{¶ 1} Appellant, Dewayne Keith, appeals from his conviction of one count of possession of crack cocaine in the amount greater than one but less than five grams, pursuant to his no-contest plea.
{¶ 2} Prior to his plea, Keith moved to suppress the drugs recovered by the police that formed the basis of his charge. According to the evidence presented at the suppression hearing, on Nоvember 18, 2006, Dayton Police Officer Ronald Velez responded to a disturbance call from the Dayton Motor Motel, located on North Keowee Street. Ms. Kailis Patel, who owns and manages the motel with hеr brother, Mr. Praful Patel, reported that a white female wearing a red sweater was knocking on motel room doors, disturbing other customers. The woman in the red sweater was later identified as Krystal Phillips. When Officer Velez arrived at the motel, Mr. Patel informed the officer that Phillips was in room 38 and accompanied him to the room.
{¶ 3} Officer Velez testified that while Mr. Patel knocked on the door of room 38, he stood next tо Patel on the opposite side of the door. Officer Velez testified that he thought Mr. Patel had called out, “Front desk,” but he was not sure, because he had some difficulty understanding Mr. Patel’s accented English. After abоut three minutes, Keith opened his door, and Officer Velez questioned Keith, who identified himself as Dewayne. Mr. Patel looked into the room, pointed to the woman in the red sweater, and stepped into Keith’s roоm. Concerned about protecting Mr. Patel from the occupants, considering the motel’s location in a high crime area, Officer Velez followed Mr. Patel into the room without asking for permission and walked to the right of Mr. Patel, who had entered to the left side of the room. Officer Velez testified that as soon as he entered the room, he observed drugs in plain view on top of the dresser that stood directly four fеet across from the doorway. In response to Officer Velez’s queries, neither Keith nor Phillips claimed ownership of the drugs, but Keith admitted that he had rented the room. Officer Velez arrested Keith for permitting drug use.
{¶ 4} Contrary to Officer Velez’s testimony, Mr. Patel testified that he was not the one who knocked on the door, but that it was Officer Velez who knocked on the door and entered the room alone without permission. While Mr. Pаtel was standing at the door, he noticed Phillips and informed the officer that Phillips was the woman creating the disturbance. After the officer asked her to identify herself, Patel returned to the front desk.
{¶ 5} Keith was indicted оn January 17, 2007, and filed a motion to suppress, which the court overruled. The trial court held: “[T]he drugs were on a dresser directly in front of this opened door, * * * and the officer saw the drugs on entering the room. But had he not entered the room, * * * by a preponderance
{¶ 6} The drugs were seen lying on a dresser directly in front of the motel door some four feet away. Keith pleaded no contest to the charge and was sentenced to 14 months in prison. Keith appeаls his conviction, asserting in his single assignment of error that the trial court erred by denying the motion to suppress the evidence seized in the warrantless search of his motel room when there was no consent given and whеn no exigent circumstances existed.
{¶ 7} The Fourth Amendment protects individuals from an unreasonable search in their homes. See
Katz v. United States
(1967),
{¶ 8} In his testimony, Officer Velez offered a justification for his warrantless entry into Keith’s rooms. Officer Velez asserted that the reason he followed Mr. Patel into the room was a result оf his concern for the safety of Mr. Patel since the Dayton Motor Motel is known for drug sales and prostitution and that he had previously made “plenty” of arrests in the area. The record, however, indicates that Ms. Patel had called the police only to evict Phillips, who was disturbing other customers by knocking on their doors. Knowing that Phillips was in room 38, the officer could have asked Phillips to exit the room and then waited outsidе until she came out. There is nothing in the record that indicates that Phillips would have refused to exit the room. Moreover, there was no one in immediate need of aid, and the entry was not made as a result of hot pursuit of the suspect. Accordingly, the exigent-circumstances exception does not apply to the present set of circumstances.
{¶ 10} The state contends that the discovery of the drugs was inevitable after Keith opened the door. Under the inevitable-discovery exception to the warrant requirement, evidence will not be suppressed if there is a reasonable probability that illegally obtained evidence would have ultimately been discovered during a lawful investigation, notwithstanding the government’s misconduct.
State v. Sharpe,
{¶ 11} One of the purposes of the exclusionary rule is to deter shortcuts of the search warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment. 6 LaFave, Search and Seizure (2004) 270-271, Section 11.4(a). Accordingly, the inevitable-discovery doctrine is not applicаble to those situations where its use would operate to nullify important Fourth Amendment safeguards. Id. at 271-272.
{¶ 12} In
United States v. Griffin
(1974),
{¶ 13} Similarly, this court held the inevitable-discovery rule not applicable in
State v. Sharpe,
{¶ 14} Likewise, we conclude that the inevitable-discovery rule is inapplicable to rehabilitate evidence seized without a warrant. To hold otherwise would justify, if not encourage, warrantless searches and seizures. If the police officer had stayed out of the room and observed the drugs, the evidence would have been admissible, but the fact is that the officer оbserved the drugs only after he had entered illegally. To allow admission of evidence seized illegally on the basis that the officer could have continued to stand at the doorway and inevitably would have seen the contraband on the dresser would emasculate the requirement for a warrant under the Fourth Amendment. In other words, “the argument that ‘if we hadn’t done it wrong, we would have done it right’ is far from compelling.”
State v. Topanotes
(2003),
{¶ 15} The appellant’s assignment of error is sustained. The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
