Derek Heuring v. State of Indiana ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                 FILED
    Feb 20 2020, 12:32 pm
    CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    IN THE
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Supreme Court Case No. 19S-CR-528
    Derek Heuring,
    Appellant (Defendant)
    –v–
    State of Indiana,
    Appellee (Plaintiff)
    Argued: November 7, 2019 | Decided: February 20, 2020
    Appeal from the Warrick Superior Court, No. 87D02-1808-F2-435
    The Honorable Robert R. Aylsworth, Judge
    On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals
    No. 19A-CR-140
    Opinion by Chief Justice Rush
    Justices David, Massa, Slaughter, and Goff concur.
    Rush, Chief Justice.
    Law enforcement secured a warrant to plant a small, inconspicuous
    GPS tracking device on Derek Heuring’s Ford Expedition. The device
    gave officers regular location readings for about a week—until it abruptly
    stopped providing updates. Over the next ten days, the officers could not
    determine what happened. But then, after discovering that the tracker was
    no longer attached to Heuring’s car, an officer obtained warrants to search
    Heuring’s home and his father’s barn for evidence of the device’s theft.
    We hold that those search warrants were invalid because the affidavits
    did not establish probable cause that the GPS device was stolen. We
    further conclude that the affidavits were so lacking in probable cause that
    the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule does not apply. Thus,
    under the exclusionary rule, the evidence seized from Heuring’s home
    and his father’s barn must be suppressed. We reverse and remand.
    Facts and Procedural History
    In summer 2018, Warrick County Sheriff’s Department Officers Matt
    Young and Jarret Busing believed that Derek Heuring was dealing
    methamphetamine. To monitor his movements for thirty days, Officer
    Young obtained a warrant to place one of the department’s GPS tracking
    devices onto Heuring’s Ford Expedition.
    On July 13, Officer Young attached the device—“a plain black plastic
    box” with no markings. The officers received regular location readings for
    the next six days. But on the seventh day, they received a “final update”
    from the tracker, showing Heuring’s car at his home. Three days later, the
    officers were still not receiving location information even though a battery
    reading showed the device was fully charged. So, Officer Young contacted
    a technician with the GPS device’s manufacturer. The technician told him
    that “the satellite was not reading,” which “could” have been caused by
    the device being “unplugged and plugged back in.”
    At some point over the next week, Officer Busing saw the vehicle in
    Heuring’s father’s barn, which he thought may be affecting the device’s
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CR-528 | February 20, 2020    Page 2 of 13
    satellite reception. Then on July 30—ten days after receiving the final
    location reading—the officers twice drove by the barn and Heuring’s
    home. They first saw the vehicle parked outside of the barn and later saw
    it parked outside of the home.
    After seeing the car away from the barn, Officer Young again contacted
    a technician “to see if the GPS would track now.” The technician informed
    him “that the device was not registering and needed a hard reset.” Officer
    Young went to retrieve the device from the vehicle, but it was gone.
    Though Officer Busing was “aware” that a GPS device had previously
    become “disengaged from a vehicle by accident,” that device “was able to
    be located” because it was still transmitting satellite readings.
    Based on the above information, the officers believed the device had
    been stolen and was in either Heuring’s home or his father’s barn. So,
    Officer Busing filed affidavits for warrants to search each location for
    evidence of “theft” of the GPS device. A magistrate issued both search
    warrants; and within the next hour, law enforcement executed them.
    While looking for the device, officers found drugs, drug paraphernalia,
    and a handgun. Each search was stopped, and Officer Busing sought and
    obtained warrants to search the house and barn for narcotics. During
    those subsequent searches, officers located the GPS device, as well as
    additional contraband. Heuring was arrested and charged with several
    offenses.
    Before trial, Heuring moved to suppress the seized evidence,
    challenging the validity of the search warrants under both the Fourth
    Amendment and Article 1, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution. Heuring
    argued that the initial search warrants were issued without probable
    cause that evidence of a crime—theft of the GPS device—would be found
    in either his home or his father’s barn. After a hearing, the trial court
    denied Heuring’s motion. On interlocutory appeal, a panel of the Court of
    Appeals affirmed. Heuring v. State, No. 19A-CR-140, 
    2019 WL 3226992
    , at
    *1, *4 (Ind. Ct. App. July 18, 2019).
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CR-528 | February 20, 2020   Page 3 of 13
    We granted transfer, vacating the Court of Appeals decision. Ind.
    Appellate Rule 58(A).
    Standard of Review
    The trial court upheld the magistrate’s finding of probable cause to
    issue two search warrants. We review the trial court’s decision de novo, as
    it concerned the constitutionality of a search. Marshall v. State, 
    117 N.E.3d 1254
    , 1258 (Ind. 2019).
    But we apply a deferential standard of review to the magistrate’s
    probable cause finding, affirming if the magistrate had a “substantial
    basis” for making that decision. McGrath v. State, 
    95 N.E.3d 522
    , 527 (Ind.
    2018). Our focus is “whether reasonable inferences drawn from the totality
    of the evidence support” the finding. Query v. State, 
    745 N.E.2d 769
    , 771
    (Ind. 2001). In making this determination, “we consider only the evidence
    presented to the issuing magistrate” and not post hoc justifications for the
    search. Figert v. State, 
    686 N.E.2d 827
    , 830 (Ind. 1997).
    Discussion and Decision
    Both the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and
    Article 1, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution require search warrants
    based on probable cause. U.S. Const. amend. IV; Ind. Const. art. 1, § 11.
    Our General Assembly has codified this constitutional requirement in
    Indiana Code section 35-33-5-2, which specifies the information that must
    be included in an affidavit supporting a search warrant. See 
    Ind. Code § 35-33-5-2
     (2019). Though a “fluid concept,” probable cause exists when
    the affidavit establishes “a fair probability that contraband or evidence of
    a crime will be found in a particular place.” Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    ,
    232, 238 (1983).
    When a magistrate concludes that an affidavit establishes probable
    cause, we accord that determination great deference. United States v. Leon,
    
    468 U.S. 897
    , 914 (1984). But this deference “is not boundless.” 
    Id.
     A search
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CR-528 | February 20, 2020      Page 4 of 13
    warrant issued without probable cause is invalid and thus the subsequent
    search illegal. Shotts v. State, 
    925 N.E.2d 719
    , 724 (Ind. 2010). Under the
    exclusionary rule—unless an exception applies—evidence obtained both
    directly and derivatively from an illegal search must be suppressed. See
    Utah v. Strieff, 
    136 S. Ct. 2056
    , 2061 (2016); Dolliver v. State, 
    598 N.E.2d 525
    ,
    527, 529 (Ind. 1992).
    Heuring argues that the initial search warrants for his home and his
    father’s barn were invalid because the accompanying affidavits failed to
    establish probable cause that a crime had been committed. He thus asserts
    that the seized evidence pursuant to both the initial search warrants and
    the subsequently issued warrants must be suppressed. The State
    disagrees, maintaining that the affidavits were supported by probable
    cause. Alternatively, the State contends that, even if the warrants were
    invalid, the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule applies, making
    suppression unnecessary.
    We agree with Heuring. The initial search warrants were invalid
    because the affidavits did not supply probable cause that the GPS device
    was stolen. And because reliance on the invalid warrants was objectively
    unreasonable, the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule does not
    apply. Thus, all direct and derivative evidence obtained as a result of the
    invalid warrants must be suppressed.
    I. The affidavits do not provide a substantial basis of
    fact from which a magistrate could find probable
    cause that the GPS tracking device was stolen.
    A search warrant affidavit must include facts that show, when viewed
    under the totality of the circumstances, a fair probability that a crime has
    been committed. See Gates, 
    462 U.S. at 238
    . Put differently, the affidavit
    must link the object of the search with criminal activity. I.C. § 35-33-5-
    2(a)(1)–(2); see also Berger v. New York, 
    388 U.S. 41
    , 59 (1967) (observing that
    the purpose of the probable cause requirement is “to keep the state out of
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CR-528 | February 20, 2020         Page 5 of 13
    constitutionally protected areas until it has reason to believe that a specific
    crime has been or is being committed”).
    Here, the warrants authorized law enforcement to search Heuring’s
    home and his father’s barn for evidence of theft of the sheriff department’s
    GPS tracking device. So, to establish probable cause, the affidavits needed
    to show a fair probability that someone (1) at least “knowingly” exerted
    “unauthorized control over property of another person” and (2) did so
    “with intent to deprive the other person of any part of its value or use.”
    I.C. § 35-43-4-2(a) (defining “theft”).
    The affidavits include the following facts, which the State maintains
    established probable cause that the device was stolen. The officers saw
    Heuring’s car at his house and in his father’s barn after the tracker
    stopped working. The officers knew that neither the battery nor the barn
    caused the device to stop working. And the officers did not believe the
    tracker had been accidentally dislodged for two reasons: first, Officer
    Busing was aware of a time when a similar device had become dislodged
    but was later found because it kept signaling; and second, a technician
    told Officer Young that the tracker “could have been unplugged and
    plugged back in to cause” the satellite to stop reading despite the fully
    charged battery.
    As explained below, we disagree that these facts show a fair probability
    that a theft—or any crime—occurred. Specifically, the affidavits fail to
    establish probable cause in two respects. They lack information (1) that
    any control over the GPS device was knowingly unauthorized or (2) that
    there was an intent to deprive the sheriff’s department of the GPS device’s
    value or use.
    A. The affidavits lack information that any control over the
    GPS device was knowingly unauthorized.
    The affidavits fail to show a fair probability that any “control” over the
    tracker was “knowingly . . . unauthorized.” Several statutory definitions
    are helpful in reaching this conclusion.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CR-528 | February 20, 2020      Page 6 of 13
    A person engages in conduct “knowingly” if “he is aware of a high
    probability that he is doing so.” I.C. § 35-41-2-2(b). To exercise “control”
    over property, one must “obtain, take, carry, drive, lead away, conceal,
    abandon, sell, convey, encumber, or possess property” or “secure,
    transfer, or extend a right to property.” I.C. § 35-43-4-1(a). And, as
    relevant here, control is “unauthorized” if it is exerted “without the other
    person’s consent” or “in a manner or to an extent other than that to which
    the other person has consented.” Id. § 1(b)(1)–(2).
    Putting this together, the affidavits needed to establish probable cause
    that someone—aware of a high probability that they were doing so—took
    the GPS device from Heuring’s vehicle without proper consent from the
    sheriff’s department. The affidavits, however, are devoid of the necessary
    information to make such a showing. Instead, they support a fair
    probability only that Heuring—or someone—found a small, unmarked
    black box attached to the vehicle, did not know what (or whose) the box
    was, and then took it off the car.
    In the affidavits, Officer Busing notes that the GPS device “placed on
    the subject vehicle” was “black in color [and] approximately” six inches
    by four inches. The affidavits also include facts tending to show that, at
    some unknown time over a ten-day period, the device was removed.
    That’s all. There is no evidence of who might have removed it. And there
    is nothing about markings or other identifying features on the device from
    which someone could determine either what it was or whose it was. In
    other words, what the affidavits show, at most, is that Heuring may have
    been the one who removed the device, knowing it was not his—not that
    he knew it belonged to law enforcement.
    To find a fair probability of unauthorized control here, we would need
    to conclude that Hoosiers don’t have the authority to remove unknown,
    unmarked objects from their personal vehicles. See Unauthorized, Black’s
    Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (defining the term as “[d]one without
    authority”); see also Woods v. State, 
    514 N.E.2d 1277
    , 1280 (Ind. Ct. App.
    1987) (finding it “ludicrous” to permit the search of a suspect’s home for
    evidence of theft based on an affidavit that provided “no facts to indicate”
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CR-528 | February 20, 2020    Page 7 of 13
    unauthorized control). Reaching such a conclusion—on these facts—
    would be illogical.
    Thus, the affidavits lack evidence showing a fair probability that any
    “control” over the device was “knowingly . . . unauthorized.” Given this
    factual deficiency, the affidavits are legally inadequate to establish
    probable cause that the device was stolen. Though this failure alone is
    fatal to the warrants’ validity, the affidavits are deficient in another
    respect.
    B. The affidavits lack information that there was an intent
    to deprive the sheriff’s department of the GPS device’s
    value or use.
    The affidavits also fail to show a fair probability that someone had the
    intent to deprive the sheriff’s department of any part of the tracker’s value
    or use. A person acts “intentionally” when “it is his conscious objective to
    do so.” I.C. § 35-41-2-2(a). Intent is a mental function; and so, absent an
    admission, it “can be inferred from a defendant’s conduct and the natural
    and usual sequence to which such conduct logically and reasonably
    points.” Phipps v. State, 
    90 N.E.3d 1190
    , 1195–96 (Ind. 2018) (quoting
    McCaskill v. State, 
    3 N.E.3d 1047
    , 1050 (Ind. Ct. App. 2014)); see also State v.
    McGraw, 
    480 N.E.2d 552
    , 554 (Ind. 1985).
    Here, however, the affidavits do not include facts showing conduct
    pointing to any natural and usual sequence. Rather, they merely describe
    a ten-day period during which the officers lost track of the GPS device.
    And thus, the affidavits support nothing more than speculation—a hunch
    that someone removed the device with the conscious objective to deprive
    the sheriff’s department of its value or use.
    But a hunch falls far short of showing probable cause. See Navarette v.
    California, 
    572 U.S. 393
    , 397 (2014) (recognizing that a mere hunch doesn’t
    even create reasonable suspicion, a standard that is less demanding than
    probable cause). True, removing an unknown device from a car may
    incidentally deprive the device’s owner of its value or use. But without
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CR-528 | February 20, 2020       Page 8 of 13
    any evidence of the requisite “intent,” there is no crime. See McGraw, 480
    N.E.2d at 554 (reasoning that intent cannot be inferred “when the natural
    and usual consequences of the conduct charged and proved are not such
    as would effect the wrong which the statute seeks to prevent”); Roark v.
    State, 
    234 Ind. 615
    , 619, 
    130 N.E.2d 326
    , 327 (1955) (reiterating the “well
    settled general principle of law that a crime is not committed if the mind
    of the person doing the act is innocent”). And here, the affidavits do not
    include facts supporting a fair probability that someone removing the
    device had the intent to deprive.
    In sum, though the affidavits allege criminal activity, the facts they
    recite—when viewed under the totality of the circumstances—relate
    exclusively to noncriminal behavior and fail to connect the object of the
    search (the GPS device) with the alleged criminal activity (its theft). See
    Warden, Md. Penitentiary v. Hayden, 
    387 U.S. 294
    , 307 (1967). Indeed, the
    affidavits provide nothing more than a tenuous and conclusory
    suggestion that the tracker was stolen. Thus, the search warrants,
    unsupported by probable cause, were invalid. And unless an exception to
    the exclusionary rule applies, the evidence subsequently obtained must be
    suppressed.
    II. The affidavits are so lacking in indicia of probable
    cause that the good-faith exception does not apply.
    Suppression of illegally obtained evidence is not required “if the police
    relied on the warrant in objective good faith.” Jackson v. State, 
    908 N.E.2d 1140
    , 1143 (Ind. 2009) (citing Leon, 
    468 U.S. at 923
    ). The State—in a single
    paragraph—argues that the good-faith exception applies. Heuring
    disagrees, maintaining that there was a “total lack of probable cause” and
    thus, the officers could not reasonably assert that they relied on “the
    warrants in good faith.” We agree with Heuring.
    The Supreme Court of the United States crafted the good-faith
    exception to the exclusionary rule in Leon. The following year, our Court
    of Appeals adopted that exception for claims brought under Article 1,
    Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution, and this Court followed suit a few
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CR-528 | February 20, 2020    Page 9 of 13
    years later. See Mers v. State, 
    482 N.E.2d 778
    , 783 (Ind. Ct. App. 1985);
    Hopkins v. State, 
    582 N.E.2d 345
    , 351 (Ind. 1991).
    But even before those decisions, our General Assembly codified a good-
    faith exception. See P.L. 323-1983, § 1 (codified at 
    Ind. Code § 35-37-4-5
    (1983 Supp.)). It provides, in relevant part, that suppression is not
    required if the evidence is obtained pursuant to
    a search warrant that was properly issued upon a
    determination of probable cause by a neutral and detached
    magistrate, that is free from obvious defects other than
    nondeliberate errors made in its preparation, and that was
    reasonably believed by the law enforcement officer to be valid.
    I.C. § 35-37-4-5(b)(1)(A). Here, there are no allegations that the magistrate
    was not “neutral,” and there are no “obvious defects” with either
    affidavit. Thus, our focus is whether the search warrants—despite lacking
    probable cause—were “reasonably believed” to be valid.
    Such belief in the warrants’ validity is not reasonable if the warrants
    were based on affidavits “so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to
    render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable.” Leon, 
    468 U.S. at 923
     (cleaned up); Jackson, 908 N.E.2d at 1143. And “indicia” requires
    sufficient signs or indications of probable cause. See Indicia, Black’s Law
    Dictionary (10th ed. 2014).
    In applying this standard, our focus is not on the magistrate’s decision
    to issue the warrant; rather, it is on law enforcement’s decision to seek and
    execute the warrant. See Leon, 
    468 U.S. at
    922 n.23. And this is not an
    inquiry into what the particular officer–affiant subjectively believed—it is
    one of “objective reasonableness.” 
    Id.
     at 923 n.24. In other words, we ask
    whether a nameless, “reasonably well trained officer would have known
    that the search was illegal despite the magistrate’s authorization.” 
    Id.
     at
    922 n.23.
    We conclude that these affidavits were devoid of information linking
    the GPS device to criminal activity and thus were so lacking in indicia of
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CR-528 | February 20, 2020     Page 10 of 13
    probable cause that reliance on them was objectively unreasonable.
    Though Officer Busing obtained the warrants to search for evidence of
    theft, the affidavits did not include facts supporting essential elements of
    the alleged crime. Rather, they were based on noncriminal behavior, a
    hunch, and a conclusory statement. Thus, a reasonably well-trained
    officer, in reviewing these affidavits, would have known that they failed
    to establish probable cause and, without more, would not have applied for
    the warrants. See Woods, 
    514 N.E.2d at 1283
     (finding the good-faith
    exception did not apply where the affidavits provided “no basis for
    believing a crime had been committed”).
    In reaching this conclusion, we find support in Figert v. State, 
    686 N.E.2d 827
    , 832–33 (Ind. 1997). There, we held that the good-faith
    exception did not apply because the search warrant affidavit provided
    only a conclusory statement—with no factual support—that drugs would
    be found inside Figert’s trailer. Id. at 833. The trailer was one of three in
    close proximity, and we found that “probable cause clearly existed with
    respect to the first two homes” and there was “suspicion or possibility of a
    joint drug-dealing enterprise.” Id. at 832 (cleaned up). But this was “not
    enough” to search Figert’s trailer because the affidavit failed to allege facts
    linking his trailer to the surrounding criminal activity. Id. So, because the
    warrant was issued based “solely on the officer’s opinion,” we held that
    the “officer’s reliance” on the warrant was not “objectively reasonable.” Id.
    at 833. The same is true here.
    Similar to the officer in Figert, Officer Busing filed the affidavits and
    participated in executing the search warrants. See id. at 831–32. And in
    those affidavits, he concluded that “he has good and probable cause to
    believe that the [GPS device] constituting fruits, instrumentalities and
    evidence of the aforesaid crime of THEFT are being concealed in or about”
    Heuring’s home or his father’s barn. But as discussed above, the affidavits
    do not include facts showing more than a hunch that the GPS device was
    stolen. And so, just as in Figert, the officer’s reliance on his own opinion—
    unsupported by the facts—is not objectively reasonable. The good-faith
    exception does not apply.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CR-528 | February 20, 2020     Page 11 of 13
    In reaching this decision, we are mindful that the good-faith exception
    is regularly used by courts—including ours—to avoid the exclusionary
    rule. And such frequent application is sound: a primary objective of the
    exclusionary rule is to deter police misconduct, which should, in theory,
    be rare. See Wright v. State, 
    108 N.E.3d 307
    , 314 (Ind. 2018). Indeed, many
    cases applying the exclusionary rule involve egregious police conduct like
    falsifying information; omitting important facts; or relying solely on
    uncorroborated, non-credible informants. See, e.g., Jaggers v. State, 
    687 N.E.2d 180
    , 185–86 (Ind. 1997); Dolliver, 598 N.E.2d at 529.
    But the rule is also meant to deter “reckless” conduct. Herring v. United
    States, 
    555 U.S. 135
    , 144 (2009); Gerth v. State, 
    51 N.E.3d 368
    , 375 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2016). And we find it reckless for an officer–affiant to search a
    suspect’s home and his father’s barn based on nothing more than a hunch
    that a crime has been committed. In reaching this conclusion, we do not
    question Officer Busing’s subjective good faith. But that is not the test. If it
    were, “the people would be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and
    effects, only in the discretion of the police.” Beck v. Ohio, 
    379 U.S. 89
    , 97
    (1964) (cleaned up). We are also aware that exclusion of the evidence here
    may result in criminal behavior going unpunished. Yet, “there is nothing
    new in the realization that the Constitution sometimes insulates the
    criminality of a few in order to protect the privacy of us all.” Arizona v.
    Hicks, 
    480 U.S. 321
    , 329 (1987).
    In short, reliance on these affidavits was objectively unreasonable, and
    we are confident that applying the exclusionary rule here will deter
    similar reckless conduct in the future. Concluding otherwise would let the
    good-faith exception swallow the exclusionary rule—at least in cases that
    are bereft of evidence linking the object of a search with the alleged
    offense. See Dolliver, 598 N.E.2d at 529 (recognizing that the good-faith
    exception “cannot be so broadly construed as to obliterate the
    exclusionary rule”); Lloyd v. State, 
    677 N.E.2d 71
    , 78 (Ind. Ct. App. 1997)
    (Najam, J., dissenting) (“If a mere hunch were sufficient to support an
    official belief in the validity of a warrant, the good faith exception would
    swallow the constitutional prohibition against unreasonable search or
    seizure . . . .”), trans. denied. This we will not do.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CR-528 | February 20, 2020       Page 12 of 13
    Thus, the exclusionary rule requires suppression of all evidence seized
    from Heuring’s home and his father’s barn. The evidence found during
    the initial search of each location must be excluded because those searches
    were illegal. And it was “by exploitation of that illegality” that law
    enforcement secured warrants to search each location a second time. Wong
    Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 488 (1963). As a result, the evidence
    found during those subsequent searches must also be excluded as “fruit of
    the poisonous tree.” 
    Id.
    Conclusion
    The initial search warrants were invalid because the accompanying
    affidavits did not provide a substantial basis to support the magistrate’s
    probable cause finding. Further, the good-faith exception to the
    exclusionary rule does not apply, and thus, the evidence obtained from
    Heuring’s home and his father’s barn must be suppressed. We reverse and
    remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    David, Massa, Slaughter, and Goff, JJ., concur.
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT
    Michael C. Keating
    Andrew C. Carroll
    Law Offices of Steven K. Deig, LLC
    Evansville, Indiana
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
    Attorney General of Indiana
    Jesse R. Drum
    Supervising Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CR-528 | February 20, 2020   Page 13 of 13