OPINION
Gilbert Coleman Price appeals his conviction and sentence of three years deferred adjudication for possession of more than four but less than two-hundred grams of cocaine. Appellant contends the trial court erred in overruling his motion to suppress evidence pursuant to the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution because the police violated the “knock and announce” rule. We reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Procedural Background
On April 23, 2001, Officer Michael R. Burdick executed a search and arrest warrant at appellant’s home. Prior to trial, appellant filed a motion to suppress evidence, claiming the search and arrest “were conducted without legal justification” because the officers “did not comply with the ‘knock, announce, and wait’ rule set out in federal law.” The motion to suppress was heard on affidavits. Appellant’s affidavit asserted that “[w]hen the police entered [his] house just before midnight on April 23, 2001, they did so via a forced hard entry through the side door. At no time did [he] or any of the other people in [his] house hear the police knock and announce themselves before they broke through the side door.” Without presenting additional evidence, the State produced a single affidavit that had been submitted by Officer Burdick in support of the warrant to search appellant’s home. The State relies exclusively upon the following sentence in the affidavit: “It has been the experience of your affiant that individuals who are in the possession of controlled substances are normally in pos *361 session of firearms and such should be considered armed and dangerous.” Defendant pled guilty but reserved the right to appeal the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress.
Standard of Review
We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress under an abuse of discretion standard.
Oles v. State,
Legal Development
Whether the common law requirement that police knock and announce their presence prior to entering the home to search and/or arrest was covered under the Fourth Amendment had not been decided by the United States Supreme Court prior to the publication of
Wilson v. Arkansas.
1
Even before the Supreme Court’s jurisprudential shift in
Wilson,
lower courts invoked both the
Ker
factors and similar rationales in analyzing whether a failure to knock and announce would be permissible.
See, e.g., United States v. Lalor,
Two years after Wilson⅝ in Richards v. Wisconsin, the Supreme Court adopted the first approach and rejected the latter, holding:
In order to justify a “no-knock” entry, the police must have a reasonable suspicion that knocking and announcing then-presence, under the particular circumstances, would be dangerous or futile, or that it would inhibit the effective investigation of the crime by, for example, allowing the destruction of evidence.
As
Richards
and
Wilson
are such recent cases, few intermediate Texas courts have addressed these issues.
See Broussard v. State,
Discussion
The State does not dispute appellant’s claim that Officer Burdick failed to knock and announce prior to entering the home. Rather, the State contends the search was lawful because Officer Bur-dick’s warrant affidavit demonstrates knocking and announcing would have been dangerous and futile, one of the exceptions to the rule set out in
Richards.
It is instx-uctive to examine the circumstances under which courts have upheld no-knock entries. In
Stokes v. State,
a no-knock entry was upheld where the officer testified he had received rehable information from informants that guns (as well as marijuana) were in the residence.
The showing required to invoke
Richards’
danger exception is “not high.”
As the State points out,
Richards
did not involve the review of reasonableness under specific facts, but rather a judicially created, explicit exception to the knock- and-announce requirement. However, based on this distinction, no authority permits the State’s conclusion that “while [Officer Burdick’s] statement is couched in terms of the general, the fact that such a statement was included in this specific affidavit indicates that the affiant believed that the target in this case would be armed and dangerous.” The language in
Richards
requiring evidence of dangerousness under the
particular circumstances,
as well as the cases that have followed it, are contrary to the State’s argument.
See Garza v. State,
Here there was no threat of violence, no history of violence, no rehable or even
*364
unreliable indication arms were actually in appellant’s home, and no indication appellant knew he was under suspicion. The mere assumption that those in possession of controlled substances are normally also in possession of firearms is insufficient as a matter of law to eliminate the notice requirement.
Richards,
Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. 3
OPINION ON MOTION FOR REHEARING
This court reversed appellant’s conviction because the officers executing the search and arrest warrant violated the Fourth Amendment in failing to knock and announce their presence. The State urges us to reconsider our holding in its motion for rehearing. In so doing, the State argues: (1) the appellant failed to preserve his sole issue on appeal by properly objecting in the trial court on the basis of the Fourth Amendment knock-and-announce rule; (2) this court erred in holding the search violated the Supreme Court’s prohibition against blanket no-knock searches in all felony drug cases; and (3) this court erred in applying the exclusionary rule to suppress evidence where there was no causal connection between the alleged violation of the knock-and-announce rule and the acquisition of the evidence. We overrule the State’s motion.
I. PRESERVATION OF ERROR
In its first ground for rehearing, the State contends the appellant did not preserve his sole issue on appeal by failing to properly object in the trial court on the basis of the Fourth Amendment knock- and-announce rule. The State did not make this argument in its original appellate brief, and thus, we are presented with this issue for the first time in its motion for rehearing. If a party raises a new ground for the first time on motion for rehearing, the decision to consider the new matter is left to the sound discretion of the appellate court.
Rochelle v. State,
Occasionally, justice may require that an appellate court consider a motion for rehearing to decide an issue not presented in the original briefs.
See Hughes v. State,
The State contends that appellant should not be allowed to claim violations of the Fourth Amendment common law knock-and-announce rule on appeal when his arguments at trial referenced only its federal statutory counterpart.
1
This court has remarked that in order to preserve error, a timely and sufficiently specific request, objection, or motion must be made to the trial court.
Laney v. State,
At the hearing on the motion to suppress, appellant’s counsel argued:
[I]t is agreed by the State and it’s in the police report as well as [appellant’s] affidavit that the officers didn’t knock. They didn’t announce. They kicked the backdoor in and came in. That’s against federal law. And while they’re trying to establish a blanket exception in drug cases, the Supreme Court expressly turned that request down. It was in 1997 where they said you can’t do it just because there might be drugs in there.
In his memorandum of law in support of the motion to suppress, appellant stated that the officers executing the warrant did not comply with the knock, announce, and wait rule set out in federal law. The argument for this section of the memorandum references the federal knock-and-announce statute but also relies on
Richards v. Wisconsin
for the proposition that blanket exceptions to the knock-and-announce rule in felony drug investigations are not permissible.
After reviewing appellant’s motion to suppress, the memorandum of law in support of the motion, and the ensuing argument on its behalf, we find appellant sufficiently alerted the trial court to the constitutional basis of his objection.
II. The FouRth Amendment
The State maintains this court erred in holding that the search violated the Supreme Court’s prohibition against blanket no-knock searches in all felony drug cases.
2
We have already held that the
Richards
*366
requirement of particularized evidence to justify the no-knock entry defeats the State’s argument in this case. Well before
Richards,
lower courts demanded specificity of law enforcement’s professed justifications for no-knock entries. Rooted in these opinions is the concern that without particularity officers can enter a private residence sans announcement with only the most vague justification.
3
In its motion for rehearing, the State claims that the no-knock entry in question was justified with specific evidence under the particular circumstances of the case. In so doing, the State does concede that within the protection provided by the Fourth Amendment is the common law principle that police officers must knock-and-announce their presence before attempting a forcible entry into a home.
See Richards,
A. Exigency and the Safety of Officers
The first exigency offered by the State to justify the unannounced entry is the likelihood that appellant was armed and dangerous and thus a peril to the entering officers. We have already held that the mere assumption that those in possession of controlled substances are normally also in possession of firearms is insufficient as a matter of law to relieve the authorities of their historical duty to knock-and-announce their presence.
Compare United States v. Valdez,
B. The Destruction of Evidence
The second exigency the State invokes to justify the unannounced entry is the likelihood of the destruction of evidence. We did not specifically address this issue in our opinion. Buttressing this argument is the State’s observation that the type of narcotic at issue, cocaine, is easily destroyed.
6
Although the experienced officer may surmise that a party is likely to dispose of evidence when faced with the execution of the search warrant, such suspicions do not create an exigency to justify an unannounced entry.
See United States. v. Bates,
We understand that it may at times be difficult for police to justify an entry based on this exception. Certainly, allowing a drug dealer a sufficient amount of time to destroy evidence of a crime is not the purpose of the knock-and-announce rule.
People v. Stevens,
Under the facts of this case, we cannot discern any particularity in the State’s justifications for unannounced entry. In light of
Richards
and
Wilson,
we decline to permit officers to invoke the destruction of evidence exception whenever the objects named in the search warrant are by their nature amenable to ready disposal or destruction.
See Commonwealth v. Scalise,
III. Suppression as Sanction
In its third and final point, the State argues that this court erred in applying the exclusionary rule to suppress evidence where there was no causal connection between the alleged violation of the knock-and-announce rule and the acquisition of the evidence. The purpose of the exclusionary rule is to deter police misconduct by removing the incentive to disregard constitutional guarantees.
See Mapp v. Ohio,
Because so few Texas courts have addressed this issue, and because the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has not had the occasion to do so, we note that this is a relatively new issue in Texas constitutional criminal procedure.
But see Stokes v. State,
*370 The State attempts to distinguish cases in which evidence was excluded under a statutory or state constitutional violation versus those excluded pursuant to the Fourth Amendment proper. However, as the great weight of the authority suggests suppression is an appropriate remedy for statutory violations, we too find it appropriate remedy for a constitutional violation implicating far greater personal and privacy interests. 11
A. Exceptions to the Exclusionary Rule
Arguing in the alternative, the State contends that if the exclusionary rule does apply in this setting then use of the evidence is rescued by one of the many exceptions. Though the State does not invoke the “inevitable discovery” or “independent source” exceptions to the exclusionary rule by name, it alludes to them with its “casual connection” argument.
12
According to the State, the cocaine would have been acquired either way, whether the appellant had notice of the entry or not, as the warrant was its own independent source. Thus;, as the State argues, the police would have lawfully entered the premises under the warrant whether or not the authorities had knocked and announced. According to this logic, the evidence would have likewise been inevitably discovered as a subsequent entry pursuant to the warrant would have superseded the no-knock entry The application of these two exceptions has provoked fierce debate in knock-and-announce cases.
See State v. Lee,
In making this argument, the State relies on the existence of the warrant to establish the evidence was discovered by means independent of any possible illegality. However, the very warrant the State relies on as an independent source was the warrant that was unlawfully executed. The search warrant, although legally obtained, was executed in violation of the Fourth Amendment, and its execution was directly connected to the illegal entry.
See United States v. Marts,
The requirement that the source be ‘genuinely independent’ and the product of a “later, lawful seizure” cuts against the State’s argument here that the valid search warrant triggers the independent source doctrine. That the information supporting the warrant was known before the illegal entry was made is irrelevant. The State cannot escape from the record here: that the otherwise valid search warrant was executed in violation of the fourth amendment. The violation is directly connected to the illegal entry. A contrary conclusion would render the ‘knock-and-announce’ requirement meaningless and allow the exception to swallow the rule. Given the longstanding common-law endorsement of the practice of announcement, we conclude that independent source does not apply under these facts.
The
Tate
court noted that this logic also defeated the government’s attempt to avail itself of the inevitable discovery exception.
Id.
at 352. We agree. Thus, for the same reason, we cannot of approve of the application of the inevitable discovery exception in this context. Ours is certainly not the first inquiry to wrestle with the application of the inevitable discovery exception to violations of the knock-and-announce requirement.
See United States v. Shugart,
*372
Because the warrant in this case was unlawfully executed, the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s objection and admitting the evidence obtained in the search.
See Dice,
B. Other Remedies
In seeking to avoid the- exclusionary rule, the State points to the efficacy of other remedies which could in its words “easily cure” any constitutional infractions.
See
42 U.S.C. 1983 (2000); Tex. Civ. Pric.
&
Rem.Code § 101.0215. Yet our courts are already awash in such lawsuits.
See, e.g., Aponte Matos v. Toledo Davila,
IY. Conclusion
Finding no merit in the State’s arguments, we overrule its motion for rehearing.
Notes
. The best authority available had been a plurality decision in a challenge to a no-knock arrest in
Ker v. California,
. In
Cohen,
the only evidence cited by the State was the lead officer’s statement that “when [felony drug suspects] know who you are, and they see you, they know why you are there, that to protect evidence from being destroyed or for some type of guns to be drawn or somebody escaping out the back door, we make entry and secure the scene.’’
. Although not raised in appellant’s brief, a closely related and perhaps more, vital issue— the type of notice that will pass muster under the Fourth Amendment — has also eluded consideration by Texas courts. Lacking definitive guidelines, police officers in several Texas counties have testified that they perhaps violate the rule in
Wilson
and
Richards
in all cases.
See United States v. Cantu,
. The federal knock and announce statute regulates only the conduct of federal officers.
United States v. Gatewood,
. In analyzing this issue, as well as the issue of suppression as the appropriate remedy, we find guidance in the opinions of courts re *366 viewing purported violations of the Fourth Amendment as well as the federal and various state knock-and-announce statutes.
. Over the years, other courts have stated this particularity requirement in different ways. As the California Supreme Court observed:
Under the Fourth Amendment, a specific showing must always be made to justify any kind of police action tending to disturb the security of the people in their homes. Unannounced forcible entry is in itself a serious disturbance of that security and cannot be justified on a blanket basis. Otherwise the constitutional test of reasonableness would turn only on practical expediency, and the amendment’s primary safeguard— the requirement of particularity — would be lost. Just as the police must have sufficiently particular reason to enter at all, so must they have some particular reason to enter in the manner chosen.
People v. Gastelo,
. In
Wilson,
Justice Thomas traced the knock- and-announce principle from its origins in thirteenth-century England to its early widespread acceptance in the United States.
[T]he sheriff (if the doors be not open) may break the party’s house, either to arrest him, or to do other execution of the King's process, if otherwise he cannot enter. But before he breaks it, he ought to signify the cause of his coming, and to make request to open the doors.
5 Co. Rep. 91a, 91b, 77 Eng. Rep. 194, 195 (K.B.1603). For an extraordinarily thorough review of the evolution of the knock-and-announce rule at common law,
see Commonwealth v. Cundriff,
. Though we cannot justify the use of stereotypes and stress the importance of the particularities of exigency, we do acknowledge the great difficulties in confronting dealers of narcotics in their homes.
See United States. v. Bonner,
. Courts are often confronted with this argument.
Compare State v. Gassner,
. The State’s reliance on the destruction of evidence exception seems anemic considering the short time officers must wait between the initial knock-announce and the subsequent burst through the threshold.
See State v. Williams,
. In
Stone v. Powell,
the Supreme Court retreated from the notion that the exclusionary rule is part and parcel with the Fourth Amendment.
. The Seventh Circuit disagrees with this approach. In
United States v. Espinoza,
it found that when a Fourth Amendment violation causes no discernable harm to the interests of an individual protected by the knock-and-announce requirement the exclusion of evidence is a disproportionately severe and inappropriate.
. See, e.g., Bates,
. Several of the cases cited were decided well before the Supreme Court’s recognition of a Fourth Amendment basis for the knock- and-announce principle. Arguably, this trend supports the notion that suppression is the appropriate remedy now as courts utilized it decades before the Supreme Court’s recent emphasis of the rule.
See Stevens,
. The independent source doctrine rests upon the assumption that so long as a later, lawful seizure is genuinely independent of an earlier, tainted one, there is no reason why the independent source doctrine should not rescue the evidence.
See Murray v. United States,
