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Federal Drug Wiretap Cases: Title III Interceptions
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Federal Drug Wiretap Cases: Title III Interceptions
Federal drug cases increasingly rely on wiretapped phone calls and electronic communications. Title III of the Wiretap Act sets strict requirements for intercepting communications—and violations can result in suppression of all intercepted evidence.
If your case involves wiretaps, understanding Title III requirements is essential because suppressing wiretap evidence can collapse the government’s case.
Title III Requirements
To obtain wiretap authorization, the government must show:
Probable cause: That specific individuals are committing specified offenses (including drug trafficking).
Necessity: That normal investigative techniques have been tried and failed, or reasonably appear unlikely to succeed, or would be too dangerous. This is the most commonly challenged requirement.
Minimization: That interceptions will be conducted to minimize capture of innocent conversations.
Particularity: Specific identification of persons, locations, and crimes.
The Necessity Requirement
Wiretaps are supposed to be last resort. The goverment must explain why traditional methods—surveillance, informants, undercover operations—were inadequate. Courts require genuine necessity showing, not just conclusory statements that other methods “wouldn’t work.”
Challenging necessity is often the strongest wiretap defense. Did agents actually try other methods? Were those efforts reasonable? Could they have built the case without wiretaps?
Minimization Challenges
Once wiretap is authorized, agents must minimize interception of non-pertinent conversations. If agents listened to clearly innocent calls without minimizing, suppression may result.
Scope Challenges
Wiretaps authorize interception of specified persons on specified phones regarding specified crimes. Evidence obtained outside that scope may be suppressible.
Fruit of the Poisonous Tree
If wiretaps were illegally obtained, all evidence derived from them may be suppressed—not just the recorded conversations, but searches and arrests based on wiretap information.
Defense Strategy
Review applications: Examine every wiretap application for necessity deficiencies.
Challenge execution: Review minimization procedures and scope limitations.
Expert testimony: Wiretap experts can identify procedural violations.
Motion practice: Comprehensive suppression motions challenging wiretaps can change case outcomes.
Get Help Now
Wiretap cases require meticulous review of Title III compliance. Violations that suppress evidence can transform winning government cases into dismissals. Call today. We’re here 24/7.

