The State appeals the order of the Superior Court {Barry, J.) granting the motion to suppress filed by the defendant, Joseph Panarello. We affirm and remand.
The record supports the following facts. In May 2006, the defendant was the supervisor of the Belknap County House of Corrections. On May 15, 2006, he called in sick to work. When he failed to report to work the next *206 day, his employer contacted the Hillsborough Police Department and requested that an officer perform a “welfare check” on the defendant at his Hillsborough home.
Hillsborough Police Officer Amy Collins subsequently arrived at the defendant’s home. Seeing his truck outside, the officer knocked on three doors of the residence and looked into several windows. Although she saw lights on in the home, she did not see the defendant, and no one responded to her knocking. Officer Collins attempted to contact the defendant by phone, but to no avail. She returned to the police station and checked with dispatch, which had not received any further information.
Officer Collins later returned to the defendant’s home. By stepping sideways through a fence opening, she accessed a fourth door, which was closed but unlocked. She entered the defendant’s home, loudly announcing that she was Officer Collins of the Hillsborough Police Department. As she walked further into the home, she continued to identify herself and said that she was at the home to check on the defendant. Upon hearing movement upstairs, she again announced her presence. When she looked up, she saw the defendant descending the stairs. When he was at the bottom of the steps and had turned around to look at her, Officer Collins “hollered to him: [‘]Mr. Panarello, it’s the Hillsborough Police____[A]re you all right?[’]” The defendant then allegedly pointed a gun at her. To get out of the line of fire, Officer Collins dove through the door to the outside.
A search warrant was subsequently obtained based upon Officer Collins’ observations in the home. The defendant was eventually charged with one count of criminal threatening, see RSA 631:4 (2007), and one count of possession of a controlled substance, see RSA 318-B-.2 (2004).
Before trial, the defendant moved to suppress “any and all physical or testimonial evidence obtained as a result of Officer Collins’ entry into his home.” He argued that the officer’s entry violated Part I, Article 19 of the State Constitution. Although the State argued that Officer Collins’ initial warrantless entry into the defendant’s home was lawful under the community caretaking exception to the warrant requirement, the trial court disagreed and granted the defendant’s motion to suppress. The State filed a motion to reconsider, which the trial court denied, and this appeal followed.
Our review of the trial court’s order on a motion to suppress is
de novo,
except as to any controlling facts determined at the trial court level in the first instance.
State v. Gubitosi,
The State does not challenge the trial court’s determination that Officer Collins’ warrantless entry into the defendant’s home was unlawful. Rather, the State argues that the trial court erred by suppressing “evidence that the defendant criminally threatened Officer Collins by pointing a gun at *207 her.” The State concedes that it did not present this argument to the trial court, but argues that we may reverse the trial court, nonetheless, under our plain error rule. See Sup. Ct. R. 16-A.
Generally, we do not consider issues raised on appeal that were not presented in the trial court.
See State v. Brum,
The plain error rule allows us to exercise our discretion to correct errors not raised in the trial court.
See
Sup. Ct. R. 16-A. Before we may do so: “(1) there must be error; (2) the error must be plain; [and] (3) the error must affect substantial rights.”
State v. Hancock,
On the first criterion, the State argues that the trial court erred by excluding evidence that the defendant criminally threatened Officer Collins as the fruit of the illegal entry. The State contends that evidence that the defendant pointed a gun at Officer Collins is evidence of a new crime that does not fall under the “fruit of the poisonous tree” doctrine.
“The ‘fruit of the poisonous tree’ doctrine requires the exclusion from trial of evidence derivatively obtained through a violation of Part I, Article 19 of the New Hampshire Constitution.”
State v. Cobb,
The purpose of the exclusionary rule is three-fold.
State v. Beauchesne,
Nevertheless, there are exceptions to this rule.
See id.
at 817. For instance, evidence will not be excluded “if the connection between the
*208
illegal police conduct and the discovery and seizure of the evidence is so attenuated as to dissipate the taint.”
Segura v. United States,
We have not heretofore decided under the New Hampshire Constitution “whether a new crime committed in response to an unlawful police entry into one’s residence is attenuated sufficiently to break the chain of causation from the unlawful entry.”
State v. Brocuglio,
Courts advance different justifications for this exception to the exclusionary rule.
Brocuglio,
In our view, “the policy concerns underlying [this last] rationale present a persuasive reason for adopting the [new crime] exception to the exclusionary rule.”
Brocuglio,
We decline to hold that after an unlawful entry[, search or seizure] evidence of subsequent crimes committed against police officers must be suppressed. Such a rule would produce intolerable results. For example, a person who correctly believed that his home had been unlawfully entered by the police could respond with unlimited force and, under the exclusionary rule, could be effectively immunized from criminal responsibility for any action taken after that entry.
State v. Burger,
We next address the second criterion: whether the trial court’s error was “plain.” For the purposes of the plain error rule, “an error is plain if it was or should have been obvious in the sense that the governing law was clearly settled to the contrary.”
Lopez,
The State contends that the trial court’s error was plain in light of our decision in
Beauchesne,
which it asserts is on all fours with this case. In
Beauchesne,
however, we were not presented with the precise question at issue here. The defendant in
Beauchesne
was unlawfully seized and, thereafter, resisted arrest.
Beauchesne,
Having concluded that the second criterion of our plain error test is not met, we hold that the State has failed to demonstrate that the trial court committed plain error in this case. Absent plain error, we decline to exercise our discretion to correct the trial court’s error in this case.
Affirmed and remanded.
