OPINION AND ORDER
Pastor Ortiz-Gonzalbo stands accused of reentering the United States without authorization after having been deported in 1989, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. His alleged unlawful reentry was detected after his April 1996 arrest and fingerprinting by New York City police officers, and the consequent disclosure that his fingerprints matched those in the file associated with his deportation. He moves to suppress the fingerprints taken in connection with his state arrest on the ground that that arrest was not based on probable cause, and seeks a hearing into the circumstances of the arrest. However, as explained below, it appears that regardless of whether there was probable cause for his arrest, there is no basis for suppressing the fingerprint evidence, and the motion aceord--ingly is denied.
L
Defendant’s motion is based entirely on the affidavit of his attorney, who attaches a copy of the Criminal Court complaint, the only charging instrument in the state proceeding. That complaint, sworn to May 1, 1996 by a New York City detective, gives the following as the basis for defendant’s war-rantless arrest for second degree murder and possession of a weapon in connection with an incident that occurred on February 12, 1994, about two years earlier:
Deponent states that he is informed by Det. William Walsh of the NYPD that a witness known to the District Attorney’s office observed the defendant shoot Jorge Almonte Suero with a shotgun in the chest thereby causing his death.
(Rostal Aff., Ex. C) Which is to say, one detective told another that he had spoken to a witness whose identity was. known, who said that he or she saw the defendant shoot the victim two years earlier. Counsel also presents a document reflecting that the state court charge was dismissed for failure to secure an indictment within the period required by state law. (Id., Ex. B) .
Counsel concludes from these documents that defendant’s warrantless state arrest was based on unreliable second-hand hearsay that later proved insufficient to support further proceedings against him, and at least that a hearing is necessary to determine whether the arrest was based on probable cause. If it was not, she argues, the finger
*288
prints taken in connection with the arrest must be suppressed on the authority of
Hayes v. Florida,
The parties dispute how broadly Davis and Hayes are to be read. The government argues that the holdings in those cases require suppression of fingerprint evidence only when defendants have been arrested without a warrant and without probable cause, and for the purpose of obtaining such evidence. Defense counsel has conceded candidly that there is nothing in the record to suggest that this defendant was arrested simply for the purpose of obtaining his fingerprints (10/22/96 Tr. at 5), but argues that Davis and Hayes require suppression whenever a war-rantless arrest is not supported by probable cause.
II.
Both
Davis
and
Hayes
arose from arrests for the purpose of obtaining fingerprints, and to the extent there was debate apparent in the opinions of the Court it was about either such arrests or more limited detention for the same purpose. Thus, the majority in
Davis
noted that even
Terry v. Ohio,
The same is true of
Hayes,
which concerned an arrest in the first instance solely to obtain the petitioner’s fingerprints.
A leading Fourth Amendment treatise takes the same view of Davis as the government does, noting that it involved an illegal arrest “for the purpose of getting ... fingerprints for use in investigation of the crime which prompted the illegal arrest,” and argu *289 ing that Davis “should not be read as declaring that fingerprints taken after an illegal arrest are always inadmissible.” Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure, § 11.4(g), at 323 (3d ed. 1996).
The parties rely on diverging authority in the Ninth Circuit. The government cites a line of cases ending with
United States v. Guzman-Bruno,
Defendant relies on
United States v. Johns,
Defendant argues further that just as it is improper to suppress evidence resulting from an objectively lawful traffic stop even if the subjective intent of the officer was to obtain evidence of a more serious crime,
Whren v. United States,
— U.S. -, -,
Defendant’s argument appeals to my sense of symmetry, but not to my reading of
Davis
and
Hayes,
where the Court focused its attention squarely on the motive of the arresting officers to obtain fingerprints, and made it plain, at least to my eye, that that motive rationalized its decision. It follows that absent such a motive, there is no requirement under
Davis
and
Hayes
that fingerprint evidence gathered under the circumstances present here be suppressed. The exclusionary rule is a judge-made rule and, as Judge Friendly cautioned in
United States v. Friedland,
As the Supreme Court has instructed, the exclusionary rule ‘is calculated to prevent, not to repair. Its purpose is to deter — to compel respect for the constitutional guaranty in the only effectively available way— by removing the incentive to disregard it,’ Elkins v. United States,364 U.S. 206 , 217,80 S.Ct. 1437 , 1444,4 L.Ed.2d 1669 (1960). Courts must neither so narrow the rule as to impair its presumed deterrent effect nor expand it in such a way that, in order to achieve a marginal increment in deterrence, society will pay too high a price. In preserving the requirement of ‘standing’ in Alderman v. United States, 394 U.S. [165], 171-176,89 S.Ct. 961 , [965-968,] [22 L.Ed.2d 176 (1969),] the Court set its face against one attempt to broaden the exclusionary rule to maximize deterrence. We are confident it would likewise hold that to grant life-long immunity from investigation and prosecution simply because a violation of the Fourth Amendment first indicated to the police that a man was not the law-abiding citizen he purported to be would stretch the exclusionary rule beyond tolerable bounds.
The motion to suppress is denied.
SO ORDERED.
