Gеrardo Hardin appeals his conviction and sentence for cocaine trafficking. See § 893.135, Fla. Stat. (2003). He argues that the trial court should have granted his motion to suppress evidence. We agree and reverse. 1
Factual Background
Sheriffs Deputies Launikitis and Glas-scock 2 were patrolling a Motel 6 parking lot in Hillsborough County. They saw a parked car with a Brownsville, Texas, license plate. Because they considered Brownsville a center of illegal drug activity, the deputies decided to investigate further. They questioned the motel clerk, who gave them the room information associated with the car. Mr. Hardin and his wife, Juana Sierra, were motel guests. The deputies’ suspicion heightened further because the namе on the car’s registration differed from that in the motel’s guest records. 3 The car, however, was not reported stolen. Armed with this seemingly benign information, the deputies suspected that drug activity was afoot.
The deputies approached the motel room, knocked on the door, and engaged Mr. Hardin in conversation. A “knock and talk” is a purely consensual encounter, which officers may initiate without any objective level of suspicion.
State v. Triana,
Mr. Hardin’s naked wife remained in bed under the sheets. Deputy Glasscock, a woman, asked if she could enter the motel room to talk with Ms. Sierra. Mr. Hardin consented. Once inside, Deputy Glasscock concluded that she would need a translator; Ms. Sierra did not speak English. Deputy Baez, a male, arrived some twenty minutes lаter. He entered the room to translate for Deputy Glasscock. Deputy Launikitis remained outside with Mr. Hardin. All deputies were in uniform and armed.
The deputies warned Mr. Hardin and Ms. Sierra that they were looking for illegal drugs. Deputy Launikitis obtained Mr. Hardin’s consent to search the car. Deputy Launikitis called in a K-9 unit. No drugs were found. Meanwhile, Deputies Glasscock and Baez obtained Ms. Sierra’s consent to search the motel room.
Despite the fruitless searches of the car and motel room, the deputies badgered Ms. Sierra, telling her that they knew she had drugs. They promised not to charge her if she cooperated. Ms. Sierra responded that she wanted no trouble. The deputies continued to badger her. Ms. Sierra relented and handed them a purse containing cocaine from under the sheets. The male deputies then left the room while Ms. Sierra dressed. 4 In the parking lot, Mr. Hardin shouted that the drugs were his. He was arrested. 5
Eventually, Mr. Hardin pleaded guilty to trafficking in cocaine, reserving for appeal the dispositive order denying his motion to suppress.
Analysis
Mr. Hardin argues that the trial court erroneously denied his motion to suppress because his wife did not voluntarily turn over the сontraband.
6
In reviewing the trial court’s order, we defer to the trial court’s factual findings but review its application of law de novo.
See Connor v. State,
Warrantless searches are per se unreasonable and violate the Fourth Amendmеnt.
Smith v. State,
The deputies initiated the “knock and talk” encounter in the early morning hours. Although not dispositive, the lateness of the hour “add[s] to the intimidating circumstance[s]” faced by Mr. Hardin and his wife.
See Kutzorik,
When Ms. Sierra handed over the contraband, three deрuties were in the room; Mr. Hardin remained outside with a K-9 officer. That two of the deputies in the room were men makes it even more likely that the naked Ms. Sierra was intimidated by the show of authority.
See Malinski v. New York,
The deputies’ behavior and aсtions also indicate that Ms. Sierra was coerced and did not act voluntarily. Mr. Hardin gave Deputy Glasscock, a woman, consent to enter the motel room to speak to his wife. Nothing in the record reflects that he consented to two male deputies entering the room. While Deputy Baez’s presence may have been necessary as a translator, nothing supports Deputy Launikitis’ entry into the room without consent, especially after a search of the room and car turned up nothing. “Absent consent, a search warrant, or an arrest warrant, a police officer may enter a private home only when there are exigent cirсumstances for the entry.”
Tillman v. State,
We cannot overlook the fact that the deputies alerted Mr. Hardin and Ms. Sierra from the outset that they were being invеstigated for illegal drugs. In
Kut-zorik,
we observed that “[t]he fact that Kutzorik knew she was the target of the investigation, and that law enforcement believed she was hiding drugs in her home, suggests a seizure rather than a consensual encounter.”
Ultimately, the dеputies were right in their hunch about illegal drugs. We readily admit that law enforcement and crime detection are critical to an ordered society. We recognize and appreciate the difficult tasks that law еnforcement officers undertake. Yet, we must do justice to the Fourth Amendment. As Justice Holmes cautioned more than eighty years ago, the delicate balance between crime detection and Fourth Amendment liberty nеcessarily requires that “some criminals should escape [rather] than that the government should play an ignoble part.”
Olmstead v. United States,
The deputies sprang into action on the supposition that anyone from Brownsville must be engaged in illegal activity. While not directly related to the question of consent, this supposition merits discussion. We cannot conclude that it is reasonable to suspect criminal behavior based solely on an individual’s origin.
See Royer,
Considering the totality of the circumstances reflected in the record before us, we hold that Ms. Sierra did not voluntarily consent to hand over contraband to the officers.
See Kutzorik,
Reversed.
Notes
. We need not address Mr. Hardin's corpus delicti argument.
. The law enforcement officers in this matter held various ranks. For convenience, we will refer to them as deputies.
.Ms. Sierra's full name is Juana Pesina-Sier-ra. The motel registration included a copy of her driver’s license with the name Juana Sierra, and the signature on the registration was Juana Pesina. The car was registered to Maria Pesina Guzman, Ms. Sierra's sister.
. Apparently, Ms. Sierra had no earlier opportunity to dress.
. There is no consistent testimony about the time of diese events. We can say that the entire encounter, from the lime the deputies knocked on the motel room door to the timе of Mr. Hardin's arrest, lasted at least an hour sometime between 2:30 a.m. and 4 a.m.
. On appeal, the State does not contest Mr. Hardin's standing to challenge the seizure.
See Elson v. State,
. The Supreme Court subsequently overruled
Olmstead's
holding that obtaining of evidence by wiretapping, in violation of state law, did not affect its admissibility.
See Katz v. United States,
