¶ 1. The State of Wisconsin appeals from an order suppressing evidence seized by police while executing a no-knock search warrant at an apartment occupied by the defendant, Rayshun Eason, and various other people. The trial court suppressed the evidence on grounds that the search warrant affidavit failed to justify a no-knock search. The State argues on appeal that the affidavit was sufficient and, even if it were not, we should still reverse the suppression order because: (1) there was no causal relationship between the officers' no-knock entry into the apartment and discovеry of the seized evidence; or, alternatively, (2) the evidence should be admissible in any event under the "good-faith exception" to the exclusionary rule articulated by the United States Supreme Court in
United States v. Leon,
¶ 2. The warrant in question authorized the police to enter the apartment without knocking or otherwise announcing their appearance, and to search the premises for cocaine and other controlled substances and associated paraphernalia. Present in the apartment, among others, were Eason, his aunt, Shannon Eason, and an acquaintance, Clinton Bentley. After
¶ 3. On review of the grant or denial of a motion to suppress evidencе, we will uphold the circuit court's findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous.
See State v. Eckert,
¶ 4. In
Richards v. Wisconsin,
[they] must have a reasonable suspicion that knocking and announcing their presence, under the particular circumstances, would be dangerous or futile, or that it would inhibit the effective investigation of thе crime....
Your affiant has checked the criminal histories of both Clinton Bentley and Shannon Eason and in so doing has learned that BENTLEY was arrested by the Belvidere Illinois Police Department in 1989 for AGGRAVATED ASSAULT. Your affiant also learned that EASON has been arrested for such things as larceny (nine times), Obstructing (three times), and ASSAULT (twice).
¶ 6. "The[se] arrests," says the State, "demonstrate the willingness of two apartment occupants to use violence,” thus placing the officers' safety at risk should their presence be made known to the occupants ahead of time. It also points to the affiant's statement elsewhere in the affidavit that, based on his experience and training as a police officer, he was aware that persons involved in "drug related crimes often arm themselves with weapons, including firearms and sometimes use those weapons against the police." 1
¶ 7. The circuit court agreed with the State that the threshold of proof in such situations is low — and noted that courts owe great deference to the determination of reasonable suspicion by the magistrate issuing the warrant,
see State v. Kerr,
¶ 9. As indicated, the State also maintains that neither the circuit court nor this court can suppress the evidence without first determining that there was a "causal relationship" between the failure to knock and the discovery of the evidence. We flatly rejected that аrgument in
State v. Stevens,
While the State is correct that the manner of the entry did not cause the evidence to be seized, the only effective deterrent to unconstitutional "no-knock" entries is to suppress the evidence. If we were to recognize the right without providing an effective remedy, we would once again give the police a blanket rule to effect unannounced entries. We are unwilling to permit this basic right to be revocable at the whim of any police officer who, in the name of lаw enforcement itself, chooses to suspend its enjoyment (internal quotations omitted).
Any alternative short of suppression would not sufficiently deter law enforcement from executing unannounced entries.
The rights we seek to vindicate are not trivial ones. See Richards,117 S. Ct. at 1421 n.5 ("the individual intеrests implicated by an unannounced, forcible entry should not be unduly minimized"). Respect for the sanctity of the home was so highly regarded by our founding fathers that it was enshrined in the Bill of Rights: "The right of the people to be securе in their . . . houses . . . against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated." UNITED STATES CONST, amend. IV. Likewise, Wisconsin has affirmed the "right of the people to be secure in their . . . houses . . . against unreasonable searсhes" for as long as it has been a state. WISCONSIN CONST, art. I, § 11. We again emphasize that the "no-knock" entry is a particularly violent intrusion into the home. Although we are sympathetic to the plight of the police involved in drug raids, we are unwilling to permit unconstitutional intrusions to go without an effective sanction.
Id. at 335-37.
¶ 10. The State directs our attention to the United States Supreme Court's opinion in a more recent case,
United States v. Ramirez,
Because we conclude that there was no Fourth Amendment violation, we need not decide whether, for example, there was sufficient causal relationship between the [officers' entry] and the discovery of the [evidence] to warrant suppression....
Id.,
¶ 11. Finally, the State argues that even if we conclude that there was a Fourth Amendment violation, the evidence seized should still be admissible under
Leon,
where the Court refused to apply the exclusionary rule to evidence obtained by law enforcement officеrs acting in objectively reasonable reliance upon a search warrant which was later ruled invalid
¶ 12. In the fifteen years since
Leon
was decided, the Wisconsin Supreme Court has never squarely faced the issue. The court had another opportunity this term in
State v. Ward,
¶ 13. We said in
State v. Grawien,
By the Court. — Order affirmed.
Notes
In
State v. Meyer,
The dissenters in
State v. Ward,
Indeed, we noted in
State v. Grawien,
