The State of Georgia appeals the grant of Gary Lewis Stringer’s pre-trial motion to suppress his confession, on the ground of his arrest on an invalid warrant. The murder and armed robbery with which Stringer is charged were committed on March 27, 1986. On September 11, 1987, Stringer was arrested pursuant to a 21-month-old state-court bench warrant (issued on December 3, 1985) for two misdemeanor shoplifting charges. During custodial interrogation, Stringer made a confession which implicated two others who later became co-defendants in the murder and armed-robbery proceedings. The trial court granted Stringer’s pre-trial motion to suppress the confession, holding that there was evidence that Stringer and his father had made several court appearances pursuant to the warrant and that the warrant had been recalled by another judge. The state appeals. We affirm.
A valid arrest must be supported by probable cause.
Dunaway v. New York,
The primary purpose of the bench warrant is to secure the presence of the defendant in court. Once the defendant appears in court, the bench warrant is no longer necessary, and has no force and effect. The bench warrant is simply a means to an end, and in the case at bar, Stringer’s appearance several times during 1986 and 1987 eliminated the need for the bench warrant. All the witnesses were in agreement that any future nonappearance by Stringer would have required the issuance of another bench warrant.
*606 The procedure used for recalling Stringer’s bench warrant was not different from that of any other bench warrant recalled by the solicitor’s office from the Richmond County Sheriff’s Department. 1 The evidence of the solicitor’s office records clearly showed that the bench warrant had been recalled on January 21, 1986.
Nor does the bench warrant retain its validity simply because no written order quashing it was entered by Judge Hamrick. As Judge Hamrick testified, the issuance of a bench warrant required an oral order by the sitting judge while the trial court was in session. Preparation of the warrant was handled by the solicitor’s office; Judge Hamrick’s signature was affixed to the warrant by means of a stamp maintained in the solicitor’s office. The “holding up,” “dissolution,” or “quashing” of a bench warrant was also carried out by the solicitor’s office upon the oral approval of the court.
The state contends that the bench warrant continues to be valid until Stringer’s state-court case is concluded. However, the State Court of Richmond County simply does not operate as formally as the Superior Court of Richmond County, having a higher caseload and fewer personnel. There was no evidence produced to authorize a finding that Stringer’s bench warrant had any validity after January 21, 1986.
The state also seeks to justify Stringer’s arrest on the ground that the arresting officer acted in good faith. The good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule occurs when an officer makes a judgmental error concerning the existence of facts sufficient to constitute probable cause if the officer has forthrightly set out the facts in an affidavit for a search warrant.
United States v. Leon,
As was stated in Albo, All S2d at 1076:
[A] contrary holding — which would sanction evidence seized through the arrest of any citizen merely because he has once been legally subject to apprehension — would affirmatively encourage the careless, perhaps deliberately neglectful, failure to delete names from that proscribed list on what would then be the correct theory that the longer the list, the more persons subject to search and the consequent seizure of admissible evidence. Affirmance would therefore actually advance just that impermissible, indeed unconstitutional, conduct the exclusionary rule was expressly adopted to prevent.
In this case, the warrant was 21 months old; such warrants were routinely returned after 24 months; the warrant had not been served during this period although Stringer lived with his father at a known address; and the arresting officer had the warrant in his possession for eight days before executing it, during which time he could, and should, have verified its status from the sheriff’s docket book. The documented collective knowledge and negligence of the law-enforcement department must be imputed to the officer executing the bench warrant.
People v. Ramirez,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
In
Kametches v. State,
