Opinion by
The Commonwealth s Department of Environmental Resources (Department) appeals an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County which arrested judgment against Blosenski Disposal Service, the appellee.
On August 17, 1982, Frank Holmes, in his capacity as a solid waste specialist of the Department and while on a public highway, noticed a truck bearing the appellees name entering a concrete building also used by the appellee. Holmes knew that the building was a transfer station, a facility used to compact waste so that it might be loaded onto a large tractor-trailer for ultimate disposal. Holmes also knew that, while the appellee had applied for a permit to operate the transfer station as required by Section 201 of the Solid Waste Management Act (Act), Act of July 7, 1980, PL. 380, 35 PS. §6018.201 (Supp. 1987), no permit had been granted by the Department. The truck appeared to be full with bags of trash piled onto the back.
When the truck backed into the concrete building in such a position that it could dump waste into the compactor, Holmes could no longer see what was actually being done. As a result, Holmes exited from his car, entered the private property on which the concrete building was located and ultimately entered the concrete building, all without obtaining a search warrant. Once inside the building, Holmes saw that the truck was empty and that a load of trash was in the compacting unit. The Department thereafter initiated a prosecution alleging a violation of the Act.
*196 The appellee was initially convicted by a district justice. The appellee thereafter filed a de novo appeal to the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County. On February 26, 1984, the date scheduled for trial, the appellee filed a motion to suppress the testimony of Holmes because he had entered private property occupied by the appellee without first obtaining a warrant. The Department objected to the filing of the motion to suppress, arguing that it was untimely. The court overruled the Departments objection, held a hearing on the matter and orally denied the motion to suppress, stating on the record that the waste disposal industry was so regulated that one. engaged therein had no reasonable expectation of privacy to be protected by either the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution or Article 1, §8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution.
A non-jury trial was subsequently held and the appellee was found guilty of violating Section 201 of the Act. The court denied appellees post-verdict motions. Before judgment of sentence could be entered, the appellee filed an appeal to this Court. In an unreported order of November 20, 1985, we dismissed the appellees appeal and remanded the matter to the trial court for the imposition of sentence. The appellee then requested reconsideration of the trial courts ruling on post-verdict motions in light of this Courts decision in
Commonwealth v.
Fiore,
The Department first argues that the original suppression motion filed on February 28, 1984 was untimely and should not have been Considered. The Rules of Criminal Procedure provide, “Except as otherwise
*197
provided in these rules, the omnibus pretrial motion for relief shall be filed and served within thirty (30) days after arraignment. . . .” Pa. R. Crim. P. 307. In
Commonwealth v. Cornelius,
In
Fiore,
the issue presented involved the Departments right to make a warrantless entry onto the premises where hazardous waste was being disposed of. The Department relied upon provisions contained in Section 608 of the Act and in Section 5(b)(8) of the Clean Streams Law, Act of June 27, 1937, P.L. 1987,
as amended,
35 P.S. §691.5(b)(8) (Supp. 1987), which allegedly authorized warrantless administrative searches of the premises. We recognized that some such administrative searches were constitutional as long as the law giving such authority provided a predictable inspection scheme.
Donovan v. Dewey,
The Department makes a number of arguments concerning our decision in
Fiore
and the Supreme Court’s decision in
Lutz.
1
Discussion of these questions, however, is unnecessary in light of
Illinois v. Krull,
480 U.S. ,
It, therefore, matters not whether
Fiore
or
Lutz
were correctly decided in accordance with the United States Constitution, as Holmes, the agent involved in this case, made his warrantless entry onto the property
*199
being used by the appellee in reliance upon provisions which at that time were presumed to be constitutional. While it is true that a state court can interpret that states constitution to afford greater protections than required by the federal constitution,
Commonwealth v. Harris,
Order
Now, October 9, 1987, the order of the Court of Common Pleas, dated December 23, 1985, arresting judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for the imposition of sentence.
Jurisdiction relinquished.
Notes
The United States Supreme Court, on March 24, 1987, granted the Departments petition for a writ of certiorari and vacated the judgment in
Lutz,
remanding the case for consideration in light of
United States v. Dunn,
