This case returns to us on remand from the Virginia Supreme Court “for a review of Logan’s challenge to the trial court’s determination that the police officer’s actions did not constitute bad faith.”
Logan v. Commonwealth,
I.
In 2002, the trial court convicted Logan of selling cocaine. A year later, while on probation, Logan was arrested for possession of cocaine. At trial on the 2003 possession charge, Logan claimed the exclusionary rule barred the admission of the cocaine because the arresting officer entered a common area of Logan’s rooming house without a warrant. It was in this common area, a stairway landing, that the officer observed Logan possess cocaine. The trial court denied the motion to suppress, holding Logan had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the common areas of the rooming house.
On appeal, two of three judges of a panel of this Court disagreed with the trial court. Citing
State v. Titus,
When the police officers entered the rooming house they did not enter appellant’s private dwelling; instead they merely entered the common corridors of the building, which were available to residents of the rooming house, their guests, people making deliveries, and others who had a legitimate *522 reason to be on the premises. Consequently, insofar as appellant maintains that he had a constitutionally protected reasonable expectation of privacy in the corridors of the rooming house, we disagree; appellant’s constitutionally protected privacy interest began at the door to room eight rather than at the door to the entire rooming house.
Logan,
In contrast, the panel dissent found
Anderson
persuasive and agreed with the trial judge that Logan had no reasonable expectation of privacy in a common area of a multi-tenant rooming house. The
Anderson
approach, the dissent noted, parallels the view taken by a “majority of federal courts” addressing the analogous context of common areas (and in particular hallways) of apartment buildings.
Id.
at 232,
Upon reviewing the case
en banc,
we focused on a purely factual concession made by the Commonwealth on appeal that the rooming house “was
not
open to the general public.”
Logan v. Commonwealth,
*523
Back in the trial court, the earlier 2002 conviction returned to the docket to determine whether Logan violated his probation by possessing cocaine. Logan argued the exclusionary rule prohibited the cocaine from being admissible in his probation revocation proceeding for the same reason it was excluded from his criminal trial. The trial court disagreed, as did we. Central to our analysis was the United States Supreme Court’s unqualified admonition that it had “repeatedly declined to extend the exclusionary rule to proceedings other than criminal trials.”
Penn. Bd. of Probation & Parole v. Scott,
The particular “other” non-criminal-trial proceeding in
Scott
was a state parole revocation hearing. Given the
ratio decidendi
of
Scott,
1
we found “no relevant distinction between the Supreme Court’s application of the exclusionary rule to parole revocation hearings and our application of the rule to probation violation hearings.”
Logan v. Commonwealth,
*524
The Virginia Supreme Court disagreed, however, and read
Scott
narrowly to apply only to parole revocation—but not probation revocation—proceedings.
Logan,
II.
Since the remand of this case to us, the United States Supreme Court decided
Herring v. United States,
— U.S. -,
“To trigger the exclusionary rule,”
Herring
held, the challenged “police conduct must be sufficiently deliberate that exclusion can meaningfully deter it, and sufficiently culpable that such deterrence is worth the price paid by the justice system.”
Id.
at-,
Herring
also deemphasized any subjectivity from the deliberateness-and-culpability test. “The pertinent analysis of deterrence and culpability is objective, not an ‘inquiry into the subjective awareness of arresting officers.’ ”
Id.
at-,
The circumstances of Logan’s case fall far short of the Herring standard. Logan does not contest that he possessed cocaine in a common area (a stairway landing) of his rooming house. Rather, his complaint is that a police officer was there to see it. Recognizing that this was a matter of first impression in Virginia, a splintered panel of our Court could not address the subject with either unanimity or finality. Relying on a Florida decision, Titus, the panel majority agreed with Logan. Relying on a decision of the United States Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, Anderson, as well as a battery of cases addressing the analogous context of apart *526 ment buildings, the panel dissent disagreed with Logan. Sitting en banc, we endorsed neither the narrow nor the broad view, finding instead that the Commonwealth’s factual concession on appeal had mooted the legal debate.
The very presence of a principled disagreement among our colleagues on this issue strongly militates against the conclusion that a “reasonably well trained officer,”
Herring,
— U.S. at-,
We similarly reject Logan’s assertion that our
en banc
opinion requires a finding of bad faith and, therefore, application of the exclusionary rule. We limited our holding to the Commonwealth’s factual concession, made on appeal, that the rooming house (including its common area stairways) was not open to the public—thus establishing Logan’s reasonable expectation of privacy. But we never held the police officer knew or should have known of that newly conceded fact. To the contrary, the officer testified he had previously been “inside the rooming house” and did not see any signs suggesting it was not open to the public.
Logan,
*527 III.
In sum, the remand mandate instructed us to review “Logan’s challenge to the trial court’s determination that the police officer’s actions did not constitute bad faith.”
Logan,
Affirmed.
Notes
.
See generally Congdon v. Congdon,
.
See also United States v. Armstrong,
. The Commonwealth correctly frames the issue before us in just these terms: "[T]he sole issue before this Court is whether an objectively reasonable officer in [the arresting officer’s] position could have believed that the defendant had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the hallway where [the officer] observed the illegal activity.” Appellee's Br. at 9 (emphasis omitted).
. The objective standard parallels the general approach applied to Fourth Amendment issues. For purposes of assessing the objective legality of an officer's actions, his "subjective motivation is irrelevant.”
Robinson v. Commonwealth,
. We likewise reject Logan’s argument on brief that the Commonwealth waived any right to argue good faith by abandoning the argument on appeal that the officer reasonably mistook Logan for another man *527 wanted on a warrant. Appellant’s Br. at 10-12. Neither the Commonwealth's argument, see Appellee’s Br. at 8, nor our holding turns on the strength or accuracy of the officer’s identification of Logan.
