Lead Opinion
OPINION
Susаn Ranae Jackson was charged with two counts of second-degree controlled substance crime in violation of Minn.Stat. § 152.022, subds. 1(1), 2(1) (2006), and two counts of child endangerment in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.378, subd. 1(b)(2) (2006). Before her trial, Jackson moved to suppress evidence seized from her home on the ground that the police executed a search warrant with an invalid authorization for a nighttime search. The Itasca County District Court concluded that the issuance of the nighttime warrant for Jackson’s home was not justified, but denied Jackson’s motion to suppress the evidence found as a result of the search. The court based its denial of the suppression motion on the ground that the nighttime search warrant violation was statutory rather than constitutional and that under the facts and circumstances of this case, the statutory violation did not require "suppression of the evidence. At trial, the court found Jackson guilty on all four counts. The court entered convictions on one controlled substance count and the two child endangerment counts and sentenced
On December 11, 2003, Itasca County Sheriffs Department Investigator Dean Scherf was conducting a narcotics investigation that involved Todd Dawson and the appellant, Susan Ranae Jackson. At about 6:30 p.m., Scherf executed a search warrant on Dawson’s vehicle after Dawson left Jackson’s home. During this search, Scherf found a large amount of methamphetamine, cash, and other items consistent with selling and dealing illegal drugs. Based on the contraband found in Dawson’s car and on information obtained from both Dawson and a confidential reliable informant, Scherf applied to the district court for a warrant to search Jackson’s home and her person. The affidavit supporting the search warrant read in pertinent part:
As a result of the Search Warrant on the Dawson [sic] your affiant seized approx. 53 grams of suspected methamphetamine from the vehicle along with a large amount of cash, a digital gram scale, and plastic baggies. All of these items are indicative of a drug dealer. Your affiant knows this from knowledge, training, and experience.
The [confidential reliable informant] that your affiant spoke to in reference to Dawson having controlled substances in his vehicle also indicated that Dawson was at the Susan Jackson residence at the time the controlled substances were observed in Dawson’s vehicle. The [confidential reliable informant] also relayed that Dawson had dropped some methamphetamine off at the Jackson residence and that Jackson also sells methamphetamine from her residence. Your affiant did verify that Dawson was at the Jackson residence prior to making the traffic stop on Dawson.
Dawson advised your affiant at the time of the traffic stop that he has been staying at the Susan Jackson residence and furthermore that Dawson has been dating Jackson.
Based on the foregoing facts in his affidavit, Scherf requested a search warrant authorizing the police to conduct a nighttime search as provided for under Minn. Stat. § 626.14 (2006). In support of the nighttime search authorization, Scherf also stated in the affidavit that “[t]his investigation has led your affiant into the nigh-time [sic] scope of search warrant.” Scherf provided no further information to support a nighttime search.
The district court granted a search warrant authorizing a nighttime entry, and at 9:25 p.m. on December 11 officers from the Itasca County Sheriffs Department executed the warrant on Jackson’s home. The officers knocked on Jackson’s door and then entered the home, where they found Jackson sitting at the kitchen table with her two teenaged children. The officers handcuffed Jackson and informed her that they were in her home to search for illegal drugs. Jackson initially denied having any illegal drugs. Scherf told Jackson that if she did not tell the officers where the illegal drugs were, they would “tear the house apart” looking for the drugs. Jackson then told the officers that she wanted to speak to them outside of the presence of her children. Acceding to this request, the officers led Jackson to her bedroom. After going into the bedroom with the officers, Jackson did lead the officers to multiple locations in the home that contained drugs. As a result of this search, the officers seized 9.7 grams of
Before trial, Jackson moved to suppress the evidence seized during the search of her home arguing that the searсh violated Minn.Stat. § 626.14 (2006) because Scherf s affidavit failed to articulate a sufficient basis to support a nighttime search. The district court agreed with Jackson and concluded that the issuance of a nighttime search warrant for her home was not justified. But the court denied Jackson’s motion to suppress the evidence seized during the search because the court concluded that the nighttime search violation was statutory rather than constitutional and that, under the facts and circumstances of this case, the statutory violation did not require suppression of the evidence. Jackson subsequently pleaded guilty to one controlled substance count in exchange for the other counts against her being dismissed. But, after learning that her guilty plea would prevent her from appealing the court’s denial of her suppression motion, Jackson withdrew her guilty plea and proceeded to a court trial on stipulated facts under State v. Lothenbach,
The district court found Jackson guilty of all charges and entered convictions for one controlled substance count and two child endangerment counts. The court sentenced Jackson to 105 months in prison for the controlled substance conviction and 12 months for each of the two child endangerment convictions, all sentences tо be served concurrently. The court of appeals affirmed the district- court’s denial of Jackson’s suppression motion.
I.
On appeal to our court, Jackson claims that the police failed to provide sufficient justification for a nighttime search of her home and therefore the issuance of the nighttime search warrant violated Minn. Stat. § 626.14 and both the United States and Minnesota constitutions. She asserts that the district court therefore erred when it denied her suppression motion. The state does not dispute that the nighttime search of Jackson’s home was improperly authorized under Minn.Stat. § 626.14. More specifically, the state does not explicitly contest the conclusion of the district court and the court of appeals that the search warrant application “did not make a sufficient showing to justify inclusion of the nighttime search clause.” Nevertheless, the state argues that the district court did not err when it admitted the evidence obtained as a direct result of the invalid search.
Minnesota Statutes § 626.14 provides that
[a] search warrant may be served only between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. unless the court determines on the basis of facts stated in the affidavits that a nighttime search outside those hours is necessary to prevent the loss, destruction, or removal of the objects of the sеarch or to protect the searchers or the public.
We have held that an application for a nighttime warrant under section 626.14
We have previously stated that we will not require the suppression of evidence obtained in violation of a statute or rule when the violation is merely technical and “did not subvert the basic purpose of the statute.” State v. Smith,
But we have also held that “serious violations which subvert the purpose of established procedures will justify suppression.” State v. Cook,
Based on the foregoing case law, the question before us is whether the 9:25 p.m. police search of Jackson’s home without valid authorization for a nighttime search is a serious violation that subverts the
In determining the purpose of section 626.14, we note that the statute appears to represent a codification and application of a legal history that illustrates an aversion to nighttime searches. Therefore, in determining the purpose of the statutory limitations on nighttime searches, we must examine this historical aversion to such searches. Further, we have also stated that the general rule against nighttime searches may have a constitutional dimension and thus implicates constitutional protections against unreasonable searches and seizures. See Lien,
Historic Aversion to Nighttime Searches
Certain provisions of the U.S. Constitution, which was adopted in 1787, and the Fourth Amendment, which was ratified in 1791, were in part a reaction to the general warrants of England and the writs of assistance used in the colonies. Steagald v. United States,
Before 1750, nighttime searches were authorized under law in the northern and central colonies and were the norm in other colonies. Tracey Maclin, The Complexity of the Fourth Amendment: A Historical Review, 77 B.U.L.Rev. 925, 971 (1997) citing William J. Cuddihy, The Fourth Amendment: Origins and Original Meaning, 602-1791, at 865-66 (1990) [hereinafter Cuddihy], But by the 1780s, every state except Delaware had enacted a statute barring nighttime searches. Id. (citing Cuddihy, supra at 1346 & n. 228). Even the states that still allowed general warrants did not allow nighttime searches. Id. The first congress that convened following the adoption of the Constitution expressed its disapproval of nighttime searches by enacting two statutes that authorized only daytime searches — Act of July 31, 1789, § 24, 1 Stat. 43, and Act of March 3, 1791, § 29, 1 Stat. 206. United States ex rel. Boyance v. Myers,
The aversion to nighttime searches that motivated these early statutes was also reflected in the other writings of the founders. For example, as early as 1774,
Every English[man] values himself exceedingly, he takes a Pride and he glories justly in that strong Protection, that sweet Security, that delightfull Tranq-uillity which the Laws have thus secured to him in his own House, especially in the Night. Now to deprive a Man of this Protection, this quiet and Security in the dead of Night, when himself and Family confiding in it are asleep, is treat[ing] him not like an Englishman not like a Freeman but like a Slave
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1 Legal Papers of John Adams 137 (L. Kinvin Wroth & Hiller B. Zobel eds., The Belknap Press 1965) (republished from the 1774 original). The special status of a person’s home at night is also reflected in the fact that at common law, attempt offenses were only misdemeanors, but breaking into a house at night with the intent to commit a felony was a felony. Thomas Y. Davies, Recovering the Original Fourth Amendment, 98 Mich. L.Rev. 547, 642 n. 259 (1999) (citing 4 William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England 223-26 (1769, reprinted facsimile U. Chi. Press, 1979)).
This early aversion to nighttime intrusion into the home indicates that the “factor of a nighttime search is sensitively related to the reasonableness issue” under the constitution. United States v. Gibbons,
Interest Protected
As we previously noted, a historic aversion to nighttime searches appears to have been the core purpose behind Minn.Stat. § 626.14, which statute was intended to protect against, at a minimum, the indignity of being roused out of bed in the middle of the night and made to stand by in nightclothes. But it is less evident exactly how far the protection extends and what is the precise interest to be protected. The interest being protected is not simply privacy in one’s home — the police may overcome that interest with a warrant supported by probable cause. Thus, in order to determine if a particular violation of the statute subverts the basic purpose of the statute, we must, with the historical context in mind, make further inquiry to more precisely define the interest being protected.
We have previously articulated the policy behind limiting nighttime searches both broadly and narrowly. In State v. Stephenson, we defined it broadly when we said it is to protect the public from the “ ‘abrasiveness of official intrusions’ during the night.”
We begin this part of our analysis^ with the understanding that any definition of the precise interest protected by restricting nighttime searches must be informed
The American Heritage Dictionary defines “repose” alternatively as “the state of being at rest,” “[fjreedom from worry; peace of mind,” and “[c]almness; tranquility.” The American Heritage Dictionary 1480 (4th ed.2000). Blаck’s Law Dictionary defines “repose” as “[cjessation of activity; temporary rest.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1327 (8th ed.2004). And Bryan A. Garner states that repose “is not ‘indefinite dormancy,’ but rather suggests temporary rest, after which there will again be activity.” Bryan A. Garner, A Dictionary of Modem Legal Usage 759 (2d ed.1995). These definitions of repose are consistent with language that appears in case law as well as the previously cited language used by John Adams in describing the special security -and tranquility of the home at night.
We believe that at certain times it will be readily apparent what is protected during this period of nighttime repose. For example, if the police search an unlit home at 3 a.m. without proper nighttime authorization, they run considerable risk of violating the occupants’ interest in being free from intrusion during a nighttime period of repose. But if the police search a home at 8:30 p.m. on the summer solstice when the doors are open and a party is underway at a home, they are much less likely to run the risk of seriously violating the occupants’ interest in being free from such intrusion. These examples illustrate a key aspect that we recognize and acknowledge about the interest we have articulated, especially at its beginning and end. This definition is a bit nebulous and necessarily encompasses what Justice Rоbert Jackson might refer to as a “zone of twilight,” within which the right to protection is less certain and will depend “on the imperatives of events and contemporary imponderables rather than on abstract theories of law.” Youngstown Sheet Tube Co. v. Sawyer,
Was the Basic Purpose of MinmStat. § 626.14 Seriously Violated?
Having defined the interest that the limitation on nighttime searches pro
State v. Lien Distinguished
Both the state and dissent assert that the violation here is not a serious violation based оn our resolution of a similar question in State v. Lien,
On review, we agreed that Minn.Stat. § 626.14 had been violated, but we went on to conclude that suppression of evidence obtained as a direct result of the invalid search was not required because the violation was merely technical. Lien,
Probable cause to search a home must be based on facts known to police before entrance into the home. State v. Lohnes,
At bottom, Minn.Stat. § 626.14 is directed at both an aversion to nighttime searches and police conduct. With respect to police conduct, it specifically aims to prevent police intrusion into the personal and private activities of individuals in their homes at night unless the police articulate facts sufficient to support their intrusion. It is the responsibility of the police to follow the statute by stating facts in an affidavit that the nighttime search “is necessary to prevent the loss, destruction, or removal of the objects of the search or to protect the searchers or the public.”
District Court Erred When It Did Not Suppress Evidence
For the preceding reasons, we conclude that the violations of Minn.Stat. § 626.14 were not mere technical violations but were serious violations. Accordingly, we conclude that admitting the evidence seized from Jackson’s home would subvert the basic purpose of section 626.14. Therefore, we hold that the district court erred when it failed to suppress the evidence seized during the invalid nighttime search of Jackson’s home.
II.
Having conсluded that suppression of the evidence seized from Jackson’s home is warranted in light of a statutory violation, we normally would not reach Jackson’s constitutional argument. We generally avoid ruling under the constitution if there is another basis upon which a case can be resolved. Bourke,
Although the general rule against nighttime searches is statutory, it may also have a constitutional dimension. Justice Marshall in a dissenting opinion, joined by Justice[s] Douglas and Brennan, in Gooding v. United States,416 U.S. 430 ,94 S.Ct. 1780 ,40 L.Ed.2d 250 (1974), while stating that the constitutional issue was not presented in that case, added that he believed the Constitution required additional justification for a nighttime search of a home over and above the ordinary showing of probable cause.
Underlying the Minnesota statutory rule as well as Justice Marshall’s suggested constitutionally based rule is the belief that a nighttime search of a home involves a much greater intrusion upon privacy and is presumably more alarming than an ordinary daytime search of a home.
Both the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, § 10 of the Minnesota Constitution provide
[I]llegitimate and unconstitutional practices get their first footing * * * by silent approaches and slight deviations from legal modes of procedure. This can Only be obviated by adhering to the rule that constitutional provisions for the security of person and property should be liberally construed. A close and literal construction deprives them of half their efficacy, and leads to gradual depreciation of the right, as if it consisted more in sound than in substance. It is the duty of courts to be watchful for the constitutional rights of the citizen, and against any stealthy encroachments thereon.
Id. The Court reinforced this rule when it held thаt evidence seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment cannot be used against a defendant at trial. Weeks v. United States,
While the Supreme Court has never held that a nighttime search implicates the reasonableness requirement of the Fourth Amendment, it has repeatedly acknowledged the especially intrusive nature of nighttime searches of the home. See, e.g., Gooding v. United States,
Further, several federal circuit courts have held that unauthorized nighttime searches violate the Fourth Amendment. For example, in United States v. Merritt, the Third Circuit considered a motion to suppress made by a defendant whose home had been searched at 7:30 p.m. with a warrant that authorized only a daytime
The state and the dissent essentially ignore the historical context of the Fourth Amendment in their analysis; but we consider this historical perspective to be a critical factor in any case involving a nighttime search.
Jackson also argues that because nighttime searches and unannounced searches both involve entry into the home in a manner rejected at common law, they should both be subject to the same constitutional constraints. In Wilson v. Arkansas, the Supreme Court held that the “common-law ‘knock and announce’ principle forms a part of the reasonаbleness inquiry under the Fourth Amendment.”
Given the historical aversion to nighttime searches, the historical recogni
In evaluating the reasonableness of an official intrusion beyond the probable cause context, the Supreme Court relies on the balancing test articulated in Camara v. Municipal Court,
Having previously defined the interests that the limitation on nighttime searches is designed to protect, we now examine the facts of this case to determine if Jackson’s constitutional rights were violated. The police entered Jackson’s home at 9:25 p.m. on December 11 when it would have been dark for several hours. The record does not indicate that the police had any specific information about what was going on in the home before entering it at nighttime. Further, for the same reasons as stated in section I, we conclude that the nighttime entry into Jackson’s home cannot be rendered constitutionally sound by the fact that the police happened to find Jackson and her children awake, fully clothed, and sitting at the kitchen table upon entering the home. Therefore, we conclude that the police violated Jackson’s right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures guaranteed by the United States Constitution when, without information indicating that Jackson had not yet entered a period of nighttime repose, they entered her home at 9:25 p.m. in the wintertime— December 11 — with a search warrant that invalidly authorized a nighttime entry. In reaching this conclusion we need not decide the exact time when Jackson’s constitutionally protected period of nighttime repose began and ended. Rather, we need only conclude that the search of her home fell within the protected time period.
III.
Having concluded that Jackson’s constitutional rights were violated by this invalid nighttime search, we now turn to the question of whether the evidence seized during the unconstitutional search of her home must be suppressed. Gener
In Hudson, the police obtained a warrant that did not authorize an unannounced entry to search the home of the defendant.
We ultimately conclude that Hudson is distinguishable for- an important .reason— an unannounced entry involves significantly different interests than the interests protected by the constitutional prohibition on nighttime searches. At the core of Hudson is the Supreme Court’s determination that a knock-and-announce violation does not require suppression was that the police in Hudson would have discovered the evidence whether they had knocked and announced or not.
Since Weeks, the Supreme Court has refused to apply the exclusionary rule in only two situations: 1) where the application of the rule would not result in appreciable deterrence, and 2) where the issue involves admissibility in a non-criminal proceeding. Hudson,
The state further argues that the evidence seized should not be suppressed because the officers reasonably relied on the nighttime search authorization issued by the district court. The Supreme Court has “long held that the ‘touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness.’ ” Ohio v. Robinette,
In this case we conclude that it was not objectively reasonable for the police to rely on the nighttime search authorization issued by the district court when the only justification provided to the court in support of a nighttime search was the police officer’s concluding statement that “[t]his investigation has led your affiant into the nightime [sic] scope of search warrant.” Since its enactment in 1963, Minn.Stat. § 626.14 has required that authorization for a nighttime search be based on “facts stated in the affidavits that a nighttime search is necessary to prevent the loss, destruction, or removal of the objects of the search.” Act of May 23, 1963, ch. 849, § 12, 1963 Minn. Laws 1552, 1555. And since Lien, which we decided in 1978, the law has been clear that section 626.14 requires some showing to the district court, beyond a bare assertion, that the warrant can only be executed successfully in the nighttime. Lien,
IV.
Jackson also asserts that Hudson is a sharp departure from the precedent of both the Supreme Court and our court,
Reversed.
Notes
. A court trial on stipulated facts under Loth-enbach is a means of preserving the defendant's right to appeal a pretrial suppression motion, which a guilty plea would extinguish. Lothenbach,
. The Minnesota rule governing telephonic search warrants, Minn. R.Crim. P. 36, was adopted the year after our decision in Cook.
. However, vessels not on the land could be searched day and night. Lasson, supra at 54 n. 17.
. Because we engaged primarily in a constitutional analysis in Lien, we did not specifically hold that suppression was not required because the violation did not subvert the basic
. See State v. Jordan,
. For a detailed discussion of the historical aversion to nighttime searches, see Part I of this opinion.
. In Hudson, five justices, including Justice Kennedy who wrote a concurring opinion, joined parts I through III of the opinion.
. We note that the dissent agrees that the rule announced in Hudson is inapplicable in this case because Hudson’s inevitable discovery analysis does not apply to a nighttime search violation.
. We specifically reject the dissent's assertion that we have failed to consider the police affidavit in its entirety by not concluding that the assertions that Dawson "dropped methamphetamine off at the Jackson residence and that Jackson also sells methamphetamine from her residence” justify a nighttime search. While such facts do support the issuance of a daytime search warrant, they do not justify a nighttime search warrant — a conclusion that even the state does not contest.
. The state does not directly cite United States v. Leon,
.See, e.g., In re Welfare of B.R.K.,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. We previously held that when a warrant is executed in violation of Minn.Stat. § 626.14 (2006), the evidence obtained as a result of the search will not be suppressed when the violation is technical in nature. State v. Lien,
I.
The State does not challenge the district court’s conclusion that the nighttime search warrant was defective. The State argues, rather, that the evidence obtained should not be suppressed despite the defect. The majority holds that the evidence must be suppressed not only because of the statutory violation, but also because the search violated Jackson’s constitutional rights. In so holding, the majority attempts to distinguish, but does not overrule, our holding in Lien. I disagree with the majority’s analysis of that case as it pertains to the facts now before us.
In Lien, the police obtained a search warrant authorizing a nighttime search despite failing to make a particularized showing that a nighttime search was necessary either to preserve evidence or to protect the safety of the officers executing the warrant.
Our decision not to suppress the evidence was based on our conclusion that the error was not of a constitutional nature. Id. at 841. In support of this conclusion, we noted that “the intrusion was not the kind of nighttime intrusion — with people being roused out of bed and forced to stand by in their night clothes while the police conduct the search — that our statutory rule against nighttime execution of search warrants is primarily designed to prevent.” Id. We further stated, “[I]t is significant that, although the warrant was executed in the nighttime, it was executed at a reasonable hour when most people are still awake.” Id. We therefore concluded that “while there was a technical violation of our statute, the violation was not of a constitutional nature,” and the exclusionary rule should not be appliеd. Id. at 840-41.
Similar to Lien, in this case the police approached Jackson’s home with a defective nighttime search clause in a search warrant. Also similar to Lien, the police did not rouse Jackson or her children out of bed; they were awake, fully clothed, and seated at the kitchen table. Furthermore, 9:25 p.m. is “a reasonable hour when most people are still awake.” Id. at 841; cf. Fed.R.Crim.P. 41(a)(2)(B) (defining “[djaytime” hours, for purposes of executing search warrants, as 6 a.m. to 10 p-m.).
The majority distinguishes Lien based on the fact that “the police had no basis to believe that Jackson had not yet entered [a] period of nighttime repose,” an interest that the majority determines section
The majority cites no rule or case law that precludes the State from introducing evidence regarding the state of the home’s occupants at the time of execution of a warrant. In Lien> we made an objective inquiry, considering all of the relevant facts and circumstances concerning the effect of the unlawful nighttime search on the occupant.
We also emphasized in Lien that the error committed was attributable to the magistrate, not to the police, and that the police acted in “good faith.”
If different facts are posited, e.g., the occupants of the home are asleep at the time the warrant is executed, the warrant does not authorize a nighttime search, or there is evidence of what the majority fears might happen — that the police are “play[ing] the odds” in ignoring the statutory requirements — there is little doubt the analysis would change as well. But those are not our facts; here, as in Lien, the facts support a conclusion that, at most, we have a technical violation of section 626.14, and I would therefore affirm the court of appeals.
II.
I would dismiss Jackson’s constitutional argument on the basis of Lien, where we stated that the error of conducting an unauthorized nighttime search under section 626.14 in that case was not of a “constitutional nature.”
Regarding the substance of the constitutional analysis, the majority correctly notes that “the Supreme Court has never held that a nighttime search implicates the reasonableness requirement of the Fourth Amendment.” See United States v. Rizzi,
III.
Even if I agreed that the nighttime search violation in this case implicates the Fourth Amendment, the question before us today is whether the evidence obtained must be suppressed.
The majority summarily concludes that suppression of the evidence in this case will have an “appreciable dеterrent effect” on police misconduct but fails to demonstrate why that is so. The failure to comply with the nighttime search warrant statute in this case was attributable to the
The Court in Leon explained that there is rarely a significant deterrent effect when an officer acts in good faith within the scope of a warrant:
In most such cases, there is no police illegality and thus nothing to deter. It is the magistrate’s responsibility to determine whether the officer’s allegations establish probable cause and, if so, to issue a warrant comporting in form with the requirements of the Fourth Amendment. In the ordinary case, an officer cannot be expected to question the magistrate’s probable-cause determination or his judgment that the form of the warrant is technically sufficient. “[Ojnce the warrant issues, there is literally nothing more the policeman can do in seeking to comply with the law.”
Id. at 920-21,
As the majority correctly observes, an officer’s reliance on a judge’s mistaken determination must be objectively reasonable, and this standard requires that the officer have “reasonable knowledge of what the law prohibits.” Id. at 919-20 n. 20,
In declaring that the only justification provided to the court in support of the nighttime authorization was the officer’s statement that “[t]his investigation has led your affiant into the nightime [sic] scope of search warrant,” the majority fails to consider the officer’s affidavit in its entirety. The supporting affidavit stated that Jackson’s boyfriend had dropped off methamphetamine at Jackson’s home and that Jackson was selling methamphetamine from there. Because, as explained above, evidence of drug-related activity in a supporting affidavit can justify inclusion of a nighttime search provision in a warrant, it was reasonable for the officers to rely оn the judge’s conclusion that the evidence justified the nighttime search authorization. Although the State concedes, and I agree, that the information contained in the affidavit was an insufficient basis for the authorization of the nighttime search, it was sufficient to make it objectively reasonable for the officers to rely on the judge’s determination.
Even if I believed that the nighttime search violation in this case implicates the Fourth Amendment, I would conclude that suppression of the evidence is not required because suppression would not deter wrongful police activity and because the officers reasonably relied on the judge’s authorization of the nighttime search.
I would affirm our holding in Lien that a technical violation of Minn.Stat. § 626.14 does not implicate a defendant’s rights under the Fourth Amendment, and even if Jackson’s Fourth Amendment rights were
. The majority emphasizes that the search in this case took place in "Jackson’s Minnesota home at 9:25 p.m. on December 11 when it would have been dark for several hours.” Why this is relevant is not clear.
. Furthermore, by addressing the constitutional question after resolving the case on statutory grounds, the majority risks that the last 12 pages of its opinion will be read as mere dicta.
. As an aside, I agree with the majority’s recognition that the Supreme Court's decision in Hudson v. Michigan, - U.S. -,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I join in the dissent of Justice G. Barry Anderson.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I join in the dissent of Justice G. Barry Anderson.
