Michigan Just Got A New Twist In The Matthew Weiss Case

A judge's decision to suppress evidence in Matthew Weiss' hacking case marks a pivotal moment, potentially reshaping the legal landscape surrounding digital privacy and law enforcement practices.

A federal judge has trimmed a key piece of the government’s case against former Michigan football coordinator Matthew Weiss, tossing evidence gathered from an illegal search of computers and other devices at the University of Michigan while allowing prosecutors to keep evidence pulled from his iCloud account.

The ruling, released Wednesday, July 1, could matter a great deal as Weiss heads toward trial, which is set for Sept. 22.

But it is not a clean win for the defense. Judge David M.

Lawson rejected Weiss’ bid to suppress the iCloud evidence, saying that part of the investigation was lawful.

Weiss was indicted in March 2025, with federal prosecutors accusing him of hacking into computers and stealing photos and private information from more than 3,300 student athletes, mostly women, over an eight-year stretch from 2015-23. The FBI charged him with 14 counts of unauthorized access and 10 counts of aggravated identity theft.

The fight over the evidence centered on whether the early search by University of Michigan police violated the Fourth Amendment. Weiss argued that it did, and Lawson agreed at least in part, finding that the initial search of computers and other equipment from Schembechler Hall could not stand.

“The search warrants issued by the state magistrate are difficult to defend, as the government appears to acknowledge, but the information is admissible, the government argues, because later-issued federal search warrants for most of the same electronic devices cured the constitutional defects in the state warrants," Lawson wrote in his latest opinion. "None of those arguments is persuasive, and the materials obtained from certain computers, tablets, and smart phones, identified below, will not be allowed into evidence.”

Lawson also rejected the government’s argument that the federal probe was separate enough from the original search to remain untouched. He described the challenged material as "fruit of the poisonous tree."

“The government cannot show that the initial illegal search had no effect in producing the FBI’s federal warrant," Lawson wrote. "While it is impossible to know for certain whether the FBI would have opened a federal investigation and sought a federal warrant if it never had been informed of the evidence obtained in the searches, it is fair to say that the FBI’s knowledge of the evidence made it more likely to pursue the investigation than it would have been otherwise."

Even with the suppression ruling, prosecutors still keep the iCloud evidence, which Lawson found was gathered legally.

The decision comes after another setback for Weiss in December, when a judge denied his request to throw out the aggravated identity theft counts - the charges that would carry the most prison time if he is convicted.

Weiss’ legal team did not immediately respond to the Free Press’ request for comment.

He is also facing a separate civil lawsuit brought by at least 74 women, who say Weiss hacked into their accounts and took personal data. That suit names Weiss along with former U-M coach Jim Harbaugh, former U-M president Santa Ono, and other school officials.

If convicted in the federal case, Weiss faces more than 70 years in prison.

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