Iowa v. Amble, No. 23-2114 (Iowa June 13, 2025)
Iowa v. Amble, No. 23-2114 (Iowa June 13, 2025)
No. 23–2114
State of Iowa,
Appellant,
vs.
Appellees.
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Michael D. Huppert,
judge.
The State appeals the district court’s ruling declaring Iowa Code
Waterman, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices
Waterman, Justice.
for collection? A divided court said yes in State v. Wright, 961 N.W.2d 396, 400,
415–19 (Iowa 2021), based on the search and seizure clause in article I, section 8
of the Iowa Constitution and a local antiscavenging ordinance that allowed only
licensed solid waste collectors to pick up the garbage. The legislature responded
by enacting Iowa Code section 808.16 (2023), which provides that such garbage
the curb for collection. The trash pulls revealed evidence of drug dealing that the
police used to obtain a warrant to search the home, where additional evidence
was found. Two occupants were charged criminally and moved to suppress the
granted their suppression motions, ruling that the entire statute is facially
in Wright. We granted the State’s motion for discretionary review. The State
argues that section 808.16 is constitutional facially and as applied under Wright.
On our review, we conclude that the district court erred in granting the
protection does not apply to abandoned property. Wright relied on the municipal
antiscavenging ordinance to hold that the defendant’s garbage placed out for
3
collection was “not yet abandoned.” 961 N.W.2d at 415–16. Such ordinances
effectively have now been preempted by Iowa Code section 808.16(3), which
applied in this case and lawfully authorized the trash pulls at issue. We therefore
reverse the district court’s ruling and remand the case for further proceedings.
his assignment with the Mid-Iowa Narcotics Enforcement Task Force (MINE). In
June 2023, he received a tip from a concerned citizen about “possible drug
activity” at a specific house in the 2000 block of 38th Street in Des Moines. Frick
investigated and determined that the house had three occupants: Teresa Amble,
her husband Charles Amble, and John Mandracchia. Teresa owned the home,
and the utilities were in Charles’s name. Mandracchia and Teresa had no
criminal records, while Charles had two criminal convictions in 2011 for failing
July 3, Frick went to the 38th Street address at 5:15 a.m. and retrieved a white
garbage bag from a trash bin set out by the curb. Frick searched the contents of
the garbage bag and found paperwork from Walgreens for Charles, as well as
small baggies and a pound-size package with THC labels that field-tested positive
for marijuana. He concluded that the pound-sized package, together with smaller
On July 10, Frick returned to the location at 5:00 a.m. He pulled out two
white garbage bags that contained an Amazon package addressed to Teresa and
three baggies that field-tested positive for marijuana. He delivered this evidence
On July 17, Frick returned at 5:05 a.m. He retrieved two black garbage
and two packages designed for THC products. The THC vape cartridge field-
tested positive for marijuana. As Frick later explained, the THC vape cartridge
Frick took this evidence to the MINE office. Frick conducted all three trash pulls
at the public street curb outside the curtilage of the 38th Street house.
Relying on the evidence obtained from these trash pulls, Frick applied for
and obtained a search warrant for the 38th Street house. Officers executed the
warrant and found additional evidence of drug distribution inside the home.
garbage bags as well as the evidence obtained by the search of the house as
fruits of the poisonous tree. The district court held a hearing on the motions.
5
Neither the State nor the defendants called any witnesses. The State conceded
that if the searches of the garbage bags were unconstitutional, then the search
warrant for the 38th Street house was invalid because the evidence found in the
trash pulls had provided the probable cause justifying the warrant to search the
home. Similarly, the defendants conceded that if the trash pulls were
constitutional, then the search warrant was supported by probable cause. As the
district court succinctly summarized the parties’ positions, “trash rips, good;
Constitution.” The State argued that Iowa Code section 808.16 authorized
Frick’s trash pulls consistent with Wright. The defendants responded by arguing
The district court ruled that Iowa Code section 808.16 is facially
unconstitutional in its entirety, and the evidence obtained from the garbage bags
and the search of the house must be suppressed. The district court ruled that
the legislature violated the separation of powers doctrine when it enacted Iowa
which the district court denied. The State then filed an application for
constitutional on its face and as applied. Specifically, the State asserts that
“Wright explained that the positive law sets expectations for privacy under the
Iowa Constitution, and the district court erred by interpreting Wright as instead
constitutionalizing the then-existing positive law.” The State reasons that Iowa
Code section 808.16 amends the currently existing positive law that undergirds
The defendants argue that the district court’s ruling was correct.
argues that “there is no other way to interpret the legislature[’]s actions other
argue that the legislature overstepped by enacting a statute that “violates the
correctly decided and should not be overruled because “nothing is different today
than it was when Wright was decided just three years ago.” We retained the case.
64 (Iowa 2024). “We independently evaluate the entire record and consider the
7
totality of the circumstances.” Id. (quoting State v. Bauler, 8 N.W.3d 892, 897
(Iowa 2024)). “We defer to the findings of fact made by the district court, ‘but we
III. Analysis.
The State argues that the garbage Detective Frick searched without a
warrant was abandoned property under Iowa Code section 808.16(3). The
defendants argue that the district court correctly ruled that the entire statute is
unconstitutional under Wright because their garbage included their “papers and
which states,
(Emphasis added.)
police. See 961 N.W.2d at 415–17. The legislature promptly responded to Wright
by enacting Iowa Code section 808.16. A state statute generally will preempt a
conflicting local ordinance. See City of Davenport v. Seymour, 755 N.W.2d 533,
N.W.2d 486, 499 (Iowa 2022). “[T]he Iowa Supreme Court ‘is the final arbiter’ of
what the Iowa Constitution means.” State v. Burns, 988 N.W.2d 352, 360 (Iowa
2023) (quoting West v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 311 U.S. 223, 236 (1940)). We must
decide whether the district court erred by ruling that Iowa Code section 808.16
We begin with the text of the challenged statute. Iowa Code section 808.16
provides:
This statute was enacted in the next legislative session after Wright. See
2022 Iowa Acts ch. 1022 (codified at Iowa Code § 808.16). The obvious purpose
warrantless searches of garbage placed out for collection in a public area not
within the curtilage of a private home.1 To achieve that goal, the statute employs
providing that such garbage is deemed abandoned, id. § 808.16(3); and (4) by
providing that police officers may search such garbage without a warrant, id.
§ 808.16(4). The statute further declares that such garbage “shall not be
1Until Wright, Iowa law enforcement routinely conducted warrantless trash pulls based
on federal and Iowa precedent holding that garbage left curbside for collection was unprotected
by the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 8 of the Iowa
Constitution. See California v. Greenwood, 486 U.S. 35, 40–41(1988) (Fourth Amendment);
State v. Henderson, 435 N.W.2d 394, 396–97 (Iowa Ct. App. 1988) (article I, section 8), overruled
by, Wright, 961 N.W.2d 396.
10
§ 808.16(3).
Guardianship of L.Y., 968 N.W.2d 882, 892 (Iowa 2022)); see also Iowa Code
Constitutions of the state and of the United States is intended.”). The defendants
argued, and the district court ruled, that section 808.16 is unconstitutional on
its face. “ ‘A facial challenge asserts the law always operates unconstitutionally
and not just as applied in particular circumstances,’ making it the most difficult
challenge a plaintiff can mount.” Summit Carbon Sols., 14 N.W.3d at 126 (quoting
League of United Latin Am. Citizens of Iowa v. Pate, 950 N.W.2d 204, 209 (Iowa
2020) (per curiam)). “If there is any set of facts where the statute could be held
constitutional, we will reject the facial challenge.” Id. Facial challenges are
disfavored for good reasons. See Singer v. City of Orange City, 15 N.W.3d 70, 77
(Iowa 2024).
challenged warrantless trash pulls. See Breeden v. Iowa Dep’t of Corr., 887
property . . . .” Iowa Code § 808.16(3). In our view, this provision fits comfortably
within the legislature’s broad police power over public health, safety, and welfare.
See generally Gravert v. Nebergall, 539 N.W.2d 184, 186 (Iowa 1995) (“Police
power refers to the legislature’s broad, inherent power to pass laws that promote
the public health, safety, and welfare.”); see also Garrison v. New Fashion Pork
LLP, 977 N.W.2d 67, 85 (Iowa 2022) (applying deferential review to legislative
in Wright precludes the legislature from conclusively declaring that Iowans have
abandoned any ownership rights in trash they placed in garbage cans for
abandoned” his papers and effects that he put in his garbage can for collection.
961 N.W.2d at 415–16 (“Until such time as the garbage bags were collected by a
licensed collector and commingled with other garbage, Wright had not yet
abandoned the property.”); see also id. at 416–17 (relying on the antiscavenging
ordinance to conclude that the officer’s “warrantless seizures and searches were
2See,e.g., Iowa Code § 163.3D (abandoned animals); id. § 321.89 (abandoned vehicles);
id. § 455B.171(1) (abandoned wells); id. § 457A.3 (abandoned conservation easements); id.
§ 548.101(1) (abandoned trademarks); id. § 556G.1 (abandoned dry cleaning); id. § 657A.1
(abandoned buildings).
3We adhere to the constitutional avoidance doctrine and refrain from addressing the
constitutionality of the remaining language in Iowa Code section 808.16(3), which declares that
such garbage “shall not be considered to be constitutionally protected papers or effects of the
person.” That assertion logically follows abandonment, but it is our role, not the legislature’s, to
determine the constitutional protection afforded to papers and effects. That language is
severable. See Breedon, 887 N.W.2d at 608–09 (addressing severability and constitutional
avoidance).
12
effects” in his not-yet abandoned garbage); id. at 417 (noting that the officer was
bound to obey the antiscavenging ordinance and stating that “where municipal
unauthorized persons from tampering with trash, the ordinances ‘should bring
with them the protection of the Fourth Amendment’ ” (quoting Baude & Stern,
of the defendant’s reasonable expectation of privacy in his garbage placed out for
collection:
Id. at 419. Conversely, the subsequent enactment of Iowa Code section 808.16(3)
a local ordinance, can define private property rights and thereby affect the
abandoned or not. And so, consistent with Wright, a change in the positive law
can make a difference. That is where the subsequent enactment of Iowa Code
13
support a finding that garbage placed outside defendants’ property for collection
is not yet abandoned. No longer may defendants claim that an officer conducting
a trash pull has committed a trespass. And no longer may defendants claim a
any inconsistent local ordinance as a matter of state property law. See Seymour,
(including any papers or effects tossed out with it) has been abandoned as a
search abandoned property. Abel v. United States, 362 U.S. 217, 241 (1960);
Burns, 988 N.W.2d at 367–68; State v. Bumpus, 459 N.W.2d 619, 625 (Iowa
1990).
in section 808.16, which in our view are severable. See Breeden, 887 N.W.2d
at 608–09.4
4In State v. Lowman, the Iowa District Court for Marion County took the same approach
that we do today. No. FECR033048 (Iowa Dist. Ct. May 2, 2024), appeal filed, No. 24–1388
(Aug. 29, 2024). In that case, the district court denied a motion to suppress evidence of
methamphetamine dealing obtained in a warrantless trash pull and rejected a constitutional
challenge to the abandonment provision in Iowa Code section 808.16(3). Judge Faith reasoned:
[T]he Defendant articulates no reason and cites no authority for the proposition
that the legislature cannot define circumstances in which property may be
deemed legally abandoned. Indeed, if the court can consider positive law in the
form of local garbage ordinances to establish when property is not abandoned,
and these ordinances are not an intrusion on the Court’s constitutional authority,
it is hard to conceive of an intellectually consistent rationale for finding it
unconstitutional for the state to enact positive law to establish when property is
abandoned. In either case, the law in question does not define a constitutional
right but provides a positive legal context for whether the owner’s act should be
construed as abandonment. The court need not determine if other portions of the
statute are constitutional since only the “deemed abandon[ed]” language is needed
for the present analysis.
14
abandoned a beverage straw he had used and voluntarily left behind after dining
in a public restaurant. 988 N.W.2d at 363–64. We held that the straw containing
his DNA was no longer his “effect” entitled to constitutional protection under
follows:
and Mandracchia had abandoned their papers and effects in the garbage they
set out for collection, no constitutional violation occurred when Detective Frick
searched the garbage bags without a warrant. Police lawfully used that evidence
to establish probable cause for the validly issued warrant to search the Amble
house. The district court erred by granting the defendants’ motions to suppress.6
Based on the foregoing, this court concludes that the trash placed out for
collection by the Defendant, under the facts and positive legal framework of this
case, was bona vacantia, abandoned, and therefore was not his papers or effects
at the time they were seized and searched.
Id. at 5–6.
5Wealso noted that Iowa Code section 729.6(3)(c)(2) allows law enforcement to collect and
analyze DNA to “identify an individual in the course of a criminal investigation.” Burns, 988
N.W.2d at 367 (quoting Iowa Code § 729.6(3)(c)(2)). Based on that positive law, we determined
that “Burns could have no reasonable expectation that Iowa law enforcement would refrain from
using his DNA in their efforts to identify [the victim’s] killer.” Id. Similarly, Iowa Code section
808.16(3) defeats any reasonable expectation of privacy in garbage placed out for collection on a
public curb.
6Statev. Kuuttila, 965 N.W.2d 484, 486–87 (Iowa 2021), and State v. Hahn, 961 N.W.2d
370, 372 (Iowa 2021), applied Wright without altering its positive law analysis. Both predated the
enactment of section 808.16. Going forward, our decision today is the controlling precedent for
reviewing trash pulls.
15
We determine that under the newly enacted and controlling statute, Iowa
papers and effects they placed in the trash curbside for collection on July 3, 10,
and 17, 2023, including the THC vape cartridge and the packaging and baggies
with trace amounts of marijuana. Put another way, those items were no longer
“their” effects at the time of the trash pulls and therefore were unprotected by
the search and seizure clause of article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution. See
Wright, 961 N.W.2d at 415 (observing that a police officer’s search of garbage
“would be inconsequential if the papers and effects did not belong” to the
defendant).
The State urges our court to decide this appeal by harmonizing Iowa Code
section 808.16 with Wright. We have resolved the appeal on that basis. We
therefore do not reach the State’s alternative argument that Wright should be
v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 936 N.W.2d 634, 645 n.4 (Iowa 2019) (“We do not ordinarily
overrule our precedent sua sponte.” (quoting Est. of McFarlin v. State, 881
IV. Disposition.
ruling and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
All justices concur except McDermott, J., who files a dissenting opinion.
16
With the passing of a statute declaring that trash left out for collection is
protection that the Iowa Constitution provides is what the legislature confers by
statute—then Wright’s demise today is no loss at all. The three justices who wrote
vigorous dissents in Wright certainly seemed to have thought that Wright stood
for something more consequential or enduring. Because I reject the notion that
the new statute requires us to find that the defendants have no privacy interest
in their trash, and I would hold instead that the defendants’ trash was protected
The district court, relying on Wright, held that the officer’s warrantless
search of the defendants’ trash in this case violated article I, section 8, of the
Iowa Constitution. That provision states: “The right of the people to be secure in
their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable seizures and
searches shall not be violated; and no warrant shall issue but on probable cause,
searched, and the persons and things to be seized.” Id. Among the evils that the
or property for evidence of wrongdoing without specifying what they were looking
17
for or why they had suspicion to search. See Sanders v. State, 2 Clarke 230, 239
(Iowa 1855). The officer did not possess a warrant to search the defendants’ trash
in this case.
trash bin left out for collection violated article I, section 8. 961 N.W.2d 396,
analysis. Id. We first considered whether the search violated “positive law,”
referring to some enacted law or legal doctrine recognized by courts. Id. In Wright,
a municipal ordinance where the defendant lived made it a crime for anyone
other than a licensed trash collector to access a trash bin. Id. We concluded that
in light of the ordinance, the officer committed a trespass by searching the trash
without a warrant and thus violated the constitution. Id. at 417. We separately
expectation of privacy in their trash left out for collection and held that the
officer’s warrantless search thus violated the constitution under this rationale
The majority in this case holds that a different law—a statute enacted after
left out for collection is constitutionally permissible. But the majority fails to
recognize that it is our role, not the legislature’s, to construe the Iowa
reasonable-expectation-of-privacy test.
holding in Wright and to ensure that warrantless searches of trash do not violate
this state” that people cannot have a reasonable expectation of privacy in trash
placed out for collection. Id. § 808.16(1). But the legislature’s disagreement with
trash and our conclusion that a warrantless search of trash thus violates
and apply the constitution in cases before us. See State v. Burns, 988 N.W.2d
352, 360 (Iowa 2023) (“[T]he Iowa Supreme Court is the ‘final arbiter’ of what the
Iowa Constitution means.” (quoting West v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 311 U.S. 223,
236 (1940))); Richardson v. Fitzgerald, 109 N.W. 866, 867 (Iowa 1906) (“As every
expound, and of the executive to enforce, the laws, and any direction by the
plain violation of the Constitution.”) The statute’s assertion of what public policy
is doesn’t decide for us the constitutional question. Subsection (1) of the statute
Subsection (2) begins with a statement that a city or county may only
regulate waste management to promote “public health and cleanliness,” but then
Iowa Code § 808.16(2). The first part of subsection (2) limiting city or county
proper legislative prerogative, offers nothing relevant to the analysis in this case.
The second part of subsection (2) simply asserts, again, that trash ordinances or
19
for collection. This is ineffectual for the same reasons offered about subsection
(1).
Skipping subsection (3) for the moment, subsection (4) declares that an
officer may search and seize trash left out for collection “without making an
of privacy in trash—and that officers thus need a warrant under the requirement
in article I, section 8 to lawfully search it—does not override our court’s authority
to decide the constitutional question in cases before us. Subsection (4) of the
Subsection (3) states that trash placed out for collection “shall be deemed
papers or effects of the person.” Id. § 808.16(3). The majority concludes that this
provision that the majority pins its holding. The majority holds that no warrant
8 does not apply to this case at all, in other words, because the trash in John
statute said so. And because it was abandoned property, the argument goes, the
But it is for the court, not the legislature, to determine whether conduct is
meaning of the constitution’s terms and “is the final arbiter of what the Iowa
20
(Iowa 1975). The text of article I, section 8 divides the analysis into four
questions: (1) Is the subject of the alleged intrusion a person, house, paper, or
effect? (2) If so, was it searched or seized? (3) If so, was it the defendant’s (“their”)
person, house, paper, or effect? (4) If so, was the search or seizure unreasonable?
See Orin S. Kerr, Katz as Originalism, 71 Duke L.J. 1047, 1052 (2022). Whether
dimension reserved for the court in cases before it. “It is emphatically the
province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.” Marbury v.
use of the Governor’s constitutional line-item veto power. 421 N.W.2d 130, 132
(Iowa 1988) (en banc). The text of the constitution limits the Governor’s use of
the line-item veto to “an appropriation bill.” Id. at 131 (quoting Iowa Const. art.
III, § 16). The legislators argued that the Governor exercised the veto on
legislation that was not an “appropriation bill.” Id. at 134. In support, the
legislators pointed to a statute enacted in the next legislative session that defined
the term “appropriation bill” in a way that supported their argument. Id. But we
rejected that argument, stating that the constitutional question was “not within
the province of the legislature to decide.” Id. “Whatever purposes the legislative
definition of ‘appropriation bill’ may serve, it does not settle the constitutional
The legislature could not, for instance, end-run the Fifth Amendment to
the United States Constitution’s protection against the taking of private property
21
entity wants to take private land to build a road, that land “shall not be deemed
private property” under the law and thus no compensation for the taking is
required. Likewise, the legislature could not end-run the constitutional right to
keep and bear arms by passing a statute saying that rifles are not “arms” and
thus a statutory restriction on owning a rifle does not implicate article I, section
dimension reserved for the court, so too is whether property constitutes the
about abandonment does not, and cannot, control our court’s interpretation and
application of the meaning of “their effects” in this case. See Junkins, 421 N.W.2d
constitution would instead be “on a level with ordinary legislative acts, and like
other acts, . . . alterable when the legislature shall please to alter it.” Id. Shifting
amendment process that the Iowa Constitution itself mandates in article X. “The
very purpose of a Bill of Rights was to withdraw certain subjects from the
and officials and to establish them as legal principles to be applied by the courts.”
W. Va. State Bd. of Educ. v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624, 638 (1943) (Jackson, J.). The
22
multiple fronts.
N.W.2d at 417–19; see also State v. Kuuttila, 965 N.W.2d 484, 486–87
(Iowa 2021) (explaining “[b]oth rationales” on which Wright’s holding relied). The
Versus Violations, 105 Iowa L. Rev. 2169, 2174 (2020)). Quoting the LaFave
treatise, we stated that “the mere fact that a citizen elects to dispose of his
Search and Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment § 2.6(c), at 933 (6th ed.
2020)).
We have relied on this rationale two other times. See State v. Hahn, 961
N.W.2d 370, 372 (Iowa 2021); Kuuttila, 965 N.W.2d at 486–87. In State v. Hahn,
23
unreasonable and thus unconstitutional seizure and search when they seized
and searched garbage bags left out for collection without first obtaining a
warrant.” Hahn, 961 N.W.2d at 372. We concluded that “[t]he same rationale”
applied to the trash search in Hahn and remanded the case. Id. But unlike in
Wright, where the city had an ordinance preventing a person from intermeddling
with another’s trash bin, no mention of an ordinance (or any other positive law)
appears in Hahn. See id. at 371–72. And although the city in State v. Kuuttila
had an ordinance, we also made clear that “[b]oth rationales” from Wright—
meaning the positive law and the reasonable expectation of privacy test—applied.
965 N.W.2d at 486–87. The majority relegates Hahn and Kuuttila to a footnote
and claims that today’s decision “is the controlling precedent for reviewing trash
The positive law is one, but certainly not the only, approach that we
seizure rights. See Orin S. Kerr, Four Models of Fourth Amendment Protection, 60
Stan. L. Rev. 503, 506, 519 (2007). We said as much in Wright: “Of course, this
is not to say article I, section 8 rises and falls based on a particular municipal
law. Municipal laws, like all positive laws, are merely one form of evidence of the
limits of a peace officer’s authority to act without a warrant.” 961 N.W.2d at 417.
violation has occurred. See Hahn, 961 N.W.2d at 372; see also Katz v. United
private details of life.” 961 N.W.2d at 418. Private information about our families,
Greeting cards, bank statements, church bulletins, voter registration cards, loan
prescription bottles—all potentially appear in our trash and all potentially reveal
private details about us. Information that is independently protected by law can
be revealed in one’s trash, too. An empty pill bottle reveals protected health
information not otherwise obtainable without violating state law. See Iowa Code
§ 22.7(13). The same holds true for a student’s school records. See id. § 22.7(1).
and thus no longer their “effect.” See State v. Bumpus, 459 N.W.2d 619, 625
whether the alleged abandonment was voluntary. Id. Under Iowa law,
property and has voluntarily relinquished all right, title and interest in the
property.” Benjamin v. Lindner Aviation, Inc., 534 N.W.2d 400, 406 (Iowa 1995)
(en banc). Because people have little choice but to put their trash out for
25
residential trash.
Unlike today, people at the time of Iowa’s founding disposed of their trash
on their own and thus could rid themselves of it without exposing it to others.
At the time, municipal trash collection was still largely a thing of the future.
Municipal trash collection efforts started around the mid-1800s, when it became
clear that accumulating garbage was having harmful health effects. Martin V.
Melosi, The Sanitary City: Environmental Services in Urban America from Colonial
Times to the Present 28 (abr. ed. 2008) [hereinafter Melosi, The Sanitary City].
haphazard at best.” See Ann E. Carlson, Recycling Norms, 89 Cal. L. Rev. 1231,
1254–55 (2001).
Sanitary City at 114. The items Americans were consuming were also beginning
Abandon, 109 Mich. L. Rev. 191, 214–15 (2010) [hereinafter Peñalver]. With more
the 1880s, “[t]he ‘garbage problem’ began to receive public notoriety.” Melosi, The
Sanitary City, at 113. Cities at first struggled with how to go about collecting
Rural areas were slower adopters of municipal trash collection and instead
granted “some liberty to each citizen to select a disposal of his refuse most
Disposal of Municipal Refuse 618 (1921). People in these areas usually handled
26
their trash in a traditional agrarian way: they reused it, fed it to farm animals,
or would just let it accumulate. See, e.g., id.; Peñalver, 109 Mich. L. Rev. at 214–
15.
Iowa’s experience with trash collection seems to have been typical of the
sanitation practices. See Melosi, The Sanitary City, at 43–44. In 1880, the United
States Census incorporated this research into reports that it prepared on over
100 cities across the country. Id. at 119. The census collected sanitation practice
data from six Iowa cities: Burlington, Cedar Rapids, Council Bluffs, Davenport,
Des Moines, and Keokuk. George E. Waring, Jr., Dep’t of Interior, Report on the
Social Statistics of Cities, Part II: The Southern and the Western States 707–37
(photo. reprt. 1991) (1887). At the time, Davenport and Des Moines—the two
largest Iowa cities that had available data—were the only ones with a municipal
trash collection service. Id. at 723, 728. The other cities (Burlington, Cedar
Rapids, Council Bluffs, and Keokuk) permitted residents to do with their garbage
as they pleased. Id. at 710, 714, 717, 737. Des Moines, which had a population
of 22,408 people, used city workers to remove garbage, but residents were also
of the system. See 1986 Iowa Acts ch. 1245, §§ 1802, 1806 (codified at Iowa Code
that regulated the disposal of trash. See 1992 Iowa Acts ch. 1215, § 10 (codified
the state. Iowa Code §§ 455B.301(20), .307A(1) (1993). It also prohibited people
from placing their trash into other people’s trash bins. Id. § 455B.307A.
methods as well, including the burning of trash. See generally Iowa Admin. Code
id. r. 567—23.2(3)(a)–(j), certain cities, including Des Moines, cannot claim these
can preempt these exemptions. Id.; see also id. r. 567—23.2(3)(f). As a result,
even if the state does not prevent open burning in, say, Davenport, the City of
Davenport can impose its own prohibition, which it has. See Davenport, Iowa,
Municipal Code § 15.32.030(B) (2024) (“No person shall ignite . . . an open fire
In Des Moines, where the defendants in this case resided, the city provides
trash collection services. See Des Moines, Iowa, Code of Ordinances § 98-54
(2025). Unless the owner of a house or building can demonstrate that it’s
unoccupied and uninhabitable, the city will charge for trash collection whether
one sets their trash out for collection or not. Id. § 98-54(7). Des Moines residents
are forbidden from holding onto their trash, as the city’s ordinances prohibit the
hoarding of items on any premises in Des Moines. Id. § 98-60. Des Moines
residents also cannot dump their trash within the city. Id. § 54-176. Although
residents can take their trash to the landfill, doing so subjects even the person’s
vehicle used to transport the trash to random inspection. See Metro Waste Auth.,
landfill/rules--policies [https://perma.cc/4XTG-6L83].
28
(1) burn their trash, (2) hoard their trash, (3) dispose of their trash somewhere
within the city, (4) dump their trash into water or land owned by the state, or
(5) throw it in someone else’s trash bin. Short of burying it on their property (not
search of their vehicle), people in Des Moines effectively have one option for their
robberies. Id. at 301–02. The prosecutors applied for court orders under the
reasonable basis to believe that the records are relevant to an ongoing criminal
requested order under the Act, forcing Carpenter’s cellphone provider to turn
over the location information tied to his cellphone use during the period that
The United States Supreme Court held that the location information
obtained from the wireless carriers was the product of a search under the Fourth
Amendment. Id. at 315–16. The holding rested, in part, on the fact that although
constant GPS tracking data for a user, the user does not voluntarily disclose his
location by carrying a cellphone. Id. at 315. After noting how “pervasive and
insistent” cellphones are in contemporary life, the Court noted that “[a]part from
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disconnecting the phone from the network, there is no way to avoid leaving
behind a trail of location data.” Id. (quoting Riley v. California, 573 U.S. 373, 385
(2014)). The Court concluded that “in no meaningful sense does the user
In the same way, Mandracchia and Amble’s choice to set out their trash
for collection is hardly voluntary. Burying their trash (if they could) or driving it
cellphone. Id. Even shredding it doesn’t guarantee that the government won’t be
able to piece it back together. See, e.g., United States v. Scott, 975 F.2d 927, 928,
930 (1st Cir. 1992) (holding that IRS agents reconstructing shredded documents
they found in the defendant’s trash did not violate the Fourth Amendment). It
goes against reason, in any event, to suggest that the only way to maintain basic
When residents set out their trash, the situation is more akin to a
the trash: the trash collector. At a minimum, people maintain ownership over
the trash until the intended recipient (the trash collector) claims it.
owned by no one.” Peñalver, 109 Mich. L. Rev. at 196. A conveyance, on the other
hand, involves the conveyor’s “ability to direct the property toward a particular
person or group of people.” Id. at 198. When someone provides their property to
a repair person, for instance, the owner of the property does not necessarily lose
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their privacy interest in it. See Commonwealth v. Shaffer, 209 A.3d 957, 976–77
(Pa. 2019) (describing how a person’s privacy interest in their computer was not
abandoned when they gave it to a computer repair shop). The key difference is
that “[t]he intent required for abandonment is the intent to sever one’s ties of
III. Conclusion.
Because I reject the notion that the new statute requires a finding of
reasonable expectation of privacy in their trash. I would thus hold that the
warrantless trash search in this case violated article I, section 8 of the Iowa
Constitution, and I would affirm the district court’s ruling on this basis.