State v. Romero ( 2020 )


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    STATE OF CONNECTICUT v. CARLOS A. ROMERO
    (AC 42213)
    Alvord, Keller and Elgo, Js.
    Syllabus
    The defendant, who had been on probation in connection with a prior
    conviction, appealed to this court from the judgment of the trial court
    revoking his probation and sentencing him to thirty months of incarcera-
    tion. Following a stop of a van in which the defendant was a passenger
    and a subsequent search of his hotel room, the defendant was arrested
    and charged with possession of narcotics with intent to sell and posses-
    sion of drug paraphernalia. At his probation revocation proceeding,
    certain evidence was admitted that had been obtained from the stop
    and the search of his hotel room. After the close of evidence, the trial
    court denied the defendant’s motion to suppress, declining to recognize
    an exception to the general inapplicability of the exclusionary rule to
    probation revocation proceedings, and ruled that the search of the defen-
    dant’s hotel room was lawful. On appeal, the defendant claimed that
    under the circumstances of the case, the trial court improperly declined
    to apply the exclusionary rule pursuant to article first, § 7, of the Connect-
    icut constitution. Held that the defendant could not prevail on his claim
    that the trial court improperly declined to apply the exclusionary rule,
    as the warrantless search at issue did not violate the Connecticut consti-
    tution; a standard condition of the defendant’s probation provided that
    he submit to a search of his person, possessions, vehicle or residence
    when a probation officer has a reasonable suspicion that he was violating
    conditions of his probation, which diminished his reasonable expecta-
    tion of privacy and furthered the state’s dual interests in facilitating
    the defendant’s rehabilitation and protecting society from any future
    criminal violations by him, and there was no requirement in the defen-
    dant’s probation search condition that a warrant be procured before a
    search was conducted, and the probation officer and investigator in
    this case possessed sufficient reasonable suspicion to suspect that the
    defendant was engaged in a sale of narcotics and that his hotel room
    might contain further evidence of such criminality to conduct their
    search of the defendant’s hotel room, the defendant having been
    observed leaving a hotel parking lot, walking to the parking lot of certain
    neighboring apartments, approaching a driver of a van and reaching his
    hand into the van’s front driver side window, and entering the van, and,
    after a motor vehicle stop of the van was conducted, the driver of the
    van was observed visibly shaking and beginning to cry, a needle and
    glassine bags were discovered on the driver’s person, the driver admitted
    to purchasing $50 worth of heroin, the sum of $50 was found in one of
    the defendant’s pockets, a room card key for the hotel was found on
    the defendant, and a hotel clerk stated that the defendant had been
    staying at the hotel.
    Submitted on briefs March 18—officially released July 14, 2020
    Procedural History
    Substitute information charging the defendant with
    violation of probation, brought to the Superior Court
    in the judicial district of New London, geographical
    area number eleven, where the case was tried to the
    court, Jongbloed, J.; thereafter, the court denied the
    defendant’s motion to suppress; judgment revoking the
    defendant’s probation, from which the defendant
    appealed to this court. Affirmed.
    J. Christopher Llinas, filed a brief for the appel-
    lant (defendant).
    Mitchell S. Brody, senior assistant state’s attorney,
    Michael L. Regan, state’s attorney, and Lawrence Tytla,
    former supervisory assistant state’s attorney, filed a
    brief for the appellee (state).
    Opinion
    ALVORD, J. The defendant, Carlos A. Romero,
    appeals from the judgment of the trial court finding
    him in violation of probation under General Statutes
    § 53a-32. On appeal, the defendant claims that, under
    the facts of his case, the court improperly declined to
    apply the exclusionary rule pursuant to article first,
    § 7, of the Connecticut constitution in his probation
    revocation hearing. Because we conclude that the
    search at issue in this case did not violate article first,
    § 7, of the Connecticut constitution, we do not reach
    the defendant’s claim that the exclusionary rule applies
    under the particular circumstances of his case.1 Accord-
    ingly, we affirm the judgment of the court.
    The following facts and procedural history are rele-
    vant to this appeal. On June 2, 2015, the defendant
    pleaded guilty to assault in the second degree under
    General Statutes § 53a-60 (a) (1) and received a sen-
    tence of five years incarceration, suspended after two
    years, followed by three years of probation. The defen-
    dant’s probation commenced on August 10, 2016. On
    July 18 and September 1, 2016, the defendant signed
    his conditions of probation, demonstrating that he
    understood them and would follow them. The standard
    conditions of the defendant’s probation required that
    he, inter alia, ‘‘not violate any criminal law of the United
    States, this state or any other state or territory,’’ ‘‘[k]eep
    the [p]robation [o]fficer informed of where you are, tell
    your probation officer immediately about any change
    to your . . . address,’’ and ‘‘[s]ubmit to a search of
    [his] person, possessions, vehicle or residence when
    the [p]robation [o]fficer has a reasonable suspicion to
    do so.’’ In addition to the standard conditions, under a
    section of the conditions of probation form titled ‘‘Court
    Ordered Special Conditions,’’ the defendant was
    required to avoid ‘‘new arrests.’’
    On March 17, 2017, the defendant was arrested and
    charged with possession of narcotics with intent to
    sell in violation of General Statutes § 21a-278 (b) and
    possession of drug paraphernalia in violation of General
    Statutes § 21a-267 (a). In May, 2017, the defendant was
    charged with violation of probation under § 53a-32. On
    June 13, 2018, the defendant filed a motion to suppress
    in his violation of probation proceedings. The court
    reserved ruling on the defendant’s motion to suppress
    until after the close of evidence. After the presentation
    of all evidence, the court found the following facts.
    On March 17, 2017, Investigator Bridget Nordstrom
    of the Groton Police Department was on duty and
    accompanied by Parole Officer Ray Belville in an
    unmarked police vehicle. Nordstrom and Belville were
    assigned to a regional task force that was formed to
    combat the heroin epidemic by actively looking for
    narcotic and prostitution related criminal activity. The
    focus of the task force required Nordstrom and Belville
    to frequently surveil local hotels. On March 17, Nords-
    trom and Belville observed the defendant exit the park-
    ing lot of the Rodeway Inn (hotel) in Groton and walk
    through a wooded area to the parking lot of the Groton
    Towers, an apartment complex (apartments) adjacent
    to the hotel. Nordstrom recognized the defendant and
    believed him to be a resident of the hotel because she
    had seen him there approximately eight to ten times
    over the prior two months. The defendant walked up
    to the driver side window of a van that had just entered
    the parking lot. The defendant reached his hand into
    the driver side window; he then proceeded to enter
    the van through its front passenger side door. The van
    exited the parking lot and was followed by Nordstrom
    and Belville.
    The van was driven from the parking lot to the Ninety-
    Nine Restaurant (restaurant), approximately one-eighth
    to one-quarter of a mile along Bridge Street. The van
    entered the restaurant’s parking lot and parked. Nords-
    trom and Belville exited their vehicle and approached
    the van to identify the driver and the defendant because
    they believed that they had witnessed a ‘‘hand-to-hand’’
    drug transaction.2 As they made their approach, Nords-
    trom and Belville were in plain clothes and displayed
    their badges to the driver and the defendant. The driver,
    who was later identified as Luis Rosario, was visibly
    shaking and began to cry. Rosario exited the vehicle
    upon request by Nordstrom and Belville. Rosario was
    asked if he had anything illegal in his van or on his
    person, to which he admitted to possessing a needle in
    his sock. Belville removed the needle from Rosario’s
    sock and, as he was doing so, discovered glassine bag-
    gies inside one of Rosario’s socks. Rosario was asked
    by Nordstrom whether he had purchased the bags from
    the defendant, to which he responded, ‘‘are you trying
    to get me killed?’’
    Nordstrom approached the defendant, who was
    ‘‘compliant’’ and had his hands on the van’s dashboard.
    The defendant was ordered out of the van, handcuffed,
    and searched. The defendant was found to possess $50
    in one pocket, approximately $57 in the other pocket,
    and a room card key for the hotel. Nordstrom asked
    the defendant if he was staying at the hotel, which he
    denied. Nordstrom asked the defendant if he was on
    probation, to which he responded affirmatively; Nords-
    trom further confirmed that the defendant was on pro-
    bation by conducting a criminal history search in the
    National Crime Information Center database.
    Following her discovery that the defendant was on
    probation, Nordstrom contacted a New London county
    probation officer and part-time member of the regional
    task force, Terry Granatek. Granatek arrived on the
    scene in fewer than ten minutes. While waiting for Gra-
    natek, the defendant denied selling drugs to Rosario.
    Rosario admitted to having purchased $50 worth of
    heroin, the same amount of money found on the defen-
    dant in one of his pockets.
    Following Granatek’s arrival on the scene, Nordstrom
    informed him of her reasons for stopping the van, that
    she suspected a sale of narcotics had occurred, and
    that the defendant was on probation and asserted that
    he was residing in Hartford. Granatek recognized the
    defendant because he had previously seen him outside
    of the hotel on a few occasions. Granatek confirmed
    with the defendant that he was on probation. Granatek
    asked the defendant if he was staying at the hotel, which
    the defendant denied. The defendant was transported
    to the hotel because the officers had a reasonable basis
    to believe that he was residing there due to his posses-
    sion of a card key to the hotel. Nordstrom and Granatek
    approached the clerk at the hotel’s front desk to inquire
    whether the defendant was staying at the hotel. The
    clerk informed Nordstrom and Granatek that the defen-
    dant had been staying at the hotel with his girlfriend,
    Adaly Estrella, and provided them with the room num-
    ber. Nordstrom, Granatek, and Police Officer Sean
    O’Brien, walked to the hotel room, knocked on its door,
    and were greeted by Estrella. Estrella pointed out pos-
    sessions of the defendant.
    With some assistance from Nordstrom, Granatek per-
    formed a search of the room, from which the following
    items were discovered: plastic sandwich bags, the cor-
    ners of which can be used for packaging narcotics;3
    seven cell phones, five of which were the defendant’s;
    and a black duffel bag containing mail addressed to the
    defendant, men’s clothing, a cylindrical pill container
    with a white powder residue within, glassine bags
    stamped with a red devil, a digital scale, and a jar con-
    taining marijuana residue. One of the defendant’s cell
    phones displayed an incoming text message that refer-
    enced ‘‘fire,’’ a term that can be associated with heroin.
    A subsequent lab test of the residue found in the cylin-
    drical pill container determined that it consisted of fen-
    tanyl, heroin, and tramadol.
    Following the close of evidence, the defendant
    argued that his motion to suppress should be granted
    because the stop of the van and the search of his hotel
    room were unconstitutional under the fourth amend-
    ment to the United States constitution and article first,
    § 7, of the Connecticut constitution. The defendant fur-
    ther argued that, under the circumstances of his case,
    an exception to the general inapplicability of the exclu-
    sionary rule in probation revocation proceedings should
    be recognized, and that the evidence collected from the
    stop of the van and the search of his hotel room should
    be suppressed. The state opposed the motion to sup-
    press, arguing that (1) the defendant, as a passenger in
    the van, had no reasonable expectation of privacy—
    and, thus, no standing—to contest the stop of the van
    and (2) the search of his hotel room was ‘‘specifically
    authorized by the conditions of probation that [the]
    defendant assented to.’’
    In its ruling on the defendant’s motion to suppress,
    the court declined to recognize an exception to the
    general inapplicability of the exclusionary rule in the
    defendant’s probation revocation hearing. The court
    further ruled that the search of the defendant’s hotel
    room was lawful, stating that ‘‘condition number twelve
    of the defendant’s conditions of probation require[d]
    [him] to submit to a search of his person, possessions,
    and residence when there’s a reasonable suspicion to
    do so. Here there was a reasonable suspicion to do so.’’
    The court found, by a preponderance of the evidence,
    that the defendant committed a violation of probation,
    revoked his probation, and sentenced him to thirty
    months of incarceration.4 This appeal followed. Addi-
    tional facts will be set forth as necessary.
    On appeal, the defendant claims that, under the cir-
    cumstances of his case, the court improperly declined
    to apply the exclusionary rule pursuant to article first,
    § 7, of the Connecticut constitution in his probation
    revocation hearing. Specifically, the defendant argues
    that an exception to the general inapplicability of the
    exclusionary rule in probation revocation hearings is
    warranted under the state constitution when officers
    conduct a search of a probationer after learning of
    that individual’s probation status.5 In support of this
    argument, the defendant cites Payne v. Robinson, 
    207 Conn. 565
    , 
    541 A.2d 504
    , cert. denied, 
    488 U.S. 898
    , 
    109 S. Ct. 242
    , 
    102 L. Ed. 2d 230
     (1988), a case in which our
    Supreme Court considered ‘‘[w]hether the exclusionary
    rule of the fourth amendment to the United States con-
    stitution applies to probation revocation hearings
    . . . .’’ (Footnote omitted.) 
    Id., 570
    . To address this
    question, the court balanced the state’s interest in accu-
    rate fact-finding, which would have been impaired by
    an application of the exclusionary rule, against the
    deterrent benefits of the rule. 
    Id., 571
    . The court con-
    cluded that ‘‘the balance of interests does not favor
    the application of the exclusionary rule to a probation
    hearing in these circumstances.’’ 
    Id.
     The court further
    stated: ‘‘[W]e emphasize that in holding that the exclu-
    sionary rule does not apply to this case, we do not
    reach the question of whether the exclusionary rule
    would apply in probation revocation proceedings when
    the police officer who had conducted the search was
    aware or had reason to be aware of the suspect’s proba-
    tionary status. If illegally obtained evidence was admis-
    sible in such circumstances, the police officer might
    very well discount the fact that such evidence was inad-
    missible at a criminal trial, believing that incarceration
    of the probationer would instead be achieved through
    the revocation of his probation. Application of the
    exclusionary rule to the probation hearing might there-
    fore contribute significantly to the deterrence of illegal
    searches.’’ 
    Id., 573
    .
    In the ensuing cases, our Supreme Court recognized
    the general inapplicability of the exclusionary rule to
    probation revocation hearings. See State v. Jacobs, 
    229 Conn. 385
    , 392, 
    641 A.2d 1351
     (1994) (‘‘[w]e note initially
    that, unlike criminal trials, in which the exclusionary
    rule typically applies, in probation revocation hearings,
    the exclusionary rule typically does not apply’’); see
    also State v. Maietta, 
    320 Conn. 678
    , 686, 
    134 A.3d 572
    (2016); State v. Foster, 
    258 Conn. 501
    , 507, 
    782 A.2d 98
    (2001). In each of those cases, however, the court was
    not presented with facts inviting it to reach the question
    it had reserved in Payne: ‘‘whether the exclusionary
    rule would apply in probation revocation proceedings
    when the police officer who had conducted the search
    was aware or had reason to be aware of the suspect’s
    probationary status.’’ Payne v. Robinson, supra, 
    207 Conn. 573
    .6
    In State v. Jacobs, supra, 
    229 Conn. 392
    , the court
    concluded that the case was not appropriate ‘‘for decid-
    ing whether the Payne dictum is correct’’ because ‘‘[t]he
    presence of a warrant [made the] case critically differ-
    ent . . . .’’ ‘‘Unlike a warrantless search, a search
    authorized by a warrant presupposes that the officer
    has persuaded a Superior Court judge that probable
    cause exists to believe that the defendant has commit-
    ted a crime and that evidence of that crime exists at
    the place to be searched.’’ 
    Id.,
     392–93. As to whether
    the exclusionary rule would apply to a search per-
    formed with a patently defective warrant, the court
    declined to address that issue, stating that the ‘‘case
    [did] not present that factual scenario.’’ Id., 394. In State
    v. Foster, supra, 509–10, the court stated that, ‘‘[a]s in
    Jacobs, the search in [this] case was made pursuant to
    a search warrant and [did] not present itself as one of
    egregious, shocking or harassing police misconduct.
    . . . Moreover, the defendant made no offer of proof
    that the state police who discovered the evidence and
    executed the search warrant knew that he was on pro-
    bation at the time.’’ (Footnote omitted.) Lastly, in State
    v. Maietta, supra, 
    320 Conn. 687
    , the court determined
    that ‘‘nothing in the underlying record indicates that
    . . . [the] probation officers were conducting the
    searches at the behest of the police or for reasons other
    than to ensure that the defendant was in compliance
    with the terms of his probation’’ and that the ‘‘case
    contain[ed] no egregious, shocking or harassing police
    misconduct that would merit the application of the
    exclusionary rule.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    In this appeal, Granatek and Nordstrom performed
    a warrantless search of the defendant’s hotel room after
    they discovered that he was on probation. In this regard,
    we are provided with facts permitting us to reach the
    question reserved in dictum by our Supreme Court in
    Payne and noted by its progeny. Nevertheless, we do
    not reach that question in this case because we con-
    clude that the search of the defendant’s hotel room
    did not violate his right to be free from unreasonable
    searches under article first, § 7, of the Connecticut con-
    stitution. Accordingly, the exclusionary rule has no
    applicability in this case irrespective of whether the
    rule might apply in probation revocation proceedings
    when officers who conducted a warrantless search
    were previously aware of an individual’s probation-
    ary status.
    ‘‘In reviewing a trial court’s decision on a motion to
    suppress, [a] finding of fact will not be disturbed unless
    it is clearly erroneous in view of the evidence and plead-
    ings in the whole record . . . . [When] the legal con-
    clusions of the court are challenged, [our review is
    plenary] . . . .’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    State v. Maietta, supra, 
    320 Conn. 686
    ; see also State
    v. Geisler, 
    222 Conn. 672
    , 694 n.15, 
    610 A.2d 1225
     (1992)
    (‘‘legal issues, e.g., whether information sufficed to give
    officers reasonable suspicion or probable cause,
    reviewed de novo’’). Article first, § 7, of the Connecticut
    constitution provides: ‘‘The people shall be secure in
    their persons, houses, papers and possessions from
    unreasonable searches or seizures; and no warrant to
    search any place, or to seize any persons or things,
    shall issue without describing them as nearly as may
    be, nor without probable cause supported by oath or
    affirmation.’’7 ‘‘[T]he exclusionary rule bars the govern-
    ment from introducing at trial evidence obtained in
    violation of the fourth amendment to the United States
    constitution. . . . The rule applies to evidence that is
    derived from unlawful government conduct, which is
    commonly referred to as the fruit of the poisonous tree
    . . . . In State v. Dukes, 
    209 Conn. 98
    , 115, 
    547 A.2d 10
     (1988), [our Supreme Court] concluded that article
    first, § 7, of the Connecticut constitution similarly
    requires the exclusion of unlawfully seized evidence.’’
    (Citations omitted; emphasis added; internal quotation
    marks omitted.) State v. Brocuglio, 
    264 Conn. 778
    , 786–
    87, 
    826 A.2d 145
     (2003). Thus, if a search is lawful, the
    exclusionary rule will not apply.
    The defendant argues that because the search of his
    hotel room was conducted without a warrant, probable
    cause and exigent circumstances, or consent, it was
    unconstitutional under article first, § 7, of the Connecti-
    cut constitution.8 We are unpersuaded.9
    In United States v. Knights, 
    534 U.S. 112
    , 114, 
    122 S. Ct. 587
    , 
    151 L. Ed. 2d 497
     (2001), the Supreme Court
    decided whether a search of a defendant pursuant to
    a search condition of his probation,10 and supported by
    reasonable suspicion, satisfied the fourth amendment.
    The court noted that neither the terms of the defen-
    dant’s probation search condition nor the fourth amend-
    ment limited permissible searches pursuant to that con-
    dition to those with probationary, rather than
    investigatory, purposes. 
    Id.,
     116–18. The court further
    refrained from determining whether the defendant’s
    ‘‘acceptance of the search condition constituted con-
    sent . . . of a complete waiver of his [f]ourth [a]mend-
    ment rights . . . because [it] conclude[d] that the
    search of [the defendant] was reasonable under [the]
    general [f]ourth [a]mendment approach of examining
    the totality of the circumstances . . . with the proba-
    tion search condition being a salient circumstance.’’
    (Citation omitted; internal quotation mark omitted.) 
    Id., 118
    . The court then considered the reasonableness of
    the search ‘‘by assessing, on the one hand, the degree
    to which it intrudes upon an individual’s privacy and,
    on the other, the degree to which it is needed for the
    promotion of legitimate governmental interests.’’ (Inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id.,
     118–19.
    According to the court, the government’s legitimate
    interests were the rehabilitation of the defendant and
    the protection of society from his commission of future
    criminal violations. 
    Id.,
     119–20. With respect to the sec-
    ond interest, the court stated that ‘‘it must be remem-
    bered that the very assumption of the institution of
    probation is that the probationer is more likely than the
    ordinary citizen to violate the law.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) 
    Id., 120
    . Therefore, the search condi-
    tion of probation advanced the government’s interests,
    while diminishing the defendant’s reasonable expecta-
    tion of privacy. 
    Id.,
     119–20. The court held ‘‘that the
    balance of these considerations require[d] no more than
    reasonable suspicion to conduct a search of [the defen-
    dant’s] house.’’ 
    Id., 121
    . Moreover, the court concluded
    that the warrant requirement was unnecessary under
    the circumstances. 
    Id.
     Thus, ‘‘[w]hen an officer has rea-
    sonable suspicion that a probationer subject to a search
    condition is engaged in criminal activity, there is enough
    likelihood that criminal conduct is occurring that an
    intrusion on the probationer’s significantly diminished
    privacy interests is reasonable.’’ Id.; see also State v.
    Smith, 
    207 Conn. 152
    , 174, 
    540 A.2d 679
     (1988)
    (‘‘Although the fourth amendment generally requires a
    warrant based on probable cause before a search
    occurs, exceptions exist to this requirement when a
    legitimate governmental purpose makes the intrusion
    into one’s privacy reasonable. . . . This is consistent
    with the diminished expectation of privacy that a proba-
    tioner, such as this defendant, is to expect in this gov-
    ernmental program to normalize his relations with soci-
    ety. The standard required to justify the search here by
    a probation officer . . . [is] reasonable suspicion
    . . . .’’ (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks
    omitted.)
    In State v. Moore, 
    112 Conn. App. 569
    , 574–75, 
    963 A.2d 1019
    , cert. denied, 
    291 Conn. 905
    , 
    967 A.2d 1221
    (2009), this court held that a warrantless search of the
    apartment of a defendant on probation did not violate
    the fourth amendment to the United States constitution.
    This court stated that ‘‘[t]he defendant’s terms of proba-
    tion required that he refrain from violating any criminal
    laws and that he ‘[s]ubmit to a search of [his] person,
    possessions, vehicle or residence when the [p]robation
    [o]fficer has a reasonable suspicion to do so.’ ’’ 
    Id., 574
    . Because the defendant’s urine tested positive for
    cocaine and marijuana, and a colleague of the defen-
    dant’s probation officer observed the defendant
    attempting to hide drug paraphernalia while the col-
    league was present in the apartment, this court deter-
    mined that the defendant’s probation officer ‘‘had ample
    basis for a reasonable suspicion that the defendant had
    violated the terms of his probation. The defendant was
    aware of and had signed and agreed to the standard
    term of his probation that provided that his probation
    officer could search his premises any time the officer
    had a reasonable suspicion to do so.’’ 
    Id., 575
    .
    Although the defendant in the present case argues
    that the search of his hotel room violated his rights
    under the state constitution, he failed to provide an
    independent analysis of whether article first, §7, of the
    Connecticut constitution provides probationers with
    greater protection from warrantless searches than pro-
    vided by the fourth amendment. See State v. Geisler,
    supra, 
    222 Conn. 684
    –85 (setting forth appropriate fac-
    tors to address whether ‘‘the protections afforded to
    the citizens of this state by our own constitution go
    beyond those provided by the federal constitution, as
    that document has been interpreted by the United States
    Supreme Court’’ (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    As such, the holdings of Knights and Moore govern
    our analysis of whether the warrantless search of the
    defendant’s hotel room was unreasonable and, thus, in
    violation of article first, §7, of the Connecticut consti-
    tution.
    As in Moore, a standard condition of the defendant’s
    probation was that he ‘‘[s]ubmit to a search of [his]
    person, possessions, vehicle or residence when the
    [p]robation [o]fficer has a reasonable suspicion to do
    so.’’ See State v. Moore, 
    supra,
     
    112 Conn. App. 574
    .
    The defendant signed the conditions of his probation,
    thereby manifesting an understanding of and assent
    to those conditions. The defendant’s probation search
    condition diminished his reasonable expectation of pri-
    vacy and furthered the state’s dual interests in facilitat-
    ing the defendant’s rehabilitation and protecting society
    from any future criminal violations by him. See United
    States v. Knights, 
    supra,
     
    534 U.S. 119
    –20; State v. Smith,
    supra, 
    207 Conn. 174
    . Furthermore, there is no require-
    ment in the defendant’s probation search condition that
    a warrant be procured before a search is conducted of
    his ‘‘person, possessions, vehicle or residence . . . .’’
    See also United States v. Knights, 
    supra, 121
     (dispens-
    ing with fourth amendment warrant requirement for
    searches of probationers who are subject to search
    condition and when there is reasonable suspicion).
    Accordingly, the defendant could reasonably be sub-
    jected to a search of his residence and possessions
    when a probation officer had reasonable suspicion that
    he was violating conditions of his probation. ‘‘The rea-
    sonable suspicion standard requires no more than that
    the authority acting . . . be able to point to specific
    and articulable facts that, taken together with rational
    inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant a belief
    . . . that a condition of [probation] has been or is being
    violated.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v.
    Moore, 
    supra,
     
    112 Conn. App. 574
    . For the reasons that
    follow, we conclude that Granatek and Nordstorm pos-
    sessed sufficient reasonable suspicion to conduct their
    search of the defendant’s hotel room.
    The defendant was observed by Nordstrom leaving
    the hotel parking lot, walking through a wooded area
    to the parking lot of the neighboring apartments, and
    approaching the driver of a van that had just pulled
    into the parking lot. The defendant reached his hand
    into the van’s front driver side window, then entered the
    van through the front passenger side door. Nordstrom
    followed the van after it left the parking lot and drove
    approximately one-eighth to one-quarter of a mile down
    Bridge Street, until it entered the parking lot of the
    restaurant. The van stopped in the restaurant’s parking
    lot. Nordstrom and Belville approached the van to make
    identifications of those inside it.11 The driver of the van,
    Rosario, was observed visibly shaking and beginning
    to cry. A needle and glassine baggies were discovered
    on Rosario’s person. After being asked whether he pur-
    chased the glassine baggies from the defendant, Rosario
    replied ‘‘are you trying to get me killed?’’ Subsequently,
    Rosario admitted to purchasing $50 worth of heroin.
    The sum of $50 was found in one of the defendant’s
    pockets, matching the amount of money Rosario admit-
    ted to paying for the heroin.
    A room card key for the hotel was also found on the
    defendant, but he denied to Nordstrom that he was
    staying there. After Nordstrom learned that the defen-
    dant was on probation, she contacted Granatek because
    he was a local probation officer. When Granatek arrived
    on the scene, Nordstrom shared with him the reasons
    for her stop of the van, and that the defendant was on
    probation and reported living in Hartford. The defen-
    dant again denied staying at the hotel when he was
    asked by Granatek. Because the defendant had a hotel
    key card and had been observed by both Granatek and
    Nordstrom outside the hotel multiple times prior to
    March 17, 2017, Granatek reasonably suspected that the
    defendant was being deceitful when he denied staying
    at the hotel. The defendant was transported to the hotel,
    where Granatek and Nordstrom inquired of the front
    desk clerk whether the defendant was staying at the
    hotel. The clerk stated that the defendant had been
    staying at the hotel with Estrella.12 Granatek went to
    the defendant’s room and performed a probation check
    of the hotel room, with some assistance from Nor-
    dstrom.
    In light of the foregoing facts found by the court, it
    was reasonable for Granatek and Nordstrom to suspect
    that the defendant was engaged in a sale of narcotics
    and that his hotel room might contain further evidence
    of such criminality. Therefore, the warrantless search
    of the defendant’s hotel room pursuant to the search
    condition of his probation was lawful.13
    The judgment is affirmed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    The defendant further claims that the court improperly concluded that
    there was sufficient evidence that he violated his probation. The defendant
    concedes that if we disagree that the exclusionary rule applies under the
    facts of his case, there is sufficient evidence to find him in violation of
    probation. In light of our conclusion that the evidence presented at his
    probation revocation proceeding was not collected from an unlawful search,
    we need not reach the defendant’s sufficiency of the evidence claim.
    2
    A young child was discovered in a car seat in the van’s second row
    of seating.
    3
    The plastic sandwich bags were found without their corners cut off.
    4
    Thereafter, the state entered a nolle prosequi of the charges pending in
    the underlying criminal case.
    5
    In Pennsylvania Board of Probation & Parole v. Scott, 
    524 U.S. 357
    ,
    368–69, 
    118 S. Ct. 2014
    , 
    141 L. Ed. 2d 344
     (1998), the United States Supreme
    Court refused to recognize an exception to the general inapplicability of
    the exclusionary rule in parole revocation hearings. The holding in Scott
    has been interpreted to apply in probation revocation hearings. See United
    States v. Hightower, 
    950 F.3d 33
    , 37 (2d Cir. 2020); United States v. Hebert,
    
    201 F.3d 1103
    , 1104 and n.2 (9th Cir. 2000); United States v. Armstrong,
    
    187 F.3d 392
    , 394 (4th Cir. 1999); State v. Foster, 
    258 Conn. 501
    , 508–509
    n.6, 
    782 A.2d 98
     (2001).
    The fourth amendment to the United States constitution provides: ‘‘The
    right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects,
    against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no
    warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirma-
    tion, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons
    or things to be seized.’’
    6
    In State v. Jacobs, supra, 
    229 Conn. 389
    –90, the defendant claimed that
    ‘‘the fourth amendment exclusionary rule applies to a revocation of proba-
    tion proceeding if the officers performing the search knew or should have
    known of the defendant’s probationary status . . . .’’ Following the United
    States Supreme Court decision in Pennsylvania Board of Probation & Parole
    v. Scott, 
    524 U.S. 357
    , 357, 
    118 S. Ct. 2014
    , 
    141 L. Ed. 2d 344
     (1998); see
    footnote 5 of this opinion; the defendant in State v. Foster, supra, 
    258 Conn. 502
    , claimed that the exclusionary rule applied in probation revocation
    proceedings under article first, § 7, of the Connecticut constitution. In State
    v. Maietta, supra, 
    320 Conn. 681
    , the defendant claimed that the exclusionary
    rule under the fourth and fourteenth amendments to the federal constitution
    should apply to his probation revocation hearing.
    7
    The fourth amendment to the United States constitution provides individ-
    uals with similar protections. See footnote 5 of this opinion.
    8
    On appeal, the defendant does not claim that the search of the hotel
    room was unlawful under the fourth amendment to the United States consti-
    tution. In addition, the defendant does not claim that the stop of the van
    was unconstitutional under either the fourth amendment to the United States
    constitution or article first, § 7, of the Connecticut constitution. Accordingly,
    we do not consider those issues.
    9
    On appeal, the state does not argue that the judgment should be affirmed
    because the search of the defendant’s hotel room was constitutional. The
    defendant does, however, claim that the search of his hotel room was
    unconstitutional under article first, § 7, of the Connecticut constitution.
    Because we conclude that the search of the hotel room was lawful, and the
    lawfulness of that search is dispositive, we decide the defendant’s appeal
    on this basis.
    10
    The probation condition, agreed to by the defendant, provided that he
    would ‘‘[s]ubmit his . . . person, property, place of residence, vehicle, per-
    sonal effects, to search at anytime, with or without a search warrant, warrant
    of arrest or reasonable cause by any probation officer or law enforcement
    officer.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) United States v. Knights, 
    supra,
    534 U.S. 114
    .
    11
    On appeal, the defendant does not challenge the legality of the stop of
    the van and, therefore, we do not consider that issue. See footnote 8 of
    this opinion.
    12
    The defendant’s conditions of probation do not define ‘‘residence,’’ as
    that term is used in the search condition. Nonetheless, because Nordstrom
    and Granatek had seen the defendant outside the hotel multiple times before
    March 17, and the hotel clerk had told Granatek that the defendant was
    staying at the hotel, it was reasonable for Granatek to infer that the hotel
    room was the defendant’s residence. See State v. Drupals, 
    306 Conn. 149
    ,
    163, 
    49 A.3d 962
     (2012) (interpreting ‘‘residence,’’ as that term is used in
    General Statutes § 54-251 (a), to mean ‘‘the act or fact of living in a given
    place for some time, and . . . does not apply to temporary stays’’).
    13
    The defendant argues that ‘‘[r]ather than seek a search warrant to search
    [his] hotel room after discovering that [he] was on probation, the police
    enlisted the assistance of . . . Granatek, who was assigned to New London
    county and was not involved in the supervision of [him] in any way.’’ The
    defendant further argues that because Granatek was not his probation offi-
    cer, he did not have access to his probation conditions to know of the
    search condition. To the extent that the defendant argues that only his
    probation officer may perform a search of his residence and possessions
    under the search condition, he has provided us with no authority to support
    that proposition. As a probation officer, Granatek was authorized to ‘‘super-
    vise and enforce all conditions of probation ordered pursuant to section
    53a-30.’’ General Statutes § 54-108 (b). The defendant’s search condition is
    a standard condition of probation. See State v. Moore, 
    supra,
     
    112 Conn. App. 575
     (referring to ‘‘standard term of . . . probation that provided . . .
    probation officer could search . . . premises’’ (emphasis added)). We thus
    find these arguments unavailing.