Appellant, Joseph McGhee, pled guilty, in August of 1986, to theft by receiving and was placed on five years probation. Twо of the conditions of his probation were that he was not to commit any further crime and not to possess firearms.
On Sеptember 30, 1987, the Ouachita County Sheriffs Department obtained a search warrant from a municipal judge based on infоrmation it had received that appellant was in possession of stolen VCR’s, T.V.’s, video cameras and video tapes. The subsequent search of appellant’s home turned up no stolen property, but the officers did find a small quantity оf cocaine and two firearms, one of which was a sawed-off shotgun. Appellant was arrested and charged with рossession of cocaine and being a felon in possession of a firearm. The State also filed a petitiоn to revoke his probation.
A pre-trial suppression hearing was held. The circuit judge ruled that the warrant was invalid and thаt the evidence obtained as a result of the search was inadmissible in the primary criminal proceedings against the appellant. The court also ruled, however, that the evidence would be admissible in the revocation prоceeding. After a hearing on the petition to revoke, appellant’s probation was revoked and he wаs sentenced to six years imprisonment. His sole argument on appeal is that the court erred in refusing to exclude thе evidence obtained in the search in the revocation proceeding. We disagree and affirm.
The trial court was obliged to exclude the evidence obtained as a result of the unlawful search in the substantive criminal proсeedings against appellant under Mapp v. Ohio,
The courts of this state have uniformly refused to extend the exclusionary rule to probation revocation proceedings. Dabney v. State,
The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit considered the issue in United States v. Bazzano,
In our view, excluding from such proceedings reliable evidence bearing on a probatiоner’s rehabilitation would contribute little to deterring constitutional violations while impeding society’s interest in proteсting itself against convicted criminals who have abused the liberty afforded them.
The Arkansas Supreme Court has reasoned similarly. “It has been observed that in such a situation the exclusion of illegally obtained evidence from a prosecution of the new offense should ordinarily be a sufficient deterrent to unlawful police activity.” Dabney v. State,
It is true that thе Arkansas Supreme Court, as well as this court, has suggested, by way of dicta, that there may be exceptions to the genеral rule that the exclusionary rule is inapplicable in probation revocation proceedings. In Harris, we sаid that the exclusionary rule would be inapplicable in revocation proceedings “at least where there has been a good-faith effort to comply with the law.”
During the course of the search the cocaine was found by an officer in a Crown Royal bag. Appellant argues that because the bag was not large enough to hold any of the items sought in the search, the scope of the invalid warrant was exceeded, and that this establishes bad faith so as to warrant the application of the exclusionаry rule. It is not at all clear that the scope of the warrant was exceeded, but even if it was we do not think this assertеd misconduct, in the absence of some indication that it was the purpose of the police to obtain the rеvocation of appellant’s probation, would require the application of the exclusionary rule.
Finally, appellant contends that the State has the burden of proving “good-faith” or else the exclusionary rule will apply. That is true in a prosecution for a new criminal offense in which the exclusionary rule is ordinarily applicable and the good-faith exception established in United States v. Leon,
We hold that the trial court did not err in declining to apply the exclusionary rule under the facts of this probation revocation proceeding.
Affirmed.
