Dеfendant was charged with possession with intent to deliver fifty grams or more, but less than 225 grams, of cocaine, MCL 333.7401(2)(a) (iii); MSA 14.15(7401)(2)(a)(iii), and possession with intent to deliver less than fifty grams of heroin, MCL 333.7401(2)(a)(iv); MSA 14.15(7401)(2)(a)(iv). The drugs were seized during the execution of a search warrant. Defendant moved to suppress the evidence оn the basis of a violation of the knock-and-announce statute, MCL 780.656; MSA 28.1259(6). The trial court granted the motion and dismissed the charges. The prosecutor appeals as of right. We reverse and remand.
This case affords this Court an opportunity to pass further on the question whether the necessary response to violations of the knock-and-announce statute is to suppress the evidence seized, in the manner of violations of Fourth Amendment search-and-seizure principles. 1 We hold that suppression is not necessarily required.
In the present case, after conducting an evidentiary hearing and entertaining arguments, the triаl court found that the officers did knock and announce their presence, but that they did not give the occupants of the house sufficient time to respond before opening the door by force. The court then stated, “ [I]f I were truly faithful to my oath, I would go on to say that. . . *54 the way in which entry was procured . . . did not result in the seizure of the evidence and, therefore, I would deny suppression.” The court explained that apart from the failure of the police to comply with the requirements of the knock-and-announce statute, the seizure of the drugs flowed from the executiоn of a lawful search warrant and not from any failure to give the occupants adequate time to answer the door. However, the court declined to rule in favor of the prosecution on that ground because of the lack of precedential authority. Instead, the court granted defendant’s motion and invited the prosecutor to appeal the court’s “erroneous ruling.”
This Court reviews a trial court’s ruling regarding a motion to suppress for clear error.
People v Truong (After Remand),
The knock-and-announce statute provides as follows:
The officer tо whom a warrant is directed, or any person assisting him, may break any outer or inner door or window of a house or building, or anything therein, in order to execute the warrant, if, after notice of his authority and purpose, he is refused admittance, or when necessary to liber *55 ate himself or any рerson assisting him in execution of the warrant. [MCL 780.656; MSA 28.1259(6).]
Because the statute’s requirement that officers knock and announce themselves before entering a house or building to execute a search warrant “has its roots in the Fourth Amendment . . . , when the method of entry violates the knock-and-announce statute, the exclusionary rule may come into play if the Fourth Amendment standard of reasonableness is also offended.”
People v Polidori,
In
People v Williams (After Remand),
In
People v Asher,
would not conclude that a timing error in the execution of a valid search warrant offends the Fourth Amendment reasonableness requirement. However, in Polidori, this Court held that if the method of entry violates thе knock-and-announce statute, the exclusionary rule must apply. Consequently, we are compelled by Administrative Order No. 1990-6 to follow Polidori and conclude that the evidence recovered must be suppressed. Were it not for the administrative order, we would not require the evidence tо be suppressed. [Id. at 624.]
Judge Gage dissented, stating that Polidori did not adopt a blanket rule “requiring suppression for every violation of the knock-and-announce statute,” but simply “cited broader principles of Fourth Amendment reasonableness as the test for whether a knock-and-announce violation requires suppressiоn.” Id. at 625-626 (Gage, J., dissenting). She was of the opinion that the search was not unreasonable for Fourth Amendment purposes solely because of the timing error in effectuating entry according to state statute, and thus that suppression was not required. Id. at 627 (Gage, J., dissenting). 2 As Judge Gage observed,
*57 MCL 780.656; MSA 28.1259(6) permits an officer to break the door or window of a building to execute a warrant if, after notice of his authority and purpose, he is refused admittance. The statute does not provide for suppression of evidence seized in noncompliance with the statute; rather, violation of the statute is punishable as a misdemеanor. [Asher, supra at 625 (Gage, J., dissenting), citing MCL 780.657; MSA 28.1259(7).]
We share Judge Gage’s concern that the Asher majority effectively disregarded the statutory misdemeanor sanction for violations of the knock-and-announce statute and attempted to elevate some, if not all, such violations to constitutional violations requiring suppression.* * 3 We do not feel that Polidori compels this result, nоr are we aware of any other state that requires so harsh a remedy for every knock- and-announce violation. 4
In
People v Ortiz (After Second Remand),
Concluding that review of the issue was proper, Judge Murphy dissented. He stated that when supрression of evidence is sought in response to “unlawful government misconduct, the appropriate inquiry ‘is whether the evidence was procured by an exploitation of the illegality or, instead, by means sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the primary taint.’ ”
Id.
at 487 (Murphy, J., dissenting), quoting
People v
Lambert,
I do not consider the purpose and flagrancy of the violation [of the knock-and-announce statute] to rise to such a level that it irreparably tainted the seizure of the evidence .... The officers were executing a drug warrant, and physical violence and evidenсe destruction frequently occur during the execution of such warrants. While there was no *59 testimony or evidence . . . that indicates that the officers had a reasonable suspicion of such risk, which would have justified a no-knock entry, such risks were nonetheless legitimate [] and . . . proper cоncerns. In addition, the officers knew they were initially entering a porch, as opposed to living quarters, . . . which . . . mitigates the flagrancy of, if not totally precludes, any violation of the knock-and- announce statute.
. . . [I]t would certainly be a stretch to say that the officers exploited their initial entry to obtain the evidence seized. If anything, they were placed at a disadvantage by their initial entry. The standoff gave defendant an opportunity to destroy evidence .... The time and intervening circumstances between the initial entry and the seizure of the evidence clearly favor a purging of the taint of any illegality, and the purpose and flagrancy of the illegality was not so great as to mandate a contrary holding. [Id. at 488-489 (Murphy, J., dissenting) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).]
Our Supreme Court granted leave to appeal
Ortiz
and reversed “for the reasons stated by the dissenting opinion” of Judge Murphy.
People v Ortiz,
We agree that Polidori did not requirе blanket suppression for every violation of the knock-and-announce statute, but instead simply cited broader principles of Fourth Amendment reasonableness as the test for whether a knock-and-announce violation requires suppression. Asher, supra at 625-626 (Gage, J., dissenting). This reading of Polidori is in accord with the Supreme Court’s disposal of Ortiz.
When this Court’s decision in Polidori, supra, is understood in its proper factuаl context, the propriety of the remedy for a violation of the knock-and-announce statute in light of Fourth Amendment suppression requirements must be determined case by case, and suppression is not automatically required for every violation of the statute. Support for this position comes from Polidori itself, where this Court stated, “Because the primary purpose of the constitutional guarantee is to prevent unreasonable invasions, if a police officer has reasonable cause to enter a dwelling to make an arrest, his entry and search are not unreasonable.” Id. at 677. Polidori further held that strict compliance with the statute may be excused under certain circumstances. Id.
We conclude that the remedy of suppression is appropriate for violations of the knock-and-announce statute only where the police сonduct is unreasonable *61 by Fourth Amendment standards. If the police misconduct is not so egregious as to be constitutionally unreasonable, suppression of the evidence seized is not warranted.
In the present case, the trial court properly determined that the seizure of the сontraband flowed from the execution of a lawful search warrant and not from the failure to give the occupants of the house adequate time to answer the door. However, the learned judge declined to admit the evidence out of concern for precedеntial authority. We believe the trial court was correct when it ruled that the seizure of the drugs flowed from the execution of the search warrant and not from the timing violation of the knock-and-announce rule. We do not believe this timing error rises to the level of unreasonable poliсe conduct for purposes of a Fourth Amendment violation. Accordingly, we affirm the reasoning of the trial court and accept its invitation to reverse its reluctantly made decision.
Reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
Notes
Wе note that the Supreme Court has granted leave to appeal the unpublished case of
People v Stevens,
unpublished opinion of the Court of Appeals, decided October 28, 1997 (Docket No. 199175), lv gtd
FoEowing this Court’s decision in
Asher,
this Court, in
People v Tanner,
We note that the Asher majority was uncomfortable with its own conclusion, stating in dicta that it “would not conclude that a timing error in the execution of a valid search warrant offends the Fourth Amendment. “ Asher, supra at 624.
We believe that
Asher
and
Polidori
can be read so they do not conflict with each other. However, to the extent that
Asher
conflicts with
Polidori,
the latter must prevail, it being the first of the two to be published after November 1990.
People v Young,
The Court also rejected the argument presented here, that application of the exclusionary rule is too harsh a remedy, because the prosecutоr relied on Wilson, supra, and this Court “decline[d] to view the [United States Supreme] Court’s refusal to address the application of the exclusionary rule to violations of the knock-and-announce principle as an indication of support for the prosecutor’s argument.” Ortiz, supra at 483-484.
In the case at bar, the trial court declared that the police entry was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment, in which case suppression of the evidence seized would be required regardless of the implications of the knock-and- announce statute. However, our reading of the transcript suggests that the trial court was simply equating a violation of the knock- and-announce statute with a Fourth Amendment violation.
