State v. Rose ( 2024 )


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  • 66                      July 31, 2024                No. 521
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE
    STATE OF OREGON
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    GARY LEE ROSE,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Clackamas County Circuit Court
    CR1200025; A176443
    Thomas J. Rastetter, Judge.
    Argued and submitted October 13, 2023.
    Morgen E. Daniels, Deputy Public Defender, argued the
    cause for appellant. Also on the briefs was Ernest J. Lannet,
    Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate Section, Office of Public
    Defense Services.
    Jennifer S. Lloyd, Assistant Attorney General, argued
    the cause for respondent. Also on the brief were Ellen F.
    Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman,
    Solicitor General.
    Before Aoyagi, Presiding Judge, and Pagan, Judge, and
    Jacquot, Judge.
    AOYAGI, P. J.
    Reversed and remanded.
    Cite as 
    334 Or App 66
     (2024)   67
    68                                               State v. Rose
    AOYAGI, P. J.
    In 2011, while executing a search warrant on defen-
    dant’s cellphone, a police officer discovered sexually explicit
    photos and videos of a child, E, on a micro-SD memory card
    inside the phone. Defendant was subsequently tried and con-
    victed of various crimes, after a trial at which the images from
    the SD card were admitted into evidence. In 2019, we reversed
    defendant’s convictions and remanded for a new trial for rea-
    sons unrelated to this appeal. On remand, defendant moved
    to suppress the images from his phone, arguing that the 2011
    warrant was invalid because it was insufficiently particular
    under State v. Mansor, 
    363 Or 185
    , 421 P3d 323 (2018), which
    announced heightened particularity requirements for war-
    rants to search digital data. The state at that point obtained a
    new warrant to search the cellphone and SD card, which were
    in police storage. The 2019 warrant listed the SD card—which
    had been removed from the phone during the 2011 search and
    stored separately—as a separate item to search. Execution of
    the 2019 warrant resulted in re-discovery of the same sex-
    ually explicit photos and videos. Defendant filed additional
    motions to suppress, challenging both the 2011 warrant and
    the 2019 warrant. All of defendant’s motions were denied. The
    images were again admitted into evidence at trial, and defen-
    dant was convicted of 13 crimes.
    Defendant appeals, raising six assignments of
    error. Our disposition of the first two assignments of error,
    challenging the suppression rulings, makes it unnecessary
    to reach the other four. As discussed below, we conclude that
    the 2011 search was unlawful, because the search command
    in the 2011 warrant was not specific enough under Mansor,
    requiring suppression of the evidence from the 2011 search.
    We further conclude that the 2019 warrant was tainted by
    the 2011 illegality, requiring suppression of the evidence
    from the 2019 search. Accordingly, the trial court erred
    in denying defendant’s motions to suppress, and we must
    reverse and remand yet again.
    I.   FACTS
    On December 18, 2011, nine-year-old E reported
    to her aunt, Volk, that she had been sexually abused by
    Cite as 
    334 Or App 66
     (2024)                               69
    defendant, who was her mother’s boyfriend. E was taken to
    the hospital the same day, where the police began an investi-
    gation. Deputy Case spoke to several witnesses at the hospi-
    tal. Volk told Case that she had noticed earlier that day that
    E seemed unusually withdrawn and was not eating well,
    so she asked E if something was wrong. E responded that
    her “privates hurt” and then graphically described sexual
    abuse by defendant. Case asked E’s mother if she believed
    E’s allegations, and she responded that E did not smirk like
    she normally does when lying. While at the hospital, Case
    seized defendant’s cellphone.
    On December 20, E was interviewed by McVay at the
    Children’s Center of Clackamas County. E said that defen-
    dant had “pictures of naked girls” on his cellphone and had
    showed her naked girls in underwear and no bras on his cell-
    phone after touching E inside her vagina. E also described
    incidents of abuse in which defendant (1) directed E to use
    his cellphone to videorecord herself peeing in the bathroom,
    which she did; (2) showed E a video on his cellphone of a
    woman masturbating; and (3) showed E a picture on his cell-
    phone of someone peeing into another person’s mouth.
    On December 22, 2011, Detective Voss applied for
    a warrant to seize and search defendant’s cellphone. In his
    affidavit, Voss described the evidence from Case’s inves-
    tigation. He also attested to knowing from training and
    experience that people save pictures and videos on their
    cellphones; that “most” cellphones can store pictures and
    videos “in the phone’s memory”; that people use cellphones
    to communicate by text message and sometimes attach pic-
    tures or videos, which “can be forms of evidence”; and that
    “names and phone numbers collected out of the memory of
    cellphones can provide investigators with information that
    could assist in the apprehension of wanted subjects, lead
    to other potential witnesses or lead to other persons who
    view child pornography.” Voss asserted that he had proba-
    ble cause to believe that defendant’s “black Cricket LG cell
    phone” that Case had seized at the hospital contained evi-
    dence of the crimes of using a child in display of sexually
    explicit conduct (ORS 163.670), second-degree encouraging
    child sexual abuse (ORS 162.686), endangering the welfare
    70                                             State v. Rose
    of a minor (ORS 163.575), and first-degree unlawful sexual
    penetration (ORS 163.411).
    The warrant was issued. It authorized officers to
    “search, seize, analyze and test” “a black Cricket LG cell-
    phone that is stored in the Clackamas County Sheriff’s
    Office (CCSO) Property Room under CCSO case #11-37846.”
    Its only search command was to search for “[e]vidence of vio-
    lation of” the four crimes listed above.
    As part of executing the warrant, Detective
    Giddings conducted a forensic examination of defendant’s
    cellphone. Giddings did not find any incriminating evi-
    dence in the phone’s built-in memory, but he found sexually
    explicit photos and videos of E, as well as photos and videos
    of females urinating or masturbating and images of nude
    or partially clothed children, on a removeable micro-SD
    memory card that he found inside the phone. The SD card
    was located beneath the battery compartment and could be
    accessed only by removing the back of the phone.
    Defendant was charged with various offenses
    against E, and the images, or testimony about the images,
    from his cellphone were admitted as evidence at trial.
    Defendant was convicted in 2013. He appealed, and, in 2019,
    we reversed his convictions and remanded for a new trial for
    reasons unrelated to this appeal. State v. Rose, 
    296 Or App 99
    , 437 P3d 1144 (2019).
    On remand, defendant moved to suppress the direct
    and derivative evidence found in the 2011 search of his cell-
    phone, including the SD card and the photos and videos. He
    argued that the warrant was insufficiently particular under
    Mansor, which had been decided during the pendency of his
    first appeal. Among other arguments, he contended that
    the warrant was not specific enough regarding the evidence
    sought and that it authorized a search of the cellphone but
    not the SD card.
    At that point, the state sought a new warrant.
    Detective Fich, who had no previous involvement in the
    investigation, prepared the 2019 warrant application. Fich
    reviewed Case’s report and other materials that predated
    the 2011 warrant application. He did not review anything
    Cite as 
    334 Or App 66
     (2024)                                  71
    that related to or postdated the 2011 search, with one excep-
    tion: He did review the “first section” of Giddings’s report,
    which described Giddings’s physical removal of the SD card
    from the cellphone during the 2011 search. Fich reviewed
    nothing else regarding the 2011 search and did not know
    what was found in the 2011 search.
    In his affidavit, Fich described the 2011 police inves-
    tigation. He also attested to knowing from training and
    experience that people save photographs and videos on their
    cellphones and “related personal digital storage media” and
    that photos or videos “created or used for purposes of sexual
    gratification” are likely to be found on cellphones and associ-
    ated devices and may include depictions of the phone’s owner
    or “others, including, in this case, [E].” Fich asserted that he
    had probable cause to believe that evidence of four crimes—
    using a child in display of sexually explicit conduct, second-
    degree encouraging child sexual abuse, first-degree sexual
    abuse, and first-degree unlawful sexual penetration—would
    be found on defendant’s cellphone “and the 2GB Micro SD
    Card that [Giddings] removed from the cellular telephone.”
    The warrant was issued. It described the items to
    be seized, searched, and analyzed as follows:
    “One (1) black Cricket LG cellular telephone, bearing
    serial number 104KPTMO112385, currently stored in the
    Milwaukie Police Department, 3200 SE Harrison Street,
    Milwaukie, OR, 97222, under Milwaukie PD case #11-5112,
    PIC #27, ltem #1; and
    “One (1) 2GB Micro SD Card, currently stored in the
    Milwaukie Police Department, 3200 SE Harrison Street,
    Milwaukie, OR, 97222, under Milwaukie PD case#l l-5112,
    PIC#27, Item#2.”
    It commanded officers to search for evidence of the four
    crimes listed above, for the time period from September 12,
    2011, to December 18, 2011, including “[p]hotographs and
    videos of [E], photographs and videos of [E] engaged in sex-
    ually explicit conduct or in any state of undress or engaged
    in urinating,” and “[p]hotographs and videos shown to [E by
    defendant] described as pictures of naked girls, a video of a
    woman masturbating, and a photograph of someone urinat-
    ing into another person’s mouth.”
    72                                             State v. Rose
    Under authority of the 2019 warrant, Giddings con-
    ducted a new forensic examination of defendant’s cellphone
    and SD card. Giddings discovered the same incriminating
    photos and videos as he had in 2011.
    The state then responded to defendant’s motions
    to suppress. The state argued that defendant’s motions
    based on the 2011 warrant were “moot” given the 2019 war-
    rant, which it contended was sufficiently particular under
    Mansor. Defendant disagreed. The court agreed with the
    state, denying defendant’s motions but “without prejudice to
    move against the new warrant.”
    Defendant filed a second set of motions to suppress,
    challenging both the 2011 warrant and the 2019 warrant. At
    the hearing on defendant’s motions, the state defended the
    validity of both warrants but argued that it was only neces-
    sary to rule on the 2011 warrant if the court decided that
    the 2019 warrant was invalid. Defendant disagreed. Among
    other things, defendant argued that the 2019 warrant was
    “poisonous fruit of the tree,” because the police learned
    about the SD card’s existence while executing the 2011 war-
    rant, which defendant maintained was an invalid warrant,
    then used that information to obtain the 2019 warrant that
    expressly authorized a seizure and search of the SD card. In
    response, among other things, the state asserted that it had
    been lawful to search the SD A182578 card while executing
    the 2011 warrant and that the 2019 warrant listed the SD
    card separately only because it had been “stored separately”
    after the 2011 search. The court summarily denied defen-
    dant’s suppression motions, ruling that the 2019 warrant
    “was valid.” The court appears to have agreed with the state
    that, in light of that determination, it was unnecessary to
    rule on the validity of the 2011 warrant.
    Undeterred, defendant—who was self-represented
    (with a legal advisor) for most of his second trial proceed-
    ing—filed a third set of motions to suppress, making the
    same arguments against both warrants. The court allowed
    defendant to call Voss, Fich, and Giddings to testify about
    the 2019 warrant. The court summarily denied defendant’s
    motions. It appears to have done so based solely on the
    Cite as 
    334 Or App 66
     (2024)                                               73
    validity of the 2019 warrant, either deciding that issue anew
    or declining to reconsider the court’s prior ruling.
    Defendant proceeded to trial. The images, or testi-
    mony about the images, found in the 2019 warranted search
    of the SD card were admitted into evidence. Defendant was
    convicted of two counts of first-degree unlawful sexual pen-
    etration, seven counts of using a child in a display of sexu-
    ally explicit conduct, and four counts of first-degree sexual
    abuse. He appeals the resulting judgment of conviction.
    II. ANALYSIS
    Defendant contends that the trial court erred in
    denying his motions to suppress. He challenges the valid-
    ity of both the 2011 warrant and the 2019 warrant. As the
    moving party, defendant had the burden to prove that the
    warranted searches were unlawful. State v. Walker, 
    350 Or 540
    , 553-55, 258 P3d 1228 (2011).
    We need not address all of the issues raised by
    defendant, only those that prove dispositive. We therefore
    limit our discussion to defendant’s specificity challenge to
    the 2011 warrant and defendant’s taint challenge to the
    2019 warrant.
    A. The 2011 Warrant Is Insufficiently Specific under Mansor
    Defendant argues that the 2011 warrant was insuf-
    ficiently specific as to what evidence the police were to search
    for on defendant’s cellphone. We agree.1
    Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution, pro-
    vides that “no warrant shall issue but upon probable cause,
    supported by oath, or affirmation, and particularly describ-
    ing the place to be searched, and the person or thing to be
    seized.” The particularity requirement includes two related
    but distinct concepts: specificity and overbreadth. Mansor,
    
    363 Or at 212
    . A warrant must be specific enough to allow
    1
    We do not understand the trial court to have ruled on the validity of the
    2011 warrant, but that issue was thoroughly briefed and argued below and is
    appropriate for us to address. See Sherertz v. Brownstein Rask, 
    314 Or App 331
    ,
    341, 498 P3d 850 (2021), rev den, 
    369 Or 338
     (2022) (regarding when we will
    address an issue presented to, but not decided by, the trial court).
    74                                               State v. Rose
    an officer to identify with reasonable effort the place to be
    searched and the items to be seized. 
    Id.
     It also must not be
    overbroad, that is, it must not permit a search broader than
    the probable cause that the affidavit supports. 
    Id.
    For searches of electronic devices, a warrant is
    specific enough to satisfy the particularity requirement if
    it “describe[s], with as much specificity as reasonably pos-
    sible under the circumstances, what investigating officers
    believe will be found” on the device, including, “if available
    and relevant, a temporal description of when the informa-
    tion was created, accessed, or otherwise used.” 
    Id. at 216, 222
     (emphasis omitted); see also 
    id. at 216
     (“the ‘what’ is a
    description of the information related to the alleged crimi-
    nal conduct which there is probable cause to believe will be
    found” on the device (emphasis omitted)). “[T]he essential
    ‘thing’ about which a warrant must be particular is the pro-
    bative information, not types of files or their location within
    the computer’s file-management system[.]” State v. Savath,
    
    298 Or App 495
    , 500, 447 P3d 1, rev den, 
    365 Or 722
     (2019).
    The 2011 warrant contained a single search com-
    mand, directing officers to search for evidence of the crimes
    of using a child in display of sexually explicit conduct,
    second-degree encouraging child sexual abuse, endanger-
    ing the welfare of a minor, and first-degree unlawful sexual
    penetration. Defendant argues that that command was not
    specific enough, especially given that the warrant did not
    limit the search to a particular timeframe or to evidence of
    crimes against E. The state counters that Voss’s affidavit
    supplied the necessary specificity by making clear that the
    officers were to search for evidence of crimes against E and
    the type of images that E described.
    The 2011 warrant on its own is clearly not specific
    enough. A command to search for “evidence of a particular
    crime” is not specific enough to satisfy Article I, section 9.
    Mansor, 
    363 Or at 213-14
     (holding that a warrant authoriz-
    ing the search of a computer for “evidence of a particular
    crime,” without more, was not sufficiently specific); State v.
    Vesa, 
    324 Or App 674
    , 687, 527 P3d 786 (2023) (“[A] warrant
    authorizing a search for all ‘evidence of a particular crime’
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    334 Or App 66
     (2024)                                                75
    is not sufficiently specific to pass constitutional muster.”
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.)).2
    The key question, then, is whether Voss’s affidavit
    supplied the necessary specificity. See Mansor, 
    363 Or at 218-220
     (concluding that limiting language in the affidavit
    attached to the warrant cured the nonspecificity of the war-
    rant); Vesa, 324 Or App at 687 (when an affidavit is part
    of the warrant, we “read the warrant’s search commands
    in conjunction with and limited by the descriptions in the
    affidavit” (internal quotation marks omitted)). Defendant
    contests that the affidavit was attached to the warrant, but
    we assume for present purposes that it was, and we conclude
    that the affidavit did not make the warrant specific enough.
    State v. Turay, 
    371 Or 128
    , 532 P3d 57 (2023), is
    instructive in reaching that conclusion. In that case, officers
    obtained a warrant to search the defendant’s cellphones as
    part of an investigation into whether he had compelled and
    promoted prostitution by a minor, J. 
    Id. at 131
    . The Supreme
    Court held that the warrant’s command to search for “[a]ny
    and all communications” between the defendant, J, and a
    named witness” was not specific enough, because it lacked
    time and subject-matter restrictions that could have been
    included based on information available to the officers. 
    Id. at 152-53
    . The Supreme Court held that the warrant’s com-
    mand to search for “[a]ny evidence regarding the locations,
    including geolocation information, of the phones” during a
    particular timeframe also was not specific enough, despite
    the timeframe limitation and description of the type of infor-
    mation sought, because it “omitted additional limiting fac-
    tors that were known to law enforcement.” 
    Id. at 152, 154
    .
    The court emphasized that “warrants to search for digital
    data must describe the evidence sought with a heightened
    degree of specificity to satisfy the constitutional particular-
    ity requirement.” 
    Id. at 149
    .
    In this case, it is true, as the state asserts,
    that a reasonable officer reading the 2011 warrant and
    2
    We disagree with the state that the warrant was sufficiently particular
    given the nature of child pornography charges. The charges here were not limited
    to child pornography, making this case distinguishable from State v. Rose, 
    264 Or App 95
    , 330 P3d 680, rev den, 
    356 Or 400
     (2014), on which the state relies.
    76                                                            State v. Rose
    affidavit together would have understood to search for sexu-
    ally explicit photos or videos of E, as well as sexually explicit
    videos or photos of the type allegedly shown to E by defen-
    dant. However, the affidavit does not describe the evidence
    sought “as specifically as reasonably possible in the circum-
    stances.” 
    Id. at 154
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    First, the 2011 warrant does not include any time-
    frame limitation, even though timeframe information was
    available to the officers. In preparing his 2011 affidavit,
    Voss had access to the same information from Case’s inves-
    tigation that Fich had in 2019, including that there was an
    allegation of abuse on September 12, 2011,3 and that E had
    reported abuse to her aunt on December 18, 2011. Based
    on that information, Fich requested a warrant to search for
    evidence in a three-month window from September 12, 2011,
    to December 18, 2011, and Voss could have done the same.
    Alternatively, Voss could have used a longer timeframe
    based on when E’s mother began dating defendant, which is
    the earliest that any abuse could have occurred. This is not
    a case where no timeframe was available. Cf. State v. Paye,
    
    310 Or App 408
    , 416-17, 486 P3d 808 (2021) (recognizing
    that the lack of a timeframe is not fatal to a warrant’s speci-
    ficity if there is no indication that a timeframe was available
    to police, especially when the alleged criminal conduct is
    ongoing in a way that makes the timeframe less relevant).
    Second, the affidavit contained language that cre-
    ated ambiguity about the scope of the authorized search. See
    Turay, 371 Or at 146 n 10 (“a description that is insufficiently
    specific creates a risk that the description will be understood
    by officers to authorize a broader search than the probable
    cause supports,” which “creates ambiguity about the scope of
    the search that is authorized”). A reasonable officer reading
    the 2011 warrant and affidavit together could understand,
    given the averments in the affidavit based on Voss’s training
    and experience, that the search of defendant’s cellphone was
    to include searching for names, phone numbers, and text
    3
    On December 18, 2011, the same day that he started his investigation, Case
    reported E’s abuse allegations to DHS. In 2019, Fich reviewed DHS’s “screening
    report,” which mentioned a prior abuse allegation from September 12, 2011, that
    had been deemed unfounded. Per Fich, that screening report was prepared before
    Voss drafted his 2011 affidavit.
    Cite as 
    334 Or App 66
     (2024)                                 77
    messages regarding “potential other witnesses” or “other
    persons who view child pornography.” That is especially so
    given the information in the affidavit regarding defendant
    showing E photos of “naked girls” on his cellphone.
    For those reasons, although Voss’s affidavit made
    the search command somewhat more specific, it did not
    make it specific enough to satisfy the heightened particu-
    larity requirement for digital data articulated in Mansor.
    See Turay, 371 Or at 145-46 (rejecting the state’s argument
    that search categories are sufficiently specific “as long as its
    description permits law enforcement to identify with a rea-
    sonable degree of certainty whether a given piece of data falls
    within the search category, no matter how broad the scope
    of the description,” as inconsistent with Mansor (emphases
    in original)). The 2011 warrant was therefore invalid, which
    means that the 2011 search was unlawful and that the evi-
    dence from that search must be suppressed.
    B.   The 2019 Warrant Is Tainted
    We next consider the 2019 warrant. Defendant argues
    that the 2019 warrant “was not independent of the 2011
    warrant” and “that the evidence re-obtained in 2019 was
    thus tainted by the first unlawful search.” The state main-
    tains that the 2019 warrant is an “independent source” of
    the evidence. It views the 2019 warrant as entirely indepen-
    dent of the 2011 warrant. We agree with defendant.
    “Evidence that is obtained as the result of an uncon-
    stitutional act is generally suppressed.” State v. 
    Thompson, 370
     Or 273, 289, 518 P3d 923 (2022). In determining whether
    evidence obtained pursuant to a warrant is subject to sup-
    pression based on a prior illegality, the question is whether
    the warranted search is tainted by the prior illegality. State
    v. DeJong, 
    368 Or 640
    , 642, 497 P3d 710 (2021). That is, the
    question is whether the prior illegality had an effect on the
    subsequent discovery of evidence. Id. at 654 (stating that
    “the focus of the inquiry is not on the legality of the act pro-
    viding authority to search” but “on the effect that the prior
    illegality may have had on the authorized search”). In mak-
    ing that assessment, courts are to apply the burden-shifting
    78                                               State v. Rose
    framework from State v. Johnson, 
    335 Or 511
    , 73 P3d 282
    (2003).
    Under the Johnson framework, “the defendant has
    the initial burden to establish a minimal factual nexus
    between the illegality and the challenged evidence.” DeJong,
    368 Or at 642. The “burden of establishing a factual nexus
    is minimal and intended merely to rebut the presumption
    of regularity attendant to warranted searches.” Id. at 654-
    55 (emphasis in original). If the defendant meets that bur-
    den, then “the burden shifts to the state to establish that
    the challenged evidence was untainted by the illegality.” Id.
    at 642. In other words, once the minimum factual nexus is
    established, “there is a presumption that the challenged evi-
    dence must be suppressed, but the state has the opportunity
    to rebut that presumption.” Turay, 371 Or at 164.
    We readily conclude that defendant established a
    minimal factual nexus between the unlawful 2011 search
    and the evidence obtained in the 2019 search. Before search-
    ing defendant’s cellphone in 2011, the police were unaware
    that it contained an SD card. They learned of the SD card
    during the 2011 search. Eight years later, the prosecutor
    requested Fich to apply for a new warrant and gave him
    instructions how to proceed, Fich learned in preparing the
    warrant application that Giddings had removed an SD card
    from defendant’s cellphone, and Fich applied for a warrant
    to search both the cellphone and the SD card. Execution of
    that warrant resulted in the discovery of the challenged evi-
    dence. That establishes a minimal factual nexus between
    the challenged evidence (the images on the SD card and
    related testimony) and the prior illegality (the 2011 search
    that revealed the existence of the SD card). See DeJong, 368
    Or at 654 (holding that a minimum factual nexus existed
    where the warrant application referenced evidence discov-
    ered in a prior illegal seizure); Johnson, 
    335 Or at 521
     (hold-
    ing that a minimum factual nexus existed where “the police
    used information derived from an earlier unlawful seizure,
    viz., the fact that the clothes could be found in a police evi-
    dence locker, when they later applied for a search warrant”).
    The burden thus shifted to the state to overcome
    the presumption of taint. The state failed to do so. Indeed,
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    334 Or App 66
     (2024)                                79
    the state failed to even try to do so, because it did not rec-
    ognize the factual nexus between the 2011 search and the
    2019 warrant.
    The state might well have been able to overcome the
    presumption of taint, had it recognized the need to do so.
    “The independent source doctrine permits the introduction of
    ‘evidence initially discovered during, or as a consequence of,
    an unlawful search, but later obtained independently from
    activities untainted by the initial illegality.’ ” Johnson, 
    335 Or at 519
     (quoting Murray v. United States, 
    487 US 533
    , 537,
    
    108 S Ct 2529
    , 
    101 L Ed 2d 472
     (1988)). There is a theory of
    independent source that is subsumed within the inevitable
    discovery doctrine. Murray, 
    487 US at 537-41
     (illustrating
    the overlapping principles of the doctrines of independent
    source and inevitable discovery as applied in Nix v. Williams,
    
    467 US 431
    , 
    104 S Ct 2501
    , 
    81 L Ed 2d 377
     (1984)). The idea
    is that “[s]ince the tainted evidence would be admissible if in
    fact discovered through an independent source, it should be
    admissible if it inevitably would have been discovered.” 
    Id. at 539
     (emphasis in original). Thus, for example, in State v.
    Johnson, 
    340 Or 319
    , 326-27, 328 & n 6, 131 P3d 173 (2006),
    the police relied in part on information from an unlawful
    warranted search to obtain a subsequent warrant, result-
    ing in a taint, but the state overcame the presumption of
    taint by putting on evidence that, if the invalid warrant had
    not issued, the state would have obtained a warrant without
    using the unlawfully obtained information, which was “not
    necessary to establish probable cause,” and thus inevitably
    discovered the challenged evidence by execution of a valid
    warrant that was “independent” of the prior illegality.
    Here, Fich’s knowledge of the existence of the SD
    card was based entirely on information from the unlawful
    2011 search, specifically Giddings’s 2011 report that he had
    “removed and separated a 2GB Micro SD card from inside
    the black Cricket LG cellular” phone seized from defendant.
    Had the state recognized that factual connection, it could
    have put on evidence to try to show, for example, that, had
    the 2011 warrant application been rejected for lack of par-
    ticularity, the state would have filed a new warrant applica-
    tion that was more particular—which necessarily would not
    80                                                                State v. Rose
    have included information from the 2011 search, as there
    would have been no 2011 search—and would have success-
    fully obtained a lawful warrant to search defendant’s cell-
    phone, including the SD card. See State v. Miller, 
    300 Or 203
    , 226, 
    709 P2d 225
     (1985), cert den, 
    475 US 1141
     (1986)
    (to purge the taint under the inevitable discovery doctrine,
    the state must show “(1) that certain proper and predictable
    investigatory procedures would have been utilized in the
    instant case, and (2) that those procedures inevitably would
    have resulted in the discovery of the evidence in question”).
    But, in fact, the state did not develop any theory or put on
    any evidence to overcome the taint on the evidence from the
    2019 warranted search.4
    The trial court therefore erred in denying defen-
    dant’s motions to suppress, and the error was not harmless,
    because the state relied on the images from the SD card
    and related testimony as either direct or corroborating evi-
    dence for all of the charges. Accordingly, we must reverse
    and remand yet again.
    Reversed and remanded.
    4
    Cf. State v. Sines, 
    287 Or App 850
    , 881-82 & n 2, 404 P3d 1060 (2017),
    rev den, 
    362 Or 545
     (2018) (noting that the state “had a full opportunity to put on
    whatever evidence it could to dispute defendant’s view that the warrant, and the
    items seized pursuant to it, were fruits of the poisonous tree” and did elicit testi-
    mony “to support the view that there might have been probable cause to support
    the warrant application even absent the [illegally obtained evidence],” but failed
    to “present any evidence that [the state] would have sought a warrant even in the
    absence of the [illegally obtained evidence]”).
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A176443

Filed Date: 7/31/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/7/2024