delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question for decision in this appeal is whether the Court of Appeals erred in holding that the doctrine of inevitable discovery was inapplicable to support the trial court’s refusal to suppress evidence seized in a search purportedly lacking in probable cause. Finding the Court of Appeals’ holding erroneous, we will reverse.
The question stems from indictments charging James Sylvester Jones (Jones) with attempted possession of cocaine and possession of a firearm after having been convicted of a felony. In a bench trial, the court found Jones guilty of both offenses and sentenced him to serve a total of eight years in the penitentiary, with five and one-half years suspended.
In an unpublished opinion, the Court of Appeals affirmed the weapons conviction but reversed the cocaine conviction. We granted the Commonwealth an appeal from the reversal of the cocaine conviction. 1
The evidence shows that about 10:30 p.m. on July 23, 2000, Officer Brian O’Donnell of the Charlottesville Police Department and two fellow officers were on patrol in response to numerous complaints of drug sales occurring at a residence located at 321 Sixth Street, S.W., in Charlottesville. The officers approached the residence through the backyards of other homes and observed a group of men standing on the sidewalk in front of the residence.
When the officers came into view, the men ran. Officer O’Donnell flashed his light on Jones and saw that he had a gun in his right hand. O’Donnell yelled “[g]un” and ordered Jones to “[g]et on the ground.” O’Donnell
In the search, O’Donnell found in Jones’ right rear pants pocket a “knotted plastic bag containing nine off-white, rock-like substances.” At that point, O’Donnell arrested Jones for possession of drugs and transported him to the police station. There, after Jones had been advised of his Miranda 2 rights, he said that the rocks were cocaine worth approximately $120.00 and that he mixed the cocaine with marijuana. 2 3
Upon arrival at the police station but before interviewing Jones, Officer O’Donnell ran “a criminal history” on Jones, which, O’Donnell testified, he “would do in the normal ordinary course of business when [he finds] somebody in the possession of a firearm.” 4 Jones’ criminal history disclosed he had been found guilty as a juvenile of an offense that would be a felony if committed by an adult. He was then charged with the firearms offense.
In considering Jones’ motion to suppress, the trial court stated that Officer O’Donnell’s detention of Jones was reasonable as a valid pat-down stop under Terry 5 but that O’Donnell did not have probable cause to search Jones. Yet, the court continued, the discovery of the drugs would have been inevitable and, on this basis, the court denied Jones’ motion to dismiss.
Jones concedes that his “initial detention was valid based on the officer observing him running away from the area with a firearm in hand,” and the Commonwealth does not question the trial court’s ruling that Officer O’Donnell did not have probable cause to search Jones. Jones argues that once the trial court found the search was without probable cause, it should have excluded the evidence concerning the drugs and held the doctrine of inevitable discovery inapplicable. The Commonwealth argues the trial court properly held that the doctrine was applicable.
Ordinarily, evidence obtained as the result of an unlawful search is subject to suppression under the exclusionary rule.
Weeks v. United States,
One of the exceptions to the exclusionary rule is the doctrine of inevitable discovery. This Court recognized the exception in
Warlick
v.
Commonwealth,
In reversing the trial court on the ground that the doctrine of inevitable discovery was inapplicable in Jones’ case, the Court of Appeals cited its earlier decision in
Walls v. Commonwealth,
(1) a reasonable probability that the evidence in question would have been discovered by lawful means but for the police misconduct, (2) that the leads making the discovery inevitable were possessed by the police at the time of the misconduct, and (3) that the police also prior to the misconduct were actively pursuing the alternative line of investigation.
Cherry,
The Court of Appeals found that the Commonwealth failed to satisfy items (2) and (3) of the Cherry test, and Jones cites this same failure on appeal. With respect to item (2), the Court of Appeals said “[t]here was no specific complaint concerning Jones, so there were no leads for the police to follow prior to the police misconduct.” While neither Cherry nor Walls specifies what is necessary to satisfy item (2), nothing in the Supreme Court’s opinion in Nix or our opinions in Warlick and Keeter suggests that, to be sufficient, a lead must relate to the specific offense with which the suspect is ultimately charged.
Here, Officer O’Donnell had a lead sufficient to satisfy item (2). After observing Jones fleeing the scene with a gun in hand,. Officer O’Donnell, “pursuant to normal police practices,”
United States v.
Seals,
With respect to item (3) of the Cherry test, the Court of Appeals held the item was not satisfied because Officer O’Donnell “was not actively pursuing any alternative line of investigation.” The Commonwealth urges us to reject item (3) because the test it creates is “unnecessarily rigid.” Jones responds that the test is not unnecessarily rigid and that we should reject the Commonwealth’s proposal.
Again, we find nothing in the Supreme Court’s opinion in Nix or our opinions in Warlick and Keeter requiring a showing that the police were actively pursuing an alternative line of investigation. And the precedential value of Cherry, upon which the Court of Appeals relied in Walls, is now suspect. Without mentioning its decision in Cherry or the requirement of an alternative line of investigation, the Fifth Circuit in United States v. Seals, supra, applied the inevitable discovery rule to uphold the challenged seizure of a vehicle following a search without a warrant. The court stated that police procedures required an inventory of impounded vehicles, and the questioned evidence would have been inevitably discovered “during the normal inventory procedures” of the police department. Id. at 1108.
Other federal circuits have disapproved the requirement for an alternative line of investigation.
United States
v.
Silvestri,
The Court of Appeals opined in
Walls
that the requirement for an alternative line of investigation is necessary to ensure “that the inevitable discovery exception will be applied consistently with the overall purpose of the exclusionary rule, which is to deter police misconduct.”
However, as noted in
Nix,
while the prosecution should not be put “in a better position than it would have been in if no illegality had transpired,”
It is clear, at least “by a preponderance of the evidence,”
Nix,
Reversed and final judgment.
Notes
In a separate petition, Jones appealed the Court of Appeals affirmance of his weapons conviction, but this Court refused his petition. (Record No. 031019, Sept. 9, 2003.)
Miranda v. Arizona,
Upon analysis, the rocks were determined to be aspirin.
Officer O’Donnell testified he did not conduct a record check with respect to the firearm at the time of arrest because he “was going to bring [Jones] to the police department and [he] didn’t have time to check.”
Terry
v.
Ohio,
