-data warrant. The
    service copies included “everything except” the affidavits and probable cause statements
    of the warrants. When Deanne gave Price the service copies, Deanne told Price that the
    sheriff’s department had received all of the information it sought in the four warrants and
    gave Price a verbal summary of the information received. On December 8, 2020, a
    felony complaint was filed charging Price with the murder of Jovany R. and unlawful
    firearm possession, and alleging firearm, prior conviction, and robbery-murder special
    circumstance enhancements.
    3. The Contents of the Geofence Warrant and Affidavit
    The geofence warrant sought “all identifying information” according to the
    Google “production protocol” for Google accounts reporting “location history data
    generated from devices that reported a location” within the geofence. As Deanne
    testified, the warrant limited the geofence to the front yard of Jovany R.’s home, where
    the shooting occurred, and the street in front of the home (Homestead) for the length of
    14
    two houses in each direction, where Samuel R. saw the two suspects flee in separate
    directions after the shooting. The street portion of the geofence on Homestead abutted
    the yards of 11 homes, including Jovany R.’s front yard. The warrant requested location
    data in the geofence between 10:00 p.m. and 10:22 p.m. on October 29, 2019, a 22-
    minute period encompassing the time of the shooting, according to 911 calls and the
    times officers responded to the scene of the shooting. The warrant included an aerial
    photograph of the geofence marked by latitude and longitude coordinates, and areas
    immediately around the geofence.
    In accordance with the Google “production protocol,” the warrant requested data
    in stages by directing Google to do the following: “1. Google shall query location
    history data based on the Initial Search Parameters described above [the area, date, and
    time period of the geofence]. [¶] 2. For each location point recorded within the Initial
    Search Parameters, Google shall produce an Anonymized List specifying a unique device
    identifier, timestamp, coordinates, display radius, and data source. [¶] 3. The
    Examining Officer will then review the Anonymized List to identify a Target List of
    devices that fit a pattern described in this Affidavit. If the Examining Officer needs
    additional location information outside the Initial Search Parameters for specific devices
    in the Anonymized List to determine if they fit a pattern described in this Affidavit, the
    officer may submit an additional request to Google for additional location information
    within the listed time period. For instance, an account moving quickly through the target
    area may be excluded from the Target List if additional information suggests that the
    device is on a highway and not associated with the events described in this Affidavit. [¶]
    15
    4. For those device IDs identified as relevant pursuant to the process described above,
    law enforcement may request that Google [p]rovide identifying information, without
    additional legal service, as defined in 
    18 U.S.C. § 2703
    (c)(2) [name, address, etc.], for the
    Google Account associated with each identified device 
    ID.
     [¶] 5. The examining officer
    may provide the Target List to Google. Upon receiving the Target List, Google shall
    provide the following subscriber information for the Google Account associated with
    each identified device: [name, street address, telephone number], email address or
    similar contact information provided by the subscriber to the provider to establish or
    maintain an account or communication channel.”
    The stated purpose of the warrant was to “authorize the examination of Google
    location history records from the time and place of the homicide to identify potential
    suspects and/or witnesses.” Investigator Deanne signed the warrant affidavit, in which
    he described the circumstances of the shooting and averred that no suspects had been
    identified. Deanne also explained why there was probable cause to believe Google had
    electronic information that would identify the suspects or lead to their identification.
    Deanne averred based on his training and experience that, “most people in today’s
    society” possess and carry “cellular phones and other connected” devices, which “may
    include global positioning systems (GPS) and other technology for determining a more
    precise location of the [phone or] device.” Google uses an operating system known as
    Android for its mobile devices. According to a February 2018 study by a research
    company, approximately 99.9 percent of all smartphones were supported either by
    Google’s Android operating system or Apple’s iOS operating system, and 86 percent of
    16
    the 99.9 percent were Android-supported. All Android-supported devices have a Google
    account, and Apple iphones support Google applications, which also include a Google
    account. These Google applications include Google Search, Gmail, Google Maps, and
    Google Drive. Whenever a user activates a Google account, Google asks the user to
    provide a phone number for the account.
    Google collects and retains location data on its server, the “ ‘Sensorvault,’ ” from
    Android-operated devices and devices supporting Google applications, as long as the
    location services of the device are enabled. That is, Google collects location data
    “whenever one of their services is activated and/or whenever there is an event on the
    mobile device such as a phone call, text messag[e], internet access, or email access,” and
    also when the user is not “interacting with the device” but Google applications are
    “running in the background.” The location data is derived from several sources—GPS
    data, cell site/cell tower information, Bluetooth beacons, and Wi-Fi access points—and is
    “stored forever” unless the user deletes it.
    Because most people use and carry a cell phone nearly all the time, and nearly all
    such devices are Android-operated or use Google applications and associated Google
    accounts, Deanne averred it was likely the two suspects were carrying at least one such
    device at the time of the shooting. Additionally, when multiple suspects are involved in
    criminal activity, they “typically” use cell phones to communicate with each other.
    Deanne also explained how the warrant would be executed according to the
    Google production protocol. The initial device tags provided by Google would be
    provided in an anonymized list and would not include any “subscriber information”
    17
    identifying the device subscribers. The anonymized list of device tags would “allow
    investigators to see which Google device tags were present in the geographical area [the
    geofence area] prior to, during, and after the crime.” Law enforcement would “review
    the Anonymized List to remove device tags that are not relevant to the investigation, such
    as device tags that were not in the location for a sufficient period of time.” If law
    enforcement needed additional location information for a given device tag to determine
    whether the device was relevant to the investigation, it could ask Google to provide that
    information. Additional location “information provided by the extended timeframe and
    times when entering and exiting the geographical area” would “allow investigators to
    determine which device tags require further investigation and which ones do not,” and
    would also “assist investigators in understanding a bigger geographic picture and
    timeline,” which could identify witnesses and “inculpate or exculpate the account
    owners.”
    At Deanne’s request, the issuing magistrate ordered the warrant, including its
    affidavit, statement of probable cause, return, and all documents related to the warrant
    sealed until further order of court. Deanne averred in the warrant that publicizing this
    information would “make it impossible to continue” the murder investigation. The
    issuing magistrate also granted Deanne’s request for a 90-day delay in notifying the
    target of the warrant, contemporaneously with the service of the warrant on Google,
    pursuant to CalECPA. (§ 1546.2, subd. (b).) Deanne averred that the 90-day notice
    delay was “justified because providing prior notice to the target . . . would lead to an
    adverse result” in that it could “endanger the life or physical safety of an individual; lead
    18
    to flight from prosecution”; destruction of or tampering with evidence; witness
    intimidation; or “otherwise seriously jeopardize” the investigation. (§§ 1546, subd. (a)
    [defining “ ‘adverse result’ ” for CalECPA purposes], 1546.2, subd. (b) [authorizing
    delayed notice].) The warrant did not explain that there was no “identified target” of the
    warrant at the time the warrant was issued. (§ 1546, subd. (c).)
    B. The Preliminary Hearing Magistrate’s Rulings on the Suppression Motion
    In denying the suppression motion at the preliminary hearing, the magistrate ruled
    that the geofence warrant was supported by probable cause to believe the suspects were
    carrying cell phones, and the warrant was not overbroad but was “narrowly tailored” in
    terms of its geographic scope and time frame to capture only the location data of the
    suspects and possible witnesses to the shooting. The magistrate concluded that the other
    10 warrants for electronic information were also supported by probable cause and
    described the data sought with sufficient particularity; none were overbroad in terms of
    the nature or extent of the data they sought.
    Regarding Price’s traversal claims, the magistrate ruled that the evidence Price
    was complaining was omitted from the affidavits for the 11 warrants was immaterial, and
    “a mountain of evidence” and probable cause supported the warrants. The magistrate
    also rejected Price’s claim that CalECPA required the suppression of all evidence
    obtained pursuant to a warrant that violates its provisions, including its particularity and
    notice requirements. (§§ 1546.1, subd. (d)(1) [particularity], 1546.2 [notice], 1546.4
    [remedies].) The magistrate concluded that the remedy for a CalECPA violation is a
    motion to suppress the warrant evidence (§ 1546.4), and a court is not required to
    19
    suppress evidence based on “technical” CalECPA violations. The magistrate also denied
    Price’s motion to suppress the gun evidence.
    After denying the suppression motion, the magistrate found sufficient evidence to
    hold Price to answer all of the charges and enhancements alleged in the felony complaint.
    On November 22, 2021, an information was filed charging Price with the
    October 29, 2019 murder of Jovany R., unlawful firearm possession, and alleging prior
    conviction, firearm, and robbery-murder special circumstance enhancements.
    C. The Renewed Suppression Motion and Section 995 Motion
    In moving to set aside the information (§ 995), Price renewed the suppression
    motion he made at the preliminary hearing, including the motions to quash and traverse
    the 11 warrants, suppress the warrant evidence and its fruits, and suppress the gun
    evidence as the fruit of his unlawful detention on January 18, 2020. On April 21, 2022,
    respondent superior court issued a detailed order, dismissing the robbery-murder special
    circumstance allegation but denying the section 995 motion in all other respects and
    denying the renewed suppression motion in its entirety.
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    At a preliminary hearing on a felony complaint, the defendant may move to
    suppress evidence that the defendant claims was obtained as a result of an invalid search
    or seizure. (People v. Magee (2011) 
    194 Cal.App.4th 178
    , 182-183; § 1538.5, subds. (a),
    (f))(1).) If the motion is denied and the defendant is held to answer, the defendant may
    renew the suppression motion in the superior court under the standards governing a
    20
    section 995 motion. (People v. Magee, at p. 182; § 1538.5, subd. (m).)7 In a section 995
    proceeding, the superior court “merely reviews” the evidence presented at the preliminary
    hearing; it does not substitute its judgment on the weight of the evidence or resolve
    conflicts in the evidence. (People v. McDonald (2006) 
    137 Cal.App.4th 521
    , 529.) The
    role of the superior court “ ‘ “is similar to that of an appellate court reviewing the
    sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a judgment and involves the determination of a
    legal issue only.” ’ ” (Brewer v. Superior Court (2017) 
    16 Cal.App.5th 1019
    , 1023.)
    In reviewing a section 995 order, itself reviewing a magistrate’s order denying a
    suppression motion at a preliminary hearing, “ ‘we, in effect, review the magistrate’s
    decision directly, deferring to the magistrate’s factual findings.’ ” (People v. Kidd, supra,
    36 Cal.App.5th at p. 17.) “ ‘We must draw all presumptions in favor of the magistrate’s
    factual determinations, and we must uphold the magistrate’s express or implied findings
    if they are supported by substantial evidence.’ ” (People v. Hawkins (2012)
    
    211 Cal.App.4th 194
    , 200.) But, like the superior court, we independently determine
    whether the search or seizure was reasonable. (People v. Magee, supra, 194 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 183; see § 1538.5, subd. (a).) That is, “ ‘[w]e judge the legality of the search by
    7   The defendant may also renew the defendant’s preliminary hearing challenge of
    the validity of the search or seizure, or challenge of the validity of the search or seizure in
    the first instance, in “a special hearing relating to the validity of the search or seizure.”
    (§ 1538.5, subd. (i)); People v. Kidd (2019) 
    36 Cal.App.5th 12
    , 19-20 & fn. 3,
    disapproved on other grounds in People v. Tacardon (2022) 
    14 Cal.5th 235
    , 245-247
    (Tacardon); People v. Superior Court (Cooper) (2003) 
    114 Cal.App.4th 713
    , 717.) Price
    did not utilize the special hearing procedure. (§ 1538.5, subd. (i).)
    21
    “measur[ing] the facts, as found by the trier, against the constitutional standard of
    reasonableness.” ’ ” (People v. Magee, at p. 183.)
    When a search warrant is challenged as unsupported by a showing of probable
    cause in the affidavit (U.S. Const., 4th Amend.), we review the probable cause
    determination of the magistrate who issued the warrant. “A magistrate’s determination of
    probable cause is entitled to great deference by reviewing courts. [Citation.] A court
    reviewing the sufficiency of an affidavit on which a search warrant is issued, should not
    conduct a de novo review of the evidence. . . . (Ibid.) Rather, the [issuing] magistrate’s
    determination of probable cause should be disturbed on review only if the affidavit fails
    as a matter of law to set forth sufficient competent evidence to support the magistrate’s
    finding of probable cause.” (People v. McDaniels (1994) 
    21 Cal.App.4th 1560
    , 1564.)
    IV. THE GEOFENCE WARRANT
    A. Fourth Amendment Claims
    1. Fourth Amendment Principles, Overview
    The Fourth Amendment protects “the right of the people to be secure in their
    persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures” and
    provides, “no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or
    affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or
    things to be seized.” (U.S. Const., 4th Amend.) The Fourth Amendment was intended to
    prevent, “ ‘the reviled “general warrants” and “writs of assistance” of the colonial era,
    which allowed British officers to rummage through homes in an unrestrained search for
    evidence of criminal activity.’ ” (Carpenter v. United States (2018) 585 U.S.___,___
    22
    [
    138 S.Ct. 2206
    , 2213]; Riley v. California (2014) 
    573 U.S. 373
    , 403; Steagald v. United
    States (1981) 
    451 U.S. 204
    , 220 [“The central objectionable feature” of general warrants
    and writs of assistance was that they provided “no judicial check” on executing officials’
    discretion to decide where to search or whom or what to seize.].)
    “To satisfy the demands of the Warrant Clause, a warrant must comply with two
    related but distinct rules. First, it must describe the place to be searched or things to be
    seized with sufficient particularity, taking account of ‘the circumstances of the case and
    the types of items involved.’ [Citation.] Second, it must be no broader than the probable
    cause on which it is based. [Citation.] The particularity rule and the probable cause rule
    serve a common purpose: to protect privacy by prohibiting ‘a general, exploratory
    rummaging in a person[’s] belongings.’ [Citation.] Although the two rules serve the
    same ultimate purpose, they achieve the purpose in distinct ways.” (United States v.
    Weber (9th Cir. 1990) 
    923 F.2d 1338
    , 1342.)
    There is probable cause for a search if “there is a fair probability that evidence of a
    crime will be found in a particular place.” (Illinois v. Gates (1983) 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 238.)
    The probable cause showing must be made in the warrant affidavit (People v. Carrington
    (2009) 
    47 Cal.4th 145
    , 161) and, as noted, the scope of the search must be “no broader
    than the probable cause on which [the warrant] is based” (United States v. Weber, supra,
    923 F.3d at p. 1342; Burrows v. Superior Court (1974) 
    13 Cal.3d 238
    , 250 [“It is
    axiomatic that a warrant may not authorize a search broader than the facts supporting its
    issuance.”]). A warrant is unconstitutionally overbroad if it describes the place to be
    searched in broader terms than is justified by the probable cause showing. (United States
    23
    v. Snow (D.AZ, Oct. 9, 2019, CR 18-1796-TUC-JGZ) 2019 U.S. Dist. Lexis 230128, p.
    *11.)
    The particularity requirement—that a warrant particularly describe the place to be
    searched and the persons or things to be seized—renders a general, exploratory search
    impossible by preventing “ ‘the seizure of one thing under a warrant describing another’ ”
    and leaving “ ‘nothing to the discretion of the officer executing the warrant.’ ” (Stanford
    v. Texas (1965) 
    379 U.S. 476
    , 485.) The particularity requirement prevents the
    government from exercising “unbridled authority” under the warrant. (Id. at pp. 481,
    485-486; Maryland v. Garrison (1987) 
    480 U.S. 79
    , 84 [“By limiting the authorization to
    search to the specific areas and things for which there is probable cause to search, the
    [particularity] requirement ensures that the search will be carefully tailored to its
    justifications, and will not take on the character of the wide-ranging exploratory searches
    the Framers intended to prohibit.”]; People v. Frank (1985) 
    38 Cal.3d 711
    , 726 [“The
    vice of an overbroad warrant is that it invites the police to treat it merely as an excuse to
    conduct an unconstitutional general search.”]; United States v. Sanchez-Jara (7th Cir.
    2018) 
    889 F.3d 418
    , 421 [A warrant cannot be “an open-ended authorization for public
    officials to rummage where they please in order to see what turns up.”].)
    In determining whether a warrant is sufficiently particular in describing the place
    to be searched or the things to be seized, courts look to “such factors as the purpose for
    which the warrant was issued, the nature of the items to which it is directed, and the total
    circumstances surrounding the case.” (People v. Rogers (1986) 
    187 Cal.App.3d 1001
    ,
    24
    1008.) Neither “complete precision” nor “near certainty” is required. (People v. Amador
    (2000) 
    24 Cal.4th 387
    , 392; People v Hepner (1994) 
    21 Cal.App.4th 761
    , 775-776.)
    2. Fourth Amendment Case Law on Geofence Warrants
    When the geofence warrant in this case was issued on November 7, 2019, “there
    were no published cases anywhere in the country, let alone in California, analyzing the
    constitutionality of geofence warrants.” (People v. Meza (2023) 
    90 Cal.App.5th 520
    ,
    526, review filed May 22, 2023, S280089 (Meza).) Since July 2020, several published
    federal district court decisions have addressed Fourth Amendment challenges to geofence
    warrants, both in the context of considering geofence warrant applications and in ruling
    on motions to suppress geofence warrant evidence.8
    8   The federal court decisions considering geofence warrant applications are: In re
    Search of Info. Stored at Premises Controlled by Google (N.D. Ill., July 8, 2020, No.
    20M297) 2020 U.S.Dist. Lexis 165185 (Pharma I) [denying application], followed by In
    re Search of Info. Stored at Premises Controlled by Google (N.D. Ill., 2020)
    
    481 F.Supp.3d 730
     (Pharma II) [same]; and In re Search Warrant Application for
    Geofence Location Data Stored at Google Concerning an Arson Investigation (N.D. Ill.,
    2020) 
    497 F.Supp.3d 345
     (Arson Investigation) [granting application]; In re Search of
    Info. That Is Stored at the Premises Controlled by Google LLC (D. Kan., June 4, 2021)
    
    542 F.Supp.3d 1153
     (Kansas Federal Crimes) [denying application]; In re Search of Info.
    Stored at Premises Controlled by Google (D.D.C., Dec. 30, 2021) 
    579 F.Supp.3d 62
    (D.C. Federal Crimes) [granting application]; and In re Search of Info. That is Stored At
    Premises Controlled by Google (S.D. Tx., Feb. 14, 2023, No. 2:22-mj-01325) 
    2023 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 33651
     (Texas Federal Crimes) [granting application]. See In re Search of
    Info. Stored at Premises Controlled by Google (Va. Cir., Feb. 24, 2022, No. KM-2022-
    79) 2022 Va. Cir. Lexis 12 [denying application]. The federal court decisions
    considering motions to suppress geofence warrant evidence are: United States v. Chatrie
    (E.D. Va. 2022) 
    590 F.Supp.3d 901
     (Chatrie), United States v. Rhine (D.D.C., Jan. 24,
    2023, No. 21-0687) 2023 U.S.Dist. Lexis 12308 (Rhine); United States v. Smith
    (N.D.Miss., Feb. 10, 2023, No. 3:21-cr-107-SA) 2023 U.S.Dist. Lexis 22944 (Smith); and
    United States v. Carpenter (M.D.Fl., Feb. 28, 2023, No. 8:21-cr-309-VMC-MRM) 2023
    U.S.Dist. Lexis 64948 (Carpenter).
    25
    Although we are not bound by the decisions of lower federal courts on questions
    of federal law, such decisions are “ ‘ “persuasive and entitled to great weight” ’ ” when,
    as here, they are “ ‘both numerous and consistent.’ ” (People v. Nguyen (2022)
    
    82 Cal.App.5th 888
    , 897.) We are also guided by Meza, to date the only California Court
    of Appeal decision to address the constitutionality of a geofence warrant. (Meza, supra,
    90 Cal.App.5th at pp. 536-543.) The California Supreme Court and United States
    Supreme Court have yet to rule on the Fourth Amendment constitutionality of a geofence
    warrant.
    3. The Geofence Affidavit Showed Probable Cause to Believe the Suspects’
    Identities Would be Revealed Through the Geofence Search9
    Price first claims that the geofence warrant is invalid because its affidavit failed to
    show probable cause to believe that evidence of a crime, namely, the suspects’ identities,
    would be found through the geofence search. (Illinois v. Gates, 
    supra,
     
    462 U.S. at
    9  The government’s intrusion into a place where an individual has a reasonable
    expectation of privacy—an expectation society is prepared to recognize as reasonable—is
    a “search” that triggers the Warrant Clause of the Fourth Amendment. (Carpenter v.
    United States, supra, 138 S.Ct. at pp. 2211-2213, 2217 & fn. 3 [warrant required to
    access at least seven days of “cell site location information” (CSLI) maintained by cell
    phone service provider]; Riley v. California, supra, 573 U.S. at p. 403 [warrant required
    for search incident to arrest of suspect’s cell phone contents]; United States v. Jones
    (2012) 
    565 U.S. 400
    , 404-405 [warrant required to install GPS tracking device on vehicle
    to track its movements over 28 days].) The United States Supreme Court has not
    determined whether individuals have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their
    electronic device location data, even for short periods of time. (See Geofence Warrants
    and the Fourth Amendment (2021) 
    134 Harv. L. Rev. 2508
    , 2509-2510 [It is “an open
    question” whether “geofence warrants are Fourth Amendment searches.”].) We assume
    for purposes of our discussion of Price’s Fourth Amendment claims that the search for
    location data and identifying information, as authorized by the geofence warrant,
    constituted a “search” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
    26
    p. 238.) Price claims the warrant affidavit failed to show probable cause to believe (1)
    the suspects were carrying cell phones, given that the affidavit was “devoid of any facts
    that someone saw” either of the suspects with a cell phone, and, therefore, (2) that Google
    would have location data and identifying information revealing the suspects’ identities.
    “The question facing a reviewing court asked to determine whether probable cause
    supported the issuance of the warrant is whether the [issuing] magistrate had a substantial
    basis for concluding a fair probability existed that a search would uncover wrongdoing.
    [Citations.] ‘The task of the issuing magistrate 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.’ ” (People v. Kraft (2000) 
    23 Cal.4th 978
    , 1040-1041;
    People v. Hulland (2003) 
    110 Cal.App.4th 1646
    , 1651.)
    Here, the suspects’ identities was the evidence that the geofence warrant sought to
    uncover. For two reasons, the warrant affidavit gave the issuing magistrate a substantial
    basis for concluding there was a fair probability the geofence warrant search would
    reveal the suspects’ identities. First, the affiant, Investigator Deanne, averred that in his
    experience people who plan and commit crimes together use cell phones to communicate,
    and that “most people in today’s society” possess and carry “cellular phones and other
    . . . devices,” which “may include global positioning systems (GPS) and other technology
    for determining a more precise location of the [phone or] device.” These statements,
    together with the evidence that the suspects acted in concert in committing the shooting,
    27
    gave the issuing magistrate a substantial basis for concluding there was a fair probability
    the suspects were carrying cell phones at the time of the shooting. Thus, it was
    unnecessary for the affidavit to show that a witness saw either suspect with a cell phone.
    (Arson Investigation, supra, 497 F.Supp.3d at pp. 355-356.)
    It is also a matter of indisputable common knowledge that most people carry cell
    phones virtually all the time, and courts may take judicial notice of “facts and
    propositions that are of such common knowledge . . . that they cannot reasonably be the
    subject of dispute.” (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (g).) In 2018, the United States Supreme
    Court observed that individuals “compulsively carry cell phones with them all the time.”
    (Carpenter v. United States, supra, 138 S.Ct. at p. 2218 [“While individuals regularly
    leave their vehicles, they compulsively carry cell phones with them all the time.”]; see
    Riley v. California, supra, 573 U.S. at p. 384 [“[M]odern cell phones . . . are now such a
    pervasive and insistent part of daily life that the proverbial visitor from Mars might
    conclude they were an important feature of human anatomy.”].) Other courts have
    followed suit in recognizing that nearly everyone regularly carries a cell phone. (United
    States v. James (8th Cir. 2021) 
    3 F.4th 1102
    , 1105 [“Even if nobody knew for sure
    whether the [suspect] actually possessed a cell phone, the judges were not required to
    check their common sense at the door and ignore the fact that most people ‘compulsively
    carry cell phones with them all the time.’ ”]; D.C. Federal Crimes, supra, 579 F.Supp.3d
    at p. 78 [“The core inquiry here is probability, not certainty, and it is eminently
    reasonable to assume that criminals, like the rest of society, possess and use cell phones
    to go about their daily business.”].) The common knowledge that most people carry cell
    28
    phones gave the issuing magistrate a substantial basis for concluding there was a fair
    probability that the suspects were carrying cell phones at the time of the shooting.
    Second, the affidavit explained why there was a fair probability that the suspects’
    cell phones were sending location data to Google, and that Google had location data and
    identifying information associated with the suspects’ cell phones or devices that would
    reveal the suspects’ identities. The affidavit cited a February 2018 study showing that
    around 99.9 percent of all smartphones were supported by Google’s Android operating
    system or Apple’s iOS operating system. The affidavit explained that all Android-
    supported devices have a Google account; the use of a Google application also requires a
    Google account; Apple iphones, like Google’s Android devices, support Google
    applications; and a Google account cannot be activated without providing Google with a
    name and phone number for the Google account. Also, Google collects and retains
    location data from all Android-operated devices and devices using Google applications,
    as long as the device’s location services are enabled. The location data is “stored
    forever” unless the user deletes it.
    Although this explanation of how Google obtains and retains location data and
    identifying information did not show it was certain that Google would have location data
    and identifying information revealing the suspects’ identities, the explanation
    demonstrated a fair probability this was the case, and this fair probability was sufficient.
    (Arson Investigation, supra, 497 F.Supp.3d at pp. 355-356.) The affidavit provided a
    substantial basis for the issuing magistrate to conclude there was a fair probability that
    the suspects were carrying cell phones and would be identified through location data and
    29
    identifying information through the geofence search. Thus, the affidavit showed
    probable cause to believe the geofence search would reveal the suspects’ identities.
    Arson Investigation is instructive. There, the court granted a geofence warrant
    application despite there being “no evidence in the affidavit that any of the suspects
    possessed cell phones or used cell phones in the commission of the offense,” and no
    “additional evidence that perpetrators or witnesses of the crime used Google applications
    or operating systems that would store location data.” (Arson Investigation, supra,
    497 F.Supp.3d at pp. 355-356, 363.) The court reasoned that an agent’s training and
    experience can provide information necessary to establish probable cause in an affidavit,
    that “probable cause does not require conclusive evidence that links a particular place or
    item to a crime,” and that “ ‘[t]he Fourth Amendment does not require certainty that a
    search will uncover the sought-after evidence; a fair probability is enough.’ ” (Ibid.)
    Applying these principles, the court found that the warrant affidavit showed a fair
    probability to believe the suspects in the crimes under investigation were carrying cell
    phones, and “that location data at Google will contain evidence of the arson crime[s],
    namely the identities of perpetrators and witnesses to the crime[s].” (Arson Investigation,
    supra, 497 F.Supp.3d. at p. 356.) Other courts have found sufficient probable cause
    based on similar showings. (Meza, supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at pp. 536-537; D.C. Federal
    Crimes, supra, 579 F.Supp.3d at pp. 78-80; but see Kansas Federal Crimes, supra,
    542 F.Supp.3d at pp. 1155-1157 [denying geofence warrant application as “too vague and
    generic to establish a fair probability” that the suspect or any witnesses would be
    identified through the proposed geofence search].) Similarly here, the warrant affidavit
    30
    showed a fair probability that (1) the suspects were carrying cell phones, (2) the phones
    were used a Google application, and, therefore, (3) Google would have location data and
    identifying information revealing the suspects’ identities.
    4. The Geofence Warrant Was Not Overbroad
    Price next claims the geofence warrant failed to satisfy the probable cause and
    particularity requirements of the Fourth Amendment because: (1) the warrant affidavit
    did not show probable cause to believe every individual or device user likely to be
    located in the geofence was a suspect or witness to the shooting of Jovany R., and (2) the
    affidavit was insufficiently particular in describing the individuals and information to be
    searched and seized because Google’s multi-step production protocol, the process
    followed in executing the warrant, is overbroad and unconstitutional on its face.
    Again, Arson Investigation is instructive. The case illustrates that, if a geofence
    warrant is narrowly tailored, in its initial search parameters, or geographic scope and time
    period, to maximize the probability it will capture only suspects and witnesses, and to
    minimize searches of location data and identifying information of individuals for whom
    there is no probable cause to believe were suspects or witnesses (uninvolved individuals),
    then the discretion afforded to the executing officer by Google’s multi-step production
    protocol will be constitutionally immaterial. (Arson Investigation, supra, 497 F.Supp.3d
    at pp. 360-363.) As we explain, the geofence warrant here fits this description.
    In Arson Investigation, the government sought a geofence warrant to identify two
    suspects in a series of arsons involving multiple vehicle fires on two commercial lots,
    separated by roadways, in the City of Chicago. (Arson Investigation, supra,
    31
    497 F.Supp.3d at p. 351.) The arsons occurred during the early morning hours (around
    2:00 a.m.) on two days in July and December 2019. (Id. at pp. 351-353.) The
    geographical areas of the proposed geofences focused on each lot, a roadway between the
    two lots, and part of another roadway near one lot. The time periods of the proposed
    geofences were 17 to 37 minutes in length and were narrowly focused on the times the
    suspects were believed to be at the lots committing the arsons and driving on the
    roadways before, after, and between the arsons. (Id. at pp. 351-352, 358.) The proposed
    geofences included some areas where uninvolved individuals may have been located,
    even during the early morning time periods: the roadways, two garages, a trailer, and a
    mixed-use building with an apartment. (Id. at p. 351, 357.)
    The court explained that a geofence warrant must be “particular in time, location,
    and scope.” (Arson Investigation, supra, 497 F.Supp.3d at pp. 353, 356.) That is, the
    warrant must be narrowly crafted, in time and geographic scope, to “minimize the
    potential for capturing location data for uninvolved individuals and maximize the
    potential for capturing location data for suspects and witnesses.” (Ibid.) But the warrant
    does not have to eliminate every possibility that it will capture location data and
    identifying information of individuals for whom there is no probable cause to believe are
    suspects or witnesses to the crimes. (Id. at pp. 360-361.) Instead, the time and
    geographic scope of the geofence are judged by a reasonableness standard. (Id. at
    p. 361.)
    “[T]he Fourth Amendment deals in probabilities and reasonableness, and not
    exactness and pinpoint accuracy.” (Arson Investigation, supra, 497 F.Supp.3d at p. 361.)
    32
    “ ‘Hence, the touchstone of reasonableness under the Fourth Amendment is sufficient
    probability, not certainty.’ ” (Ibid.) Thus, in assessing whether a geofence warrant
    passes Fourth Amendment scrutiny, “[t]he proper line of inquiry is not whether a search
    of location data could impact even one uninvolved person’s privacy interest, but rather
    the reasonableness of the search, the probability of finding evidence at the location, and
    the particularity of the search request.” (Id. at p. 362.)
    The court noted it is not unusual for “one uninvolved individual’s privacy rights
    [to be] indirectly impacted by a search . . . .” (Arson Investigation, supra, 497 F.Supp.3d
    at p. 361.) “[W]hen a court authorizes the search of a house, the entire house is subject to
    the search, . . . such as bedrooms and bathrooms, of individuals who may not be involved
    in the crime but who nonetheless live in the premises, such as spouses and children.”
    (Ibid.) And, “when a court authorizes the search of an individual’s email account,” the
    search “includes private emails sent by non-perpetrators that were not intended to be seen
    by the government . . . but are nonetheless viewed by government agents in the search for
    evidence of the crime.” (Ibid.) Searches of cell phones reveal “calendar entries of
    meetings, events, and text messages with uninvolved individuals” and pictures
    identifying the locations of these individuals. (Ibid.) Thus, “it is nearly impossible to
    pinpoint a search where only the perpetrators’ privacy interests are impacted. Similarly,
    in the geofence context, there is no way to exclude the possibility that at any given time,
    a delivery truck may drop off a parcel within the geofence location.” (Id. at pp. 361-362.)
    The court concluded that the proposed geofence warrant described the places to be
    searched with sufficient particularity “because it narrowly identifie[d] the place[s] by
    33
    time and location,” and it was “not overbroad in scope.” (Arson Investigation, supra,
    497 F.Supp.3d at p. 357.) The court treated physical location and “scope” as distinct, but
    in discussing the scope of the proposed warrant, the court discussed how investigators
    had worked to narrow the geographic scope of the warrant to exclude areas where
    uninvolved individuals could be located. (Id. at pp. 355-358.) The proposed geofences
    excluded residences and commercial buildings along the roadways, and surveillance
    videos showed few vehicles other than the suspect vehicles on the roadways near the
    times of the arsons. (Id. at pp. 358-359.) Thus, the government “satisfied overbreadth
    considerations by ensuring” there was “probable cause that location data of perpetrators,
    co-conspirators and witnesses will be collected from Google, and that the scope of the
    warrant would not result in the collection of a broad sweep of data from uninvolved
    individuals for which there is no probable cause.” (Ibid.)10
    The court next addressed the Google production protocol and found it “of no
    matter” to the constitutionality of the warrant under the Fourth Amendment, given that
    the government had “established probable cause to seize all location and subscriber data
    within the geofence locations.” (Arson Investigation, supra, 497 F.Supp.3d at p. 362.) In
    light of the probable cause showing, it was immaterial to the constitutionality of the
    10 The court acknowledged that location data has a margin of error of around
    20 meters that could cause devices outside of a geofence to appear to be inside, and vice
    versa. (Arson Investigation, supra, 497 F.Supp.3d at p. 360.) But the court said the
    margin of error did not invalidate the warrant because “only reasonableness is required,
    not surgical precision. A margin of error, in light of the remarkable accuracy of Google
    location data, is reasonable given the nature of the evidence being sought and what is
    possible with the technology at issue.” (Id. at p. 361.)
    34
    warrant whether the government chose to seize all location data and subscriber
    information for all devices located in the geofences. (See ibid.) The court
    acknowledged, however, that “a constitutionally permissible warrant does not leave open
    the opportunity for the government agent to use his discretion in conducting a search or
    seizure.” (Ibid., citing Stanford v. Texas, 
    supra,
     379 U.S. at pp. 485-486.) Thus, the
    court did not sanction the Fourth Amendment constitutionality of the multi-step protocol
    in cases where no probable cause is shown to seize all location data and identifying
    information for all devices located in the geofences. (Arson Investigation, at p. 362.)
    Here, the geofence warrant was a model of particularity in geographic scope and
    time period. (Arson Investigation, supra, 497 F.Supp.3d at pp. 357-358.) The “initial
    search parameters” specified a “target location” and a “date and time period.” Pursuant
    to Google’s multi-step production protocol, the warrant sought location data for a 22-
    minute period, between 10:00 p.m. and 10:22 p.m., on October 29, 2019—the date and
    time period encompassing the shooting. Like the warrant application in Arson
    Investigation, the warrant sought location data “tailored and specific to the time of the
    [crime] only.” (Id. at p. 357.)
    The target location was likewise narrowly tailored to “minimize the potential for
    capturing location data for uninvolved individuals.” (Arson Investigation, supra,
    497 F.Supp.3d at p. 353.) The target location was limited to the front yard of Jovany R.’s
    house, where the shooting occurred, and the street in front of the house, for the length of
    two houses in each direction, where the two suspects were seen fleeing after the shooting.
    Thus, the target location was “narrowly crafted to ensure that location data, with a fair
    35
    probability, [would] capture evidence of the crime only.” (Id. at p. 357.) Additionally,
    because the warrant sought first-stage location data after 10:00 p.m. in a suburban,
    residential neighborhood, it was likely that any individuals traversing the geofence were
    either suspects or witnesses to the shooting. (Id. at p. 358.) The initial time and location
    parameters of the warrant were reasonably specific; in fact, they were as narrowly
    tailored as they could have been to capture only the location data and identifying
    information of the suspects and potential witnesses to the shooting.
    Given the narrowly tailored initial search (time and location) parameters of the
    warrant, the multi-step production protocol, which, as applied in executing the warrant,
    was constitutionally immaterial to the extent it authorized a search for location data and
    identifying information associated with devices located outside the geofence, at step two
    of the production protocol. In his testimony at the preliminary hearing, Investigator
    Deanne explained how the geofence warrant was executed and what information he
    received at each step of the production protocol.11
    The stage-one information, the anonymized list, showed five device IDs in the
    geofence during the 22-minute period, and that two of the five device IDs were at Jovany
    R.’s house for five to seven minutes during the 22-minute period. At stage two, Deanne
    requested and obtained additional location data for the two device IDs, showing where
    the two device IDs travelled after they were in the geofence. The stage-two information
    11  In his testimony, Investigator Deanne described the Google production protocol
    as a three-stage process. The warrant affidavit described the process in five steps, but the
    affidavit’s description is consistent with Investigator’s Deanne’s description of the three-
    stage process.
    36
    showed that the two device IDs “ultimately” traveled east on Limonite, past the gas
    station where surveillance video showed a silver car, similar to the car Samuel R. said the
    shooter left in after the shooting, traveling east on Limonite after the shooting.
    Thus, at stage two, Deanne received location data for the two device IDs outside
    of the initial time and location parameters, or the initial search parameters, of the
    geofence. Deanne then requested stage-three identifying information for the two device
    IDs and discovered they were associated with a single device and two Gmail accounts,
    both associated with Price.
    The stage-two information that Deanne was authorized to receive under the
    production protocol did not render the warrant insufficiently particular under the Fourth
    Amendment. As in Arson Investigation, the warrant showed probable cause to seize all
    location data and identifying information for all devices traversing the geofence. (Arson
    Investigation, supra, 497 F.Supp.3d at p. 362.) And, because the additional location data
    that Deanne was authorized to receive at stage two was based on the location data
    produced at stage one, the Google production protocol, as applied, did not vest Deanne
    with discretion to conduct a search and seizure unsupported by the probable cause
    showing in the warrant. (Ibid; Stanford v. Texas, 
    supra,
     379 U.S. at pp. 481, 485-486.)
    Price does not challenge the warrant affidavit’s showing of probable cause to
    believe every individual who was likely to be located in the geofence was a suspect or a
    witness to the shooting. (Pharma II, supra, 481 F.Supp.3d at pp. 751-753 [comparing
    geofence warrants to “ ‘all persons’ ” warrants that require probable cause to believe
    “ ‘all persons present’ ” in the place to be searched participated in criminal activity].) It
    37
    is difficult to imagine how the warrant could have been more narrowly tailored to focus
    on identifying only the suspects and minimizing the potential for seizing location data
    and identifying information associated with devices carried by uninvolved individuals.
    (Arson Investigation, supra, 497 F.Supp.3d at p. 356.)
    Relying on Chatrie, supra, 
    590 F.Supp.3d 901
    , Price argues that Google’s three-
    step production protocol renders the warrant insufficiently particular under the Fourth
    Amendment. Chatrie is distinguishable. Unlike the warrant in this case and the
    approved warrant application in Arson Investigation, Chatrie involved a geofence
    warrant that lacked “particularized probable cause” to believe every individual in the
    geofence was a suspect or witness to the crime under investigation. (Chatrie, at pp. 929-
    930; Pharma II, supra, 481 F.Supp.3d at pp. 751-753.) Thus, the warrant in Chatrie was
    overbroad in the first place, before the Google production protocol allowed the executing
    officer discretion to obtain location data and identifying information for individuals
    traveling outside the geofence.
    In Chatrie, the court considered a motion to suppress evidence obtained pursuant
    to a geofence warrant. (Chatrie, supra, 590 F.Supp.3d at p. 906.) The court ultimately
    denied the suppression motion based on the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule.
    (Id. at pp. 905, 937-940.) But the court concluded that the geofence warrant was invalid
    because it lacked both “particularized probable cause” and sufficient particularity under
    Fourth Amendment standards. (Id. at pp. 927-935.) The court heard extensive evidence
    on the suppression motion, including testimony and declarations from Google employees,
    describing Google’s three-stage production protocol, and Google’s policies in
    38
    implementing the protocol. (Id. at pp. 906-907, 914-917.) Google also filed an amicus
    brief in the case. (See id. at pp. 906-907 & fn. 5.) According to the record in Chatrie,
    Google received its first geofence warrant in 2016, and, in 2019, Google received
    “ ‘around 9,000 total geofence requests.’ ” (Id. at p. 914.)
    Chatrie includes an in-depth discussion of location data, including how Google
    collects and stores location data and the margin of error for location data. (Id. at pp. 905-
    913.) The record in Chatrie shows that Google works with law enforcement to limit the
    additional location data and identifying information that Google produces at stages two
    and three of the production protocol, but there were no practical limitations on the
    additional location data and identifying information that Google would produce pursuant
    to the protocol. (Id. at pp. 916-917, 934-935.)
    Through the warrant in Chatrie, the government was seeking to identify a single
    suspect in a bank robbery. (Chatrie, supra, 590 F.Supp.3d at p. 916.) Surveillance video
    showed the suspect entering the bank building holding a cell phone. (Id. at p. 917.) The
    geofence was circular, with a diameter of 300 meters—longer than three football fields
    “in an urban environment,” and included a church. (Id. at p. 918.) “All told, the
    geofence encompassed 17.5 acres.” (Ibid.) The warrant sought location data for every
    device present within the geofence for one full hour, on the day of the robbery, pursuant
    to Google’s three-step production protocol. (Id. at pp. 918-919.)
    Chatrie first explained that the warrant was not supported by sufficient probable
    cause because it did not show probable cause to believe that every individual or Google
    account holder in the geofence was a suspect in the robbery. (Chatrie, supra,
    39
    590 F.Supp.3d at pp. 926-929.) Warrants that “authorize the search of every person
    within a particular area must establish probable cause to search every one of those
    persons.” (Id. at p. 927.) That is, such warrants “must establish probable cause that is
    ‘particularized with respect to the person to be searched or seized.’ ” (Id. at p. 929,
    quoting Maryland v. Pringle (2003) 
    540 U.S. 366
    , 371; accord Pharma II, supra,
    481 F.Supp.3d at p. 751-753, citing Ybarra v. Illinois (1979) 
    444 U.S. 85
    , 91 [“ ‘[A]
    warrant to search “all persons present” for evidence of a crime may only be obtained
    when there is reason to believe that all those present will be participants in the suspected
    criminal activity . . . .’ ”].)
    The warrant in Chatrie further authorized the government to obtain location data
    “for yet another hour” for devices that traveled outside the geofence, “with no
    geographical restrictions” on the additional location data, and with no showing that all or
    even a substantial number of the individuals to be searched had participated in or
    witnessed the crime. (Chatrie, supra, 590 F.Supp.3d at p. 929.) The warrant “swept in
    unrestricted location data for private citizens who had no reason to incur Government
    scrutiny.” (Id. at pp. 929-930.) Under the Fourth Amendment, it was unreasonable to
    request so much location data. (Id. at p. 930.)12
    12 The overbroad geofence warrant in Chatrie is similar to the overbroad geofence
    warrant applications in Pharma I, Pharma II, and Kansas Federal Crimes. In these
    cases, the warrant applications were denied because they would have authorized the
    government to search the location data and identifying information of large numbers of
    uninvolved individuals for whom there was no probable cause to believe were suspects or
    witnesses to the crimes under investigation. (Pharma I, supra, 2020 U.S.Dist. Lexis
    165185 at pp. *7-*8; Pharma II, supra, 481 F.Supp.3d at pp. 742-745; Kansas Federal
    [footnote continued on next page]
    40
    The Chatrie court rejected the government’s argument that the Google three-step
    production protocol “cure[d] any defects with the warrant’s particularized probable
    cause.” (Chatrie, supra, 590 F.Supp.3d at pp. 933-934.) Observing that the particularity
    requirement “ ‘leaves the executing officer with no discretion as to what to seize’ ” (id. at
    p. 934), the court concluded that steps two and three of the production protocol gave the
    government “unbridled discretion and lack any semblance of objective criteria to guide
    how officers would narrow the lists of users” or minimize the amount of location data
    and identifying information obtained for uninvolved individuals (ibid.). The warrant
    contained no “objective guardrails by which officers could determine which accounts
    would be subject to further scrutiny.” (Ibid.) Instead, the warrant gave the government
    “unchecked discretion to seize more intrusive and personal data with each round of
    requests—without ever needing to return to a neutral and detached magistrate for
    approval.” (Ibid.) Thus, the court concluded that steps two and three of the protocol did
    not “supply this warrant with particularized probable cause, as these steps independently
    fail under the Fourth Amendment’s particularity requirement.” (Id. at p. 935.)
    Crimes, supra, 542 F.Supp.3d at p. 1157.) In contrast, the warrant applications in D.C.
    Federal Crimes and Texas Federal Crimes, and the warrants in Rhine and Smith, are
    more like the warrant application in Arson Investigation and the warrant in this case:
    they were not overbroad; they did not “have the potential of sweeping up the location
    data of large numbers of uninvolved persons”; and they were “ ‘confined to the breadth
    of the probable cause that support[ed]” them. (D.C. Federal Crimes, supra, 579
    F.Supp.3d at pp. 81, 85; Rhine, supra, 2023 U.S. Dist.Lexis 12308 at pp. *95-*98; Smith,
    supra, 2023 U.S.Dist. Lexis 22944 at pp. *18-*24; Texas Federal Crimes, supra, 2023
    U.S.Dist. Lexis 33651 at pp. *9,*33-*40.)
    41
    Price argues that the geofence warrant suffers from the same particularity
    deficiency as the geofence warrant in Chatrie. He argues that, at steps two and three of
    the Google production protocol, the warrant gave the executing officer unbridled or
    unchecked discretion to demand additional location data for devices traveling beyond the
    initial time and location parameters of the geofence and identifying information for all
    devices identified in step one, without any judicial oversight at stages two and three.
    But as Arson Investigation demonstrates, these potentially overbroad aspects of
    the Google production protocol are constitutionally immaterial when, as here, the warrant
    shows probable cause to believe that all persons, or nearly all persons, likely to be located
    in the geofence (the initial time and location parameters of the search) are suspects or
    witnesses to the crime or crimes under investigation. (Arson Investigation, supra,
    479 F.Supp.3d at pp. 362-363.) “[T]he Constitution ‘is not so exacting’ as to require the
    ‘eliminat[ion of] all discretion of the officers executing the warrant.’ ” (D.C. Federal
    Crimes, supra, 579 F.Supp.3d at p. 76.) The degree of required particularity “ ‘turns on
    what was realistic or possible in this investigation,’ ” and “ ‘a broader sweep’ can be
    lawful ‘when a reasonable investigation cannot produce a more particular description’ of
    the things to be seized prior to obtaining and executing the warrant.” (Ibid.) “Ultimately,
    ‘[t]he touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness, and the reasonableness of
    a search is determined “by assessing, on the one hand, the degree to which it intrudes
    upon an individual’s privacy and, on the other, the degree to which it is needed to
    promote legitimate governmental interests.” ’ ” (Ibid.) The geofence warrant in this case
    satisfied the Fourth Amendment standard of reasonableness.
    42
    B. Traversal Claims
    A motion to traverse a warrant challenges the completeness and truthfulness of the
    warrant affidavit’s probable cause showing. (Franks v. Delaware (1978) 
    438 U.S. 154
    ,
    155-156.) Generally, in order to traverse a warrant, the defendant must show that “(1) the
    affidavit included a false statement made ‘knowingly and intentionally, or with reckless
    disregard for the truth,’ and (2) ‘the allegedly false statement is necessary to the finding
    of probable cause.’ ” (People. v. Hobbs (1994) 
    7 Cal.4th 948
    , 974, quoting Franks v.
    Delaware at pp. 155-156.) If the defendant makes this showing, “ ‘the Fourth
    Amendment requires that a hearing be held at the defendant’s request. In the event that at
    that hearing the allegation of perjury or reckless disregard is established by the defendant
    by a preponderance of the evidence, and, with the affidavit’s false material set to one
    side, the affidavit’s remaining content is insufficient to establish probable cause, the
    search warrant must be voided and the fruits of the search excluded to the same extent as
    if probable cause was lacking on the face of the affidavit.’ ” (People v. Lazarus (2015)
    
    238 Cal.App.4th 734
    , 768, quoting Franks v. Delaware, at pp. 155-156.)
    Likewise, a defendant who challenges a warrant based on factual omissions in the
    affidavit must show that the omissions were material to the probable cause determination.
    (People v. Panah (2005) 
    35 Cal.4th 395
    , 456.) Facts omitted from a warrant affidavit are
    “not material” if “there is no ‘substantial possibility they would have altered a reasonable
    magistrate’s probable cause determination,’ and their omission did not ‘make the
    affidavit[s] substantially misleading.’ ” (People v. Eubanks (2011) 
    53 Cal.4th 110
    , 136.)
    “We review the denial of a Franks hearing de novo.” (People v. Panah, at p. 457.)
    43
    Price claims the geofence warrant affidavit omitted material facts showing there
    was no evidence that the two murder suspects knew about the marijuana grow in Jovany
    R.’s house. The affidavit stated, “Deputies conducted a safety sweep of the residence and
    located what appeared to be a marijuana grow with numerous marijuana plants in varying
    stages of maturation, as well as large amounts of processed marijuana throughout the
    residence. [¶] Based on the statement the suspects made prior to the shooting [“Don’t
    move”] and the large amounts of marijuana within the residence, it appears the suspects
    had knowledge there would be large amounts of marijuana at the residence.” Price notes
    the affidavit failed to state that “the home looked normal and the marijuana grow was not
    visible from outside of the home,” and that the affidavit did not point to any evidence
    (besides the shooter’s “Don’t Move” statement ) that the two suspects knew about the
    marijuana grow.
    The magistrate at the preliminary hearing, and the superior court in ruling on the
    section 995 motion, found these omissions immaterial to the issuing magistrates’
    probable cause determination for all of the 11 challenged warrants, including the
    geofence warrant. On de novo review, we agree that these omissions were immaterial.
    Whether the suspects knew there was a marijuana grow in the house is relevant to
    whether the suspects had a motive for the shooting (CALCRIM No. 370), but motive is
    not an element of murder. (§§ 187-189.) Even if the affidavit had explained that the
    marijuana grow was not visible from the outside of the house or that there was no direct
    evidence the suspects knew there was a marijuana grow in the house or garage, the
    44
    affidavit showed probable cause to believe Jovany R. was murdered by two unknown
    suspects and that Google had information that would reveal the suspects’ identities.13
    C. The Good Faith Exception to the Exclusionary Rule Precludes Suppression of the
    Geofence Warrant Evidence and Its Fruits
    The exclusionary rule is not a personal constitutional right; nor is it designed to
    “ ‘redress the injury’ occasioned by an unconstitutional search.” (Davis v. United States
    (2011) 
    564 U.S. 229
    , 236 (Davis); Chatrie, supra, 590 F.Supp.3d at p. 937.) It is “ ‘a
    judicially created remedy designed to safeguard Fourth Amendment rights’ ” by deterring
    “police misconduct” rather than by punishing “the errors of judges and magistrates.”
    (United States v. Leon (1984) 
    468 U.S. 897
    , 906, 909, 916 (Leon); Herring v. United
    States (2009) 
    555 U.S. 135
    , 144 [The rule “serves to deter deliberate, reckless, or grossly
    negligent conduct, or in some circumstances recurring or systemic negligence.”].) Given
    that the purpose of the rule “is to deter future Fourth Amendment violations” by law
    enforcement officers, “[w]here suppression fails to yield appreciable deterrence,’
    exclusion is ‘clearly. . . unwarranted.’ ” (Davis, at pp. 236-237.)
    In Leon, the high court held that “ when ‘an officer acting with objective good
    faith has obtained a search warrant from a judge or magistrate and acted within its scope,’
    the ‘marginal or nonexistent benefits’ produced by suppressing the evidence obtained
    ‘cannot justify the substantial costs of exclusion.’ ” (People v. Lazarus, supra,
    13  Price also claims the geofence warrant affidavit should be traversed because it
    did not state that a gun was found on Jovany R.’s person after the shooting. This is not
    so. The affidavit stated, “deputies . . . located a Beretta .40-caliber handgun on the
    victim’s person.”
    45
    238 Cal.App.4th at p. 766, quoting Leon, 
    supra,
     468 U.S. at pp. 920, 922; Meza, supra,
    90 CalApp.5th at p. 543) Thus, under the good faith exception, the “exclusionary rule
    does not bar the use in the prosecution’s case-in-chief of evidence obtained by officers
    acting in reasonable reliance on a search warrant issued by a detached and neutral
    magistrate but ultimately found to be unsupported by probable cause.” (People v. Lim
    (2000) 
    85 Cal.App.4th 1289
    , 1296, citing Leon, at p. 922.)
    There are four “limited situations” in which reasonable, good faith reliance on the
    warrant cannot not be established and suppression remains appropriate: “(i) the issuing
    magistrate was misled by information that the officer knew or should have known was
    false; (ii) the magistrate ‘wholly abandoned his judicial role’; (iii) the affidavit was ‘ “so
    lacking in indicia of probable cause” ’ that it would be ‘ “entirely unreasonable ” ’ for an
    officer to believe such cause existed; and (iv) the warrant was so facially deficient that
    the executing officer could not reasonably presume it to be valid.” (People v. Camarella
    (1991) 
    54 Cal.3d 592
    , 596, quoting Leon, 
    supra,
     468 U.S. at p. 923. Price suggests the
    third and fourth limited situations apply.
    We review the application of the good faith exception de novo, applying “the
    objective test of ‘ “whether a reasonably well-trained officer would have known that the
    search was illegal despite the magistrate’s authorization.” ’ ” (People v. Lazarus, supra,
    238 Cal.App.4th at pp. 766-767.) In other words, we ask whether a reasonably well
    trained officer “ ‘would have known that his affidavit failed to establish probable cause
    and that he should not have applied for the warrant.’ ” (People v. Camarella, 
    supra,
    46
    54 Cal.3d at pp. 605-606.) “[T]he government has the burden to prove facts warranting
    application of the good faith exception.” (People v. Willis (2002) 
    28 Cal.4th 22
    , 37.)
    When the warrant was issued on November 7, 2019, “geofence warrants were still
    a novel investigative tool,” and “there were no published cases anywhere in the country,
    let alone in California, analyzing the constitutionality of geofence warrants.” (Meza,
    supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at p. 544.) And, although Pharma I and Pharma II, were issued in
    July and August 2020, before Deanne received stage three identifying information from
    Google on September 14, 2020, these cases did not reasonably indicate that the warrant
    was invalid or that Deanne should have obtained a further warrant before obtaining the
    stage two or stage three information from Google. (Pharma I, supra, 2020 U.S.Dist.
    Lexis 165185; Pharma II, supra, 
    481 F.Supp.3d 730
    .) The cases involved significantly
    overbroad geofence warrant applications that would have allowed the government to
    seize location data and identifying information for numerous individuals who had no
    connection to the crimes under investigation. In contrast, the geofence warrant here was
    both narrowly drawn and executed to exclude such data.
    Thus, from the time the warrant was issued through its execution, a well-trained
    officer in Investigator Deanne’s position had no reason to believe the warrant affidavit
    failed to establish probable cause, that Deanne should not have applied for the warrant, or
    that Deanne should have sought a further warrant before seeking stage two or stage three
    information from Google. Nor was the warrant so facially deficient, at any time during
    its execution, that a well-trained officer could not have reasonably presumed it to be
    valid. The record shows Investigator Deanne acted in good faith in drafting the warrant,
    47
    in relying on the issuing magistrate’s probable cause determination, and in seeking and
    obtaining from Google only so much location data and identifying information as was
    reasonably necessary to identify the suspects and possible witnesses to the shooting.
    Thus, even if the geofence warrant is invalid under the Fourth Amendment, the good faith
    exception applies. No deterrent purpose would be served by suppressing the geofence
    warrant evidence or its fruits.14
    D. CalECPA Claims
    Price claims the geofence warrant violated CalECPA’s particularity requirement
    (§ 1546.1, subd. (d)(1)) and, in executing the warrant, the Riverside County Sheriff’s
    Department failed to give notice of the warrant in accordance with the notice provisions
    of CalECPA (§ 1546.2). For these violations, Price claims that the CalECPA’s remedy
    provision requires the suppression of the warrant evidence and its fruits. (§ 1546.4.)
    1. CalECPA Applies to Geofence Warrants15
    Subject to exceptions not applicable here, CalECPA requires a government entity
    to obtain a search warrant (§ 1523 et seq.) to do any of the following: (1) “Compel the
    14 Other courts applied the good faith exception to geofence warrant evidence
    based in part on (1) the novelty of geofence warrants as investigative tools, and (2) the
    lack of controlling authority addressing the constitutionality of geofence warrants at the
    time the warrants were issued and executed. (Meza, supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at pp. 543-
    545; Chatrie, supra, 590 F.Supp.3d at pp. 937-938; Carpenter, supra, 2023 U.S.Dist.
    Lexis 64948 at pp. *33-*34; Smith, supra, U.S.Dist. Lexis 22944 at pp. *36-*38; see
    Rhine, supra, 2023 U.S.Dist. Lexis 12308 at pp *108-*109.)
    15 CalECPA was enacted effective January 1, 2016 (Stats. 2015, ch. 651, § 1) and
    was most recently amended effective January 1, 2017 (Stats. 2016, ch. 541, § 3.5). For
    an extensive discussion of the history, purpose, and provisions of CalECPA, see
    [footnote continued on next page]
    48
    production of or access to electronic communication information from a service
    provider,” (2) “Compel the production of or access to electronic device information from
    any person or entity other than the authorized possessor of the device,” or (3) “Access
    electronic device information by means of physical interaction or electronic
    communication with the electronic device.” (§ 1546.1, subds. (a)-(c).)16
    CalECPA does not address geofence warrants specifically (§§ 1546 to 1546.5), but
    it applies to geofence warrants. In the words of CalEPCA, a geofence warrant seeks
    to compel the production of, or access to, electronic communication information from a
    service provider, and to compel the production of or access to electronic device
    information from anyone other than the authorized possessor of an electronic device.
    Freiwald, At the Privacy Vanguard: California’s Electronic Communications Privacy
    Act (CalECPA) (2018) 
    33 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 131
     (hereafter Freiwald).
    16  CalECPA defines several terms for purposes of its provisions. (§ 1546, subd.
    (a).) A “ ‘service provider’ means a person or entity offering an electronic
    communication service.” (§ 1546, subd. (j).) “ ‘Electronic communication’ means the
    transfer of signs, signals, writings, images, sounds, data, or intelligence of any nature in
    whole or in part by a wire, radio, electromagnetic, photoelectric, or photooptical system.”
    (§ 1546, subd. (c).) “ ‘Electronic communication service’ means a service that provides
    to its subscribers or users the ability to send or receive electronic communications,
    including any service that acts as intermediary in the transmission of electronic
    communications, or stores electronic communication information.” (§ 1546, subd. (e).)
    “ ‘Electronic communication information’ means “any information about an
    electronic communication or the use of an electronic communication service,” including
    “the location of the sender or recipients at any point during the communication.”
    (§ 1546, subd (d).) “Subscriber information” is specifically excluded from the definition
    of “ ‘electronic communication information.’ ” (Ibid.) “ ‘[E]lectronic device
    information’ means any information stored on or generated through the operation of an
    electronic device, including the current and prior locations of the device.” (§ 1546, subd.
    (g).) “ ‘Electronic information’ means electronic communication information or
    electronic device information.” (§1546, subd. (h).)
    49
    (§ 1546.1, subd. (b).) A geofence warrant also seeks to access electronic device
    information by means of electronic communication with the device. (§ 1546.1,
    subd. (c).)
    2. The Geofence Warrant Did Not Violate CalECPA’s Particularity Requirement
    CalECPA requires “[a]ny warrant for electronic information” to “describe with
    particularity the information to be seized by specifying, as appropriate and reasonable,
    the time periods covered, the target individuals or accounts, the applications or services
    covered, and types of information sought.” (§ 1546.1, subd. (d)(1); see § 1525.) Price
    claims the geofence warrant violated this particularity requirement because it did not
    specify “the target individual or accounts, the applications or services covered,” or
    sufficiently describe “the types of information sought.” (§ 1546.1, subd. (d)(1).) As we
    explain, these arguments disregard the plain language of section 1546.1, subdivision
    (d)(1), and the types of information the geofence warrant sought.
    The language of section 1546.1, subdivision (d)(1), is plain and unambiguous and
    controls our interpretation of the statute. (People v. King (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 617
    , 622
    [“ ‘[I]f the plain, commonsense meaning of a statute’s words is unambiguous, the plain
    meaning controls.’ ”].) The statute only requires a warrant for electronic information to
    describe the information it seeks by “specifying, as appropriate and reasonable, the time
    periods covered, the target individuals or accounts, the applications or services covered,
    and the types of information sought . . . .” (§ 1546.1, subd. (d)(1), italics added.) Thus,
    not every warrant for electronic information must describe the information it seeks in
    50
    terms of each of the four categories of information listed in the statute. The warrant is
    only required to include such descriptions “as appropriate and reasonable.” (Ibid.)17
    And here, it was not “appropriate and reasonable” for the geofence warrant to
    specify “the target individuals or accounts.” (§1546.1, subd. (d)(1).) A geofence warrant
    seeks to identify target individuals through location data generated from, and accounts
    and identifying information associated with, devices located in the geofence. The
    identities of the “target individuals” and their “accounts” with the service provider are
    unknown to the agency executing a geofence warrant. Thus, it was not “appropriate and
    reasonable” for the sheriff’s department to specify “the target individuals or accounts” in
    describing the information sought in the geofence warrant.18
    Price next argues that the geofence warrant violated CalECPA’s particularity
    requirement by not specifying the “applications or services covered” by the warrant.
    (§ 1546.1, subd. (d)(1).) Price points out that the warrant directed Google “to query all
    location data within the geofence for the specified time without reference to the
    17 Section 1546.1, subdivision (d), expressly contemplates that a “court may
    determine that it is not appropriate to specify time periods” in a warrant to access
    electronic device information through physical interaction with or electronic
    communication with a device (§ 1546.1, subd. (c)) “because of the specific circumstances
    of the investigation, including, but not limited to, the nature of the device to be searched”
    (§ 1546.1, subd. (d)(1)).
    18  As noted in Meza, “CalECPA specifially contemplates a scenario where there
    is ‘no identified target of a warrant.’ ” (Meza, supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at pp. 545-546.)
    When there is no identified target, CalECPA allows the entity executing the warrant to
    serve the warrant on the Department of Justice (§ 1546.2, subd. (c)) “because notice of
    the warrant cannot be served upon any individual.” (Meza, at p. 546.) Thus, “the failure
    to specify an individual’s name or other identifying information” does not render a
    geofence warrant invalid under CalECPA. (Meza, at p. 546.)
    51
    applications or services utilized to provide that data to Google,” and that Investigator
    Deanne “admitted he had no idea what applications or services might be in use on the
    unknown target’s device that would produce the location data sought.”
    This argument confuses the electronic information the warrant sought (location
    data emitted from and identifying information associated with devices in the geofence)
    with applications or services that the devices or the service provider (Google) used to
    obtain, store, and retrieve the location data and identifying information. These
    applications and services were merely incidental to the “type of information sought,” the
    location data and identifying information. As the Meza court explained: “With a
    geofence warrant, . . . the government is not seeking data or content related to a particular
    application or service. Rather, what is sought is the service provider’s record of all
    electronic contact with that device, regardless of which applications or services originated
    the contact.” (Meza, supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at p. 546 [rejecting claim of CalECPA
    particularity violation].) Thus, it was not appropriate and reasonable for the geofence
    warrant to specify the applications or services that the devices or Google used to obtain,
    store, and retrieve “types of information sought,” the location data and identifying
    information. (§ 1546.2, subd. (d)(1).)
    Price also claims that the geofence warrant insufficiently described “the types of
    information” sought (§ 1546.1, subd. (d)(1)), but Price does not explain what types of
    information the warrant sought that it failed to sufficiently describe, or how the warrant
    was unclear or ambiguous in describing the types of information it sought. The warrant
    included a detailed description of the types of information it sought, summarized here as
    52
    location data and identifying information associated with devices found to be traversing
    the geofence (specified by date, time, and geographical location), to be produced in
    accordance with Google’s production protocol. There is no evidence that Google
    misinterpreted the types of information the warrant sought. Thus, Price has not shown
    that the warrant insufficiently described the types of information sought. (Ibid.)
    Price further suggests that any warrant for electronic information that violates the
    Fourth Amendment’s particularity requirement necessarily, and independently, violates
    CalECPA’s particularity requirement. (§ 1546.1, subd. (d)(1).) Price does not explain
    how a Fourth Amendment particularity infirmity in a warrant necessarily violates section
    1546.1, subdivision (d)(1) (Meza, supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at pp. 545-546 [rejecting similar
    claim]), and nothing in the language of the statute (§ 1546.2, subd. (d)(1)) supports
    Price’s interpretation. Price also suggests that CalECPA’s remedies provision (§ 1546.4,
    subd. (a)), which allows “any person” to “move to suppress any electronic information
    obtained or retained in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution or of [CalECPA],” means that a Fourth Amendment particularity violation
    also violates CalECPA’s particularity requirement. (§ 1546.4, subd. (a), italics added.)
    The language of the remedies provision (§ 1546.4, subd. (a)) does not support this
    interpretation. To the contrary, the remedies provision refers to Fourth Amendment and
    CalECPA violations as separate violations, by its use of the disjunctive term “or.”
    53
    (§ 1546.4, subd. (a).) The remedies provision does “nothing more than expressly
    preserve an individual’s existing rights under the federal Constitution.” (Meza, at p 546.)
    3. CalECPA’s Notice Provisions
    (a) Notice to identified targets
    Section 1546.2 requires a government entity that executes a warrant for electronic
    information to “serve upon, or deliver to by registered or first-class mail, electronic mail,
    or other means reasonably calculated to be effective, the identified targets of the warrant
    . . . , a notice that informs the recipient that information about the recipient has been
    compelled or obtained, and states with reasonable specificity the nature of the
    government investigation under which the information is sought.” (§ 1546.2, subd.
    (a)(1), italics added.) The notice must include a copy of the warrant and must be
    “provided contemporaneously with the execution of [the] warrant.” (Ibid.)
    (b) Delayed notice to identified targets
    “[T]he government entity may submit a request supported by a sworn affidavit for
    an order delaying notification and prohibiting any party providing information from
    notifying any other party that information has been sought. The court shall issue the
    order if the court determines that there is reason to believe that notification may have an
    adverse result, but only for the period of time that the court finds there is reason to
    believe that the notification may have that adverse result, and not to exceed 90 days.”
    (§ 1546.2, subd. (b)(1), italics added.) An “ ‘adverse result’ ” means “[d]anger to the life
    or physical safety of an individual,” “[f]light from prosecution,” “[d]estruction of or
    tampering with evidence,” “[i]ntimidation of potential witnesses,” or “[s]erious jeopardy
    54
    to an investigation or undue delay of a trial.” (§ 1546, subd. (a).) The court may grant
    successive extensions of the notice delay period, of up to 90 days for each extension,
    based on a continued showing of an adverse result. (§ 1546.2, subd. (b)(2).)
    (c) Identified target to be served following delayed notice period
    Upon the expiration of the delayed notice period, including extensions, the
    government entity is required to serve the identified target or targets of the warrant with
    all of the information described in section 1546.2, subdivision (a)(1) [notice of the
    warrant, including the nature of the investigation, and a copy of the warrant], together
    with copies of or a summary of the information obtained pursuant to the warrant,
    “including, at a minimum, the number and types of records disclosed, the date and time
    when the earliest and latest records were created, and a statement of the grounds for the
    court’s determination to grant a delay in notifying the individual.” (§ 1546.2, subd.
    (b)(3).)
    (d) Service on the California Department of Justice
    If there is no identified target of a warrant, then within three days of the execution
    of the warrant, the government entity is required to “submit to Department of Justice” the
    information described in section 1546.2, subdivision (a)—notice of the warrant, including
    the nature of the investigation, and a copy of the warrant (§ 1546.2, subd. (c)). If an
    order delaying notice of the warrant has been issued (§ 1546.2, subd. (b)(1)-(2)), then,
    upon the expiration of the notice delay period, including extensions, the government is
    required to serve the department with notice of the warrant, including the nature of the
    investigation, a copy of the warrant, and a copy or summary of all electronic information
    55
    obtained pursuant to the warrant. (§ 1546.2, subd. (c).) The department is required to
    “publish all those reports on its Internet Web site within 90 days of receipt,” but it “may
    redact names or other personal identifying information from the reports.” (Ibid.)
    4. The CalECPA Notice Violations
    In the geofence warrant, the People sought an order delaying the People’s
    obligation to serve “identified targets” of the warrant with notice of the warrant under
    CalECPA for a period of 90 days. (§ 1546.2, subds. (a), (b)(2).) The warrant claimed the
    delay was justified because “providing prior notice to the target/ party” could lead to all
    of the adverse results listed in section 1546, subdivision (a); that is, it could endanger
    lives or physical safety, lead to flight from prosecution, destruction of or tampering with
    evidence, intimidation of potential witnesses, and it could seriously jeopardize the
    investigation. The issuing magistrate found “reason to believe that contemporaneous
    notification of the existence” of the warrant “may have an adverse result on the on-going
    criminal investigation” and granted the 90-day notification delay in issuing the warrant
    on November 7, 2019.19 (§ 1546.2, subd. (b)(2).)
    19  The warrant ordered Google to “delay notification of the subscribers or to any
    other person, for a period of 90 days unless otherwise directed by the court,” but the
    warrant did not expressly grant the People’s request for a 90-day order delaying
    notification of identified targets of the warrant with notice of the warrant. (§ 1546.2,
    subds. (a), (b)(2).) The omission in the order must have been inadvertent, and the parties
    agree that the requested 90-day notification delay was granted. CalECPA contemplates
    that “an order delaying notification and prohibiting the party providing information from
    notifying any other party that information has been sought” will be made in the same
    order. (§ 1546.2, subd. (b)(2), italics added.) An order prohibiting the party providing
    information from disclosing that the information is being sought under the warrant would
    be ineffective without an order delaying notification of the target parties, and vice versa.
    56
    The People did not seek any extensions of the order delaying notice; thus, the 90-
    day notice delay period expired on February 5, 2020. (§ 1546.2, subd. (b)(2).) There
    were no “identified targets” of the warrant from the time it was issued on
    November 7, 2019 until September 14, 2020, when Investigator Deanne received the
    identifying information linking Price to the shooting. But, on or around January 29,
    2020, during the 90-day notice delay period, Deanne received the anonymized list of five
    device IDs from Google, the stage one information. Deanne received the stage two
    information, showing two device IDs traveling outside the geofence, in March 2020.
    Thus, by February 6, 2020, upon the expiration of the 90-day notice delay period,
    the People were required to serve the Department of Justice with the information listed in
    section 1546.2, subdivsion (b)(3) (notice of the warrant including the nature of the
    investigation and a copy of the warrant), together with the stage one information, in the
    form of “a copy of all electronic information obtained or a summary of that information,
    including, at a minimum, the number and types of records disclosed, the date and time
    when the earliest and latest records were created, and a statement of the grounds for the
    court’s determination to grant a delay in notifying the individual.” (§ 1546.2, subds. (a),
    (b)(3).) By failing to submit this information to the Department of Justice by
    February 6, 2020, the People violated CalECPA’s notice requirements. (§ 1546.2,
    subd. (c).)
    The People concede Price was not properly served with notice of the warrant, or
    the information obtained pursuant to the warrant (stage one, two, and three information)
    when Price was arrested in December 2020. (§ 1546.2, subds. (a), (b)(3), (c).) At that
    57
    time, Investigator Deanne gave Price what Deanne called a “service copy” of the warrant,
    without the affidavit and probable cause statement, and gave Price a verbal summary of
    the geofence information that the sheriff’s department had obtained pursuant to the
    warrant. The service copy and verbal summaries did not include all of the information
    with which Price was required to be served, once he was identified as a target of the
    warrant. (§ 1546.2, subd. (b)(3).) In the absence of an order extending the 90-day notice
    delay period, the government was required to notify Price of the warrant, the
    investigation, and the information obtained pursuant to the warrant, when the government
    identified Price as a target on September 14, 2020. (§ 1546.2, subds. (a), (b)(3), (c).)20
    5. CalECPA Does Not Require the Suppression of Electronic Information
    Section 1546.4 specifies remedies for CalECPA violations. (§ 1546.4, subds. (a)-
    (c).) As pertinent, the statute provides: “Any person in a trial, hearing, or proceeding
    may move to suppress any electronic information obtained or retained in violation of the
    Fourth Amendment . . . or of this chapter [(CalECPA; §§ 1546-1546.4)].[21] The motion
    shall be made, determined, and be subject to review in accordance with the procedures set
    forth in subdivisions (b) through (q), inclusive of Section 1538.5.” (§ 1546.4, subd. (a).)
    Price claims that section 1546.4, subdivision (a), is an “express suppression
    20  Section 1546.2, subdivision (b)(3), requires “the identified targets” to be served
    with notice of the warrant and any information obtained pursuant to the warrant “[u]pon
    expiration of the period of delay of the notification.” (Ibid.) We interpret this provision
    to mean that identified targets must be served as soon as they are identified, if they are
    identified when no notice delay period is in effect.
    21 Chapter 3.6 of title 12 of part 2 of the Penal Code comprises CalECPA
    (§§ 1546 to 1546.5).
    58
    requirement” which requires any electronic information obtained or retained in violation
    of CalECPA to be suppressed in a criminal proceeding. This interpretation of the statute
    is inconsistent with its plain language, which governs our interpretation. (People v. King,
    
    supra,
     38 Cal.4th at p. 622; Khan v. Los Angeles City Employees’ Retirement System
    (2010) 
    187 Cal.App.4th 98
    , 106.) The statute does not require the suppression of any
    electronic information. Rather, it authorizes any person in a trial, hearing, or proceeding
    to move to suppress any electronic information obtained or retained in violation of the
    Fourth Amendment or CalECPA. (§ 1546.4, subd. (a).) Its only directive is that the
    motion “be made, determined, and be subject to review” in accordance with the
    procedures set forth in section 1538.5, subdivisions (b) through (q)—the procedures
    governing suppression motions in criminal proceedings. (§ 1538.5.)
    Interpreting section 1546.4, subdivision (a), as requiring courts to suppress
    electronic information obtained or retained in violation of CalECPA would be
    inconsistent with the plain language of similar CalECPA provisions, subdivisions (b) and
    (c) of section 1546.4. Subdivision (b) authorizes the Attorney General to bring a civil
    action to compel a government entity to comply with CalECPA. Subdivision (c)
    authorizes,“[a]n individual whose information is targeted by a warrant, order, or other
    legal process that is inconsistent with [CalECPA], or the California Constitution or the
    United States Constitution,” or “any other recipient of the warrant, order, or other legal
    process,” to “petition the issuing court to void or modify the warrant, order, or process, or
    to order the destruction of any information obtained in violation of [CalECPA], or the
    California Constitution, or the United States Constitution.” (§ 1546.4, subd. (c).)
    59
    Subdivisions (a), (b), and (c) of section 1546.4 are in pari materia—they each deal
    with electronic evidence obtained or retained in violation of CalECPA. Thus, they
    should be construed consistently with each other and according to their terms.
    (Apartment Assn. of Los Angeles County, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles (2009)
    
    173 Cal.App.4th 13
    , 22.) [Statutes in pari materia should be “ ‘construed together’ ” and
    consistently with each other.].) None of these provisions direct a court to impose a
    particular remedy for a CalECPA violation; they leave the determination of the
    appropriate remedy to the court considering the suppression motion, civil action, or
    petition alleging the CalECPA violation.
    Price suggests that section 1546.4, subdivision (a), requires a court to suppress
    electronic information obtained in violation of CalECPA because CalECPA was enacted
    by over two-thirds vote of each house of the Legislature, and is therefore excepted from
    the Right to Truth-in-Evidence provision of the California Constitution (Cal. Const.,
    art. I, § 28, subd. (f)(2).) The Right to Truth-in-Evidence provision prohibits the
    suppression of relevant evidence in a criminal proceeding to an extent not compelled by
    the federal Constitution, unless the exclusion is authorized by a statute enacted by two-
    thirds supermajorities in both houses of the Legislature. (People v. Guzman (2019)
    
    8 Cal.5th 673
    , 679; In re Lance W. (1985) 
    37 Cal.3d 873
    , 886-887.)
    In the summary of the bill that enacted CalECPA, the Legislative Counsel’s Digest
    advised: “Because this bill would exclude evidence obtained or retained in violation of its
    provisions in a criminal proceeding, it requires a 2/3 vote of the Legislature.” (Legis.
    Counsel’s Dig., Sen. Bill. No. 178 (2015-2016 Reg. Sess.), ch. 651, italics added.) Price
    60
    points to this advisory in arguing that the Legislature intended section 1546.4,
    subdivision (a), to require the exclusion in criminal proceedings of evidence obtained or
    retained in violation of the Fourth Amendment or CalECPA. (See § 1546.4, subd. (a).)
    Again, the argument conflates a court’s authority to suppress evidence based on a
    CalECPA violation (§§ 1538.5, 1546.4, subd. (a)), with a statutory directive to suppress
    such evidence. By authorizing the suppression of electronic evidence based on a
    CalECPA violation, section 1546.4, subdivision (a), authorizes the suppression of
    evidence to an extent not required by the federal Constitution. But nothing in CalECPA
    requires the suppression of electronic information in a criminal proceeding.
    Price argues that the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule, which applies
    to Fourth Amendment violations (Leon, 
    supra,
     468 U.S. at p. 922), does not apply to
    electronic information obtained or retained in violation of CalECPA because section
    1546.4, subdivision (a), overrides the good faith exception by requiring the suppression
    of the electronic evidence obtained or retained in violation of CalECPA. Nothing in
    subdivision (a) supports this interpretation. Subdivision (a) does not mention the good
    faith exception or prohibit its application to CalECPA violations. (§ 1546.4, subd (a).)
    As respondent superior court noted, “[i]nsofar as [Price’s] claims encompass the
    argument that CalECPA does not permit good faith reliance on the warrant, [Price] has
    failed to show that the Legislature intended such a sweeping change to this well-
    established rule without express clarity. The Legislature is presumed to know existing
    law, including case law [citation], and nothing in CalECPA suggests that the legislation
    was intended to vitiate the rule of Leon and its progeny.”
    61
    6. Suppression Is Not an Appropriate Remedy for the CalECPA Notice Errors
    Given our conclusion that the superior court was not required to suppress the
    geofence warrant evidence and its fruits based on the CalECPA notice errors (§§ 1546.2,
    1546.4), the next question we must determine is whether suppression of the geofence
    warrant evidence and its fruits is an appropriate remedy for the CalECPA notice
    violations. Section 1546.4 does not address what circumstances may justify the
    suppression of electronic information obtained pursuant to a warrant that violates the
    notice provisions of CalECPA. But in denying the renewed suppression motion, the
    superior court found guidance in the way courts have analyzed motions to suppress
    intercepted wire or electronic communications, and evidence derived from those
    communications, based on the government’s violation of the reporting requirements for
    the wiretap order. (§ 629.72.) The wiretap context is instructive.
    In People v. Roberts (2010) 
    184 Cal.App.4th 1149
     (Roberts), the defendants
    moved to suppress evidence obtained pursuant to a wiretap order (§§ 629.52, 1538.5), on
    the ground the government failed to timely file periodic reports with the court overseeing
    the order in accordance with former section 629.60 (Roberts, at pp. 1178-1183). At the
    time the order was in effect, section 629.60 required the government to file reports with
    the court at intervals of not less than six days. (See Roberts, at p. 1179.)22
    22 Section 629.60 was amended effective January 1, 2011 to require the reports to
    be filed with the court “not less than one for each period of 10 days, commencing with
    the signing of the order . . . .” (Stats. 2010, ch. 707, § 8.) In 2019, the wiretap statutes
    (§§ 629.50 to 629.86) were repealed effective January 1, 2025. (§ 629.98; Stats. 2019,
    ch. 607, § 1.) CalECPA allows a government entity to obtain a wiretap order (§ 629.50 et
    [footnote continued on next page]
    62
    Section 629.72 authorizes a motion to suppress wiretap evidence. It mirrors
    section 1546.4, subdivision (a), in that it provides: “Any person in any trial, hearing, or
    proceeding, may move to suppress some or all of the contents of any intercepted wire or
    electronic communications, or evidence derived therefrom, only on the basis that the
    contents or evidence were obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment of the United
    States Constitution or of this chapter [(§§ 629.50-629.98)]. The motion shall be made,
    determined, and be subject to review in accordance with the procedures set forth in
    Section 1538.5.” (§ 629.72.)
    In determining whether the government’s failure to timely file the six-day reports
    (§ 629.60) merited suppression of the wiretap evidence under section 629.72, Roberts
    applied the framework articulated in People v. Jackson (2005) 
    129 Cal.App.4th 129
    , 149
    (Jackson) (Roberts, supra, 184 Cal.App.4th at p. 1183). Under the Jackson framework,
    “the defendant has the burden to show the evidence was obtained in violation of
    the Fourth Amendment or a provision of the Act, and that provision was intended to play
    a central role in the authorization and execution of wiretaps. The burden then shifts to
    the state to show the statutory purpose of the violated provision was achieved in spite of
    the error.” (Roberts, at p. 1183, citing Jackson, at p. 160.)
    The Roberts court concluded that “the timely filing requirement” of section 629.60
    played “a central role in the wiretap statutory scheme,” and the defendants met their
    burden of showing that the wiretap evidence was obtained in violation of section 629.60.
    seq.), as an alternative to a warrant, to access electronic device information (§ 1546.1,
    subd. (c)(2)).
    63
    (Roberts, supra, 184 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1184-1185.) “A central role,” the court
    explained, “is one that affects the legality of the authorization or the execution of the
    wiretaps.” (Id. at p. 1185.) Section 629.60 affected the legality of the wiretap order and
    the execution of the wiretaps because it “prescribe[d] timely and ongoing judicial
    oversight” of the order and “mandate[d] immediate termination of the wiretap” if “the
    judge [overseeing the wiretaps]” found that “progress ha[d] not been made, the
    [government’s] explanation for the lack of progress [was] not satisfactory,” or there was
    “no need” for “continued interception.” (Roberts, at p. 1185.)
    The court also concluded, however, that the government met its burden of showing
    that the purpose of section 629.60 was achieved despite the untimely filing of the wiretap
    reports. (Roberts, supra, 184 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1185-1186.) The court reasoned that the
    supervising judge would not have terminated the wiretap if the reports had been timely
    filed. (Id. at p. 1185.) The record showed that the government informed the supervising
    judge about developments in the case, and the judge “made the appropriate findings of
    necessity” to continue the wiretap order. (Id. at pp. 1185-1186.) Thus, the purpose of the
    reporting provision (§ 629.60) was achieved, despite the government’s statutory
    violations in failing to timely file reports (id. at p. 1186).
    Price has met his burden of making the necessary two-prong showing under the
    Jackson framework. (Roberts, supra, 184 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1183; Jackson, supra,
    129 Cal.App.4th at p. 149.) He has shown that the government violated the notice
    provisions of CalECPA by failing to timely submit to the Department of Justice and serve
    Price with notice of the warrant, the nature of the investigation, and the copies or
    64
    summaries of the electronic information obtained. (§ 1546.2.) He has also shown that
    CalECPA’s notice provisions play a central role in serving the purpose of CalECPA,
    which is to allow identified targets of warrants and others to protect the privacy of
    electronic information. (See Freiwald, supra, 33 Berkeley Tech. L.J. at pp. 133, 143-
    144.)
    But the People have met their burden of showing that the CalECPA notice
    violations did not undermine the purpose of the CalECPA notice provisions. (Roberts,
    supra, at pp. 1185-1186.) The warrant was ordered sealed when it was issued on
    November 7, 2019, and it remained sealed until August 24, 2021, after Price filed his
    motion to suppress evidence at the preliminary hearing. The court also granted the
    government a 90-day delay in giving notice of the warrant under CalECPA. (§ 1546.2,
    subd. (b).) In light of the sealing order, the 90-day notice delay order, and the nature of
    the investigation, including that the warrant sought to identify two unknown murder
    suspects, a court would have granted successive 90-day extensions of the initial 90-day
    notice delay period (§ 1546.2, subd (b)), at least through the time of Price’s arrest in
    December 2020, if the People had sought the extensions.
    Notifying the Department of Justice or Price of the warrant, the nature of the
    investigation, and the electronic information obtained pursuant to the warrant at any time
    before Price was arrested in December 2020 may have seriously jeopardized the murder
    investigation and led to other adverse results. (§ 1546, subd. (a).) For the same reasons
    the magistrate ordered the warrant sealed, the magistrate would have granted the further
    extension requests. Because the notice violations did not undermine the purpose of the
    65
    notice provisions, the notice violations do not justify suppressing the geofence warrant
    evidence or its fruits. (Roberts, supra, 184 Cal.App.4th at p. 1185.)
    V.
    THE OTHER WARRANT EVIDENCE
    Price claims the other 10 warrants seeking electronic information are invalid for
    the same reasons he argues the geofence warrant is invalid: (1) the warrants lacked
    sufficient probable cause and particularity under the Fourth Amendment; (2) the warrants
    violated CalECPA’s particularity and notice requirements; and (3) the supporting
    affidavits for the warrants omitted material facts, requiring traversal.23
    A. Additional Background
    Here, we list all 11 of the challenged warrants in chronological order, by their
    dates of issuance, beginning with the geofence warrant issued on November 7, 2019, and
    we summarize the electronic information sought in each warrant.24
    1.     The geofence warrant, to Google for location data and identifying
    information pursuant to Google’s production protocol, for devices located in the geofence
    specified in the geofence warrant, issued on November 7, 2019 (RI1107201919);
    23  Price originally moved to suppress evidence obtained pursuant to 15 warrants,
    but Price withdrew his motion as to four of the 15 warrants in his reply to the opposition
    to his original suppression motion at the preliminary hearing. Between October 30, 2019
    and November 25, 2020, 19 warrants were issued in the Jovany R. murder investigation.
    24   When Price was arrested, Deanne gave Price “service copies” of the warrants
    listed as items 1, 6, 7, and 10. The 11 warrants were ordered sealed when each warrant
    was issued, and each warrant was ordered unsealed on August 26, 2021, after Price filed
    his motion to suppress evidence at the preliminary hearing.
    66
    2.     To Google for “any search” on “any and all Google applications” for
    several variations of Jovany R.’s address on Homestead, between October 22, 2019 and
    October 30, 2019; issued on November 7, 2019 (RI1107201918);
    3.     To Facebook for all account information for Jovany R.’s user IDs and
    profiles between April 29, 2019 and January 6, 2020; issued on January 6, 2020
    (RI106202013);
    4.     To Instagram for “all data” related to Jovany R.’s two Instagram accounts,
    between April 29, 2019 and January 6, 2020; issued on January 6, 2020 (RI106202012);
    5.     To Google for “all records” associated with three Gmail accounts in the
    names of two suspects in unrelated robberies (K.W. and T. H.), between June 1, 2019 and
    January 1, 2020; issued on May 8, 2020 (RI051120201) (“0201”);
    6.     To AT&T Wireless for “all records” associated with Price’s cell phone
    number “4481” between August 1, 2019 and September 15, 2020; issued on September
    15, 2020 (RI0915202024);
    7.     To Google for “all records” related to two Gmail accounts associated with
    Price, between August 1, 2019 and September 15, 2020; issued on September 15, 2020
    (RI0915202023);
    8.     To AT&T for “all records” related to two phone numbers believed to be
    associated with Price’s brother, C. Price, between August 1, 2019 and November 5, 2020;
    issued on November 5, 2020 (RI1105202017);
    67
    9.     To T-Mobile for “all records” associated with a phone number believed to
    be associated with G. Contreras between August 1, 2019 and November 17, 2020; issued
    on November 17, 2020 (RI111820201);
    10.    To AT&T for “all records” associated with Price’s “4481” phone number
    for September 15 through November 25, 2020; issued on November 25, 2020
    (RI12012024) (“2024”);
    11.    To Apple for “all data” and content concerning an iphone found on Price at
    the time of his December 4, 2020 arrest, between January 1, 2019 and December 4, 2020;
    issued on December 4, 2020 (RI120820209) (“0209”).
    B. Under CalECPA, Price Has Standing To Challenge the Validity of All 11 Warrants
    As a preliminary matter, we observe that CalECPA confers standing on Price to
    challenge the validity of all 11 warrants, on Fourth Amendment and CalECPA grounds,
    including the six warrants that targeted electronic information of persons other than Price,
    and that, therefore, did not implicate Price’s Fourth Amendment rights.
    Federal law provides that “ ‘Fourth Amendment rights are personal’ and ‘may not
    be vicariously asserted.’ [Citations.] A person who is aggrieved by an illegal search and
    seizure only through the introduction of damaging evidence secured by a search of a third
    person’s premises or property has not had any of his Fourth Amendment rights
    infringed.” (Rakas v. Illinois (1978) 
    439 U.S. 128
    , 133-134.) Thus, to have standing to
    challenge a search on Fourth Amendment grounds, a defendant must establish a
    reasonable expectation of privacy in the area searched. (In re Rudy F. (2004)
    
    117 Cal.App.4th 1124
    , 1131; Rawlings v. Kentucky (1980) 
    448 U.S. 98
    , 104-105.)
    68
    Under federal law, Price cannot establish a reasonable expectation of privacy in
    the areas searched pursuant to at least six of the 11 warrants—the warrants listed above
    as items 2, 3, 4, 5, 9, and 10. These warrants sought electronic information generated by
    persons other than Price (e.g., Jovany R.’s Gmail account data), in which Price had no
    reasonable expectation of privacy. Thus, Price lacks Fourth Amendment standing to
    challenge the six warrants under federal, Fourth Amendment law.25
    But under CalECPA, Price has standing to challenge the validity of all 11 warrants
    on Fourth Amendment and CalECPA grounds. As we have discussed, section 1564.4,
    subdivision (a), authorizes “[a]ny person in a trial, hearing, or proceeding” to move to
    suppress “any electronic information obtained or retained in violation of the Fourth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution or of this chapter.” (Italics added.) Price
    is a person in a trial, hearing, or proceeding, and each of the 11 challenged warrants
    sought “electronic information,” as CalECPA defines the term. (§ 1546, subd. (h).)
    CalECPA does not require Price to have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the
    electronic information sought in the 11 warrants in order to have standing to file a motion
    to suppress the information under CalECPA. (§ 1546.4, subd. (a).)
    25  We assumed for purposes of our analysis of Price’s Fourth Amendment
    challenges to the geofence warrant that Price had a reasonable expectation of privacy in
    the location data and identifying information sought in the warrant, and, therefore, the
    warrant authorized a search within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. Other courts
    have treated this issue as forfeited or implicitly conceded by the government, in the
    context of a defendant’s Fourth Amendment challenge to a geofence warrant, when, as
    here, the government sought the warrant and does not claim the warrant did not authorize
    a search. (See, e.g., Chatrie, Meza.)
    69
    The Right to Truth-in-Evidence provision of our state Constitution (Cal. Const.,
    art. I, § 28, subd. (f)(2)) does not require us to follow the federal law of Fourth
    Amendment standing. Originally enacted in 1982, the provision states: “Except as
    provided by statute hereafter enacted by a two-thirds vote of the membership in each
    house of the Legislature, relevant evidence shall not be excluded in any criminal
    proceeding including pretrial and post conviction motions and hearings . . . .” (Ibid.;
    People v. Guzman, supra, 8 Cal.5th at p. 679.) Absent such a statute, the Right to Truth-
    in-Evidence provision prohibits relevant evidence from being excluded in a criminal
    proceeding, “except to the extent that exclusion remains federally compelled.” (In re
    Lance W., 
    supra,
     37 Cal.3d at pp. 886-887.)
    CalECPA was enacted by over a two-thirds vote of the membership of each house
    of our state Legislature. Thus, CalECPA is excepted from the Right to Truth-in-Evidence
    provision of our state Constitution. (Cal. Const., art. I, § 28, subd. (d)(2).) In authorizing
    “[a]ny person, in a trial, hearing, or proceeding” to make a motion “to suppress evidence
    obtained or retained in violation of” any person’s Fourth Amendment rights or of
    CalECPA, section 1546.4, subdivision (a), confers standing on Price to challenge the
    validity of the 11 warrants on both Fourth Amendment and CalECPA grounds.
    C. Price Has Forfeited Most of His Challenges to the Other 10 Warrants
    A party forfeits a claim on appeal if the party fails to support the claim “with
    cogent argument, legal authority or specific citations to the record on appeal.” (United
    Grand Corp. v. Malibu Hillbillies, LLC (2019) 
    36 Cal.App.5th 142
    , 153.) “We may and
    do ‘disregard conclusory arguments that are not supported by pertinent legal authority or
    70
    fail to disclose the reasoning by which the appellant reached the conclusions he wants us
    to adopt.’ ” (Ibid.) “In order to demonstrate error, an appellant must supply the
    reviewing court with some cogent argument supported by legal analysis and citation to
    the record.” (City of Santa Maria v. Adam (2012) 
    211 Cal.App.4th 266
    , 286-287.)
    Price has forfeited most of his Fourth Amendment and CalECPA claims
    concerning 10 of the warrants (except the geofence warrant) because his petition does not
    explain the factual and legal bases of most of his claims. For example, Price does not
    explain why any of the warrants, other than the geofence warrant, lacked probable cause
    or particularity under the Fourth Amendment. Price only generally asserts that the other
    10 warrants were overbroad in the electronic information the warrants sought.
    In his original and renewed suppression motions, Price raised specific challenges
    to the other 10 warrants. But Price does not sufficiently articulate most of these claims in
    his writ petition. Nor does he explain how the superior court’s extensive analysis of his
    claims regarding the other 10 warrants was incorrect. Thus, we do not revisit these
    claims here. We would only be rehashing the superior court’s analysis of the claims.
    Nonetheless, we have reviewed the contents of the other 10 warrants and find no
    Fourth Amendment probable cause or particularity infirmities in the electronic
    information sought. Each warrant also specified, as reasonable and appropriate, “the time
    periods covered, the target individuals or accounts, the applications or services covered,
    and the types of information sought” in accordance with CalECPA’s particularity
    provision. (§ 1546.1, subd. (d)(1).) And, to the extent notice of the other 10 warrants
    was not given in accordance with CalECPA (§ 1546.2), the purpose of CalECPA’s notice
    71
    provisions was not undermined, for the same reasons it was not undermined in
    connection with the geofence warrant.
    Through all 11 warrants, investigators were trying to identify the two unknown
    suspects in the murder of Jovany R. or find evidence linking a suspect to the murder. All
    11 warrants were sealed when issued and remained sealed until after Price filed his
    original suppression motion. Sealing the warrants until the investigation was completed
    and Price was arrested was necessary to prevent adverse results, including serious
    jeopardy to the investigation. (§§ 1546, subd. (a), 1546.2, subd. (b)(1)-(2).) Thus, a
    court would have extended the notification periods for each warrant, through Price’s
    December 2020 arrest, had the People sought the extensions.
    D. Price’s Traversal Claims Concerning the Other 10 Warrants Lack Merit
    Price has preserved his claim that the other 10 warrants must be traversed based on
    the failure of their affidavits to explain that (1) the marijuana grow inside Jovany R.’s
    house was not visible from the outside, and (2) there was no evidence the suspects knew
    about the marijuana grow. As with the geofence warrant, however, these omissions were
    immaterial to the issuing magistrates’ probable cause determination for each warrant.
    Price raises another traversal claim concerning warrant 0201 (listed above as item
    no. 5), which sought records for three Gmail accounts belonging to two suspects in
    unrelated robberies, K.W. and T.H. This warrant was issued on May 8, 2020, and sought
    the Gmail account data for K.W. and T.J. for a seven-month period, June 1, 2019 through
    January 1, 2020. Price claims the government engaged in “warrant laundering” to obtain
    this warrant. He points out that the government first sought a warrant for the same Gmail
    72
    account data on January 22, 2020, for the period of June 1, 2019 through January 1, 2020,
    and this warrant was issued but the issuing magistrate restricted the time period to 60
    days. The government did not serve this warrant, and, on January 28, 2020, the
    government went to another magistrate who issued a second warrant (0205) for the
    originally requested period of January 1, 2019 through January 1, 2020. This warrant
    (0205) was served and the government received the data, but Price claims “two
    specifically listed officers didn’t download that data.” Then, on May 8, 2020, the
    government obtained warrant 0201 for the same Gmail account data, for the seven-month
    period of June 1, 2019 through January 1, 2020. The May 8, 2020 warrant (0201)
    mentioned the seven-month, January 28, 2020 warrant (0205), but it did not mention the
    60-day, January 22, 2020 warrant.
    Price claims the failure to mention the 60-day January 22, 2020 warrant in the
    affidavit for the seven-month, May 8, 2020 warrant (0201) was a material omission. We
    disagree. Although we agree that the magistrate should have been apprised of both prior
    warrants, we do not view the omission as material. As the superior court explained in
    rejecting this claim, the omission had no bearing on the probable cause showing for the
    May 8, 2020 warrant. The affidavit for the May 8 warrant showed probable cause to
    believe that seven months of Gmail account data for the two suspects in the unrelated
    robberies, from June 1, 2019 through January 1, 2020, rather than 60 days of such Gmail
    account data, would reveal evidence of the murder and help law enforcement identify the
    suspects, or rule out K.W. and T.H. as suspects. As the superior court explained:
    “Whether the first magistrate limited the timeframe does not impact whether another
    73
    magistrate believed a larger timeframe was constitutionally permissible. Reasonable
    persons may disagree about these [timeframe] issues, and the finding of one magistrate
    does not mean the finding of another is invalid or that the second magistrate would
    necessarily have agreed with the first.”
    VI. THE GUN EVIDENCE
    Price claims the gun evidence should have been suppressed as a product of his
    unlawful detention in West Covina on January 18, 2020. We disagree.
    A. Additional Background
    1. Officer Kyle Clifton’s Preliminary Hearing/Suppression Motion Testimony
    Around 3:40 p.m. on January 18, 2020, Officer Clifton was on patrol in West
    Covina, driving a marked police car, when he drove by the “California Parkette,” a
    suburban park that “backs up” to a water company. The officer was familiar with the
    area from patrolling it and noticed something unusual: a vehicle parked in the water
    company’s private driveway. The driveway was adjacent to the park and led to a gate to
    the water company. The vehicle, a blue Ford Fusion, appeared to be unoccupied. It was
    parked on the right side of the driveway, next to a grassy area of the park, and facing a
    gate to the water company.
    Officer Clifton testified he believed the vehicle was parked in violation of Vehicle
    Code section 22500, subdivision (e)(1), which he understood prohibited “blocking a
    driveway.” The officer parked his patrol car around 15 to 20 feet behind and around one
    foot to the left of the vehicle. He then walked to the driver’s side window of the vehicle,
    which was down. He did not recall whether he had his hand on his gun as he approached
    74
    the vehicle. He noticed a male in the driver’s seat, whom he identified in court as Price.
    He then noticed a female in the front passenger seat. He asked Price how Price’s day was
    going and whether Price was willing to speak with him, and Price said yes. He then
    asked Price what Price was doing at the park. Price said he was looking for directions
    and wanted to show his female passenger a video on his phone.
    As he was speaking with Price, Officer Clifton noticed “a strong odor of marijuana
    emitting from the vehicle.” The officer then asked Price whether the officer could have
    Price’s driver’s license, and Price said, “yes.” As Price was handing the officer his
    driver’s license, the officer asked Price whether there was any marijuana in the vehicle.
    Price said, “yes,” and showed the officer a bag of marijuana. Price had “bloodshot,
    watery eyes,” which made the officer suspect Price was under the influence of marijuana.
    Next, the officer asked Price whether Price was on parole or probation. Price said he was
    on parole for assault with a deadly weapon.
    Officer Clifton then stepped away from the vehicle to perform a records check to
    determine whether Price was on parole. After verifying that Price was on parole, either
    on his phone or through his patrol car radio, the officer stepped back to the vehicle and
    asked Price whether there were any other drugs or weapons in the vehicle. Price said
    there were not. The officer then stepped away from the vehicle to “have” Price step out
    of the vehicle. The officer did not recall asking or ordering Price to step out of the
    vehicle.
    Before Price stepped out of the vehicle, the vehicle suddenly lurched forward,
    toward the gate to the water company and away from Officer Clifton. The officer
    75
    stepped behind the driver’s side door of his patrol car for “cover.” Price quickly stopped
    the vehicle, reversed it a few feet to where it had been parked, put his hands in the air
    through the driver’s side window, and called to the officer that he did not know his
    vehicle was still in drive. Around this time, Officer Clifton’s partner pulled up in a
    second marked patrol car and parked on the street in front of the park. After the second
    officer arrived, Price and his female passenger were ordered out of the vehicle and taken
    into custody.
    Next, Officer Clifton conducted a parole search of Price’s vehicle. The officer
    found a loaded .45-caliber handgun “in plain view” on the front passenger seat. The gun
    was in the firing position and its safety was “off.” In the center console, the officer found
    the bag of marijuana Price had shown him. The officer took the marijuana and booked
    the gun into evidence.
    Later on January 18, 2020, Officer Clifton wrote a report of the incident, his first
    of two reports. The officer testified he mistakenly wrote in his original report that the
    vehicle was parked in a “parking lot” rather than in a driveway because he was
    “exhausted” after working an overtime shift. The officer also wrote in his original report,
    and testified, that he contacted Price and the female passenger in a “consensual manner,”
    that is, in a “politer, more professional way” for “de-escalation and to gain a little bit
    more cooperation with the driver.”
    On August 9, 2021, Price filed a motion to suppress the warrant evidence and the
    gun evidence—the evidence that the gun used in the October 29, 2019 shooting death of
    Jovany R. was found in Price’s vehicle during the January 18, 2020 parole search of the
    76
    vehicle. After the suppression motion was filed, a deputy district attorney and
    Investigator Deanne contacted Officer Clifton and questioned him about his original
    report. Officer Clifton then wrote a supplemental report, dated August 25, 2021, to
    correct his January 18, 2020 original report, and to provide further details about the
    driveway and his “consensual encounter” with Price. Officer Clifton denied that anyone
    told him what to write in his supplemental report, and he affirmed that the information in
    the supplemental report was based on his observations and recollections of the
    January 18, 2020 incident.
    In his supplemental report, Officer Clifton wrote that the vehicle was parked in a
    driveway, not in a parking lot, and that the officer returned to the driveway and measured
    it for the supplemental report. The driveway was 17 feet wide and 80 feet long, measured
    from the street in front of the driveway to the “water supply facility[’s]” wrought iron
    gate. Price’s vehicle was parked one foot from the right side of the driveway, facing the
    gate to the water supply facility. The officer knew that only large commercial trucks
    typically used the driveway to enter and exit the facility, and Price’s vehicle was blocking
    the trucks’ access to and from the facility.
    In his original report, Officer Clifton did not mention Vehicle Code section 22500
    or state that he intended to issue a citation to the driver for violating the statute when he
    approached the vehicle. The officer first mentioned Vehicle Code section 22500 in his
    supplemental report. The officer testified that when he approached the vehicle, he
    intended to “at least” advise its occupant of the Vehicle Code section 22500, subsection
    (e)(1) violation, or issue a citation for the violation. But he did not do either of these
    77
    things, because his intentions changed after he verified that Price was on parole and
    found the gun in Price’s vehicle during the parole search. When asked why he did not
    tell Price that Price was not allowed to park in the driveway, Officer Clifton testified that
    he “did not have to.”
    There were no signs posted along the driveway, prohibiting parking on or in the
    driveway. The officer also did not look for or find any “pipes or joints or anything that
    would . . . account for the smell of burning marijuana.” The officer initially testified he
    could not tell whether the vehicle was running when he approached it, but he later
    testified that the vehicle was running, and he did not recall that its engine was turned off
    before it lurched forward. The officer also testified that he did not recall the precise
    sequence of events when he first testified, but his recollection of events was refreshed
    after he reviewed his original and supplemental reports.
    2. The Magistrate’s Rulings on the Motion To Suppress the Gun Evidence
    The magistrate at the preliminary hearing denied the motion to suppress the gun
    evidence after concluding that Price was lawfully detained in the water company’s
    driveway before the parole search of his vehicle. Thus, the magistrate ruled that the gun
    found during the parole search of the vehicle and the ballistics evidence showing that the
    gun was the same gun used in the shooting death of Jovany R., were not required to be
    suppressed as the fruits of an unlawful detention.
    The magistrate concluded that Price’s vehicle was parked on a private driveway
    (Veh. Code, § 490), and that Price was detained when Officer Clifton parked his patrol
    car behind Price’s vehicle. The magistrate also ruled that the detention was lawful—it
    78
    did not violate the Fourth Amendment—because the officer had reason to suspect that the
    vehicle was parked “on” the driveway in violation of Vehicle Code section § 22500,
    subdivision (e)(1), which prohibits parking “in front of a public or private driveway.”
    (Italics added.) The magistrate rejected Price’s argument that the vehicle was lawfully
    parked “on” or “in” rather than “in front of” the driveway and, therefore, that Price was
    unlawfully detained. The magistrate also concluded that “everything” Officer Clifton did
    after he approached Price’s vehicle was “reasonable” and did not violate the Fourth
    Amendment.
    B. The Motion To Suppress the Gun Evidence Was Properly Denied
    Price claims the motion to suppress the gun evidence was erroneously denied
    because the parole search, during which the gun used in the shooting was found in Price’s
    vehicle, was the fruit of Price’s unlawful detention. Price claims he was unlawfully
    detained without an articulable, reasonable suspicion that he had committed or was
    committing a crime, when Officer Clifton approached him in his parked vehicle. Price
    claims his vehicle was lawfully parked “in” or “on” the private driveway of the water
    supply company, and he was therefore not violating Vehicle Code section 22500,
    subdivision (e)(1), which only prohibits parking “in front of” a driveway. Price also
    claims Officer Clifton violated Price’s Fourth Amendment rights by “demanding” to see
    Price’s identification, asking Price whether there was any marijuana in the vehicle, asking
    Price whether he was on probation or parole, then “ordering” Price to step out of the
    79
    vehicle. Lastly, Price claims the magistrate should have discredited all of Officer
    Clifton’s testimony as contradictory and inherently unreliable.26
    1. Legal Principles
    The Fourth Amendment guarantees “ ‘[t]he right of the people’ ” to be free from
    unreasonable searches and seizures. (People v. Camacho (2000) 
    23 Cal.4th 824
    , 829.)
    For purposes of the Fourth Amendment, police “ ‘ “contacts” ’ ” or “ ‘ “interactions” ’ ”
    with individuals fall into three broad categories: “consensual encounters, detentions, and
    arrests, with consensual encounters being the least intrusive, and arrests the most
    intrusive, of these contacts.” (People v. Gutierrez (2018) 
    21 Cal.App.5th 1146
    , 1152.)
    “Consensual encounters do not trigger Fourth Amendment scrutiny.” (In re
    Manuel G. (1997) 
    16 Cal.4th 805
    , 821.) “ ‘[L]aw enforcement officers may approach
    someone on the street or in another public place and converse if the person is willing to
    do so’ without having any ‘articulable suspicion of criminal activity. ’ ” (People v.
    Parrott (2017) 
    10 Cal.App.5th 485
    , 492.) “[A] detention does not occur when a police
    officer merely approaches an individual on the street and asks a few questions.” (In re
    Manuel G., at p. 821, citing Florida v. Bostick (1991) 
    501 U.S. 429
    , 434.) But a motorist
    is detained when an officer approaches the motorist in a parked car and, in view of the
    26  Price represents that the Los Angeles County District Attorney did not file an
    unlawful firearm possession charge against Price based on Price’s unlawful possession of
    the gun found during the January 18, 2020 parole search, “presumably because [the Los
    Angeles County District Attorney] could not overcome the Fourth Amendment
    violation.” We are unaware of the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s reasons, if
    any, for not filing the unlawful possession charge, and its failure to file or prosecute the
    charge does not affect our analysis of the lawfulness of the detention.
    80
    circumstances, a reasonable person in the motorist’s position would not feel free to leave
    or otherwise terminate the encounter. (People v. Brown (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 968
    , 975-977.)
    Evidence may be suppressed if it is the “fruit” of an unlawful detention. (Brewer v.
    Superior Court, supra, 16 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1023-1025.)
    2. Price Was Lawfully Detained
    The magistrate concluded, and the People do not dispute, that Price was detained
    when Officer Clifton parked his patrol car around 15 to 20 feet behind, and one foot to
    the left of, Price’s parked vehicle, and approached the vehicle, ostensibly to speak with
    its driver or occupants. Whether an individual had been detained is a legal question
    subject to our de novo review. (Tacardon, supra, 14 Cal.5th at pp. 254-255.) In
    determining whether a detention occurred, we defer to the magistrate’s factual findings if
    substantial evidence supports them and the record shows the magistrate performed the
    function of weighing the evidence concerning the detention. (Id. at pp. 255-256.)
    The record shows the magistrate weighed Officer Clifton’s testimony about the
    circumstances surrounding the officer’s investigation of Price’s parked vehicle and
    detention of Price. Based on this evidence, the magistrate concluded that a detention
    occurred when the officer parked his patrol car behind Price’s vehicle because it would
    have taken “herculean efforts to get out [of the driveway] past the police officer.” That
    is, to leave the driveway, Price would have had to drive his vehicle forward, turn his
    vehicle around, and drive around the officer’s patrol car. Substantial evidence shows
    Price was detained when the officer parked his patrol car behind Price’s vehicle. The
    officer parked 15 to 20 feet behind and one foot to the left of the vehicle, indicating to
    81
    any reasonable driver of the vehicle that the driver was not free to leave or terminate the
    encounter.
    In Tacardon, our Supreme Court emphasized that, “merely walking up to someone
    in a parked car is not a detention.” (Tacardon, supra, 14 Cal.5th at p. 241.) Something
    more is required: the officer must, “by means of physical force or a show of authority” in
    some way, restrain the liberty of an individual. (Ibid., citing People v. Brown (2015)
    
    61 Cal.4th 968
    , 974.) “ ‘In situations involving a show of authority, a person is seized “if
    ‘in view of all of the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would
    have believed that he was not free to leave’ ” or “ ‘otherwise terminate the
    encounter’ ”. . . .’ ” (Tacardon, at p. 241, italics added.)
    In determining whether a detention occurred, courts are required to consider the
    totality of the circumstances, including “the use of a patrol car to block movement.”
    (Tarcardon, supra, 14 Cal.5th at p. 242, citing Michigan v. Chesternut (1988) 
    486 U.S. 567
    , 575.) The facts are reviewed objectively; the officer’s state of mind is not relevant “
    ‘except insofar as his overt actions would communicate that state of mind,’ ” and the
    individual citizen’s subjective state of mind or belief is also not relevant. (Tacardon, at
    p. 242.) Here, the facts, viewed objectively, show Price was detained when Officer
    Clifton parked his patrol car 15 to 20 feet behind and one foot to the left of Price’s
    vehicle. Under the totality of the circumstances, parking the patrol car behind and to the
    left of the vehicle was a sufficient show of authority to turn what might have been a
    consensual encounter into a detention. The way the officer parked his patrol car
    82
    reasonably indicated to any occupants of Price’s vehicle that the occupants were not free
    to leave and terminate the encounter with the officer.
    Price claims his detention violated his Fourth Amendment rights because there
    was no reason to suspect he was committing a crime by parking his vehicle on or in the
    private driveway. Detentions are “seizures of an individual which are strictly limited in
    duration, scope and purpose, and which may be undertaken by the police ‘if there is an
    articulable suspicion that a person has committed or is about to commit a crime.’ ”
    (Wilson v. Superior Court (1983) 
    34 Cal.3d 777
    , 784.) The suspected crime may be a
    misdemeanor or a traffic violation. (Atwater v. City of Lago Vista (2001) 
    532 U.S. 318
    ,
    354 [upholding warrantless arrest based on probable cause of misdemeanor seat belt
    violation]; Arkansas v. Sullivan (2001) 
    532 U.S. 769
    , 771-772 [upholding traffic stop and
    detention for speeding and tinted windshield violations].)
    The articulable suspicion requirement is also measured by an objective standard,
    not by the detaining officer’s subjective state of mind at the time of the detention.
    (People v. Kidd, supra, 36 Cal.App.5th at p. 22; People v. Conway (1994) 
    25 Cal.App.4th 385
    , 388-389 [“ ‘[T]he fact that the officer does not have the state of mind which is
    hypothecated by the reasons which provide the legal justification for the officer’s action
    does not invalidate the action taken as long as the circumstances, viewed objectively,
    justify that action.’ ”].) The objectively reasonable suspicion necessary to justify a
    detention is “ ‘. . . less demanding than that for probable cause’ and can be established by
    ‘considerably less than proof of wrongdoing by a preponderance of the evidence.’ ”
    (People v. Souza (1994) 
    9 Cal.4th 224
    , 230.)
    83
    A misdemeanor trespass is committed by willfully driving a vehicle upon real
    property belonging to another and known not to be open to the general public, without the
    consent of the property owner. (§ 602, subd. (n).) Officer Clifton had an objectively
    reasonable suspicion that Price was trespassing on the private driveway by parking his
    vehicle on or in the driveway. (Ibid.) The facts known to the officer when he decided to
    investigate the parked vehicle, and why it was parked there, supported a reasonable
    suspicion that the driver of the parked vehicle was committing a misdemeanor trespass by
    parking the vehicle on the driveway without the driveway owner’s permission.
    Officer Clifton testified that he was familiar with the area and had seen large,
    commercial water trucks using the driveway to enter and exit the dirt area behind the
    water company gate. The officer knew the driveway belonged to the water company and
    that the driveway was not part of the adjoining park. On the other side of the park, there
    was a parking area for park visitors. The officer believed that members of the public
    were not authorized to park vehicles on the driveway. Although there was enough room
    on the driveway to allow passenger vehicles to drive around Price’s parked vehicle, the
    vehicle would have prevented the water company’s large, commercial trucks from using
    the driveway. Even though there were no signs posted near or along the driveway
    prohibiting parking or trespassing, the officer’s testimony showed that it was reasonably
    apparent that the driveway was a private driveway not open to the general public.27
    27 The posting of signs prohibiting trespassing is not an element of a trespass in
    violation of section 602, subdivision (n); rather, the real property driven upon must be
    “known not to be open to the general public.” (Cf. § 602, subd. (h)(1) [trespass is
    [footnote continued on next page]
    84
    Price claims Officer Clifton’s suspicion that Price was violating Vehicle Code
    section 22500, subdivision (e)(1), did not justify the detention because Price was not
    violating the statute by parking on or in, rather than in front of, the driveway. Officer
    Clifton testified he stopped to investigate the parked vehicle because he suspected it was
    parked in violation of Vehicle Code section 22500, subdivision (e)(1). The statute
    prohibits parking “in front of” a public or private driveway, but it does not expressly
    prohibit parking “in” or “on” a driveway. (Veh. Code, §22500, subd. (e)(1).) It provides:
    “A person shall not stop, park, or leave standing any vehicle whether attended or
    unattended, except when necessary to avoid conflict with other traffic or in compliance
    with the directions of a peace officer or official traffic control device, in any of the
    following places: . . . [¶] . . . [¶] (e)(1) In front of a public or private driveway. . . .”
    (Ibid.) Vehicle Code section 490 defines a “ ‘private road or driveway’ ” as “a way or
    place in private ownership and used for vehicular travel by the owner and those having
    express or implied permission from the owner but not by other members of the public.”
    Both the magistrate at the preliminary hearing, who heard the officer’s testimony
    and ruled on the original suppression motion, and respondent superior court, in ruling on
    the renewed suppression motion as part of the Penal Code section 995 motion, concluded
    that Vehicle Code section 22500, subdivision (e)(1), applies when a car is parked “in” or
    “on” a driveway. The magistrate and court reasoned that Vehicle Code section 22500,
    committed by “[e]ntering upon lands . . . owned by any other person without the license
    of the owner or legal occupant, where signs forbidding trespass are displayed, and
    whereon cattle . . . or any other animal, is being raised . . . .” (Italics added.)].)
    85
    subdivision (e)(1), is intended to prevent vehicles from blocking driveways, and a vehicle
    is necessarily blocking part of a driveway when it is parked in or on the driveway. Thus,
    the magistrate and superior court ruled that Price was lawfully detained based on the
    officer’s reasonable suspicion that Price was parked in or on the driveway in violation of
    Vehicle Code section 22500, subdivision (e)(1).
    It is unnecessary for this court to determine whether Vehicle Code section 22500,
    subdivision (e)(1), prohibits parking in or on a driveway, in addition to parking in front of
    a driveway, and, therefore, the officer had reason to suspect Price’s vehicle was parked in
    violation of the statute, justifying the detention. It is immaterial that Officer Clifton
    believed the driver was violating Vehicle Code section 22500, subdivision (e)(1), by
    being parked in or on the driveway. Everything the officer saw concerning the parked
    vehicle supported an objectively reasonable suspicion that the vehicle’s driver was
    committing a misdemeanor trespass by parking the vehicle on or in the driveway without
    its owner’s permission. (Pen. Code, § 602, subd. (n).) “[A]n officer’s reliance on the
    wrong statute [to justify a detention] does not render the officer’s actions unlawful if
    there is a right statute that applies to the defendant’s conduct.” (In re Justin K. (2002)
    
    98 Cal.App.4th 695
    , 700.)
    3. Officer Clifton’s Actions During the Detention Were Lawful
    Price claims that, when Officer Clifton approached Price’s vehicle and smelled
    marijuana, the officer violated the Fourth Amendment by “demanding” to see Price’s
    identification, asking Price whether there was marijuana in the car, asking Price whether
    86
    he was on parole or probation, and ordering Price to step out of the vehicle. We conclude
    that none of the officer’s actions violated Price’s Fourth Amendment rights.
    At the beginning of the detention, as Officer Clifton was speaking with Price, and
    before the officer noticed the smell of marijuana in the vehicle and that Price had
    bloodshot and watery eyes, the officer was justified in asking or “demanding” to see
    Price’s identification or driver’s license, based on the officer’s reasonable suspicion that
    Price’s vehicle was unlawfully parked on the driveway. (People v. Saunders (2006)
    
    38 Cal.4th 1129
    , 1135 [When there is reason to suspect a vehicle or its occupant is
    subject to seizure for violation of the law, “the vehicle may be stopped and the driver
    detained in order to check his or her driver’s license and the vehicle’s registration.”];
    People v. Tully (2012) 
    54 Cal.4th 952
    , 980 [Upon demand of a police officer, every
    motorist must present for examination the motorist’s driver’s license and vehicle
    registration card.].)
    Officer Clifton was also justified in asking Price whether there was marijuana in
    the vehicle, after the officer smelled marijuana in the vehicle and noticed Price had blood
    shot and watery eyes. The officer testified that, as Price was handing Price’s driver’s
    license to the officer, the officer noticed “a strong odor of marijuana emitting from the
    vehicle,” then asked Price whether there was any marijuana in the vehicle. Price said,
    “yes,” and showed the officer a bag of marijuana. Around this time, the officer noticed
    that Price’s eyes were bloodshot and watery, which made the officer suspect that Price
    was under the influence of marijuana.
    87
    As Price points out, the presence of a small quantity of marijuana in a vehicle, by
    itself, does not constitute probable cause to search the vehicle for contraband, given that
    the possession of 28.5 grams or less of marijuana by a person age 21 years or older is no
    longer a crime. (People v. Hall (2020) 
    57 Cal.App.5th 946
    , 952 [“[T]he lawful
    possession of marijuana in a vehicle, by itself, cannot justify a warrantless car search.”];
    People v. Johnson (2020) 
    50 Cal.App.5th 620
    , 629 [“[E]vidence of marijuana in a car
    does not provide certainty the car contains contraband.”]; Health & Saf. Code, § 11362.1,
    subds. (a)(1), (a)(4) [authorizing possession, use, and transportation by persons 21 years
    of age or older of less than 28.5 grams of cannabis], subd. (c) [“no conduct deemed
    lawful by this section shall constitute the basis for detention, search, or arrest”].)
    But this case does not involve the apparent lawful possession of marijuana in a
    vehicle without probable cause to believe the driver had committed or was committing a
    crime. When Officer Clifton noticed “a strong odor of marijuana emitting from the
    vehicle” and that Price had bloodshot and watery eyes, the officer had probable cause to
    believe Price was committing two crimes: (1) driving under the influence of marijuana
    (Veh. Code, § 23152, subd. (f)), and (2) driving with an open container of marijuana in
    the vehicle (Veh. Code, § 23222, subd. (b); People v Johnson, supra, 50 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 630; People v. Fews (2018) 
    27 Cal.App.5th 553
    , 563).
    In any event, the officer did not violate Price’s Fourth Amendment rights by
    asking Price whether there was any marijuana in the vehicle, and whether Price was on
    probation or parole. “Questioning during the routine traffic stop on a subject unrelated to
    the purpose of the stop is not itself a Fourth Amendment violation. Mere questioning is
    88
    neither a search nor a seizure. [Citation.] While the traffic detainee is under no
    obligation to answer unrelated questions, the Constitution does not prohibit law
    enforcement officers from asking.” (People v. Brown (1998) 
    62 Cal.App.4th 493
    , 499.)
    Next, in response to the officer’s question whether Price was on probation or
    parole, Price said he was on parole for assault with a deadly weapon. The officer then
    stepped away from Price’s vehicle to verify that Price was on parole, and after doing so,
    stepped back to the vehicle, ostensibly ordered Price to step out of the vehicle, and asked
    Price whether there were any other drugs or weapons in the vehicle. The officer’s order
    to Price to step out of the vehicle was justified after the officer verified that Price was on
    parole and subject to a parole search condition. (§ 3067, subd. (b)(3); People v. Delrio
    (2020) 
    45 Cal.App.5th 965
    , 970-971.) A parole search condition subjects a parolee to a
    search “at any time of the day or night, with or without a search warrant or with or
    without cause.” (§ 3067, subd. (b)(3).) During the subsequent parole search of the
    vehicle, a loaded .45-caliber handgun was found “in plain view” on the front passenger
    seat. The ballistics test later showed that the gun was the gun used to shoot and kill
    Jovany R. on October 29, 2019.
    4. No Part of Officer’s Clifton’s Testimony Must Be Discredited
    Price claims the magistrate at the preliminary hearing abused his discretion in
    crediting any part of Officer Clifton’s testimony. He claims the officer’s testimony was
    contradictory in many respects and was therefore not trustworthy or credible as a whole.
    He points out that, after the original motion to suppress the gun evidence was filed on
    August 9, 2021, and the officer spoke with Investigator Deanne and a prosecutor, the
    89
    officer wrote a second, supplemental report, stating for the first time that he approached
    Price’s vehicle based on his suspicion that Price was violating Vehicle Code section
    22500, subdivision (e)(1). Price claims the officer’s supplemental report contradicted his
    original report because the original report did not mention Vehicle Code section 22500,
    subdivision (e)(1), as a basis for the investigatory stop. Instead, the original report stated
    that the officer approached Price’s vehicle to engage in a “consensual encounter.”
    “ ‘ In a suppression motion, “the power to judge the credibility of witnesses,
    resolve any conflicts in the testimony, weigh the evidence and draw factual inferences, is
    vested in the trial court.” ’ ” (People v. Vannesse (2018) 
    23 Cal.App.5th 440
    , 445.)
    “ ‘ “To warrant the rejection of the statements given by a witness who has been believed
    by a trial court, there must exist either a physical impossibility that [the statements] are
    true, or [the statements’] falsity must be apparent without resorting to inferences or
    deductions.” ’ ” (People v. Ennis (2010) 
    190 Cal.App.4th 721
    , 728; see Zemek v.
    Superior Court (2020) 
    44 Cal.App.5th 535
    , 546.)
    Here, there is no basis for this court to discredit the officer’s testimony because
    none of the testimony was physically impossible or false on its face. For example,
    nothing in the officer’s supplemental report was physically impossible or facially untrue
    in light of the officer’s original report and testimony as a whole.
    5. Conclusion
    In sum, the January 18, 2020 parole search of Price’s vehicle, during which the
    gun used in the October 29, 2019 shooting death of Jovany R. was found, was not the
    90
    fruit of an unlawful detention. (Brewer v. Superior Court, supra, 16 Cal.App.5th at
    pp. 1023-1025.) Thus, the motion to suppress the gun evidence was properly denied.
    VII. DISPOSITION
    The petition for a writ of prohibition is denied. The order staying the criminal
    proceedings against Price is lifted.
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION
    FIELDS
    J.
    We concur:
    MILLER
    Acting P.J.
    MENETREZ
    J.
    91