When the police arrived at the house in Peoria from which Dennis Jones routinely sold cocaine, one team approached the front door and another the back door. The officers had a warrant to search not only the house but also Jones’s person for drugs. The back-door team found Jones leaving the back porch and took him into custody on the back lawn, finding crack cocaine in his pockets. The front-door team knocked on the door, shouted “Police, search warrant”, and *716 broke the door with a battering ram when the living room’s occupant, Raymond Cook, did not respond to the demand for entry. Police found more drugs inside, but the indictment was confined to the drugs found on Jones’s person. He asked the court to suppress this evidence and, after the motion was denied, pleaded guilty to possessing cocaine base with intent to distribute and was sentenced to 60 months’ imprisonment. With the court’s approval, Jones reserved an opportunity to appeal from the denial of the motion to suppress. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(2).
The district court denied the motion for two reasons: first, that Jones lacked a privacy interest in the interior of the house; second, that the police complied with the statutory (18 U.S.C. § 3109) and constitutional
(Wilson v. Arkansas,
Jones believes that the sequence of events is irrelevant because the back porch is part of the house’s “curtilage.” What this has to do with causation is mysterious. The police found and seized him, discovering the drugs, independently of the front-door team’s activities. What is more, the premise is wrong.
United States v. Santana,
A causal link between unlawful police conduct and a seizure is necessary but not sufficient to justify the exclusion of reliable evidence. The inevitable discovery doctrine, see
Nix v. Williams,
Affirmed.
