After a jury trial, James Wilder was convicted of statutory rape, aggravated child molestation, two counts of child molestation and two counts of sexual exploitation of a child based on acts he committed with a 15-year-old girl. On appeal, this court affirmed the convictions, holding in part that Wilder’s motion to suppress incriminating evidence found in a briefcase had been properly denied pursuant to the independent source exception to the exclusionary rule. Wilder v. State,
The Supreme Court, quoting from Wilder,
[A]n investigating officer received information 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 her 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 she wanted the briefcase “out of my house.”
The officer requested that Quick retrieve the briefcase from Mai in’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.” Once 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 Wilder 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.
The Supreme Court went on to explain that
[a]s the foregoing recitation of facts reflects, there was but a single search of Wilder’s briefcase, and this search was conducted only after issuance of a search warrant, the validity of which is not at issue. Wilder’s contentions thus center on the warrantless seizure of the briefcase prior to issuance of the search warrant.
Wilder,
1. Inevitable discovery doctrine.
Wilder claims that the trial court erred in concluding that the motion to suppress was properly denied under the inevitable discovery doctrine. The claim is without merit.
Under the inevitable discovery doctrine, if the [s]tate can prove by a preponderance of the evidence that evidence derived from police error or illegality would have been ultimately or inevitably discovered by lawful means, then the evidence is not suppressed as fruit of an impermissible search or seizure. In other words, there must be a reasonable probability that the evidence in question would have been discovered by lawful means, and the prosecution must demonstrate that the lawful means which made discovery inevitable were possessed by the police and were being actively pursued prior to the occurrence of the illegal conduct.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Schweitzer v. State,
In this case, even if we presume that the warrantless seizure of the briefcase was unlawful, prior to that seizure the investigating officer had information from the minor victim and Quick that the briefcase contained videotapes of Wilder engaging in sexual activity with the victim, and that the briefcase was located at Malin’s house. That information included Quick actually having seen Wilder play a brief portion of one of the videotapes, which depicted him and the victim engaged in oral sex, and Wilder then placing the videotape in the briefcase. The officer investigated the information by, among other things, contacting Malin to confirm that the briefcase was in fact at her house. The officer called Malin two or three times to discuss the briefcase, she confirmed that Wilder had left the briefcase at her house, and she complied with the officer’s request to give the briefcase to Quick so she could turn it over to the officer.
Within 24 hours of receiving the briefcase, the officer applied for a warrant to search the contents of the briefcase. In his application and affidavit, the officer included not only the information he had obtained from Quick prior to the seizure of the briefcase, but also information provided by the victim as well as two other witnesses interviewed as part of the officer’s ongoing investigation. In light of the record before us, we find that there was a reasonable probability that the evidence in question would have inevitably been discovered by lawful means. The investigating officer possessed information about the contents and location of the briefcase, he was actively pursuing investigation of that information, and such information provided probable cause to authorize seizure of the briefcase. See Teal v. State,
2. Third-party consent.
Because of our holding above in Division 1, we need not consider appellant’s further claim that the trial court erred in finding the seizure lawful under the third-party consent doctrine. Even if we assume for the
Judgment affirmed. Barnes,
