Lewis Larsen appeals the denial of his motion to suppress evidence. In denying the motion, the district court concluded that although the evidence was found as a result of an illegal search, it inevitably would have been discovered in a separate investigation independent of the illegal search. .Larsen’s sole issue on appeal is whether the inevitable discovery rule requires proof of a separate investigation ongoing at the time of the constitutional violation. We conclude it does not and affirm.
I.
On August 4, 1994, local law enforcement officers recovered a stolen trailer from Larsen’s property. One of the officers noticed a vehicle on the property with no vehicle identification number (VIN) plate and applied for a search warrant the next day, August 5. A warrant was issued authorizing a search for vehicles with identification numbers removed, identification number plates that had been removed from vehicles, and vehicle titles.
In executing the warrant on August 5, officers seized three vehicles within the scope of the warrant, but also seized numerous items outside the scope of the warrant, including tools, videocassette recorders, exercise equipment, lawn mowers, furniture, blankets, a microwave oven, bank records, and credit cards. The officers seized these items solely because they thought they might be stolen.
Mike Weigel, a state trooper, assisted with the search. Later that day, he went to the Saline Valley Bank in Lincoln on personal business and, while he was there, he mentioned to Glenn Stegman, the bank’s vice president, that he had just recovered stolen vehicles from Larsen’s property. Stegman became concerned because the bank had loaned money to Larsen for a vehicle. Stegman checked the bank’s records to determine the status of Larsen’s loans and, on August 24, he sent a Report of Apparent Crime to the FDIC.
Meanwhile, local officers contacted William Pettijohn, a KBI Agent. Pettijohn reviewed the seized bank records and, suspecting Larsen had obtained loans through fraud, he subpoenaed records from several banks on August 8, 1994. Based on information obtained in the August 5 search, local officers also obtained a second search warrant on August 9, authorizing a search of Larsen’s property.
Pettijohn contacted Scott Crabtree, an FBI Agent, on August 9 and Crabtree reviewed the records produced by the banks. As the FDIC routinely forwards Reports of Apparent Crime to the FBI, Stegman’s report was forwarded to Crabtee. Based on the bank records and Stegman’s report, Crabtree issued subpoenas and, in accordance with standard FBI procedures, began tracing Larsen’s banking activities. This led to issuance of subpoenas by a grand jury and discovery of the bank records on which Larsen’s prosecution for federal bank fraud and money laundering was based.
Larsen moved to suppress all evidence seized in both searches and evidence -discov
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ered as a result of the searches, including the bank records subpoenaed by the grand jury. At the suppression hearing, Crabtree testified that Stegman’s report would have been forwarded to, him regardless of the other investigation and by itself would have caused him to undertake the same course of action to trace Larsen’s funds. Applying
United States v. Medlin,
However, the district court applied the inevitable discovery doctrine adopted by the Supreme Court in
Nix v. Williams,
Larsen entered a conditional plea of guilty to one count of bank fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1344, and one count of money laundering, 18 U.S.C. § 1957, and the remaining counts were dismissed.
II.
Larsen contends the inevitable discovery rule requires proof of a separate investigation
ongoing
at the time of the constitutional violation. He points out that the bank investigation that the district court found would have led to discovery of the evidence of fraud did not commence until after the illegal August 5 search. Larsen relies on
United States v. Terzado-Madruga,
We do not agree with Larsen’s interpretation of these cases. We conclude the inevitable discovery exception applies whenever an independent investigation inevitably would have led to discovery of the evidence, whether or not the investigation was ongoing at the time of the illegal police conduct.
Like the independent source doctrine, the inevitable discovery doctrine is an exception to the general rule' requiring exclusion of evidence that is the result of unlawful government conduct. Evidence found as a result of illegal police conduct that inevitably would have been lawfully discovered absent the illegal conduct need not be suppressed.
Nix,
*987
It is true that in
Nix,
the independent search the Court concluded inevitably would have led to discovery of the evidence was underway during the illegal police conduct. The dissent described the majority opinion as holding the inevitable discovery exception applies when evidence inevitably would have been discovered “by an independent line of investigation that was already being pursued when the constitutional violation occurred.”
Id.
at 457 (Brennan, J., dissenting). We quoted this language in
Owens,
and noted the unconstitutional search in a motel room “tainted the only police investigation that was ongoing.”
However, neither the majority opinion in
Nix
nor our cases limit the inevitable discovery exception to lines of investigation that were already underway. They require only that the investigation that inevitably would have led to the evidence be independent of the constitutional violation.
Nix,
The fact that another investigation was already underway when a constitutional violation occurred is strong proof that it was independent of the illegal investigation, as
Nix
and
Griffin
illustrate. However, it is possible for an investigation that begins after the violation to be independent of the illegal investigation.
See, e.g., United States v. Kennedy,
The district court properly applied the inevitable discovery doctrine in denying Larsen’s motion to suppress, even though the investigation that inevitably would have led to discovery of the evidence began after the illegal conduct.
The order of the district court denying Larsen’s motion to suppress is AFFIRMED.
