What are the facts?
Acting on a tip that Michael Riley was growing marijuana on his rural Florida property, a sheriff's deputy went to Riley's residence, where a mobile home sat with a greenhouse behind it within the home's curtilage. The area was fenced and surrounded by trees, and the greenhouse's sides were enclosed; however, several roof panels were missing or displaced, leaving openings. From ground level outside the property, the deputy could not see inside the greenhouse. He then conducted aerial surveillance in a helicopter at approximately 400 feet above the property, which is permitted for helicopters under Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) regulations so long as the flight does not pose a hazard. From that vantage point, and using only his naked eye, the deputy looked through the roof openings and observed what he believed to be marijuana. The helicopter's presence did not cause undue wind, dust, or other disruption, and the officer did not physically intrude onto the property. Based on the aerial observations, the deputy obtained a search warrant. Execution of the warrant revealed marijuana plants in the greenhouse, and Riley was charged. Riley moved to suppress the evidence, arguing the aerial surveillance was an unconstitutional warrantless search of his curtilage. The Florida Supreme Court agreed and suppressed the evidence. The U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari.
What is the legal issue?
Does police observation of the curtilage of a home from a helicopter at 400 feet, using only the naked eye and without a warrant, constitute a search under the Fourth Amendment?
What rule applies?
Under Katz, a search occurs if the government violates a subjective expectation of privacy that society recognizes as reasonable. Applying that test to aerial surveillance of curtilage, observation from aircraft in public navigable airspace using the naked eye generally is not a search if (1) the flight occurs at an altitude and in a manner used by the public with sufficient regularity such that the area is exposed to public view, and (2) the surveillance is not unduly intrusive (e.g., causing significant noise, wind, dust, threat of injury, or physical interference). Compliance with FAA regulations is relevant but not dispositive of whether the expectation of privacy is reasonable. (Justice O'Connor's concurring opinion provides the controlling, narrowest grounds under Marks v. United States.)
What did the court hold?
No. Observing Riley's greenhouse from a helicopter at 400 feet did not constitute a Fourth Amendment search under the circumstances; therefore, the warrant based on those observations was valid and the evidence need not be suppressed.
What is the reasoning?
Plurality (White, joined by Rehnquist, Scalia, and Kennedy): Riley did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy against naked-eye aerial observation from 400 feet because any member of the public could legally fly at that altitude. The greenhouse roof was partially open, making its interior visible from above. The helicopter did not interfere with Riley's property or life in a manner that would render the surveillance itself a search. Consistent with Ciraolo (fixed-wing aircraft at 1,000 feet), observation from lawful airspace that reveals what is visible to the naked eye does not intrude upon a constitutionally protected reasonable expectation of privacy, even in the curtilage. Controlling concurrence (O'Connor): FAA legality alone is not dispositive; the correct inquiry is whether the vantage point was one the public uses with sufficient regularity that Riley could not reasonably expect privacy from aerial observation at that altitude. Additionally, whether the surveillance was unduly intrusive matters. On the record here, Riley failed to show that helicopter flights at 400 feet were so rare as to make his expectation of privacy reasonable, and the helicopter did not unduly disrupt the property. Thus, no search occurred, but the analysis should turn on public usage and intrusiveness, not simply FAA compliance. Dissents (Brennan, joined by Marshall and Stevens; Blackmun separately): The dissenters argued that a homeowner who has shielded his curtilage from ground view retains a reasonable expectation of privacy from targeted, low-altitude aerial surveillance that is unusual, noisy, and potentially disruptive. They cautioned against converting the mere legality of flight into a blanket license for warrantless surveillance and emphasized that curtilage is afforded special constitutional protection. In their view, the helicopter's low altitude and the artificial vantage used to peer through roof gaps made the surveillance a search.
Why is this case significant?
Florida v. Riley refines the Fourth Amendment analysis for aerial surveillance after Ciraolo and Dow Chemical. Because the decision lacks a single majority opinion, Justice O'Connor's concurrence is the controlling rule: courts should ask whether the public commonly occupies the vantage point and whether the surveillance was unduly intrusive, with FAA regulations as a non-dispositive data point. The case underscores that even curtilage may be exposed to lawful aerial observation, but it preserves meaningful limits tied to common public use and intrusiveness. For students and practitioners, Riley is essential for understanding the Katz framework in nontraditional contexts, how to apply Marks to fractured opinions, and how evolving technologies (e.g., helicopters, drones, sensors) may recalibrate reasonable expectations of privacy.
How does Florida v. Riley differ from California v. Ciraolo?
Ciraolo involved observation of a backyard from a fixed-wing aircraft at 1,000 feet and held that no search occurred because the flight was in public navigable airspace and the view was from a commonly used vantage. Riley involved a helicopter at 400 feet observing through roof openings into a curtilage greenhouse. Riley adds nuance: compliance with FAA rules is not alone determinative; courts must examine whether the public actually uses the vantage with sufficient regularity and whether the surveillance is unduly intrusive. Thus, Riley narrows Ciraolo's emphasis on lawful airspace by conditioning reasonableness on public usage and intrusiveness.
What is the controlling opinion in Riley, and why?
There was no majority opinion. A four-Justice plurality concluded that observation at 400 feet was not a search largely because the vantage was legal and nonintrusive. Justice O'Connor concurred in the judgment but rejected the idea that FAA compliance alone resolves the case. Under the Marks rule, when there is no majority, the narrowest grounds supporting the judgment control. O'Connor's concurrence is narrower and thus controlling: the reasonableness of a privacy expectation turns on common public use of the vantage point and on the intrusiveness of the surveillance, with FAA regulations as relevant but not dispositive.
Did the missing roof panels in the greenhouse matter to the outcome?
Yes, they mattered as part of the expectation-of-privacy analysis. The plurality emphasized that the greenhouse interior was visible through roof openings, indicating that Riley had not fully shielded the area from aerial view. While that is not dispositive—because even shielded curtilage can be vulnerable to aerial observation—the openings made it more reasonable to conclude that what was seen from a lawful, commonly used vantage was exposed to public view. Under Justice O'Connor's test, the roof gaps matter only in conjunction with the frequency of public flights and the nonintrusiveness of the observation.
Would the analysis change if the helicopter hovered at 100 feet or caused significant noise and wind?
Likely yes. Under the controlling concurrence, the lower the altitude, the less likely it is that the public commonly occupies that vantage. If a helicopter hovered at very low altitude or caused significant noise, wind, dust, or safety risks, a court could deem the surveillance unduly intrusive and thus a search. The key is whether the vantage is one the public uses with sufficient regularity and whether the manner of observation imposes a meaningful intrusion beyond mere visual observation from lawful airspace.
How does Riley inform modern questions about drone surveillance?
Riley's controlling framework focuses on whether the public commonly uses the vantage point and on intrusiveness. Drones can operate at very low altitudes and are becoming more common, which may affect whether an expectation of privacy from overhead observation is reasonable. However, persistent, targeted, or technologically enhanced surveillance (e.g., zoom lenses, thermal imaging, or long-term monitoring) raises distinct concerns under Katz, Kyllo, Carpenter, and mosaic theories. Many jurisdictions also regulate drones by statute or provide greater protection under state constitutions, so Riley is a starting point, not the final word.