Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In Gerstein v. Pugh,
Petitioner Kitrich Powell was arrested on Friday, November 3, 1989, for felony child abuse of his girlfriend’s 4-year-old daughter, in violation of Nev. Rev. Stat. § 200.508 (1991). That afternoon, the arresting officer prepared a sworn declaration describing the cause for and circumstances of the arrest. Not until November 7, 1989, however, did a Magistrate find probable cause to hold Powell for a preliminary hearing. That same day, November 7, Powell made statements to the police, prejudicial to him, which the prosecutor later presented at Powell’s trial. Powell was not personally brought before a Magistrate until November 13, 1989. By that time, the child had died of her injuries, and Powell was charged additionally with her murder.
A jury found Powell guilty of first-degree murder and, following a penalty hearing, sentenced him to death. On appeal to the Nevada Supreme Court, Powell argued that the State had violated Nevada’s “initial appearance” statute by failing to bring him before a magistrate within 72 hours, and that his conviction should therefore be reversed.
The Nevada statute governing appearances before a magistrate provides:
“If an arrested person is not brought before a magistrate within 72 hours after arrest, excluding nonjudicial days, the magistrate:
“(a) Shall give the prosecuting attorney an opportunity to explain the circumstances leading to the delay; and
“(b) May release the arrested person if he determines that the person was not brought before a magistrate without unnecessary delay.” Nev. Rev. Stat. §171.178(3) (1991).
Powell emphasized that 10 days had elapsed between his arrest on November 3, 1989, and his November 13 initial .appearance before a Magistrate. In view of the incriminating
The district attorney maintained before the Nevada Supreme Court that there had been no fatal violation of Nevada’s initial appearance statute. First, the district attorney urged, the confirmation of probable cause by a Magistrate on November 7 occurred within 72 hours of the November 3 arrest (excluding the intervening weekend). This probable-cause finding, the district attorney contended, satisfied the 72-hour prescription of Nev. Rev. Stat. §171.178. In any event, the district attorney continued, under Nevada law, an accused waives his right to a speedy arraignment when he voluntarily waives his right to remain silent and his right to counsel. Powell did so, the district attorney said, when he made his November 7 statements, after he was read his Miranda rights and waived those rights. See Respondent’s Answering Brief in No. 22348 (Nev.), pp. 56-60. In reply, Powell vigorously contested the district attorney’s portrayal of the probable-cause determination as tantamount to an initial appearance sufficient to satisfy Nev. Rev. Stat. § 171.178’s 72-hour prescription. Powell pointed out that he “was neither present [n]or advised of the magistrate’s finding.” Appellant’s Reply Brief in No. 22348 (Nev.), p. 1.
The Nevada Supreme Court concluded, in accord with the district attorney’s assertion, that Powell had waived his right under state law to a speedy arraignment.
County of Riverside v. McLaughlin,
Powell petitioned for our review raising the question whether a state court may decline to apply a recently rendered Fourth Amendment decision of this Court to a case pending on direct appeal. We granted certiorari,
II
Powell’s arrest was not validated by a magistrate until four days elapsed. That delay was presumptively unreason
It does not necessarily follow, however, that Powell must “be set free,”
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For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Nevada Supreme Court is vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Notes
Justice Thomas would reach out and decide the first of these questions, though it is not presented in the petition for review. He would rule inappropriate “suppression of [Powell’s November 7] statement ... because the statement was not a product of the McLaughlin violation.” Post, at 89. It is “settled law,” he maintains, post, at 88, that if probable cause in fact existed for Powell’s detention, then McLaughlin’s 48-hour rule, though violated, triggers no suppression remedy. Quite the opposite, Justice Thomas recognizes, is “settled law” regarding search warrants: A court’s postsearch validation of probable cause will not render the evidence admissible. See Vale v. Louisiana,
Justice Thomas maintains, however, that our precedents, especially New York v. Harris,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
After concluding that the Nevada Supreme Court erred by failing to follow our decision in Griffith v. Kentucky, 479 U. S.
I
The petition for certiorari in this case presented a single question for review — namely, whether a particular decision of this Court concerning criminal procedure should apply retroactively to all cases pending on direct review. This question was well settled at the time the petition was filed, and had been since our decision in Griffith, in which we stated that “a new rule for the conduct of criminal prosecutions is to be applied retroactively to all cases, state or federal, pending on direct review or not yet final.”
According to this Court’s Rule 10.1, “[a] petition for a writ of certiorari will be granted only when there are special and important reasons therefor.” Not only were there no special or important reasons favoring review in this case, but, as Justice Stewart once wrote: “The only remarkable thing about this case is its presence in this Court. For the case involves no more than the application of well-settled principles to a familiar situation, and has little significance except for the [parties].” Butz v. Glover Livestock Commission Co.,
Now that we have invested time and resources in full briefing and oral argument, however, we must decide how properly to dispose of the case. The Court vacates and remands because the Nevada Supreme Court erred, not in its judgment, but rather in its “prospectivity declaration.” Ante, at 83. The “declaration” to which the Court refers is the state court’s statement that our decision in County of Riverside v. McLaughlin,
Of course, when there is a need for further factfinding or for proceedings best conducted in the lower courts, or where the ultimate question to be decided depends on debatable points of law that have not been briefed or argued, we regularly determine that the best course is to remand. See, e. g., Pierce v. Underwood,
II
While in petitioner’s care on November 2, 1989, 4-year-old Melea Allen suffered massive head and spinal injuries. When petitioner took her to the hospital the following day, November 3, she was comatose and suffering respiratory failure. Petitioner told doctors and nurses that she had fallen from his shoulders during play. When emergency room personnel discovered that Melea also had numerous bruises and lacerations on her body — injuries that suggested she had been abused repeatedly — they called the police. Petitioner spoke to the officers who responded to the call and again explained that the child’s injuries were the result of an accidental fall.
Several hours later, the police arrested petitioner for child abuse. Within an hour of the arrest, officers prepared a declaration of arrest that recited the above facts to establish probable cause. Petitioner was still in custody on November 7, when, after receiving Miranda warnings, he agreed to give a second statement to the police. He repeated the same version of events he had given at the hospital before his arrest, but in slightly more detail. On that same day, a Magistrate, relying on the facts recited in the declaration of arrest described above, determined that petitioner’s arrest had been supported by probable cause. The next day Melea died, and petitioner was charged with first-degree murder.
Petitioner contends that respondent’s delay in securing a prompt judicial determination of probable cause to arrest
Against that argument, respondent and its amici raise several contentions: first, that suppression of evidence would never be an appropriate remedy for a McLaughlin violation; second, that the statement at issue here was not a product of the McLaughlin error, or at least that the connection between the McLaughlin violation and the statement is so attenuated that suppression is not required; third, that suppression is inappropriate under Illinois v. Krull,
Our decisions make clear “that evidence will not be excluded as ‘fruit’ [of an unlawful act] unless the illegality is at least the ‘but for’ cause of the discovery of the evidence.” Segura v. United States,
Contrary to petitioner’s arguments, the violation of McLaughlin (as opposed to his arrest and custody) bore no causal relationship whatsoever to his November 7 statement. The timing of the probable-cause determination would have affected petitioner’s statement only if a proper hearing at or before the 48-hour mark would have resulted in a finding of no probable cause. Yet, as the Magistrate found, the police had probable cause to suspect petitioner of child abuse, cf. Illinois v. Gates,
Moreover, it cannot be argued that the McLaughlin error somehow made petitioner’s custody unlawful and thereby rendered the statement the product of unlawful custody. Because the arresting officers had probable cause to arrest petitioner, he was lawfully arrested at the hospital. Cf. Harris, supra, at 18.
In short, the statement does not even meet the threshold requirement of being a “product” of the McLaughlin violation.
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For the foregoing reasons, the judgment below should be affirmed.
I respectfully dissent.
The fact that the arrest was supported by probable cause and was not investigatory in nature fully distinguishes this case from our decisions in Taylor v. Alabama,
As the Court notes, ante, at 85, n., a different rule applies to search warrants. In that context, we have insisted that, absent exigent circumstances, police officers obtain a search warrant, even if they had probable cause to conduct the search, see, e. g., Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
Thus, conventional attenuation principles are inapplicable in this case, for as we pointed out in Harris, “attenuation analysis is only appropriate where, as a threshold matter, courts determine that ‘the challenged evidence is in some sense the product of illegal governmental activity.’ ”
