Case Explained:This article breaks down the legal background, charges, and implications of Case Explained: Oregon Supreme Court reverses child sex abuse conviction on privacy groundsĀ – Legal Perspective
The Oregon Supreme Court on Thursday, March 26, overturned a Lane County manās conviction for encouraging child sex abuse, ruling that local authorities subjected him to a warrantless search when monitoring his use of a restaurantās free wireless internet network.Ā
In 2018 and 2019, Oakridge resident Randall De Witt Simons had accessed an A&W restaurantās wireless internet network which extended into the range of his own home in Lane County. The network required a terms of service agreement, which noted that the restaurant chain may cooperate with legal authorities in the investigation of an alleged crime or may disclose internet activity in response to lawful requests by authorities.Ā
After the restaurant owner discovered the suspicious activity, the business reported the information to local law enforcement who directed the owner to continue tracking Simonsā activity. The business gave authorities more than 250,000 activity logs of all the websites Simons had accessed, including those which a firewall had flagged forĀ āchild abuse images.ā
For more than a year, according to the ruling, law enforcement had the business track his activity and report it to an investigating officer, who eventually used that information to help secure a warrant and search Simonsā laptop in his home. A search of that laptop revealed that Simons, who is now 73, had accessed child pornography. He was charged and convicted on 15 counts of encouraging child sex abuse.
But in the courtās ThursdayĀ ruling, Justice Bronson D. James wrote that the way authorities and the restaurant chain went about that investigation ran afoul of the Oregon Constitution and its protections against unreasonable seizures, which extend to privacy in oneās internet browsing activities.Ā
The state had argued that Simons did not have privacy rights for his activity on the network and that A&W had not been acting as an agent of the state. But James wrote that constitutional protections are not forgone by using a public network or agreeing to terms of service agreements allowing law enforcement investigations.
āIt is a necessary concession of modern life that, to use the internet, one must access it through channels controlled by others, which make oneās browsing activity potentially viewable by third parties,ā the 39-page decision reads. āThat does not change the societal norm that a personās internet searches and browsing activities are reasonably considered to be private.ā
The justices partially reversed a 2023 Oregon Court of AppealsĀ rulingĀ which had found that Simons had no privacy interest in his internet activities performed on a third party network. The Oregon Supreme Court also sent the case back to a trial court for further consideration. That means the Lane County Circuit Court will reconsider Simonsā denied motion to challenge the information used to obtain the warrant and suppress evidence found through his internet activity on the network.Ā
The move casts fresh uncertainty on the future of Simonsā convictions. He has been incarcerated in the Umatilla-based Two Rivers Correction Institution since 2021, and prison records currently show his earliest possible release date is in 2030.Ā
āWe are still evaluating the Courtās opinion and the impact on the case,ā Lane County District Attorney Christopher Parosa said in an email. āWe should have some answers early next week.ā
Marta Hanson, a spokesperson for the Oregon Department of Justice, said the agency is committed to supporting justice and community safety when it represents the state for criminal appeals.
āWe respect the courtās ruling, which clarified the law governing these technologies and provides guidance to law enforcement for future criminal investigations,ā Hanson said in a statement. āWe will continue to advocate for rules that protect our community while honoring privacy rights.ā
A public defense attorney representing Simons declined to comment. A&W did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Friday.
The case also drew the attention of groups representing criminal defense attorneys and civil liberty advocates, including the American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon, which declined to comment.
The groups had pushed back on the search of Simonsā internet activity on the grounds of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which bars against unreasonable searches and seizures. They arguedĀ in a legal briefĀ that the Oregon Court of Appeals failed to understand that user agreements A&W used had āno meaningful distinction between a user of a businessās public Internet network like Simons and the millions of other Oregonians who use a paid Internet service.ā
āThe Court of Appealsā holding and reasoning advances an inconsistent and unsustainable standard for conducting the reasonable expectation of privacy analysis in the realm of Internet activity,ā the brief reads. āThere are important constitutional questions at stake in this case, and if this Court denies Simonsās petition, it risks jeopardizing closely held Fourth Amendment rights and creating a ācrazy quilt of the Fourth Amendment.āā
In a dissent, Justice Stephen K. Bushong did not dispute that authorities had conducted a warrantless search as argued in the majority opinion. However, he argued that Simons had accepted A&Wās network terms and that the search of his activity was limited to Simonsā use of the network to access child pornography.
āAlthough I share the majority opinionās concerns about police activities that unreasonably intrude upon the peopleās freedom from governmental scrutiny, I am not convinced that this limited collection of information by law enforcement violated any societal norms,ā Bushong wrote.Ā
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Shaanth Kodialam Nanguneri is a reporter based in Salem, Oregon covering Gov. Tina Kotek and the Oregon Legislature. He grew up in the Bay Area, California and went on to study at UCLA, reporting for the Daily Bruin until graduating in March 2025. Previously, he was a reporting intern covering criminal justice and health for CalMatters in Sacramento, California. He is always eager to tell stories that illuminate how complex and intricate policies from state government can help shape the lives of everyday Oregonians.
