Case Information
*1 IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA JOHNNY JAMES TIMS, NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO
FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND Appellant, DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED v. CASE NO. 1D15-2346 STATE OF FLORIDA,
Appellee.
_____________________________/
Opinion filed October 4, 2016.
An appeal from the Circuit Court for Escambia County.
Gary L. Bergosh, Judge.
Nancy A. Daniels, Public Defender, Steven L. Seliger, Assistant Public Defender, and William Pafford, Assistant Public Defender, Tallahassee, for Appellant.
Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Trisha Meggs Pate, Assistant Attorney General, and Jillian H. Redding, Assistant Attorney General, Tallahassee, for Appellee.
WINSOR, J.
Johnny James Tims responded violently when law enforcement officers sought to question him about domestic violence allegations. He pleaded no contest to three charges relating to that violent response, but he reserved the right to appeal the order denying his motion to suppress. In Tims’s view, the officers had no right *2 to be where they were, so any evidence that Tims battered them, resisted with violence, or knocked equipment from an officer’s hand must be suppressed as fruit of the poisonous tree. We reject that view and affirm.
I. Dispatched to address reports of domestic violence, two law enforcement officers headed to Tims’s trailer home. As they arrived, Tims’s girlfriend flagged them down and reported that Tims “had jumped on her.” Carrying flashlights, the officers set off to investigate. One went to the trailer door; the other initially waited in the yard. [1]
Tims opened and shut his door several times, all while yelling things like “come back with a warrant,” “no trespassing,” and “private property.” One officer instructed Tims to come outside to speak with them, but Tims continually refused. Although the record does not establish the precise timing, at some point one of the officers approached the door, flashlight still in hand. From the door’s threshold, Tims reached out and slapped the officer’s hand, knocking the flashlight to the ground. Tims then made a quick move towards one of the officers before trying to move back into his trailer. The officers stepped into the trailer to place Tims under arrest—not for the domestic violence, but for his striking at the officer. Just inside the threshold, Tims began resisting, shrugging his arms, and pushing himself off *3 the wall. Before the officers could handcuff him, Tims tried to bite one officer and tried to hit both with a closed fist. Ultimately, the officers placed Tims under arrest.
II. That night’s events led to four criminal charges: Count I alleged resisting an officer with violence, in violation of section 843.01, Florida Statutes; Count II alleged battery upon an officer, in violation of sections 784.03 and 784.07(2)(b); Count III alleged depriving an officer of a means of protection (the flashlight), in violation of section 843.025; and Count IV alleged battery—for the underlying domestic violence that led the officers to Tims’s home in the first place. The State dropped Count IV, meaning the three counts now at issue all stem from the altercation that began when Tims slapped at the officer’s flashlight and ended with Tims handcuffed inside his home.
Tims moved to suppress all evidence supporting any of the remaining charges. He argued that the officers were not lawfully inside his home because (i) the officers had no warrant to enter, (ii) the reported domestic violence that led the officers to Tims’s home was a misdemeanor, and (iii) the victim was outside the home (so not in danger). In fact, Tims argued, the officers had no right even to remain outside his door—at least not once he made clear that he wanted them to leave.
The trial court denied the motion. After noting agreement with Tims that the misdemeanor domestic violence allegation did not allow warrantless entry into Tims’s home, the judge found that everything changed the moment Tims struck the deputy’s hand. After that, the judge concluded, the officers “had the right to go get him and they did.”
III. On appeal, the State maintains that the officers were lawfully present, both at the door and inside the home. According to the State, “there is no indication the officers knocked for an excessive period of time.” And, the State argues, the officers lawfully entered the home because they had probable cause to arrest Tims for the felony assault. Tims, for his part, insists the officers’ presence was unlawful, meaning everything they observed should be suppressed. [2]
Ultimately, we find it unnecessary to decide whether the officers were lawfully present. Either way, the trial court properly denied the motion. The exclusionary rule does not command suppression of evidence that Tims violently resisted arrest and accosted officers, lawfully present or not.
*5 A.
The Fourth Amendment protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure in
their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and
seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. Although the federal constitution does not
expressly command suppression of evidence unlawfully obtained, the United
States Supreme Court established the exclusionary rule by decisional law.
See
Herring v. United States
, 555 U.S. 135, 139 (2009).
[3]
By operating to exclude
evidence obtained unlawfully, the exclusionary rule encourages officers to act
within Fourth Amendment limits. That encouragement, in turn, protects the public
from unlawful intrusions.
See Herring
,
This court’s decision in
Lee v. State
,
This case, however, is not the typical suppression case. The evidence at issue
here does not relate to some earlier crime discovered while officers allegedly
violated the Fourth Amendment; it relates to crimes Tims
committed
against
officers while they allegedly violated the Fourth Amendment.
[4]
In this
circumstance, suppressing evidence of these crimes would not serve the purposes
underlying the exclusionary rule. “[T]he limited objective of the exclusionary rule
*7
is to deter unlawful police conduct—not to provide citizens with a shield so as to
afford an unfettered right to threaten or harm police officers in response to the
illegality.”
State v. Brocuglio
,
It is not enough to say, as Tims does, that officers could not have discovered
evidence of his crimes without illegally entering his home. Obviously had the
officers not been in his home, Tims could not have assaulted or resisted them in his
home. And were they not by his door, Tims could not have swatted the flashlight
from the officer’s hand by his door. But it has never been the rule that courts must
exclude all evidence that would have escaped discovery absent a Fourth
Amendment violation.
Herring
, 555 U.S. at 141;
see also Wong Sun v. United
States
, 371 U.S. 471, 487-88 (1963) (rejecting “but for” test);
State v. Frierson
,
In its usual operation, the exclusionary rule will deter officers from illegal
searches and seizures because officers know that the products of those searches
*8
typically will be useless. Officers will not illegally stop a vehicle looking for
contraband, for example, knowing that contraband they find cannot support a
prosecution. But it would be unreasonable (at best) to suppose that rejecting Tims’s
claims here would encourage officers’ unlawful actions. We cannot imagine
circumstances in which officers would unlawfully enter homes hoping they would
themselves be accosted upon entry, leading to criminal charges against the
accoster.
Cf. United States v. Pryor
,
Even assuming some minimal deterrent value in excluding evidence under
these circumstances, the societal cost would far outweigh it. The problem with
Tims’s approach is obvious. “[E]xtending the fruits doctrine to immunize a
defendant from arrest for new crimes gives a defendant an intolerable carte blanche
to commit further criminal acts so long as they are sufficiently connected to the
chain of causation started by the police misconduct.”
United States v. Bailey
, 691
F.2d 1009, 1017 (11th Cir. 1982). By precluding evidence of battery on officers,
the rule would all but invite such battery—perhaps even encouraging some to bait
officers into unlawful entry.
Cf. id.
(“[S]ound policy reasons obviously argue that
the law should discourage and deter the incentive on the part of potential arrestees
*9
to forcibly resist arrest or to commit other new and separate crimes.”). To be sure,
Tims does not assert that he had the legal right to use violence against officers
unlawfully present.
Cf. Morley v. State,
362 So. 2d 1013, 1014 (Fla. 1st DCA
1978) (noting common-law right to resist illegal arrest abrogated by statute). But
the practical difference between that and his suppression argument amounts to
little.
See Pryor
,
B.
The result we reach here is consistent with decisions from other Districts. In
State v. Clavette
, for example, the defendant was charged with trying to take a
firearm from an officer, resisting with violence, and battery on an officer. 969 So.
2d 463 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007). The defendant sought to suppress related evidence,
claiming the officers unlawfully entered his home. But the Fifth District found that
even if the officers violated the Fourth Amendment by entering the home,
suppression was not warranted because the defendant’s “use of force was an
independent act of misconduct.”
Id.
at 467. Similarly, the defendant in
State v.
*10
Freeney
sought to suppress evidence related to his charges for battery on an
officer. 613 So. 2d 523 (Fla. 2d DCA 1993). The trial court granted the motion,
finding the evidence “to be fruits of an illegal seizure,”
id.
at 524-25, but the
Second District reversed: “Even though the altercations between Mr. Freeney and
the police may never have occurred ‘but for’ the stop, the evidence concerning the
defendant’s battery on the police officer . . . is not legally derivative for purposes
of the exclusionary rule.”
Id.
at 525;
see also State v. White
,
C.
Finally, we have not overlooked
Faith v. State
,
The court’s conclusion that the drugs should have been suppressed is consistent with settled law and inapplicable here. And the court’s implicit conclusion that evidence of resisting without violence should have been suppressed—offered with no analysis—does not compel that result here. Even assuming it was a binding holding otherwise, it would not bind us here because these convictions are unquestionably more serious. Tims resisted with violence, battered officers, and separated an officer from his equipment. The trial court properly denied Tims’s request to suppress evidence of his crimes.
AFFIRMED.
WINOKUR, J., CONCURS; WOLF, J., CONCURS IN RESULT.
Notes
[1] Because the State prevailed below, we interpret the evidence in a light most
favorable to it.
See Brandin v. State
,
[2] Tims pleaded no contest to crimes that included as elements lawful action by officers. See § 843.01, Fla. Stat. (criminalizing resisting officers “in the lawful execution of any legal duty”); § 784.07(2), Fla. Stat. (classifying battery as a felony when committed against an officer “engaged in the lawful performance of his or her duties”). Because the State has not presented the argument, and because it would not affect the outcome here, we do not decide whether those pleas foreclose Tims’s arguments that the officers acted unlawfully.
[3] Florida’s Fourth Amendment analogue—Article I, section 12, of the Florida
Constitution—likewise protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their
persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures.”
That provision does explicitly preclude admission of “[a]rticles or information
obtained in violation of this right,” but only if it “would be inadmissible under
decisions of the United States Supreme Court construing the 4th Amendment.” Art.
I, § 12, Fla. Const.;
see also G.M. v. State
,
[4] Although the motion did not identify specific evidence—instead seeking to suppress “a) Evidence of any Resisting Officer with Violence,” “b) Evidence of any Battery Upon a Leo,” and “c) Evidence of any Depriving an Officer of Means of Protection or Communication”—the principal (if not sole) evidence presumably would have been the officers’ testimony.
