OPINION
This appeal raises the question of whether the exclusionary rule, invoked to suppress evidence of an illegal search, should be applied to a probation revocation hearing when the police officers who conducted the search were aware of the defendant’s status as a probationer. We agree with the trial court that it should in this instance.
On April 28, 1975, appellee Michael Shirley pled guilty to the crime of second degree burglary. Imposition of sentence was suspended and appellee was placed on probation.
In the early morning hours of May 3, 1976, officers from the Federal Drug Enforcement Administration task force, Arizona Department of Public Safety, Pinal County Sheriff’s Department and Casa Grande Police Department executed a nighttime search warrant and seized a quantity of marijuana, prescription-only drugs and a revolver. The officers were aware when they obtained the warrant that Shirley was on probation.
On May 18, the Pinal County Grand Jury returned an indictment against Shirley on charges of possession of marijuana for sale, possession of prescription-only drugs and possession of a pistol by a criminal. The charges were dropped later because the search warrant was found to be defective.
*106 On May 20, a petition to revoke Shirley’s probation was filed in Pinal County Superi- or Court. Shirley filed a motion to suppress, alleging that the search warrant and affidavit were defective and that all the evidence therefore was illegally obtained. Following a hearing, the court suppressed the evidence and denied the petition to revoke. Its written order stated:
“ * * * The basis for the Court’s ruling is that this evidence was obtained in violation of defendant-probationer’s constitutional rights under the 4th Amendment of the U. S. Constitution: i. e., that the evidence was seized illegally in that the search warrant was defective.”
The state contends that a probationer does not enjoy the same constitutional protections as other citizens. Relying on
Morrissey v. Brewer,
Morrissey
v.
Brewer,
supra, however, does not stand for the proposition that a probationer is without any constitutional protection. On the contrary, the majority in
Morrissey,
which involved parole revocation, points to the liberty which the parolee is enjoying and concludes that due process must be applied before that liberty may be revoked.
Morrissey
holds that “. due process is flexible and calls for such procedural protections as the particular situation demands.”
The state urges that application of the exclusionary rule to probation revocation would not serve the rule’s primary purpose of deterring police officers from conducting illegal searches.
Elkins v. United States,
The state relies on three cases in which courts have refused to apply the exclusionary rule to revocation hearings:
In re Martinez,
Sup.,
In another case,
Verdugo v. United States,
In
Winsett,
supra, the same court balanced the potential harm against the potential benefits of applying the exclusionary rule under the .facts presented, and reasoned that extension of the rule to probation revocation proceedings would “. deter only police searches and arrests consciously directed toward probationers.”
“Compare Verdugo v. United States, [supra], in which this court applied the exclusionary rule to sentencing proceedings where the police were familiar with past narcotic violators and current suspects and had a personal stake in seeing not only that a violator was convicted, but also that he receive a lengthy sentence. *107 The court reasoned that in the absence of the exclusionary rule an officer would have an incentive, given the proper circumstances, to lawfully obtain only so much evidence as is necessary to assure conviction of the defendant of a single offense, and then proceed to unlawfully obtain evidence of additional offenses which would ensure a long sentence.
“Similarly, when the police at the moment of search know that a suspect is a probationer, they may have a significant incentive to carry out an illegal search even though knowing that evidence would be inadmissible in any criminal proceeding. The police have nothing to risk: If the motion to suppress in the criminal proceedings were denied, defendant would stand convicted of a new crime; and if the motion were granted, the defendant would still find himself behind bars due to revocation of probation. Thus, in such circumstances, extension of the exclusionary rule to the probation revocation proceeding may be necessary to effectuate Fourth Amendment safeguards.”518 F.2d at 54, n.5 .
The rationale of Verdugo is appropriate to the record before us. One of the officers who conducted the illegal search was an arresting officer on the burglary for which Shirley had been placed on probation, and testified at the revocation hearing that he “had hoped for something a little bit more” following the burglary conviction. The facts thus provide the potential incentive for misconduct that brings this case within the exception anticipated in United States v. Winsett, supra. The court properly suppressed the evidence and denied the petition to revoke probation.
Our holding is not inconsistent with our recent decision in
State v. Jeffers,
While a person is on probation his expectations of privacy are less than those of other citizens not so categorized.
State v. Montgomery,
Affirmed.
