Lynn PORTER, Appellee,
v.
John P. ASHMORE, Jr., Greenville County Supervisor, A. C.
Thompson, GreenvilleCounty Jailer, William D.
Leeke, Director of the Department of
Corrections andthe State of
South Carolina, Appellants.
No. 13597.
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Argued Nov. 7, 1969.
Decided Feb. 10, 1970.
C. Tolbert Goolsby, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen. of S.C. (Daniel R. McLeod, Atty. Gen. of S.C., Emmett H. Clair, Asst. Atty. Gen. of S.C., B. O. Thomason, Jr., Solicitor, Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, and H. F. Partee, Asst. Sol., Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, on the brief), for appellants.
Kale R. Alexander, Columbia, S.C. (David A. Fedor, Columbia, S.C., on the brief), for appellee.
Before SOBELOFF, BOREMAN and CRAVEN, Circuit Judges.
CRAVEN, Circuit Judge:
Lynn Porter was convicted of occupying a house containing gambling paraphernalia in violation of S.C. Code of Laws 16-515(2) (1962). The South Carolina Supreme Court affirmed his conviction. State v. Porter,
Ted M. Owens, an agent with the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, was assigned to investigate gambling activity in Greenville County, South Carolina, on August 24, 1965. He testified at Porter's trial that he received, from a 'reliable source,' the telephone number of a party accepting bets on baseball and football games. He called the number and began placing bets with the party who answered; on the stand he identified the voice on the phone as that of Lynn Porter. Owens made wagers on a weekly basis with Porter through December 1965, usually placing the bets by phone and leaving the money bet at the desk of the Imperial 400 motel. Someone, inferentially Porter, would later pick up the money at the motel.
On December 29, 1965, Owens received information that Porter had gambling paraphernalia and parlay cards at his home. He then signed an arrest warrant for Porter and proceeded, with four other officers, to Porter's residence. According to the officers, Mrs. Porter answered the officers' knock at the door by pushing it open slightly. Seeing the police outside, she shut the door and went away. Porter himself then came to the door and asked whether the officers had a search warrant. They told him they had an arrest warrant, and Porter opened the door. The police stepped in and read the warrant to him. Lieutenant Coleman, one of the officers present, then told Porter that he wanted to look around, to which Porter is said to have replied, 'Go ahead,' or 'Help yourself.' The police then searched the premises. In a basement room some distance from the point of the arrest they found a phone with four or five incoming lines, some parlay cards, dice, playing cards, and 'odds' books. The parlay cards and odds books were introduced at Porter's trial.
While the police were at the Porter residence, Mrs. Porter requested that she be allowed to take her children and go to a neighbor's house. Before she left, however, the officers asked her whether she had any parlay cards, or other gambling equipment, in her purse. She replied by offering to hand over her bag, but one of the police told her to open it instead. When she complied, the officer noticed a billfold inside and asked if there was money in it. Mrs. Porter took out $105 and gave it to the police, who told her they would have to hold the money until they could determine whether it was cash mailed to Porter by Owens. They subsequently confirmed, by an examination of the serial numbers, that part of the money had been sent to Porter on a 'bet' placed by Owens. This money was also introduced at the trial.
Porter attacks his detention on two grounds: (a) that the search and seizure without a search warrant was invalid, even though made contemporaneously with and incident to a lawful arrest; (b) that he did not waive his constitutional protection by consenting to the search.
I.
The district court ordered Porter's release prior to the decision in Chimel v. California,
In Linkletter v. Walker,
In Linkletter the Court stated that it would not serve the purpose of the exclusionary rule to apply it retrospectively. The purpose of the rule, of course, is not to exclude untrustworthy evidence from the jury, but to deter unlawful police conduct. Prior police activity cannot be corrected by retrospective application of an exclusionary rule. Deterrence of future conduct will be served as well by prospective application. The same reasoning is applicable to the extension of the exclusionary rule in Chimel.
The Court in Linkletter also pointed out that the states had relied heavily on the doctrine of Wolf v. Colorado,
II.
The validity of the search in this case must be determined under the rules promulgated in United States v. Rabinowitz,
In Rabinowitz, government agents arrested defendant in his one-room office. The arrest was pursuant to a valid arrest warrant, but no search warrant had been issued. The agents searched the office for an hour and a half, uncovering and seizing 573 stamps on which 'overprints' had been forged. The Court declared that the constitution prohibits only unreasonable searches and that the reasonableness of a search depends upon the circumstances of each case. Because the search and seizure were incident to a lawful arrest, the place searched was a business room to which the public was invited, the room was small and under the complete control of respondent, the search did not extend beyond the room, and the possession of the forged stamps was a crime, the Court declared the search reasonable.
In the case before us now the district court decision rests squarely on Trupiano v. United States,
Reversed.
Notes
The Court, in its opinion, refers to the so-called mere evidence rule, which was subsequently overruled in Warden, Md. Penitentiary v. Hayden,
The absence of an authorizing statute would not, of course, legitimate a search where a warrant is constitutionally required-- as, for instance, under the new rule promulgated by Chimel v. California,
