State v. Cannon ( 2024 )


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  •        IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    STATE OF DELAWARE                         :        ID: S2305011667
    :
    vs.                                 :
    :
    KAVOUN CANNON,                            :
    :
    Defendant.                          :
    :
    Submitted: January 19, 2024
    Decided: January 30, 2024
    Upon Defendant’s Motion to Suppress, GRANTED.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Nichole Gannett, Esquire, Deputy Attorney General.
    Zachary George, Esquire, Attorney for Defendant.
    Robinson, J.
    Kevoun Cannon (“Cannon”) has moved to suppress DNA results that link him
    to a gun, arguing that the search warrant for his DNA lacked sufficient probable
    cause. The State opposes Cannon’s motion and filed a written response. Because the
    sole issue is the sufficiency of the probable cause contained within the four corners
    of the search warrant, there is no need for a hearing. For the reasons explained below,
    the motion to suppress is GRANTED.
    The search warrant recites the following facts. On May 22, 2023, Corporal
    Howard of the Laurel Police Department (“Howard”) responded to a complaint of a
    domestic incident in Hollybrook Apartments. Upon arrival, Howard found a female
    who was visibly upset, standing next to a car with a broken window. She told Howard
    that she and her boyfriend, Cannon, had argued and she locked herself in her car to
    get away from him. Cannon then allegedly broke the window of the car to get to her
    and fled from the scene with her car keys. Howard followed the route Cannon took
    but could not locate Cannon or the car keys. On his way back to the scene of the
    incident, Howard noticed a gun and a fanny pack underneath a parked car. He looked
    in the fanny pack and saw suspected marijuana, drug paraphernalia, several Black &
    Mild cigars, and loose change. Howard secured the gun and the fanny pack as
    evidence.
    Later that evening, Howard returned to the scene after police received a 911
    call that Cannon was attempting to break into the same woman’s apartment. Howard
    2
    arrested Cannon at the apartment. Howard interviewed Cannon who denied that the
    gun and fanny pack were his. Cannon mentioned that he and the woman had been
    smoking Black & Mild cigars earlier that day.
    The day after Cannon’s arrest, Howard reviewed several surveillance videos
    from the apartment complex that showed Cannon in the area where the first domestic
    incident occurred and near where Howard found the gun and fanny pack. Howard
    noted that Cannon was wearing the same clothing he was arrested in and saw that
    Cannon had a fanny pack slung over his shoulder that resembled the fanny pack
    found at the scene.1 Howard also noticed Cannon appeared to have a heavy object in
    his pocket in the videos, but that Cannon’s pockets were empty when he was arrested
    later that night.2
    Based on the above information, Howard obtained a search warrant to collect
    a sample of Cannon’s DNA.3 At the time, Howard had not collected DNA from the
    gun, and he did not know if DNA could be collected. In other words, he sought a
    DNA sample from Cannon in case DNA was later recovered from the gun.
    1
    The fanny pack had a shiny gold zipper and a white, rectangular patch on the bottom right front.
    2
    In its response, the State claims that Howard also viewed surveillance footage that showed
    Cannon pause next to the car where the fanny pack and gun were found and thereafter he is no
    longer seen with the fanny pack. The State claims that the footage shows the police car arriving on
    the scene, suggesting that Cannon discarded the fanny pack—and presumably the gun—when he
    saw the police arriving. These facts, however, are not in the search warrant so they will not be
    considered.
    3
    Howard noted in the warrant that Cannon’s criminal history indicated he had been arrested three
    times for having a firearm and was twice arrested with both marijuana and a gun in a backpack.
    This information is extraneous and will not be considered in this decision.
    3
    Cannon argues that the search warrant lacks a nexus between his DNA and
    the gun because Howard could only speculate that DNA would be recovered from
    the gun. He cites to a line of Delaware cases beginning with State v. Campbell, which
    held:
    [T]he Court does believe more is required than the detective’s
    unsupported belief that DNA may be recovered from an object. At a
    minimum, the assertions made in the affidavit must be supported by
    training, education, or experience that would reasonably justify and
    explain the detective’s conclusion that DNA could reasonably be
    recovered from that particular object. On occasion, this will be easy to
    justify simply from the object being tested, such as blood or semen. On
    other occasions, when the object is one on which DNA is not routinely
    found because of the properties of that object, more justification for the
    search will be needed.4
    In State v. White,5 this court followed the Campbell court’s rejection of the approach
    taken by some other states: that warrants for a suspect’s DNA are automatically
    insufficient if there is not a DNA sample already recovered from a piece of evidence.
    The White court determined that the warrant must show a “fair probability” that a
    DNA sample would be found on an object.6 In State v. Riley, this court granted the
    defendant’s motion to suppress, finding that the search warrant was “completely
    devoid of any reference to [the officer’s] experience leading him to believe that
    4
    
    2015 WL 5968901
    , at *5 (Del. Super. Ct. Oct. 5, 2015). In Campbell, the police did not recover
    DNA from the objects recovered, so the court determined the issue was moot.
    5
    
    2017 WL 1842784
    , at *4 (Del. Super. Ct. May 8, 2017).
    6
    Id. at *5. In the White case, the court denied the defendant’s motion to suppress. The evidence in
    that case was a tight-fitting mask found at the scene. A tight-fitting mask would likely have the
    wearer’s DNA on it. Also, the suspect’s fingerprints were found on the mask.
    4
    [there] was a fair probability that evidence would be found on the seized .40 caliber
    and ammunition recovered from [the d]efendant’s residence that would be linked to
    the victim’s murder or shell casings found at the crime scene.”7 Likewise, in State v.
    Bell, this court suppressed evidence recovered from a DNA search warrant because
    the warrant did not include any information about the affiant’s training or experience
    and did not describe the likelihood that DNA would be recovered from an object.8
    This court reached a similar conclusion in State v. Lovett.9
    The search warrant in the present case is comparable to those in Campbell,
    Riley, Bell, and Lovett in that it fails to articulate either the affiant’s training and
    experience sufficient to support his conclusion that DNA would be recovered from
    the gun, or that there was a fair probability that DNA would be recovered from the
    gun. Although Howard states his credentials at the beginning of the warrant
    (including where and for how long he has been employed and when he graduated
    from the police academy) and that he believes a DNA sample “would provide”
    necessary evidence to prosecute Cannon, these statements are not sufficient to
    establish probable cause.
    The State also argues that even if the search warrant is deemed insufficient,
    alternative theories such as the search incident to arrest exception or the independent
    7
    
    2019 WL 3976038
    , at *6 (Del. Super. Ct. Aug. 20, 2019).
    8
    
    2019 WL 4507853
    , at *3-4 (Del. Super. Ct. Aug. 28, 2019).
    9
    
    2020 WL 5870259
    , at *4-5 (Del. Super. Ct. Oct. 2, 2020).
    5
    source doctrine would allow the DNA evidence to be admitted at trial. First, the court
    in Riley considered a similar argument, and as in Riley, the search incident to arrest
    argument is easily dispatched. Delaware’s search incident to arrest statute, 11 Del.
    C. § 2303, requires that the search be incidental and contemporaneous to the arrest.
    This search was neither. Howard arrested Cannon on May 23, but did not obtain the
    warrant until June 4. Second, the State makes a passing reference to the independent
    source exception,10 but it only argues that Cannon’s DNA would have been
    inevitably discovered.11 This argument likewise fails because it was not inevitable
    DNA would be found on the gun. As it happens, DNA was found, but at the time of
    the drafting of the warrant, it was unknown whether DNA would be on the gun.
    For the reasons stated above, Cannon’s motion to suppress his DNA sample
    collected under the search warrant is GRANTED.
    10
    The warrant notes that Cannon had been convicted of several felonies and that he was on
    probation at the time of the arrest, which would indicate a sample of his DNA was collected and
    included in a database. See 29 Del. C. § 4713(b). If his DNA was in a database, then that would
    constitute an independent source.
    11
    The State is correct that this case would have been prolonged if the police first had to wait for
    the gun to be tested before obtaining the warrant for Cannon’s DNA sample. The timeline of the
    DNA testing results is not in the record, but the DNA sample was likely obtained around the time
    of the search warrant that was issued on June 4. In his motion to file the motion to suppress out of
    time, defense counsel states that he did not get the DNA laboratory results until December 1, 2023.
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2305011667

Judges: Robinson J.

Filed Date: 1/30/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/30/2024