Aрpellant James Glenn Wilder was convicted on two counts each of child molestation and sexual exploitation of a child and one count each of aggravated child molestation and statutory rape based on sexual acts committed on several occasions with a 15-year-old girl. He was sentenced as a recidivist to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, plus a second consecutive life term and a total of 60 additional years consecutive. On appeal, Wilder challenged, inter alia, the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress incriminating evidence found in a locked briefcase owned by Wilder that was seized from a third party’s premises without a warrant and subsеquently searched pursuant to a valid warrant. In affirming Wilder’s conviction, the Court of Appeals held that the motion to suppress had been properly denied pursuant to the “independent source” exception to the exclusionаry rule.
Wilder v. State,
The evidence adduced at the suppression hearing established as follows:
[A]n investigating officer received infоrmation from the victim and another woman, April Quick, that Wilder had a briefcase containing videotapes of the victim and Wilder engaging in sex acts, and that the briefcase was at the home of Wilder’s friend, Judy Malin. Malin testified that Wilder had been at hеr home with the victim on one occasion and that, on another occasion, Wilder left a locked briefcase at her home and told her he would “pick it back up later.” Malin stated further the briefcase was at her home for several months before she was contacted by the officer who asked that she turn it over to him. She [testified] that she was reluctant, confused, and frightened, but that she “felt like [she] was cooperating with whatever needed to be done” and that shе wanted the briefcase “out of my house.”
*14 The officer requested that Quick retrieve the briefcase from Malin’s home and bring it to him. Quick testified that when she gave him the briefcase, the officer gave her $20 “for my gas because I had no gas.” Oncе the officer had possession of the briefcase, he obtained a search warrant to search its contents. Inside the briefcase officers found DVDs containing explicit images of the victim, videotapes containing images of Wildеr and the victim engaging in sexual intercourse, and copies of portions of the Georgia Code (downloaded while the victim was 15 years old) defining sodomy, statutory rape, and child molestation with the text “under the age of 16 years” highlighted.
(Footnote omitted.)
Wilder,
supra,
Based on these facts, the trial court denied Wilder’s motion to suppress on the ground that Malin had validly consented to the seizure of the briefcase; alternatively, the court held that the evidence was admissible under the independent source doctrine, which authorizes admission of evidence initially discovered through improper means if it was ultimately “obtained ... by a means untainted by and unrelated to the initial illegality.” (Footnote omitted.)
State v. Lejeune,
On review, the Court of Appeals hеld that Wilder had a reasonable expectation of privacy in his locked briefcase, which was not abridged by virtue of having left it at Malin’s home.
Wilder v. State,
supra,
[b]ecause the contents of the briefcase were seized pursuant to a valid search warrant based upon information wholly independent from law enforcement’s illegal use of Malin and Quick to obtain the briefcase, [the evidence] meets the criteria for admissibility under the independent source doctrine. [Cits.]
*15 Id. at 893 (1).
1. Before examining the merits of the Fourth Amendment issue, we -first address the argument that Wilder lacks standing to challenge the seizure of his briefcase because it was obtained from the home of a third party. Stated simply, “the . . . assertion that [Wilder] is without standing to object to the seizure of his pеrsonal belongings is plainly wrong. [Cit.]”
Mooney v. State,
2. Turning to the merits of the Fourth Amendment issue, оn review of a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, “the trial court’s findings on disputed facts will be upheld unless clearly erroneous, and its application of the law to undisputed facts is subject to de novo review. [Cit.]”
Barrett v. State,
[The Fourth Amendment] protects two types of expectations, one involving “searches,” the other “seizures.” A “search” occurs when an expectation of privacy that society is prepared to consider reasonable is infringed. A “seizure” of property occurs when there is some meaningful interfer- *16 enee with an individual’s possessory interests in that property.
(Footnotes omitted.)
United States v. Jacobsen,
The independent source doctrine “ ‘allows the prosecution to use evidence only if it was, in fact, obtained by fully lawful means. . . .’ [Cit.]”
Teal v. State,
supra,
This case presents a different scenario, in that it involves a single search, preceded only by an unlawful seizure,
3
which yielded custody of the item ultimately searched rather than information giving rise to the eventual lawful search. Here, while the
information
on which the search warrant was based derived from a source wholly independent of the initial unlawful seizure, the
search itself
cannot be said to have been conducted independent of the seizure, as it was the seizure that in fact made possible the search that actually occurred. Accordingly, we simply cannot find that the evidence here was “discovered by means wholly independent of any constitutional violation.”
Teal,
supra,
3. In addition to the independent sourсe doctrine, the trial court utilized an alternative rationale for denying the motion to suppress, finding that Malin had given consent for the seizure of the briefcase and thus finding that the seizure was not unlawful in the first instance. See
United States v. Matlock,
Judgment reversed and case remanded.
Notes
While affirming the conviction, the Court of Appeals did find error in the imposition of a recidivist sentence and thus vacated appellant’s sentence and remanded the case for resentencing. Wilder at 896 (6).
It appears uncontested that the taking of the briefcase, though actually performed by a private citizen, constituted an act of the State to which the Fourth Amendment’s proscriptiоns would apply. See
Wilder v. State,
supra,
As noted in Division 3, infra, whether the seizure was actually unlawful remains an open question; for purposes of analyzing the applicability of the independent source doctrine, we simply assume that it was.
Nеither the trial court nor the Court of Appeals made any explicit findings regarding the existence of a bailment. However, given the undisputed evidence that Wilder left the briefcase with Malin for safekeeping and that Malin kept the briefcаse at his request, it appears that a bailment was created. See
Bohannon v. State,
