Just after midnight on May 28, 2017, a Naperville police officer stopped defendant for speeding. Based on an odor in the car, the officer called for a canine search. The searching officers found eight $100 bills (several of which had identical serial numbers), a loaded .40-caliber handgun, and two unlabeled pill bottles, which in turn contained bags that held pills marked Xanax, a green leafy substance, and a white powder. While defendant was in the back of the squad car, he used the iPhone at issue to make a call.
The cops took everything they found, including the cellphone Meakens was using. The record is unclear as to why the cops took this phone but the court points out in a footnote that it should have been released to Meakens when Meakens was released from custody.
We note that a cell phone is not contraband; therefore, defendant’s cell phone should have been returned to him upon his initial release.
But that's not what happened. The PD instead decided to hold onto Meakens' phone for nearly sixteen months. It was only shortly before the trial began that officers finally sought a warrant and performed a search of the seized phone.
When the government was asked why it had taken so long to seek a warrant, it claimed that the delay was irrelevant. After all, taking a person's phone away for sixteen months hardly inconveniences them. Also Meakens was in jail where he wouldn't have access to it anyway.