OPINION ON REMAND
This is an opinion on remand from the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. The State appealed the trial court’s decision to suppress evidence that showed appellee resisted arrest. The trial court suppressed the evidence on the ground that it was “fruit of the poisonous tree” because no arrest warrant existed. We reversed the trial court’s decision in
State v. Mayorga,
In the initial submission of this case, we assumed, as did the parties, that the police arrested appellee unlawfully.
Mayorga,
Since our first opinion in
Mayorga,
the United States Supreme Court has established a categorical exception to the federal exclusionary rule when erroneous information leading to an unlawful arrest results from clerical error by court employees.
See Evans,
514 U.S. at -,
Using the analysis set out in
United States v. Leon,
In the instant case, the arresting police officer testified that he radioed the police dispatcher and gave appellee’s name and date of birth. The police dispatcher responded that there were outstanding warrants. The officer arrested appellee based on this information. The arresting officer testified that he followed routine police department procedure for confirming the warrants by radio. When the officer took appellee to jail, however, he discovered the warrants were actually in the name of Imelda Mayorga, not Haydee Mayorga, and that the driver’s license number differed by one digit.
Like the police officer in Evans, the officer in this case was acting in an objectively reasonable manner when he relied on the information from the police dispatcher that a warrant existed for appellee’s arrest. Similarly, the officer in this case was bound to arrest and would have been derelict in his duty if he failed to arrest appellee after receiving the dispatcher’s message. But, unlike Evans, the error in this ease was made by a police employee, not a court clerk.
The categorical exception to the exclusionary rule in
Evans
is limited to “clerical errors of court employees.”
Id.
at -,
We conclude the application of the Leon analytical framework does not support a categorical exception to the federal exclusionary rule for mistakes made by police dispatchers. Unlike court clerks or judges, police dispatchers are in continuous radio contact with the officers on duty. They are adjuncts to the law enforcement team with a stake in the outcome of criminal prosecutions. They directly provide the warrant information upon which an officer in the field depends to make an arrest; their misconduct or carelessness can be significantly affected by the threat of exclusion. Because we recognize the exclusionary rule as an important tool to help prevent impingement on Fourth Amendment rights, we decline to create another exception *84 to the rule for errors caused by police personnel.
Our conclusion that
Leon
and, consequently,
Evans
do not support another categorical exception to the federal exclusionary rule for mistakes made by police dispatchers does not change the outcome of this appeal.
2
Any exception to the federal exclusionary rule that permits the admission of evidence in the face of a Fourth Amendment violation presupposes that the evidence is actually within the scope of exclusion. As we previously held in our first opinion, the evidence appel-lee sought to exclude was outside the scope of the exclusionary rule.
Mayorga,
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 primary taint.
Wong Sun v. United States,
We next revisit our analysis under article 38.23in light of
Ford,
Article 38.23 provides that no evidence “obtained ... in violation of ... the Constitution or laws of the State of Texas, or the Constitution or laws of the United States of America” is admissible in trial against the accused. Tex.Code CRIm.ProCAnn. art. 38.23(Vernon Supp.1996). On discretionary review, the court of criminal appeals agreed that the evidence of appellee’s resisting arrest was not “obtained” in violation of the law as prohibited by article 38.23 because article 38.23contemplates the illegal procurement of
existing
evidence of a previously committed crime.
See Mayorga,
The court of criminal appeals remanded the case, however, for consideration of our holding in light of
Ford
and
Barnett.
As the court of criminal appeals noted, the parties cited these cases in their briefs.
Mayorga,
In
Ford,
the court of criminal appeals discussed the constitutionality of section
*85
38.08(b) of the Texas Penal Code. Tex.Penal Code Ajnn. § 38.03(b) (Vernon 1994). Under section 38.03(b), illegality of the arrest is not a defense to prosecution for resisting arrest. In its discussion of whether section 38.03(b) interferes with due process of law and the guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures under the Texas and United States Constitutions,
Ford
concluded that section 38.03(b) was a valid exercise of police power.
Ford,
Neither Ford nor Barnett affects our analysis of appellee’s claim under state law. Ap-pellee retains the suppression remedy of the exclusionary rule under Ford and Barnett if she can show she is entitled to it. For example, even though the illegality of an arrest is not a defense to the offense of resisting arrest, if an arresting officer exploits an illegal arrest by impermissibly interrogating the accused or improperly obtaining a consent to search, the accused may be entitled to suppression of her subsequent oral statement or evidence found pursuant to the consent to search. An accused also may be entitled to suppression of the evidence of her resisting arrest if she can show the evidence was obtained by exploitation of the initial illegal arrest; that is, for example, if she can show the officer used an illegal arrest to provoke her to resist. Thus, our decision to reverse the trial court in this case does not offend the holdings of Ford or Barnett. Appellee retains all the remedies noted in Ford, including the suppression remedy. She simply has not shown under the facts presented that she is entitled to it.
Accordingly, we conclude our previous analysis in Mayorga, that the evidence appel-lee sought to suppress is outside the field of exploitation and thus not subject to exclusion, need not be altered in light of either Evans, Ford, or Barnett. The Evans opinion presupposes that the illegal substance was within the field of exploitable and, therefore, excludable evidence. Because we conclude that the evidence in this case is not within the scope of excludable evidence, the categorical exception to the exclusionary rule created in Evans is unnecessary to the disposition of this appeal. Moreover, the Evans exception applies only to clerical errors by court employees and is factually distinguishable from this ease. Again, we decline to extend the Evans exception to errors committed by police personnel.
Unquestionably, Ford and Barnett stand for the general principle that the exclusionary rule remains a viable remedy for persons who are unlawfully arrested. Neither case, however, mandates that all evidence that police gather after effecting an illegal arrest must be suppressed. To invoke the suppression remedy, appellee must show she is entitled to it. She has not shown that she is entitled to suppression of the evidence of her resisting arrest.
Consequently, the analysis in our original opinion remains unchanged. We remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings.
Notes
.
Leon
established the ‘‘good-faith exception” to the federal exclusionary rule for judicial misconduct when police officers act in objectively reasonable reliance on a search warrant, issued by a neutral and detached magistrate, that is later determined to be invalid.
Leon,
. Indeed, our opinion on remand
cannot
change the outcome of this appeal: The court of criminal appeals has already affirmed our decision that the trial court erred.
Mayorga,
. Our conclusion that article 38.23 is not applicable is also supported by the court of criminal appeals’ subsequent discussion of the attenuation doctrine in
State v. Daugherty,
