The State appeals from the district court’s order suppressing evidence and dismissing charges against Heather Lusby. We reverse and remand.
I.
BACKGROUND
On January 28, 2007, officers were dispatched to an apartment to investigate a disturbance between Lusby and another individual. While officers were speaking with Lusby, she became agitated and retreated into the apartment. One of the officers followed her, pulled her out, and announced that she was under arrest for resisting and obstructing him. Lusby struggled with the officer. As she was being handcuffed, she allegedly intentionally hit an officer in the face with her elbow. Lusby was searched incident to the arrest, and officers found drug paraphernalia in her possession. She was charged with felony battery on a law enforcement officer, Idaho Code §§ 18-915(d), 1 -903(b), misdemeanor possession of paraphernalia, I.C. § 37-2734A, and misdemeanor resisting and obstructing an officer, I.C. § 18-705.
Lusby moved to suppress the evidence of the drug paraphernalia and dismiss the battery and obstruction charges on the ground that the officer’s warrantless entry into the apartment to retrieve Lusby violated her Fourth Amendment rights. The district court granted the motion, finding that the officer entered the apartment without a legal justification for doing so. The court reasoned that all the subsequent events flowed from this illegality, and therefore evidence of Lusby’s resistance and battery on the officer and the subsequent search must be suppressed as fruit of the unlawful entry.
The State appeals. It does not challenge the district court’s holding that the officer’s intrusion into Lusby’s apartment violated constitutional standards. Rather, the State argues that evidence of the battery or other forceful resistance to the officer, and evidence of the paraphernalia, was not gained by exploitation of the unlawful entry and therefore ought not be suppressed.
II.
ANALYSIS
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution assures the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” It has long been held that evidence obtained by searches and seizures made in violation of this constitutional right is inadmissible against the accused.
Mapp v. Ohio,
Evidence is not necessarily “fruit of the poisonous tree” simply because it would not have come to light but for illegal actions of the police. “Rather, the more apt question in such a case is ‘whether, granting establishment of the primary illegality, the evidence to which instant objection is made has been come at by exploitation of that illegality or instead by means sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the
The State argues that Lusby’s use of force against the officer was an intervening circumstance that broke the chain of causation between the illegal entry of Lusby’s apartment and all subsequent events. 2 The State therefore contends that the district court improperly suppressed the evidence of Lusby’s battering the officer by hitting him with her elbow, of paraphernalia found in a search incident to the arrest for this battery, and of any further physical resistance or obstruction by Lusby.
We begin by noting that Lusby’s use of physical violence against the officer was a crime and was not justified by the officer’s unlawful entry into her home. It is well established that an individual may not use force to resist a peaceable arrest by one she knows or has good reason to believe is a police officer, even if the arrest is illegal under the circumstances.
State v. Richardson,
It appears to be a nearly universal rule in American jurisdictions that when a suspect responds to an unconstitutional search or seizure by a physical attack on the officer, evidence of this new crime is admissible notwithstanding the prior illegality.
See
Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment § 11.4(j) (4th ed.2004). This was our conclusion in
Wren,
The rationale of these decisions is that, although officers may have conducted an unconstitutional search or seizure, a subsequent attack on the officer is a new crime unrelated to any prior illegality.
3
Because there has been no exploitation of the officer’s unconstitutional conduct, the purpose of the exclusionary rule — to deter police misconduct— would not be advanced by suppressing evidence of the attack on the officer. As observed by the North Carolina Supreme Court in
State v. Miller,
Accordingly, we hold that evidence of Lusby’s alleged battery on an officer or other forceful resistance is not suppressible. The officers did not derive evidence of this new criminal conduct from any exploitation of the unlawful entry. Therefore, evidence of the battery, evidence of other criminal acts in resisting or obstructing the officer, 4 and evidence of paraphernalia found in the search incident to Lusby’s arrest are admissible.
The order suppressing evidence of drug paraphernalia and dismissing the battery and obstruction charges is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
. Idaho Code § 18 — 915(d) was recently amended and re-codified as I.C. § 18-915(3), 2008 Idaho Sess. Laws, ch. 151 (S.B.1362).
. Lusby contends that this issue was not preserved for appeal because the prosecutor did not specifically argue to the district court that Lusby's actions were intervening circumstances. This contention is unpersuasive. The overarching issue of the admissibility of the evidence was raised by Lusby's suppression motion, not by the State. Once evidence has been presénted on such a motion, it is the judge’s duty to determine whether the facts proven demonstrate a violation of the Fourth Amendment, and the court’s analysis is not limited by the prosecutor's argument or the absence thereof.
See Bower,
. This must be distinguished from circumstances where a defendant's response to the police illegality is not itself criminal but merely exposes an ongoing crime. Such evidence is still suppressible under the ordinary exclusionary rule analysis.
See Bailey,
. The district court did not address, and it is not clear from the charging information, whether the obstruction charge was based on acts of mere passive resistance to the officer's attempt to remove Lusby from her apartment or was an unjustified use of force that would be subject to prosecution on the same basis as the battery charge. These are issues that may be examined on remand.
