Case o' The Week: Footnotes Matter - Garcia and Fourth Amendment Attenuation (Intervening Circumstances)
"Recent events have
reminded us of the devastating consequences that can follow when armed officers
take the residents of a home by surprise. See Darcy Costello & Tessa
Duvall, Minute by Minute: What Happened the Night Louisville Police Fatally
Shot Breonna Taylor, Louisville Courier J. (May 29, 2020), https://tinyurl.com/y3ytxuju
."
United States v. Javier Garcia, 2020 WL 5417153, at *8 &n.6 (9th Cir. Sept. 10,
2020), decision available here.
Big win for (former) ND Cal CJA Attorney Jamie Moore, in an appeal from
a hard-fought district court case by ND CJA counsel Tom Ferrito.
After learning Garcia’s name they discovered that he was on supervised release with a search condition. Id. A search of the apartment revealed meth, he was charged in federal court, and a San Jose D.J. refused to suppress. Id.
Garcia appealed and won in the Ninth: the case was remanded for findings on the second search. Id. at *3.
On remand, the district court again upheld the search, concluding that the search condition was an attenuating and intervening circumstance. Id. Garcia appealed again.
Issue(s): “The question before us today is whether, despite these facts, suppression of the evidence found in Garcia's home, and other evidence derived from that evidence, is not required because, under the attenuation doctrine, the officers’ discovery of the suspicionless search condition broke the causal chain between the Fourth Amendment violation and the discovery of the evidence.” Id.
“[T]he key question this case presents is whether the officers’ discretionary decision to conduct a full investigatory search of Garcia's home was significantly directed by information they learned during their initial unlawful entry. And because the Government bears the burden of showing attenuation . . . it was the responsibility of the Government to introduce evidence on this point.” Id. at *6.
Held: “[T]he Government did not present any evidence regarding the officers’ reasons for entering Garcia’s home the second time, much less evidence sufficient to show that this decision had nothing to do with what they saw inside the home minutes earlier, during their unconstitutional search.” Id. at *6 (emphasis in original).
“The officers did not enter Garcia's home
with blinders on. And the record shows that in the few minutes between the two
searches, the officers’ motives for entering the home abruptly changed from
non-investigatory to investigatory. Yet the Government offers nothing more than
its say-so to explain this sudden shift. That is not enough to avoid suppression.
Cf. United States v. Bocharnikov, 966 F.3d 1000, 1007 (9th Cir. 2020)
(Chhabria, J., concurring) (“To rule in the government's favor on this appeal
would have required us to bend over backwards, doing the government's work for
it. Federal prosecutors should not need that kind of help from the courts, nor
should they expect to receive it.”). In the absence of evidence showing that
the officers’ decision to conduct the second search was untainted by what they
saw during the initial unlawful entry, we conclude that the Government has not
met its burden of showing that the discovery of the suspicionless search
condition was a sufficient intervening circumstance.” Id. at *7.
“We conclude that the evidence found in the search was not sufficiently attenuated from the constitutional violation.We therefore hold that the district court erred by denying Garcia's motion to suppress, and we reverse his conviction.” Id. at *2.
In a most-notable footnote, Judge Wardlaw warns of the “devasting consequences” of this law enforcement approach, and refers us to a story about the homicide of Breonna Taylor. See id. at *8 & n.6.
An “attenuation” must read.
Image
of Breonna Taylor from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53111709
Image of Breonna Taylor mural from https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/06/us/breonna-taylor-mural-trnd/index.html
Steven Kalar, Federal
Public Defender, N.D. Cal. Website at www.ndcalfpd.org
Labels: Attenuation, Black Lives Matter, Fourth Amendment, Wardlaw
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