OPINION AND ORDER
The matter before the court is the government’s motion for an order requiring defendant to provide a fingerprint exemplar. Oral argument on the motion was held July 25, 2003.
This court’s resolution of the government’s motion for a fingerprint exemplar is dependent on its earlier ruling that defendant’s arrest was race-based. On July 7, 2003, this court granted defendant’s motion to suppress the fingerprints and subsequent identification that formed the basis of his indictment for illegal reentry. Amended Opinion and Order, July 7, 2003. The court concluded that, based upon the facts and testimony discussed in the amended opinion and order, the police officers stopped, searched, and arrested defendant because of his race. The opinion discusses the police officers’ proffered justifications for stopping, searching and arresting defendant, and concluded they were completely unfounded and baseless. For example, the officers testified they relied on the following observations for their probable cause determination: defendant and another Hispanic man walked to a grocery store parking lot in the middle of the afternoon; one of the two men used a public telephone and stood near it; the two men walked over to a vehicle, chatted with the occupants, and then got in; the vehicle drove away. The court concluded that nothing in these observations could justify the belief by a prudent person that defendant had committed or was about to commit a crime. Further, one of the officers testified that he saw two Hispanic men getting into a vehicle and followed that vehicle. He testified that, without any rational basis, he thought one of the individuals was defendant and also thought that drugs were being transported. The officer admitted he was in error because when he stopped the vehicle and conducted a search, neither individual-in the vehicle was defendant and the search revealed nothing illegal. In addition, the driver of the other vehicle observed by police during this incident was a non-Hispanic woman, and her passenger was a non-Hispanic. Officers stopped the vehicle because the driver failed to signal a left-hand turn. She was driving with a suspended license, told the officers that she was on methadone but also using heroin on occasion, and also told them that she and her passenger owned the drug paraphernalia found in the vehicle. Even so, the police had no interest in the non-Hispanic driver or passenger, rather focusing on the defendant.
The government now requests a fingerprint exemplar, which it intends to compare with the fingerprints in defendant’s immigration file to establish his identity at trial on the illegal reentry charge. The government relies primarily on
United States V; Parga-Rosas,
United States v. Lumitap is not on point. There the Ninth Circuit held that a defendant cannot challenge his presence at trial, and a subsequent in-court identification, simply because his appearance ' in court was precipitated by an unlawful arrest. Ill F.3d at 84. The issue here is not defendant’s presence at trial or in-court identification, but rather whether the government may obtain from defendant a *1121 fingerprint exemplar when earlier fingerprint evidence was suppressed because the arrest was race-based.
United States v. Humphries
is also not on point. The illegal arrest in that case was not race-based.
Further,
Parga-Rosas
is not controlling authority in this case because the illegal arrest in that case was also not race-based. There, defendant was charged with an immigration crime. The district court concluded that defendant’s arrest was illegal (but not race-based) and granted defendant’s motion to suppress evidence “as the fruit of an illegal arrest.”
In this case, the government argues that, as in Parga-Rosas, the exclusionary rule does not operate to foreclose the government’s acquisition and introduction of identity evidence (the fingerprint exemplar) even where the court suppressed the fingerprints taken at the arrest. This court disagrees—application of the exclusionary rule depends on whether the seizure was race-based. Because the Pargar-Rosas seizure was not race-based, it does not dictate the result of this case where the seizure was race-based.
In the Ninth Circuit, the exclusionary rule operates in a civil deportation context to exclude identity evidence when the seizure was race-based.
Gonzalez-Rivera v. INS,
Prior to
Gonzalez-Rivera
or
Orhorhaghe,
the Supreme Court concluded in
INS v. Lopez-Mendoza,
Thus, in the civil deportation context, race-based seizures are egregious violations of the Fourth Amendment and the exclusionary rule applies to identity evidence.
Gonzalez-Rivera v. INS,
The government argued at oral argument that any possible application of the exclusionary rule to identity evidence must be limited to the most egregious constitutional violations. In support of this argument, the government cites
Frisbie v. Collins,
The court concludes that the fingerprint exemplar in this case implicates judicial integrity and the deterrance purpose of the exclusionary rule. To permit the exemplar would be to ignore the most obvious and offensive of constitutional violations and the deterrence goal of the rule. Therefore, the court concludes that the seizure in this case, which the court has already concluded was illegal because it was race-based, was an egregious violation of the Fourth Amendment and therefore the exclusionary rule applies to identity evidence in this criminal proceeding.
The government’s motion to compel fingerprint exemplar (doc. 38) is DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The
Lopez-Mendoza
court said that in a civil deportation proceeding, there is virtually no need to deter border patrol officers because "the INS has its own comprehensive scheme for deterring Fourth Amendment violations by its officers.”
