Com. v. Romesburg, D. ( 2019 )


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  • J-S27038-19
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA           :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant            :
    :
    :
    v.                        :
    :
    :
    DONALD RAY ROMESBURG                   :   No. 1733 WDA 2018
    Appeal from the Order Entered November 7, 2018
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-26-CR-0001299-2018
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA           :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant            :
    :
    :
    v.                        :
    :
    :
    MELISSA L. WARGO                       :   No. 1734 WDA 2018
    Appeal from the Order Entered November 7, 2018
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-26-CR-0001301-2018
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA           :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant            :
    :
    :
    v.                        :
    :
    :
    MARK ALAN CRISWELL                     :   No. 1735 WDA 2018
    Appeal from the Order Entered November 7, 2018
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-26-CR-0001300-2018
    BEFORE:   OLSON, J., OTT, J., and COLINS*, J.
    ____________________________________
    * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-S27038-19
    MEMORANDUM BY COLINS, J.:                               FILED JULY 12, 2019
    In these consolidated appeals, the Commonwealth appeals from the trial
    court’s order, which granted the motions of Appellees, Melissa L. Wargo,
    Donald Ray Romesburg, and Mark Alan Criswell, to suppress evidence seized
    during a June 7, 2017 search of a Smithfield, Pennsylvania residence and
    Appellees’ habeas corpus motions to dismiss the charges of dealing in
    proceeds of unlawful activities1 against them. We affirm.
    On June 7, 2017, Corporal Creighton Callas of the Pennsylvania State
    Police received a tip from Lieutenant John Harvey Bryant of the Preston
    County, West Virginia Sheriff’s Department regarding a large marijuana grow
    operation on Great Lakes Road in Smithfield.        N.T., 5/30/18, at 30; N.T.,
    10/22/18, at 12-13.         The tip identified the Appellees as residing at the
    address. N.T., 5/30/18, at 30; N.T., 10/22/18, at 12. Corporal Callas did not
    speak to the informant directly or discover the informant’s name, and no
    information relating to the reliability of the informant was known to the
    Pennsylvania State Police. N.T., 5/30/18, at 20-21, 30, 45; N.T., 10/22/18,
    at 6-7, 9-10.
    Based on the tip, Corporal Callas and Troopers Robert Hughes, Adam
    Kezmarsky, and Matthew Rucinski went to the identified Smithfield address to
    perform a “knock and talk.” N.T., 5/30/18, at 6-8, 12, 30-31; N.T., 10/22/18,
    at 5-6, 11. While traveling on Great Lakes Road, a single-lane gravel road,
    ____________________________________________
    1   18 Pa.C.S. § 5111(a)(1).
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    the troopers encountered a black SUV, which was pulling out of the driveway
    of the troopers’ destination.   N.T., 5/30/18, at 7, 13-14, 24-26, 34; N.T.,
    10/22/18, at 8. Trooper Hughes, who was leading the investigation, directed
    Trooper Rucinski to stop the vehicle, but, before Trooper Rucinski could do so,
    the SUV pulled off the road and stopped approximately 40 to 50 yards from
    the driveway entrance to let the troopers pass. N.T., 5/30/18, at 7, 14, 16,
    24, 34-35, 46, 55-56; N.T., 10/22/18, at 8-9.       The troopers exited their
    vehicles and approached the SUV, which was driven by Appellee Wargo. N.T.,
    5/30/18, at 7-8, 25, 35; N.T., 10/22/18, at 8. Trooper Hughes detected a
    strong odor of raw marijuana from Wargo, and he directed Trooper Rucinski
    to detain Wargo at that location while the other three troopers proceeded to
    the residence. N.T., 5/30/18, at 8, 27-28, 35-36, 46, 57-58.
    Troopers Hughes and Kezmarsky and Corporal Callas then proceeded to
    the house, which was set back approximately 50 to 70 yards from the road
    down a hill and surrounded by woods. Id. at 8, 36; N.T., 10/22/18, at 5-8,
    10. Three cars were present in the driveway when they pulled up to the house.
    N.T., 5/30/18, at 37, 52.    When the three troopers arrived at the house,
    Appellees Criswell and Romesburg exited the front door and approached the
    troopers. Id. at 10, 37, 46-47. The troopers detected a very strong odor of
    raw marijuana that grew stronger as they walked towards the house. Id. at
    8, 10, 17-18, 22-23, 37, 47-48.         The troopers detained Criswell and
    Romesburg, and then heard a noise from inside the house, which sounded like
    “physical movement” or “another person possibly running around.” Id. at 11,
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    19, 21, 27-28, 37, 48-49. Trooper Kezmarsky asked Criswell and Romesburg,
    whether there was anyone else inside the house; either Criswell or Romesburg
    responded that no one else was home. Id. at 18-19.
    Concerned for their safety and the potential destruction of evidence
    related to the marijuana grow operation, Trooper Kezmarsky and Corporal
    Callas entered the house and swept the house room-by-room, looking in any
    area that would be large enough for a human to hide. Id. at 11, 19, 27, 37.
    The troopers did not find anyone else inside the house, but did notice several
    cats present to which they attributed the noise they had heard. Id. at 12.
    The troopers also discovered in plain view live marijuana plants, marijuana
    drying on screens, and pound bags of marijuana. Id. at 11-12, 19-20, 49.
    Upon the completion of the sweep of the house, Trooper Kezmarsky
    related what he saw inside the house to Trooper Hughes. Id. at 12, 38. Based
    on this information along with their detection of a strong raw marijuana odor
    and the information from the West Virginia tip, Trooper Hughes applied for a
    search warrant for the house and a detached shed behind the house. Id. at
    38, 54. The application was granted, and the troopers seized approximately
    48 pounds of bagged marijuana, 111 marijuana plants, 50 of which were
    located in the shed, along with lights and other materials used in the grow
    operation. Id. at 39-40, 50, 54. The troopers also seized $7,572 in cash from
    a bedroom in the house and various unlabeled pill bottles containing tramadol
    and hydrocodone.     Id. at 41, 44, 50.      The troopers did not find any
    prescriptions for the pills that were seized, but also did not ask Appellees
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    whether the pills were prescribed. Id. at 51, 57. The troopers also did not
    perform any test on the cash to determine whether any traces of controlled
    substances were present. Id. at 50.
    On June 8, 2017, Appellees were each charged with dealing in proceeds
    of unlawful activities, 18 Pa.C.S. § 5111(a)(1); manufacture, delivery or
    possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver, 35 P.S. § 780-
    113(a)(30); adulteration, mutilation, destruction, obliteration, or removal of
    label, 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(5); two counts of possession of a controlled
    substance, 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(16); and use or possession of drug
    paraphernalia, 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(32). On May 30, 2018, a preliminary
    hearing was conducted at which Troopers Hughes and Kezmarsky testified. At
    the conclusion of the preliminary hearing, the magisterial district judge held
    the charges over for court. N.T., 5/30/18, at 58. On June 26, 2018, the
    Commonwealth filed notices of consolidation of the three criminal matters for
    trial. On July 16, 2018, the Commonwealth filed a criminal information against
    each Appellee, which added a third count of possession of a controlled
    substance.
    On August 22, 2018, Appellees filed omnibus pre-trial motions seeking
    the suppression of the evidence collected during the searches of the Smithfield
    property and the dismissal of the charges against them based on the
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    Commonwealth’s purported failure to present a prima facie case.2,3 A hearing
    was held on the motions on October 22, 2018, at which Trooper Hughes and
    Lieutenant Bryant of the Preston County, West Virginia Sheriff’s Department
    testified, and the transcript of the preliminary hearing was submitted into the
    record. N.T., 10/22/18, at 3.
    On November 7, 2018, the trial court entered an order granting the
    motions to suppress the evidence seized during the June 7, 2017 searches of
    the Smithfield property, denying the motions to suppress statements made
    by Appellees Criswell and Wargo, and granting the habeas corpus motions
    with respect to the dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities charges. In light
    of these rulings, the trial court dismissed all of the charges against Appellees.
    In its opinion accompanying the order, the trial court rejected the
    Commonwealth’s contention that exigent circumstances related to the
    potential destruction of evidence justified the warrantless entry of the
    residence:
    The possibility that an occupant in the residence might attempt to
    destroy evidence would be a possibility these trained narcotic
    officers would anticipate and be prepared to deal with. However,
    ____________________________________________
    2 Appellee Romesburg sought the dismissal of only four of the charges
    against him: dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities; adulteration,
    mutilation, destruction, obliteration, or removal of label; and two of the
    possession of a controlled substance charges.
    3 Appellees Criswell and Wargo also sought suppression of statements they
    made to the officers in their omnibus pre-trial motions. The trial court
    denied the motions to suppress statements because no evidence was
    presented of any statements made to the officers nor was there testimony
    presented regarding the circumstances of when such statements, if any,
    were made. Trial Court Opinion and Order, 11/7/18, at 5-6.
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    the sound of movement, without more, was insufficient to excuse
    a warrantless search of this home. Large quantities of marijuana
    cannot easily be destroyed in the same manner as other forms of
    controlled substances. As the troopers believed this was a large
    marijuana manufacturing operation, the troopers could have
    secured the Defendants in front of the residence while a warrant
    was being obtained. If circumstances changed while they were
    awaiting the warrant, then other actions could have been taken.
    There simply was no serious risk that a substantial quantity of
    marijuana would have been destroyed while the officers secured
    the residence but did not enter it. The troopers lacked sufficient
    and valid exigent circumstances to permit a warrantless intrusion
    of the property.
    Trial Court Opinion and Order, 11/7/18, at 4. The trial court recognized that
    probable cause existed for a search warrant when the troopers smelled the
    odor of raw marijuana as they were approaching the house.             Id. at 3.
    However, in the absence of a warrant or exigent circumstances, the trial court
    concluded that the search of the home by Trooper Kezmarsky and Corporal
    Callas was in contravention of the Fourth Amendment of the United States
    Constitution and Article I, Section 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution. Id. at
    4.
    The trial court further ruled that the evidence collected at the Smithfield
    property was not admissible under the doctrine of inevitable discovery
    because the Commonwealth had not demonstrated a source of information
    fully independent from the tainted evidence and the investigative team that
    engaged in the warrantless search of the residence. Id. at 4-5. The trial
    court determined that the information provided to the State Police by the
    Preston County, West Virginia Sheriff’s Department was devoid of information
    concerning the reliability of the informant, and was by itself insufficient to
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    support a finding of probable cause. Id. at 3. The trial court concluded that,
    because the evidence of the illegal search of the residence was suppressed,
    the violations of The Controlled Substance, Drug, Device and Cosmetics Act
    would have to be dismissed. Id. at 5. In addition, the trial court concluded
    that the Dealing in Proceeds of Unlawful Activities charge would have to be
    dismissed because the Commonwealth had not presented evidence that
    Appellees engaged in any financial transactions or sale of either marijuana or
    the tramadol and hydrocodone pills found inside the residence. Id.
    The Commonwealth filed timely notices of appeal of the trial court’s
    November 7, 2018 order.4 By an April 12, 2019 order, this Court consolidated
    the Commonwealth’s three appeals.
    The Commonwealth presents the following three issues on appeal:
    1. Did the Trial Court error in granting the Appellees’ Pre-Trial
    Motion to Suppress Evidence in finding that the Pennsylvania
    State Police did not have exigent circumstances to validate a
    warrantless search of the Appellees’ home?
    2. Did the Trial Court error in granting the Appellees’ Pre-Trial
    Motion to Suppress evidence in rejecting the Commonwealth's
    argument of inevitable discovery?
    3. Did the Trial Court error in granting the Appellees’ Habeas
    Corpus Motion regarding the charge of Dealing in Proceeds of
    Unlawful Activity?
    Commonwealth’s Brief at 4 (suggested answers omitted).
    ____________________________________________
    4 The Commonwealth filed its statements of errors complained of on appeal
    on January 2, 2019. On January 3, 2019, the trial court entered a
    statement in lieu of opinion, in which it indicated that it was relying on its
    earlier opinion.
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    Our standard of review in a review of the denial of a suppression motion
    is whether the lower court’s factual findings are supported by the record and
    whether     the   legal    conclusions      drawn       from    those   facts   are   correct.
    Commonwealth v. Raglin, 
    178 A.3d 868
    , 871 (Pa. Super. 2018).                              The
    suppression court has sole province as factfinder to pass on the credibility of
    witnesses and the weight to be given to their testimony. Commonwealth v.
    Duke, ___ A.3d ___, 
    2019 PA Super 115
    , *7 (filed April 12, 2019). We are
    not bound by the suppression court’s conclusions of law, and our standard of
    review of questions of law is de novo. Commonwealth v. Millner, 
    888 A.2d 680
    , 685 (Pa. 2005). Our scope of review from a suppression ruling is limited
    to    the   evidentiary      record        created      at     the   suppression      hearing.
    Commonwealth v. Fulton, 
    179 A.3d 475
    , 487 (Pa. 2018).
    The Commonwealth’s first argument on appeal is that the search was
    justified by exigent circumstances. “Both the Fourth Amendment of the United
    States Constitution and Article I, Section 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution
    guarantee individuals freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures.”
    Commonwealth v. Newsome, 
    170 A.3d 1151
    , 1154 (Pa. Super. 2017).
    “Absent the application of one of a few clearly delineated exceptions, a
    warrantless       search     or   seizure          is    presumptively      unreasonable.”
    Commonwealth v. Whitlock, 
    69 A.3d 635
    , 637 (Pa. Super. 2013). Among
    the   recognized     exceptions       to     the     warrant     requirement     is   exigent
    circumstances;      “[a]bsent     probable           cause      and exigent circumstances,
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    warrantless searches and seizures in a private home violate both the Fourth
    Amendment” and Article I, Section 8. Duke, 
    2019 PA Super 115
    , *7.
    In Commonwealth v. Roland, 
    637 A.2d 269
     (Pa. 1994), our Supreme
    Court listed various factors to be considered when determining whether
    exigent circumstances exist, including:
    (1) the gravity of the offense, (2) whether the suspect is
    reasonably believed to be armed, (3) whether there is above and
    beyond a clear showing of probable cause, (4) whether there is
    strong reason to believe that the suspect is within the premises
    being entered, (5) whether there is a likelihood that the suspect
    will escape if not swiftly apprehended, (6) whether the entry was
    peaceable, and (7) the time of the entry, i.e., whether it was made
    at night. These factors are to be balanced against one another in
    determining whether the warrantless intrusion was justified.
    Other factors may also be taken into account, such as whether
    there is hot pursuit of a fleeing felon, a likelihood that evidence
    will be destroyed if police take the time to obtain a warrant, or a
    danger to police or other persons inside or outside the dwelling.
    Id. at 270-71 (citations omitted); see also Commonwealth v. Bowmaster,
    
    101 A.3d 789
    , 793 (Pa. Super. 2014). The Commonwealth bears a “heavy
    burden when attempting to demonstrate an urgent need that might justify
    warrantless searches or arrests,” and must present clear and convincing
    evidence to meet this burden. Roland, 637 A.2d at 271 (quoting Welsh v.
    Wisconsin, 
    466 U.S. 740
    , 749-50 (1984); Duke, 
    2019 PA Super 115
    , *8.
    The Commonwealth argues that the balance of factors weighs in favor
    of a finding of exigent circumstances that justified the warrantless search.
    The Commonwealth argues that the troopers had probable cause to search
    the residence based upon the strong odor of raw marijuana emanating from
    the house and Appellee Wargo coupled with the previous information that they
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    had received from West Virginia regarding a large marijuana operation. The
    Commonwealth asserts that the troopers lacked sufficient knowledge to rule
    out that anyone else was present in the house, based on the fact that the
    property was located in a remote, wooded location and that there was one
    more vehicle in the driveway than known occupants of the house. Thus, the
    Commonwealth contends, when the troopers heard a noise inside the house,
    they reasonably believed that someone inside was potentially destroying
    evidence or posed a threat to the troopers’ safety. Finally, the Commonwealth
    notes that the incident took place during daylight hours and the criminal
    offense of the manufacture of large quantities of marijuana was a serious
    offense, additional factors under Roland weighing in favor of the troopers’
    need to make entry to secure the premises.
    This Court’s decision in Commonwealth v. Waddell, 
    61 A.3d 198
     (Pa.
    Super. 2012), involves analogous facts and is instructive in our analysis of the
    issue of whether exigent circumstances existed here.         In Waddell, the
    Homestead Borough Police Department received a tip conveyed by a
    neighboring police department that large quantities of marijuana were being
    distributed from a house in the Borough. 
    Id. at 208
    . That tip was confirmed
    by another informant, and based upon information the informant disclosed,
    an arrest was made of individuals transporting 13 pounds of marijuana from
    the house. 
    Id.
     Four officers then proceeded to the house to perform a “knock
    and talk.” 
    Id. at 209
    . The officers detected the odor of marijuana in the
    vicinity of the house, which grew stronger as they approached.        
    Id.
       The
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    officers knocked three times at the door with no response, but they heard
    “slight movement” inside, which grew louder after the third knock. 
    Id.
     An
    officer posted at the rear of the residence then observed the appellant
    attempting to jump out of a rear window, radioing this information to the
    officers at the front of the house. 
    Id.
     Upon learning of the attempted escape,
    the officers at the front of the house kicked the front door open and entered
    the house, discovering two firearms and ten pounds of marijuana in plain view
    in the residence. 
    Id. at 209-10
    .
    This Court in Waddell reversed the trial court’s denial of the motion to
    suppress, rejecting the claim of exigent circumstances based upon a concern
    of potential destruction of evidence or a danger to the safety of the officers.
    While we acknowledged that the officers had probable cause to conduct a
    search once they detected the smell of raw marijuana emanating from the
    house, we distinguished the facts from other cases where the police were in
    hot pursuit of a felon who retreated into a residence, noting that the residents
    of the house appeared to be unaware of the police activity before they knocked
    on the door. 
    Id. at 215
    ; cf. Commonwealth v. Bostick, 
    958 A.2d 543
    , 557-
    58 (Pa. Super. 2008) (exigent circumstances found where individual opened
    front door that was targeted for drug operation, saw an arrest in progress,
    uttered an expletive, and retreated inside, tossing items in vestibule in an
    apparent effort to conceal evidence); Commonwealth v. Griffin, 
    785 A.2d 501
    , 506 (Pa. Super. 2001) (suspect fleeing police into residence and
    displaying handgun during his retreat contributed to finding of exigent
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    J-S27038-19
    circumstances). We concluded that the “officers lacked any specific evidence
    that anyone inside the home was armed,” and any concern of a danger to the
    officers “was premised upon generalized experience with those that traffic in
    narcotics, not any particular evidence derived from the investigation in this
    case.” Waddell, 
    61 A.3d at 215
    .
    Related to the potential destruction of evidence, we noted that the mere
    detection of a noise indicating “hurried movement” inside the premises did not
    “provide a strong inference that evidence was being destroyed.” 
    Id. at 216
    .
    Additionally, we recognized that the concerns of the destruction of evidence
    were overstated based on the crime being investigated: “It does not take an
    expert to know that one cannot flush multiple pounds of marijuana down a
    toilet quickly, nor with the ease that one could flush heroin, cocaine, or other
    common controlled substances.” 
    Id. at 217
    . Moreover, in light of the fact
    that the officers present were adept at differentiating the scents of burnt and
    raw marijuana, there was no serious risk that “significant quantities of
    marijuana [could be] burned inside the home, particularly since windows at
    the house had been left open permitting the odor of raw marijuana to exude
    from the residence in the first place.” 
    Id. at 218
    .
    Upon review and in light of our decision in Waddell, we agree with the
    trial court that the Commonwealth did not present sufficient evidence to justify
    the warrantless search on the basis of exigent circumstances. First, while the
    troopers clearly had reason to believe that marijuana was present inside the
    house based upon the smell emanating from the house, their fear that
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    evidence of the marijuana operation was being destroyed was not nearly so
    well-founded. The tip identified three individuals as being involved with the
    grow operation, Appellees, and all three had been detained prior to the
    troopers making the decision to enter the residence. While the troopers heard
    a noise from inside the house and one more car than the number of known
    individuals was observed at the property, the troopers only generally related
    that these noises conveyed a sense of “movement” and did not indicate that
    these noises were related to an act of destroying evidence.             These
    observations only gave the troopers grounds to speculate whether another
    individual was present at the residence and did not provide any reason for the
    troopers   to   conclude   that   evidence   was   being   destroyed.    See
    Commonwealth v. Mason, 
    637 A.2d 251
    , 255 n.2 (Pa. 1993) (“[U]nless
    there is something more than suspicion that [] destruction of evidence may
    occur, the circumstances are not exigent.”).
    In addition, as in Waddell, the nature of the illicit operation being
    investigated cast doubt on the potential destruction of evidence as
    authorization for the warrantless entry. The tip that the troopers were acting
    upon indicated that there was a large-scale marijuana grow operation taking
    place at the property, and the extent of the operation was confirmed by the
    strong odor of marijuana emanating from the house.          The risk that the
    evidence of such an operation could be destroyed is greatly reduced compared
    to the evidence of other crimes, including the manufacture of other controlled
    substances in pill or powder form. See Waddell, 
    61 A.3d at 217-18
    . To the
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    extent the troopers were concerned of the potential destruction of the
    marijuana by burning, Trooper Kezmarsky testified that he was well-trained
    in distinguishing the scents of raw and burned marijuana, N.T., 5/30/18 at 8-
    10, and he therefore would have been well equipped to detect whether any
    potential destruction of the marijuana occurred by burning.      Furthermore,
    similar to Waddell, Trooper Hughes testified that a window in the front of the
    house was open and a screened door remained open after Appellees Criswell
    and Romesburg had exited, id. at 47-48, thus allowing the troopers ample
    opportunity to secure and monitor the house from the outside while they
    obtained a search warrant. See Commonwealth v. English, 
    839 A.2d 1136
    ,
    1142 (Pa. Super. 2003) (concluding that exigent circumstances did not justify
    warrantless seizure of marijuana plants, even though police claimed plants
    could be destroyed before search warrant could be procured, where officers
    could have secured the scene while a different officer obtained a warrant).
    The Commonwealth also did not demonstrate that the troopers had
    knowledge of a potential threat to their safety inside the residence. Appellees
    Criswell and Romesburg were cooperative to the troopers, and indeed
    responded truthfully in the negative when asked whether anyone else was
    present at the house. No testimony was presented that any weapons were
    found on Appellees, and there also was no indication that the West Virginia tip
    included information that Appellees or anyone else with access to the property
    were armed or otherwise would present a danger to investigating troopers.
    As in Waddell, the troopers’ concern regarding the potential destruction of
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    evidence appears to have been based upon “generalized experience” with drug
    trafficking cases rather than any “specific evidence” in this case.5 
    61 A.3d at 215
    ; see also Duke, 
    2019 PA Super 115
    , *11 (stating that a “lack of
    knowledge of” an individual’s intentions does create an exigency based on
    concern of officer safety and the officers “must observe some conduct or
    action on the part of [the individual] from which they could reasonably infer
    that [the individual] intended to harm them”). Thus, we conclude that exigent
    circumstances could not have been found based upon potential danger to the
    troopers. Compare Duke, 
    2019 PA Super 115
    , *10-*11 (exigency could not
    be grounded on officers’ concern that defendant who refused consent to
    search house would retreat to house to obtain a weapon where officers “had
    no basis on which to make this assumption”) with Commonwealth v.
    Coughlin, 
    199 A.3d 401
    , 408-09 (Pa. Super. 2018) (en banc) (exigent
    circumstances existed for warrantless entry for warrantless sweep of home
    where officers responded to reports of suspect firing assault rifle in
    neighborhood known for gun violence and suspect gave inconsistent answers
    as to whether anyone else was inside home).
    ____________________________________________
    5 We recognize that Waddell is distinguishable from the instant case based
    upon the fact that, once the appellant in Waddell exited from the rear
    window, a fact that was communicated to the officers at the front of the
    house just prior to their warrantless entry, there was no reason to believe
    that anyone was present inside the house. 
    61 A.3d at 215
    . However, we
    are not convinced that this factor alone tips the balance of factors in favor of
    finding exigent circumstances here.
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    J-S27038-19
    Certainly, other factors related to the presence of exigent circumstances
    elaborated in Roland were present in this case. As the trial court noted, the
    troopers clearly had probable cause to obtain a search warrant for the property
    based upon the tip from the West Virginia informant and their detection of the
    smell of marijuana coming from the house.          The criminal offense at issue
    involving the manufacture of large quantities of marijuana is also undoubtedly
    a serious one. Furthermore, the warrantless entry to the residence was not
    made with force, and it occurred during daylight hours, rather than at night
    when a warrantless search would have been more intrusive.6 N.T., 5/30/18,
    at 56-57. Nevertheless, these factors tilting in favor of exigent circumstances
    must be weighed against factors that detracted from the urgent need to make
    entry, including the fact that all of the identified suspects related to the drug
    operation had already been apprehended, none of the individuals the troopers
    encountered had attempted to flee, there was no reason to believe that
    anyone present at the property was armed or posed a danger to the troopers,
    and the nebulous concern that evidence was being destroyed. The trial court
    did not err in balan+cing these factors in favor of Appellees.
    ____________________________________________
    6 In Commonwealth v. Williams, 
    396 A.2d 1177
     (Pa. 1978), our Supreme
    Court noted that the time of day “works in more than one direction” as the
    late hour in which the incident occurs may also provide justification for
    warrantless entry based upon the potential delay in or impracticability of
    obtaining a warrant. Id. at 1180 (citation omitted); see also Griffin, 
    785 A.2d at 506
     (fact that warrantless entry was made at night when “the
    prospect of securing the house pending a warrant [was] too dangerous given
    the cover that nightfall could have given the armed conspirators” weighed in
    favor of finding of exigent circumstances).
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    J-S27038-19
    In its second appellate issue, the Commonwealth argues that, even if
    the warrantless entry to the residence was not justified through exigent
    circumstances, the evidence on the property would have inevitably been
    discovered when the troopers executed a search warrant. The Commonwealth
    asserts that the troopers’ detection of a strong odor emanating from the
    residence provided a basis for applying for the search warrant that was
    entirely independent of any of the marijuana plants, bagged marijuana and
    grow equipment that Trooper Kezmarsky and Corporal Callas viewed during
    their warrantless entry. The Commonwealth contends that the troopers would
    have still obtained a search warrant even if the troopers had never decided to
    enter the residence, and the trial court therefore erred in granting the
    suppression motion.
    Evidence that is obtained by law enforcement through an unlawful
    search may not be used in any respect, including as evidence against the
    subject of the search at trial. Fulton, 179 A.3d at 489. Such evidence may
    only be used against a defendant if knowledge of the evidence is gained from
    an independent source or if the evidence in question would inevitably have
    been discovered without reference to the police error or misconduct. Id. at
    489-90.   The Commonwealth bears the burden of proof at a suppression
    hearing to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the evidence
    illegally obtained would have ultimately or inevitably been discovered by legal
    means. Id. at 490.
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    J-S27038-19
    In Commonwealth v. Berkheimer, 
    57 A.3d 171
     (Pa. Super. 2012) (en
    banc), an en banc panel of this Court reviewed the development of the
    inevitable discovery doctrine in Pennsylvania, explaining that Pennsylvania
    courts   have   interpreted   the   doctrine   more   narrowly   based   on   the
    understanding that the exclusionary role serves an essential role in
    safeguarding the right to privacy under Article I, Section 8. 
    Id. at 181-88
    ;
    see also, e.g., Mason, 637 A.2d at 256. This Court explained that in cases
    where evidence is gathered through “a substantially unwitting violation of the
    warrant requirement, devoid of any cognizable misconduct,” the inevitable
    discovery doctrine in Pennsylvania is coterminous with its application under
    the Fourth Amendment. Berkheimer, 
    57 A.3d at 188
    . This standard requires
    a finding that the law enforcement officers’ decision to seek a warrant was
    prompted by information independent of what was learned during the unlawful
    entry and that the information illegally obtained did not influence the
    magistrate’s issuance of the search warrant. 
    Id.
     at 184 (citing Murray v.
    United States, 
    487 U.S. 533
    , 543-44).
    On the other hand, in cases “where misconduct by law enforcement
    officers is apparent, negating the warrant requirement and violating the
    constitutional right to privacy,” the higher standard under Article I, Section 8
    applies. Id. at 187-88. In such cases, suppression of the evidence can only
    be avoided where the information that forms the basis of the warrant is “truly
    independent from both the tainted evidence and the police or investigative
    team which engaged in the misconduct by which the tainted evidence was
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    J-S27038-19
    discovered.” Id. at 186-88 (quoting Commonwealth v. Melendez, 
    676 A.2d 226
    , 231 (Pa. 1996)) (emphasis omitted); see also Commonwealth v.
    Perel, 
    107 A.3d 185
    , 195 (Pa. Super. 2014). As this Court later emphasized,
    the doctrine of inevitable discovery does not operate “as an invitation for
    appellate courts to overlook patently unconstitutional searches whenever the
    police could have complied with the Constitution’s warrant requirement, but
    instead consciously disregarded it.”    Perel, 107 A.3d at 195 (emphasis in
    original).
    In Berkheimer, police officers received a tip that an individual who was
    wanted on a probation detainer was residing at the house of the defendants.
    
    57 A.3d at 174
    . When they arrived at the door, the officers banged on the
    door for two or three seconds and then entered the house after detecting the
    smell of burnt marijuana drifting outside. 
    Id. at 174-75
    . The officers then
    announced their intention to secure the house while they obtained a search
    warrant based on the marijuana smell.         
    Id. at 175
    .   While removing the
    defendants, the officers observed a plastic bag and pill bottle containing
    marijuana, marijuana pipes, and several rounds of ammunition.          
    Id.
       The
    officers then applied for a search warrant based in part upon the observation
    of the contraband they saw during their warrantless entry. 
    Id. at 175
    , 189-
    90 & n.15.
    The trial court recognized that the officers’ initial warrantless entry was
    unlawful based on the absence of exigent circumstances, but denied a
    suppression motion on the basis that the officers had probable cause for the
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    J-S27038-19
    issuance of a warrant prior to the initial entry based upon the smell of
    marijuana and therefore the evidence would have been inevitably discovered.
    
    Id. at 176-77
    . This Court disagreed, and reversed the convictions for the
    possession and manufacture of marijuana. First, the Court noted that, under
    applicable precedent, the officers’ “entry of a private home in the absence of
    a warrant, on the pretext of circumstances that are not demonstrably exigent,
    poses a substantial invasion of privacy and [] constitute[s] police misconduct,”
    necessitating the application of the heightened standard of the inevitable
    discovery rule under Pennsylvania Constitution.      
    Id. at 188
    .    Under that
    standard, the Court concluded that the Commonwealth could not show that
    the search warrant was premised on a truly independent source as the entry
    and the warrant application arose “from the concerted actions of a single
    group of officers.”   
    Id. at 188-90
    .      The Court further determined that
    suppression would also be required under the more lenient Fourth Amendment
    inevitable discovery standard applicable in cases where no police misconduct
    is present because the application for the search warrant was premised upon
    the officers’ observations during their initial entry, obviating the possibility
    that the magistrate who issued the warrant had an independent source for the
    issuance of the warrant. 
    Id. at 189-90
    .
    The failure of the inevitable discovery doctrine to overcome the
    exclusionary rule’s protection of the essential privacy rights embedded in
    Article I, Section 8, naturally follows from our prior decision in Berkheimer.
    In this case, as in Berkheimer, the troopers had probable cause to obtain a
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    J-S27038-19
    search warrant based upon the detection of the marijuana smell prior to their
    warrantless entry of the residence. However, despite the presence of probable
    cause and the opportunity to obtain a search warrant for the premises, the
    troopers made a warrantless entry to the residence. This warrantless entry
    triggered the heightened standard under Article I, Section 8 of the
    Pennsylvania Constitution. In both this case and Berkheimer, there was only
    a single law enforcement investigative team involved in the case. Therefore,
    it was impossible to show a “truly independent source” that would have led to
    the inevitable discovery of the contraband. Moreover, like in Berkheimer,
    the troopers’ search warrant incorporated information gathered from their
    warrantless entry precluding invocation of inevitable discovery as an exception
    to the exclusionary rule even assuming the less onerous Fourth Amendment
    version of that standard applied in this case.
    We next address the Commonwealth’s argument the evidence collected
    from the detached shed behind the house, including approximately 50 live
    marijuana plants and marijuana growing equipment, should not have been
    suppressed because the troopers obtained a search warrant prior to entering
    the shed. This argument was not raised in the Commonwealth’s Pa.R.A.P.
    1925(b) statement of errors complained of on appeal nor is it raised in the
    statement of questions presented section of the Commonwealth’s brief;
    accordingly, this argument is waived. Pa.R.A.P. 302(a) (“Issues not raised in
    the lower court are waived and cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.”);
    Commonwealth v. Proctor, 
    156 A.3d 261
    , 267 (Pa. Super. 2017) (“[I]t is
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    J-S27038-19
    well-settled that issues that are not set forth in an appellant’s statement of
    matters complained of on appeal are deemed waived.”) (citation, quotation
    marks, and brackets omitted); Krebs v. United Refining Company of
    Pennsylvania, 
    893 A.2d 776
    , 797 (Pa. Super. 2006) (issue not set forth in
    or suggested by the statement of questions involved in an appellate brief is
    deemed waived under Pa.R.A.P. 2116(a)).
    Even if not waived, however, this argument would fail.                 “The
    exclusionary remedy for illegal searches and seizures extends not only to the
    direct product of the illegality, the primary evidence, but also to the indirect
    product of the search or seizure, the secondary or derivative evidence.”
    Fulton, 179 A.3d at 490 (citation omitted). The focus of the inquiry as to
    whether the challenged evidence constitutes “fruit of the poisonous tree” is
    whether such evidence was obtained via exploitation of the initial illegality.
    Id.; Commonwealth v. Shabezz, 
    166 A.3d 278
    , 289 (Pa. 2017). If the
    evidence is a product of the initial illegality, it “may nonetheless be usable and
    admissible if the connection between the information obtained was sufficiently
    attenuated from the illegal search, thus removing the taint of the original
    illegality.” Fulton, 179 A.3d at 490. The “traditional circumstances that have
    been found to purge the taint of an unconstitutional act” include “attenuation,
    inevitable discovery, independent source, or some other intervening act or
    event.” Shabezz, 166 A.3d at 290.
    In this case, there is no doubt that the search of the shed was the fruit
    of the earlier warrantless search of the residence as the search of the shed
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    J-S27038-19
    occurred on the same day, directly following the warrantless search of the
    residence. For the same reasons as described above, the inevitable discovery
    doctrine is unavailing to the Commonwealth because no truly independent
    source of information was shown for the search of the shed and the troopers’
    observations of the contraband detected during the warrantless search of the
    house was incorporated into the affidavit of probable cause for the search
    warrant for the shed. Furthermore, no evidence was presented to the trial
    court of any intervening event or other attenuating factor following the
    unconstitutional entry of the residence that would serve to purge the taint of
    illegality from the later search of the shed.
    Based upon the foregoing, we conclude that the trial court properly
    granted the motions to suppress the evidence gathered at the Smithfield
    property and dismissed the criminal charges against Appellees that were
    based on the evidence collected. The Commonwealth’s final appellate issue
    related to the trial court’s ruling that the Commonwealth did not present a
    prima facie case as to the charges of dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities.
    However, as we have already ruled that the evidence underlying these charges
    was properly excluded, we need not address this portion of the trial court’s
    November 7, 2018 order in this decision.7
    Order affirmed.
    ____________________________________________
    7 The Commonwealth recognized in its appellate brief that its third appellate
    issue only applied if it was meritorious in its claim challenging the grant of
    Appellees’ motions to suppress. Commonwealth’s Brief at 23.
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    J-S27038-19
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 7/12/2019
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