MEMORANDUM OPINION
On February 10, 2004, the court entered an order granting Defendant Gray’s Motion to Suppress and ordering the exclusion of all evidence obtained through an unlawful search of Mr. Gray’s home that occurred on July 3, 2003 [Docket 55]. The court found that the government failed to meet its burden of proving that Mr. Gray knowingly and voluntarily consented to the officers’ entry into his home and that the officers’ entry therefore constituted an unlawful search. In addition, the court found that the subsequently issued warrant to search Mr. Gray’s home was invalid because the warrant was based solely on evidence obtained during the illegal predicate search and that the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule does not apply in this circumstance. The rationale for these rulings is explained below.
I. BACKGROUND
On or about July 3, 2003, Officers Hunter, Copley, and Jividen of the Huntington Drug Task Force went to Mr. Gray’s home, located at 4511 Rear Altizer Avenue in Huntington, West Virginia for the purpose of conducting a “knock and talk.” Drug trafficking complaints filed by at least one of Mr. Gray’s neighbors prompted the officers’ visit. Once the officers arrived, they knocked on Mr. Gray’s side kitchen door, and he opened the door. A few moments later the officers entered Mr. Gray’s home.
After the officers entered Mr. Gray’s home, they observed on the kitchen table a very small amount of a tan substance with the appearance of crack cocaine. The officers asked Mr. Gray if anyone else was in the home and he said his friends were there. Standing at the door joining the kitchen and the living room, Officer Hunter observed two individuals in the living room, one of whom was Mr. Gray’s co-defendant Terrence Askew. Mr. Askew was near a table on which lay a set of scales, a substance appearing to be cocaine, and a substance appearing to be crack cocaine. The officers asked for Mr. Gray’s permission to search the home. Mr. Gray refused, and Officer Copley then applied for and obtained a search warrant
II. DISCUSSION
The Fourth Amendment provides that “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated.” U.S. Const, amend IV. This language “unequivocally establishes the proposition that ‘[a]t the very core [of the Fourth Amendment] stands the right of a man to retreat into his own home and there be free from unreasonable governmental intrusion.’ ”
Payton v. New York,
In his motion to suppress, Mr. Gray asserted that the officers’ entry into his home violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure and asked this court to bar the admission of any evidence obtained by virtue of the officers’ allegedly unlawful entry. According to the government, the officers’ entry was lawful because Mr. Gray knowingly and voluntarily consented to the entry. The issue of consent is a question of fact, the resolution of which requires courts to consider the “totality of the circumstances.”
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
Although three officers were present at the search and two were present at the hearing on Mr. Gray’s motion to suppress, the government chose to call only Officer Hunter to testify. On the issue of Mr. Gray’s consent, Officer Hunter testified that the officers knocked on Mr. Gray’s side kitchen door and asked if they could come in to talk. 1 Mr. Gray stepped back, as though he were inviting the officers to enter, and the officers then stepped inside the kitchen area of Mr. Gray’s home.
According to the defendants’ testimony, the officers knocked on the side kitchen door, Mr. Gray opened the door, and the officers asked to speak with him. Mr. Gray stepped out of his home and down one or two of the stairs, pulling the door behind him. The officers were silent for a moment, and then Officer Jividen placed his hand on Mr. Gray’s chest and said
When asked on cross examination if Officer Jividen touched Mr. Gray, Officer Hunter said that he could not recall. No rebuttal evidence was offered by the government. Having considered all the evidence, the court concludes that the defendants’ testimony was consistent with the evidence presented by the government. Officer Hunter and the defendants agree that Mr. Gray took a step back and that he did not verbally or physically resist the officers’ entry into his- home. Further, Officer Hunter did not refute the defendants’ testimony .that Officer Jividen placed his hand on Mr. Gray’s chest.
Mr. Gray’s act of stepping back is too ambiguous to be interpreted as consent.
2
This act occurred after Mr. Gray was confronted by three law enforcement officers and in response to the subtle coercion resulting from Officer Jividen’s decision to place his hand on Mr. Gray’s chest. By stepping backward, Mr. Gray merely indicated nonresistance, a common reaction to confrontations with law enforcement officers.
See United States v. Most,
After entering Mr. Gray’s home and finding crack and cocaine in “plain view,” Officer Copley obtained a search warrant and returned to Mr. Gray’s home. Evidence obtained after an unlawful entry may not be used to support the finding of probable cause required for the valid issuance of a warrant.
See Murray v. United States,
Where, as here, law enforcement officers violate an individual’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure, use of the evidence obtained directly and indirectly from that violation may be barred by virtue of the exclusionary rule.
See Wong Sun,
In
United States v. Leon,
the Supreme Court made clear that the cost society pays when probative evidence is excluded can only be justified when the exclusion serves to deter law enforcement officers from conducting unlawful searches and seizures.
Leon
does not hold that the exclusionary rule is inapplicable to searches conducted pursuant to a warrant; rather, it holds that the exclusionary rule does not apply to evidence obtained pursuant to a warrant when an objectively reasonable officer would have believed that the warrant authorized a constitutional search.
6
See id.
at 922,
In the present case, the warrant was not invalid because the judge made an error in his assessment of probable cause. Instead, the warrant was invalid because the officers conducted an unlawful search of Mr. Gray’s home and submitted the tainted fruit of this unlawful search to the magistrate in the warrant application. Because the warrant affidavit in
Leon
was free from tainted evidence,
Leon
leaves unanswered the question of whether the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule applies where the probable cause for the issuance of a warrant is based on an illegal predicate search.
7
See United States v. Meixner,
The rationale for the good faith exception set forth in
Leon
hinges on the deterrent purpose of the exclusionary rule.
Leon,
Some courts have suggested that the officer’s truthfulness, or lack thereof, to the magistrate concerning the circumstances of the illegal predicate search affects the good faith analysis.
See United States v. Diehl,
The issue of whether the officer informed the magistrate of the circumstances surrounding a predicate search is irrelevant to the application of the good faith exception. An officer who fails to tell a magistrate about the circumstances surrounding a predicate search is not necessarily acting in bad faith or trying to hide something because the warrant application process has never required an officer to explain with specificity how the evidence in the affidavit was obtained. Conversely, an officer cannot render a predicate search lawful simply by telling the magistrate the truth about the search. Regardless of whether an officer concealed or confessed the circumstances of the predicate search, he should bear responsibility for any illegality occurring prior to the issuance of the warrant. A magistrate’s chambers is not a confessional in which an officer can expiate constitutional sin by admitting his actions in a well-drafted warrant application. The evidence remains tainted even if the officer admits its origins.
The purpose of the exclusionary rule is to deter law enforcement officers from conducting unlawful searches, and that purpose is doubly served by the exclusion of evidence obtained pursuant to a warrant issued on the basis of an illegal predicate search. Courts that have found otherwise mistakenly focused on the warrant process.
See United States v. Diehl,
Application of the good faith exception in this case would sanction a course of conduct in which officers who lack probable cause to search a home conduct an unlawful search to obtain probable cause, submit the tainted evidence to a magistrate who issues a warrant, and benefit from the unlawful search when the evidence obtained pursuant to the warrant is used to prosecute the search victim. To deter such conduct, the court granted Mr. Gray’s motion to suppress all evidence obtained pursuant to the search of his home.
III. CONCLUSION
When a law enforcement officer enters a home without consent, exigent circumstances, or a warrant, the entry is a clear violation of the resident’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure. All the evidence against Mr. Gray obtained through the officers’ unlawful entry into his home on July 3, 2003 and the subsequent warranted search of that home was therefore suppressed. The court DIRECTS the Clerk to send a copy of this Opinion to defense counsel, the United States Attorney, the United States Probation Office, and the United States Marshal, and DIRECTS that Clerk to post this published opinion at http://www.imsd.uscourts.gov.
Notes
. Law enforcement officers' standard "knock and talk” procedure passes constitutional muster. Recently, the Fourth Circuit held that "[a] voluntary response to an officer's knock at the front door of a dwelling does not generally implicate the Fourth Amendment, and thus an officer generally does not need probable cause or reasonable suspicion to justify knocking on the door and then making verbal inquiry.”
United States v. Cephas,
. The officers clearly had the opportunity to seek Mr. Gray's express consent and failed to do so. The officers suspected drug activity prior to entering Mr. Gray’s home but lacked sufficient evidence to obtain a warrant. The officers went to Mr. Gray’s home hoping that Mr. Gray would consent to a search or would at least invite them to enter. Although the officers knew that they lacked probable cause to enter Mr. Gray's home without his consent, they failed to bring a written consent form or even orally ask for his consent. While the constitution requires neither oral nor written consent, obtaining this sort of objective evidence of consent is good practice where, as here, the police go to a home without a warrant in hopes of gaining entrance.
. The Affidavit and Complaint for Search Warrant submitted by Officer Copley stated: "On 7-3-03, members of Huntington Drug Task Force went to defendants’ residence at 4511 R Altizer Avenue to do a knock and talk about drug activity. Defendant let officers into residence. Crack cocaine observed in plain view on kitchen table. A male subject from Detroit-MI had approximately $8,000.00 U.S. currency on him. Subject also admitted to ingesting a quantity of crack. An electronic scale with white powder was also visible in plain view.” (spelling corrections made).
. In so holding, the court does not fault the judge who issued the warrant. The judge could not have known that the officers entered Mr. Gray's home unlawfully, and had their entrance been lawful, Officer Copley's statement would have been a sufficient basis for finding probable cause to search.
. The
Leon
Court specified that reference to "officer” in its opinion should not be read narrowly.
. The
Leon
Court made clear that in some circumstances an officer has no reasonable grounds for believing a warrant to be valid. Accordingly, the Court noted that the good faith exception would not apply if the magistrate was misled by information that the affi-ant knew or should have known to be false, if the magistrate abandoned his neutral and detached role, if the affidavit was "so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable,” or if the warrant was so facially deficient that the executing officers could not reasonably rely on its validity.
. The term "illegal predicate search” refers to unlawful searches conducted prior to the issuance of a warrant and used as a basis for the issuance of a warrant. See Gretchen R. Diffendal, Application of the Good-Faith Exception in Instances of a Predicate Illegal Search: “Reasonable” Means Around the Exclusionary Rule?, 68 St. John's L.Rev. 217 (1994) (using term).
. The illegal predicate search in the instant case was a search of a home conducted in the absence of a warrant, consent or exigent circumstances. This type of search is a clear violation of the Fourth Amendment.
See Payton,
