State of Tennessee v. Jerry Brandon Phifer ( 2014 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    May 13, 2014 Session
    STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JERRY BRANDON PHIFER
    Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County
    No. 2011B1782    Cheryl A. Blackburn, Judge
    No. M2013-01401-CCA-R3-CD            - Filed September 23, 2014
    The defendant, Jerry Brandon Phifer, was convicted of one count of aggravated
    robbery, a Class B felony, and one count of aggravated burglary, a Class C felony. On
    appeal, the defendant argues that the trial court erred by: (1) denying his motion to suppress
    the results of a traffic stop that occurred two weeks prior to his arrest; (2) denying the motion
    to suppress evidence seized as a result of the warrantless installation of a GPS tracking
    device; (3) finding that the State had probable cause to arrest the defendant; (4) finding that
    the defendant’s waiver of his Miranda rights was knowing and voluntary; (5) declaring
    Jongho Lim an unavailable witness pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Evidence 804 and
    admitting his prior testimony as substantive evidence; (6) imposing consecutive sentences;
    and (7) violating the defendant’s due process rights based upon the cumulative effect of the
    errors. After review of the record and the applicable law, we affirm the trial court’s findings
    in issues 1, 4, 5, and 6. We conclude that the warrantless use of the GPS tracking device
    constituted an illegal search, and the evidence obtained therefrom, including the defendant’s
    arrest and statements to police, must be suppressed. We reverse the trial court’s denial of the
    motion to suppress the evidence and remand the case for a new trial.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Criminal Court Affirmed in
    Part, Reversed in Part, and Case Remanded
    J OHN E VERETT W ILLIAMS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J AMES C URWOOD
    W ITT, J R., and R OGER A. P AGE, JJ., joined.
    Jim Todd, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jerry Brandon Phifer.
    Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Clark B. Thorton, Senior Counsel;
    Victor S. (Torry) Johnson, III, District Attorney General; and Bret Gunn, Assistant District
    Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    Facts and Procedural History
    A Davidson County grand jury indicted the defendant for aggravated robbery, five
    counts of aggravated burglary, five counts of theft of property, and possession of a deadly
    weapon other than a firearm during the commission of a dangerous felony. The trial court
    granted the defendant’s motion to sever, and an amended indictment was issued charging the
    defendant with one count of aggravated robbery and one count of aggravated burglary.
    The defendant filed a motion to suppress his statements to police, arguing that he was
    unlawfully arrested, that his waiver of his Miranda rights was a product of police coercion,
    that his waiver was not knowing and voluntary, and that his waiver was not sufficiently
    attenuated from the taint of the unlawful arrest. At the motion to suppress hearing, Detective
    Robert Shotwell of the Metropolitan Police Department testified that his precinct saw a large
    rise in burglaries during the first three months of 2011. Several weeks prior to the
    defendant’s arrest, Betty Bower called to report that a white male came to her door and
    knocked on it. When Ms. Bower opened the door, she saw that the man had socks on his
    hands, and he asked for someone who did not live there. Ms. Bower informed him that the
    person did not live there, and the man departed. Officers did not respond immediately to Ms.
    Bower’s call but were able to follow up and speak with Ms. Bower before the defendant’s
    arrest. Detective Shotwell testified that he was unsure of the exact date that his office
    received information about Ms. Bower’s report but was sure that it was before the date of the
    defendant’s arrest.
    Ms. Bower told her neighbor, Daniel Osborne, about the incident. Mr. Osborne was
    able to tell police about a “beige or gold” 2000 Cadillac with the license plate number 889
    PZW, and police assumed that the car belonged to the man Ms. Bower described. Officer
    Joe Cadden later spotted the vehicle and observed the defendant lying on the bench-style
    front seat with his “feet out the window in the passenger’s side.” Officer Cadden could not
    see any part of the defendant’s upper body, and he decided to stop the vehicle based upon his
    suspicion that the defendant was in violation of the seat belt law. Officer Cadden believed
    that it would have been impossible for a person to sit in the same manner as the defendant
    while properly wearing a seat belt. Officer Cadden could not recall whether the defendant
    2
    fastened his seatbelt once the vehicle was stopped. Officer Cadden implied that the
    defendant was wearing the seatbelt improperly because the belt was not visible across the
    defendant’s chest. Officer Cadden did not issue a ticket for a seat belt violation, and he
    wrote in his report that he stopped the vehicle because the defendant had “both legs from the
    knee down hanging outside of the vehicle[’s] right front window.” The report made no
    mention of a seatbelt violation.
    The driver of the vehicle was Tina Stewart, the defendant’s girlfriend. Ms. Stewart
    consented to a search of the vehicle, and the defendant told officers that his home address
    was 212 Cedarview Drive in Antioch, Tennessee.1 Officer Cadden found two flashlights,
    two screwdrivers, Xbox games, one GPS, four jewelry boxes with fifty pieces of jewelry, two
    cell phones in addition to the phones belonging to Ms. Stewart and the defendant, a blue latex
    glove, blue cloth gloves, and empty trash bags. Officer Cadden could not find a reason to
    charge the defendant with a criminal offense, so he made a report that was forwarded to
    detectives. Detective Shotwell discovered this report on the day before the defendant’s
    arrest.
    Detective Shotwell stated that there was a burglary at the address of 1842 Shaylin
    Loop, where Katie Piper, a neighbor of the victim, observed two suspects: a white male,
    described as “[e]ighteen to 23, 5’8”, 120, blonde or strawberry hair, eyes unknown, wearing
    a black hat, black T-shirt and blue jeans,” and a white female, “18 to 22, 5’6”, red or auburn
    hair, unknown eyes, white tank top[.]” Ms. Piper saw both suspects in a gold Cadillac with
    a license plate that started with the letters “VFN.” Ms. Piper witnessed both suspects
    participate in the burglary, and she observed the partial license plate from across the street.
    She took a photograph of the vehicle with her cell phone and sent it to Detective Shotwell.
    Detective Shotwell testified that the Cadillac in the photograph had tinted windows and
    specialty rims. Ms. Piper later identified Ms. Stewart from a photograph lineup as the driver
    of the vehicle.
    On April 14, 2011, a burglary occurred at 675 Harding Place. Jongho Lim was asleep
    in his aunt’s apartment when a suspect entered the apartment with a knife and demanded
    jewelry and “whatnot.” Mr. Lim described his assailant as a white male aged “27 to 35, 5’9”,
    180, unknown hair and eyes, clean shaven, red and gray ballcap and t shirt, blue jeans.”
    During this incident, a neighbor, Andrew George, saw a bronze, four-door Cadillac Deville
    with darkly-tinted windows and expensive-looking rims. Detective Shotwell testified that
    a photograph lineup was prepared and shown to the victim and that the defendant was not
    chosen from the lineup.
    1
    This address was later discovered to be the address of the defendant’s mother.
    3
    On that same day, there was a burglary at 4936 Salem Drive, where Tiffany Fykes
    observed the suspect and his vehicle. She described the suspect as a white male, “unknown
    in ethnicity, 30 or 35, 6’0”, 200 pounds, unknown hair, unknown eyes, and unknown scars,
    wearing a white ball cap, a red shirt,” in a tan, four-door Cadillac Deville.
    By this date, the defendant had come to Detective Shotwell’s attention as a primary
    suspect in the burglaries. Detective Shotwell was aware that the defendant had a prior
    criminal record consisting of four aggravated burglaries and several other felonies and that
    the defendant was on probation.
    The defendant was arrested on April 15, 2011. The night before the defendant’s
    arrest, police officers placed a Global Positioning Satellite (“GPS”) tracking device on the
    defendant’s Cadillac while it was parked at an apartment complex. Officers did not have a
    warrant to use the GPS tracking device. Detective Shotwell testified that officers were
    confident that the defendant was the individual who was responsible for the recent burglaries
    when they placed the GPS device on the defendant’s car.
    Detective Shotwell testified that locating the vehicle at 808 Ilawood Court was
    “absolutely” facilitated by information from the GPS tracking device. He agreed that the
    GPS device alerted officers to the defendant’s location, and an officer was able to drive by
    the residence and observe the vehicle parked in the grass of the front yard of 808 Ilawood
    Court.
    On cross-examination, he testified that officers drove their vehicles through the
    neighborhood and crossed paths with the defendant when the defendant began to move
    throughout the neighborhood. He stated that Detective Keller spotted the defendant “at the
    corner of Ilawood and Ilawood Court” and that Detective Keller “also was able to swing
    around and see the car in front.” He admitted that officers could have been watching the
    GPS device at the time but was unsure whether anyone was. He agreed that the GPS device
    “assisted” officers in locating the vehicle at the Ilawood address, and then officers were
    dispatched to the residence.
    A few moments later, officers noticed that the vehicle was no longer at the Ilawood
    residence. Detective Shotwell estimated that “two or three minutes” could have elapsed
    before officers realized the vehicle was gone. Detective Shotwell then approached the
    residence and noticed that “[t]he front door was busted in and the house had been ransacked.”
    He testified that around eight officers were “in and around the neighborhood” and that none
    of them could see the defendant’s residence from their surveillance points. The car was
    discovered at the defendant’s residence a short time later. Detective Shotwell stated that he
    knew that Detective Keller went to the defendant’s residence and that officers knew that the
    4
    defendant’s vehicle was at his residence. He was unsure whether the GPS device was being
    used at the same time that Detective Keller observed the vehicle in the defendant’s driveway
    or if the discovery was made solely due to Detective Keller’s visual observation.
    Detective Shotwell testified that the defendant’s address was “as a crow flies maybe
    a quarter mile” from the Ilawood address. Detective Shotwell was in a vehicle with Sergeant
    Meadow and Detective Traughber, and they proceeded to the defendant’s residence knowing
    only that the vehicle from the Ilawood robbery was in the defendant’s driveway. They
    spotted the defendant walking on the street and initially passed the defendant because the
    officers “were kind of dumbfounded, like he is walking down the street.” The officers then
    turned around and stopped the defendant.
    The defendant told the officers that he had been out smoking and walking around the
    neighborhood. When officers asked him for identification, the defendant produced a
    Tennessee driver’s license that belonged to another individual. The defendant was then
    arrested after he was told that there was a warrant for his arrest due to a failure to appear.
    Detective Shotwell admitted that the defendant did not have an outstanding warrant. The
    defendant did not make any admissions about the burglaries at that point, and Detective
    Shotwell estimated that the defendant was arrested “two or three minutes” after officers
    began talking to him.
    Detective Shotwell then proceeded to the defendant’s address. He confirmed that the
    address was the same one that the defendant provided to Officer Cadden during the traffic
    stop for the seatbelt violation. The Cadillac was parked in the driveway, and Detective
    Shotwell noticed that the wheels and wheel wells of the vehicle had grass “from Ilawood
    from the front yard where it spun.” As he approached the vehicle, Detective Shotwell
    observed jewelry lying in the grass between the residence and the vehicle. He photographed
    the jewelry and sent the photograph to an officer who was at the Ilawood residence. The
    officer showed the victim the photograph, and the victim identified the jewelry as property
    taken during the burglary.
    Detective Shotwell testified that because he was aware that the vehicle had just left
    the scene of the burglary, he considered the defendant “an ‘A’ No. 1 prime suspect[.]”
    Officers linked the defendant to the Cadillac based upon the prior traffic stop, the fact that
    Ms. Stewart was identified as the driver at the Shaylin Loop burglary, and because officers
    knew that Ms. Stewart was the defendant’s girlfriend. Detective Shotwell stated that police
    “had a pretty good indication that [the gold Cadillac] was [the defendant’s] car.”
    The defendant testified that detectives informed him that he had a warrant for his
    arrest based upon a failure to appear. He gave officers a fake identification because he
    5
    believed that he had an outstanding warrant from North Carolina. A patrol car was called
    to the scene, and the defendant was placed in the back of the car. He then asked officers to
    take him to jail, and the officers replied that they were taking him to the South Precinct. The
    defendant estimated that fifteen minutes elapsed from the time when he was placed in
    custody to the time when he arrived at the South Precinct. He was placed in a holding cell
    for “30 to 45 minutes” and then was taken to “an isolated room with a table and numerous
    chairs.” Prior to arriving in the room, the defendant was not questioned by anyone and did
    not make any statements. The defendant repeatedly told detectives that he did not have an
    outstanding warrant for failure to appear.
    The relevant portions of the interview exchange are as follows:
    Detective 1: I can tell by talking with you that you’re nervous about
    something.
    Defendant: I am not nervous. I am pissed off. I thought I had a child
    support warrant. I’m not going to lie to you. My baby mama went to Court
    like two weeks ago and-she went to court and they’re coming to get me.
    ....
    Defendant: When the cop came up, I thought this is it, but they say it
    was a misdemeanor failure to appear. But I didn’t get served no papers for me
    to go to court for child support,
    Detective 1: So, it was a misdemeanor? Failure to appear?
    Defendant: That’s what the cops said. But, I didn’t even have papers
    for me to go to court. But, just my baby’s mama saying they’re coming to get
    you, I am assuming they are coming to get me, but that wouldn’t be a failure
    to appear. They say it’s failure to appear, but I ain’t been in no trouble to have
    a failure to appear to even go to anything.
    [. . . . [D]iscussion about Defendant’s medication Roxycontin and
    Xanax. Detective 1 notes that the defendant’s hands are a little shaky.]
    ....
    Defendant: They said a burglary or robbery or something happened like
    6
    right down the street or wherever the hell it was. I’m walking around my
    neighborhood three different times.
    ....
    Detective 1: I’m going to read this upside down to you. This is the
    official, official, official, official, formal rights waiver, okay?
    Defendant: hmm mm.
    Detective 1: Is there a reason- -
    Defendant: Are you pretty much threatening me if I don’t talk to you,
    you are going to arrest me for something is that it?
    Detective 1: Uh, I am not sure what charges you have on you. I came
    in on tail end of this.
    Defendant: You’re telling me—
    Detective 1: You are under arrest. You were in handcuffs. You are
    under arrest, okay.
    Defendant: For a failure to appear? I don’t have no failure to appear[.]
    Detective 1: [looks to Detective 2]. I’m going to tell him this I don’t
    know.
    Defendant: I have no failure to appear. I wouldn’t have a failure to
    appear to have a failure to appear. I wouldn’t have a court date to have that.
    Detective 1: Let me ask you this. This first question—
    Defendant: I just want—
    Detective 1: [reading from form] Is there a reason to believe that the
    interviewee is intoxicated by alcohol or drugs.
    Defendant: I’m on Roxy—
    7
    Detective 1: Are you intoxicated?
    Defendant: No. I’m on medication if you call that intoxicated.
    Detective 1: I mean I don’t but I am asking you.
    Defendant: I don’t feel intoxicated.
    Detective 1: You understand what we are talking about—that you are
    not off in la la land going “I don’t know where I am at.”
    Defendant: I’m not f***** up.
    Detective 1: Okay.
    Defendant: What I am asking you, you asking me questions. What are
    you talking about if I don’t talk to you you’re going to arrest me?
    Detective 1: You are under arrest.
    Defendant: For what?
    Detective 1: [to Detective 2] Somebody tell me what is going on. I
    need to know.
    Defendant: I have no failure to appear for anything.
    Detective 2: [pointing to rights waiver form] I have to add. If you want
    to talk to me, we’ll talk to you but we have to have these questions answered,
    okay? I mean you’re—
    Detective 1: We have to make sure—
    Detective 2: You are under arrest—
    Defendant: For what?
    Detective 2: If you want to talk to us I will talk to you about it, okay?
    Defendant: But, if I am under arrest what is the point of even talking
    8
    about it?
    Detective 2: That’s your decision. I can’t make it for you.
    ....
    Defendant: If I am under arrest, I am under arrest. Let’s go[.] [stands
    up]
    Detective 2: Okay. [gathers papers and moves to get up]
    Detective 1: [to defendant] Where are you going to go?
    Defendant: What am I under arrest for? What did I do? I haven’t done
    anything. The same thing that is happening six months ago is happening now.
    Detective 1: Do you want to try and clear this up or not?
    Defendant: Are you going to let me go?
    Detective 1: Yes or no?
    Defendant: Are you going to let me go?
    Detective 1: It’s a good possibility.
    Defendant: A possibility or yes or no?
    Detective 1: I guarantee it won’t hurt you.
    Defendant: I mean the guy [gesturing to Detective 2] is saying I am
    under arrest, but he won’t tell me what I am under arrest for. I mean—
    Detective 2: I have to have my question—if you want to speak to me,
    then I have to have this [points to rights waiver] filled out.
    Detective 1: Let’s get this out of the way—
    Detective 2: If you don’t want to speak to me—
    9
    Defendant: I just want everybody on the same page.
    Detective 2: We are all on the same page. I can’t talk to you unless you
    want.
    Defendant: You can’t evidently tell me why I am under arrest?
    Detective 1: [referring to rights waiver] This is the right page.
    Everyone is on this page right now. You want to clear this up—
    Defendant: He’s not going to talk to me?
    Detective 1: He’s obviously not as friendly as I am. He’s not going to
    talk to you.
    Detective 2: Look [shrugs; inaudible]
    Defendant: Why can’t you tell me why I am under arrest for, brother?
    Detective 1: I think he will in a minute.
    Detective 2: I will. And, I will tell you everything about it. But I have
    to have [pointing to rights waiver] - if you want to know you have to fill out
    your rights.
    Defendant: You told me if I talked to you and got everything cleared up
    I’m gone. Is that not—
    Detective 1: If you convince us - I said if you convince us you were not
    involved in anything then, yeah, you’re gone.
    Defendant: [looking to Detective 2] I mean is that not the case?
    Detective 2: [shakes head] Talk to this man right here.
    Defendant: I am asking you. Is that what it is?
    Detective 1: Listen, if that what it is—If you didn’t do anything then
    you have nothing to worry about, okay?
    10
    Defendant: [mumbles]
    Detective 1: Yes or no? Let’s get this right waiver out of the way okay?
    Defendant: Yeah.
    Detective 1: What was the last grade you completed in school?
    Defendant: I got my GED.
    Detective 1: And you said something about college too [referring to
    conversation before Detective 2 entered room]
    Defendant: I got two degrees, an Associate’s Degree in Business
    Management and Business Communication.
    Detective 1: Okay. This is your rights [turns form to Defendant]. I am
    going to read it upside down. [Goes on to read waiver form]. No promises or
    threats have been made to me and no pressure or coercion—
    Defendant: Threats have been made to me.
    Detective 1: has been used against me.
    Defendant: If I don’t talk I am going to be arrested.
    Detective 1: No threats have been made. A threat would be somebody
    is going to whoop your ass if you don’t talk. That would be a threat. Or we
    got your family hostage and if you don’t talk somebody is going to get hurt.
    Defendant: You have nothing to arrest me for. I have done nothing.
    Detective 1: Let me ask you this. Did you understand?
    Defendant: I understand everything that you said.
    Detective 1: If you understood it all I need is your signature right there.
    Defendant: [signing form] I understand everything. I have no reason
    to have an arrest for anything. Maybe child support. If you don’t got anything
    11
    for child support then you don’t have reason for me to be under arrest for
    anything.
    Detective 1: Like I said I came on the tail end. This guy right here—
    Defendant: My background, my background just makes me f*****’
    seem—. My [inaudible] background makes me look like a, like a serial killer.
    Detective 1: We are not talking about your background right now, okay.
    Like I told you a little bit ago. We ain’t worried about background. We are
    worried about -
    Defendant: You lied to me.
    Detective 1: Whoa, whoa—when did I lie to you?
    Defendant: You said go answer these questions, get this cleared up, and
    you’re on your way. Now I got that I am under arrest.
    Detective 1: I said if you convince us that you were not involved then
    you would be on your way. Did I not? Don’t call me a liar.
    The defendant testified that he had consumed crack cocaine, Roxycontin, and Xanax that day
    and that he told Detective William Stewart about the drugs he had been taking. He recalled
    signing a rights waiver but testified that he “didn’t understand what the situation behind it
    was” and that officers told him what the waiver was after he signed it. The defendant signed
    the waiver because he felt as though he was not going to be able to leave unless he
    cooperated with detectives. He testified that Sergeant Jason Beddoe told him that they had
    arrested one of the defendant’s friends a year ago and that the friend received a twenty-year
    sentence because he was uncooperative. The defendant said that at one point he rose to
    leave, and the detectives “got all hysterical[,]” with one detective banging “both fists on the
    table.” He testified that this response scared him “pretty much to where [he] sat back down.”
    He said that he “honestly didn’t know” what would happen to him if he told the officers he
    did not wish to speak with them. He confirmed that he knew that individuals arrested in
    Davidson County were brought before a commissioner to learn the charges against them and
    what the bond amount would be.
    The defendant testified that officers informed him that they had a large caseload of
    burglaries that they wanted to take care of and that if he cooperated they would tell the
    district attorney about his cooperation, and he would not be charged with the crimes. He then
    12
    said he got into a vehicle with the officers, who took him to numerous apartment complexes.
    He testified that during the ride, officers “might have said, ‘There has been 20 burglaries here
    in the last eight months[.]’” He admitted to committing the burglaries but told officers, “You
    can’t convict me for it, I ain’t done it[.]”
    Sergeant Jason Beddoe, a supervisory sergeant of the Burglary Division in the South
    Precinct, testified that his first conversation with the defendant occurred after officers spotted
    the defendant walking down the road. Sergeant Beddoe informed the defendant that he was
    under arrest for “either for failure to appear or child support, a warrant, something like that.”
    Sergeant Beddoe confirmed that the warrant was “fictitious,” but he testified that the
    defendant was under arrest at the time because officers suspected that he had been involved
    with a burglary and because he provided false identification.
    Sergeant Beddoe next spoke with the defendant when the defendant took a break
    during his interview to smoke a cigarette. This conversation occurred off-camera and after
    the defendant had waived his Miranda rights. Sergeant Beddoe and the defendant went
    outside, and the defendant told Sergeant Beddoe that he felt like his life was over. Sergeant
    Beddoe empathized with the defendant and told him that his arrest could be a positive thing
    because it would afford him the opportunity to change his life for the better. Sergeant
    Beddoe said that he and the defendant discussed “honesty being the best policy” and Sergeant
    Beddoe’s understanding that addiction to drugs provided the motive for the defendant to
    commit burglaries. Sergeant Beddoe stated that he understood that the majority of residential
    burglaries were motivated by addiction. Sergeant Beddoe testified that he did not make any
    promises to the defendant but told him that he wanted to be able to tell the district attorney
    what type of person the defendant was if the district attorney asked him. Sergeant Beddoe
    spoke with the defendant for “[a]s long as it takes to smoke a couple of cigarettes.”
    Upon returning to the interview room, Sergeant Beddoe asked the defendant on the
    record whether he had been promised, threatened, or coerced during their discussion. The
    defendant replied that he had not. Sergeant Beddoe testified that he never told the defendant
    that he would tell the district attorney that the defendant had been honest but that the
    “statement was made in regard to just the general philosophy in human beings that when
    you’re remorseful and you’re honest oftentimes people are less likely to be more aggravated
    in how to handle circumstances.” Sergeant Beddoe did not recall why he gave the defendant
    his business card but believed that it was to allow the defendant to contact him if he was
    released from jail and had helpful information to provide to police.
    At trial, Hoe Chong testified through an interpreter that on April 14, 2011, she lived
    in apartment number N6 at 675 Harding Place. Her nephew, Jongo Lim, was staying with
    her and her husband on April 14, 2011, and someone broke into their apartment that morning.
    13
    She was not at home at the time of the break-in but found out about the break-in when she
    returned home and saw the broken door. Ms. Chong’s television and cell phone were stolen,
    along with Mr. Lim’s laptop computer and iPhone.
    Sonny Dothard, the information technology director for the Criminal Clerk’s office,
    testified that his office produced a recording of the testimony of Mr. Lim from the
    preliminary hearing. Mr. Lim’s testimony was then played in open court.
    Mr. Lim testified that on the morning of April 14, 2011, he was asleep when he was
    awakened at 6:30 a.m. by a white male whom he did not know. Mr. Lim was not wearing
    his glasses, so he could not recognize the man very well. The man held a knife to Mr. Lim
    and told him to get up. The man asked where the money and jewelry were. Mr. Lim told the
    man that he did not speak English and that he did not know where the money and jewelry
    were because it was not his home. The man then took Mr. Lim through the bedroom and
    downstairs to search for money and jewelry. The man continually threatened Mr. Lim that
    he would kill Mr. Lim and his family and told him to find the money and jewelry. The man
    ordered Mr. Lim to unplug the television, and the man took the television and threatened Mr.
    Lim again. The man told Mr. Lim to return upstairs with him, and he took Mr. Lim’s iPhone
    and laptop. He instructed Mr. Lim to lie on the floor and count to twenty, and the man then
    left the residence. Mr. Lim waited for his family to return, and they returned about ten to
    fifteen minutes after the man left. The police were called, and Mr. Lim saw a lineup at about
    8:00 a.m. that morning. He testified that the man was wearing a hat, a red T-shirt, jeans, and
    blue gloves. He testified that the man was about 180 centimeters tall.
    Andrew George, a neighbor of Ms. Chong, testified that he heard a commotion
    coming from Ms. Chong’s apartment on the morning of the incident. He heard what sounded
    like “stuff being tossed around.” He later looked outside and saw a bronze, four-door
    Cadillac with darkly tinted windows and “custom or fancy” wheels. Mr. George believed
    that the Cadillac was a Coupe de Ville. He saw the vehicle as it was leaving, and he testified
    that he did not see anyone exit Ms. Chong’s apartment and enter the vehicle and that he could
    not see anything about the individuals inside the vehicle.
    Officer Mike Pyle of the Metro Police Department testified that he responded to a
    robbery and burglary scene at 675 Harding Place, Apartment N6. He spoke with Mr. Lim,
    Ms. Chong, and Mr. George. He observed that the door and door frame were damaged and
    requested that the identification section unit come to the scene to collect fingerprints. He
    testified that Mr. Lim was able to speak broken English, so he communicated with Mr. Lim
    with the assistance of a family member. Mr. Lim was able to recall the incident himself “[t]o
    some degree.”
    14
    Detective Shotwell testified that he interviewed the defendant on the day of his arrest.
    Portions of the interview were then played for the jury. During the interview, the defendant
    admitted that he participated in the robbery at 675 Harding Place and identified the victim
    as “some Chinese dude.” The defendant also stated that he was carrying a knife, and he said
    that he had access to a Cadillac de Ville. Detective Shotwell stated that he saw a Cadillac
    de Ville at the defendant’s mother’s residence on the day the defendant was arrested and
    interviewed and agreed that the defendant was carrying a knife on the day that police
    encountered him.
    Detective Shotwell testified that the defendant’s mother lived about “[f]ive to seven
    miles or so roughly” from the apartment at 675 Harding Place and that it would take “ten or
    twelve minutes or so” to arrive in a vehicle. He stated that Mr. Lim was unable to pick the
    defendant out of a photographic lineup and that the fingerprints collected at the scene were
    “of no value.” Detective Shotwell agreed that a red T-shirt and blue gloves were not found
    during a search of the defendant’s mother’s residence, nor was any of Mr. Lim’s property
    recovered.
    At the conclusion of Detective Shotwell’s testimony, the State rested, and the
    defendant did not put on any proof. The jury subsequently found the defendant guilty of
    aggravated robbery and aggravated burglary.
    At the sentencing hearing, both trial counsel agreed that the defendant was a persistent
    offender. Detective Shotwell testified at the hearing and agreed that the defendant rode with
    him and pointed out homes that he had burglarized. This ride was not recorded, but
    Detective Shotwell made notations regarding the homes the defendant admitted to
    burglarizing. Detective Shotwell prepared two lists: one indicating burglaries the defendant
    confessed to committing where property connected with the burglary was discovered in the
    defendant’s home and a second list indicating burglaries the defendant admitted to where no
    property was recovered. The defendant confessed to a total of forty-three burglaries: twenty-
    six where property was not recovered and seventeen where property was recovered.
    The court then sentenced the defendant to a thirty-year sentence for Count 1 and a fifteen-
    year sentence for Count 2.
    The court ordered the sentences to be served consecutively, finding that the defendant
    had an extensive criminal history and that he was sentenced for an offense committed while
    on probation. The court found that the severity of committing an aggravated burglary where
    the victim was at home at the time and threatened with a knife in conjunction with the other
    forty-three burglaries necessitated consecutive sentencing. The court stated that confinement
    was necessary to protect the public from further serious criminal activity by the defendant
    because he committed the offenses while on probation for reckless aggravated assault. The
    15
    court found that the defendant received numerous opportunities to correct his behavior but
    failed to do so, instead continuing to commit criminal offenses.
    The defendant filed a motion for new trial, which the trial court denied. He then filed
    this timely appeal, and we proceed to consider his claims.
    ANALYSIS
    I. Traffic Stop
    The defendant argues that the trial court erred when it failed to suppress the results
    of the defendant’s traffic stop. Specifically, he contends that reasonable suspicion did not
    exist to support the traffic stop because hanging one’s legs from the knees down outside of
    a car window is not a prohibited offense.
    The findings of fact made by the trial court at the hearing on a motion to suppress are
    binding upon this court unless the evidence contained in the record preponderates against
    them. State v. Ross, 
    49 S.W.3d 833
    , 839 (Tenn. 2001). The prevailing party is entitled to
    the strongest legitimate view of the evidence and all reasonable and legitimate inferences that
    may be drawn from that evidence. State v. Hicks, 
    55 S.W.3d 515
    , 521 (Tenn. 2001).
    However, the application of the law to the facts found by the trial court are questions of law
    that this court reviews de novo. State v. Daniel, 
    12 S.W.3d 420
    , 423 (Tenn. 2000). Absent
    a showing by the defendant that the evidence preponderates against the judgment of the trial
    court, this court must defer to the ruling of the trial court. State v. Cribbs, 
    967 S.W.2d 773
    ,
    795 (Tenn.1998).
    Both the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section
    7 of the Tennessee Constitution protect individuals against unreasonable searches and
    seizures. The purpose and intent of article I, section 7 is identical with that of the Fourth
    Amendment, which is to “‘safeguard the privacy and security of individuals against the
    arbitrary invasions of government officials.’” State v. Randolph, 
    74 S.W.3d 330
    , 334 (Tenn.
    2002) (quoting Camara v. Municipal Court, 
    387 U.S. 523
    , 528 (1967)).
    Under both constitutions, a warrantless search or seizure is presumed unreasonable
    unless it is conducted under one of the narrowly defined exceptions to the warrant
    requirement. State v. Binette, 
    33 S.W.3d 215
    , 218 (Tenn. 2000). One such exception is a
    stop based upon either probable cause or reasonable suspicion that a traffic violation has
    occurred. Whren v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 806
    , 810 (1996). The existence of probable
    cause is a determination of “‘whether at that moment the facts and circumstances within [the
    officers’] knowledge and of which they had reasonably trustworthy information were
    16
    sufficient to warrant a prudent man in believing that [the defendant] had committed or was
    committing an offense.’” State v. Day, 
    263 S.W.3d 891
    , 902 (Tenn. 2008) (quoting Goines
    v. State, 
    572 S.W.2d 644
    , 647 (Tenn. 1978)).
    Another such exception is the initiation of an investigatory stop “based upon
    reasonable suspicion, supported by specific and articulable facts that a criminal offense has
    been or is about to be committed.” Binette, 
    33 S.W.3d at
    218 (citing Terry v. Ohio, 
    329 U.S. 1
    , 20-21 (1968)). In order to determine whether reasonable suspicion existed to justify the
    stop, the court must consider the totality of the circumstances. Day, 
    263 S.W.3d at 903
    . This
    inquiry includes, but is not limited to, such factors as objective observations, information
    obtained from other officers or agencies, information obtained from citizens, and certain
    offenders’ patterns of operation. State v. Watkins, 
    827 S.W.2d 293
    , 294 (Tenn. 1992). The
    court should also take into account the rational inferences and deductions that a trained police
    officer may draw from the facts and circumstances known to him or her. 
    Id.
    Tennessee Code Annotated sections 55-9-603(a)(1) states that “[n]o person shall
    operate a motor vehicle on any highway, as defined in § 55-8-101, in this state unless the
    person and all passengers four (4) years of age or older are restrained by a safety belt at all
    times the vehicle is in forward motion.” A violation of this provision is a Class C
    misdemeanor. T.C.A. § 55-9-603(d)(1) (2012). An officer’s observation of a violation of
    this statute creates probable cause to justify the traffic stop. State v. Harris, 
    280 S.W.3d 832
    ,
    840 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2008); see State v. Vineyard, 
    958 S.W.2d 730
    , 735-36 (Tenn. 1997)
    (holding that subjective motivation of an officer is irrelevant when the observation of a
    traffic offense gave the officer probable cause to stop the vehicle).
    Officer Cadden stopped the defendant’s vehicle when he observed the defendant
    hanging both of his legs out of the window. Officer Cadden believed the defendant was in
    violation of the seatbelt law because he could not see the defendant’s upper body and
    believed the seatbelt could not be properly fastened when the defendant was reclining in such
    a manner. The defendant argues that Officer Cadden’s testimony is not credible because
    Officer Cadden could not recall if the defendant’s seatbelt was buckled when he approached
    the vehicle and because he wrote in his report that he stopped the vehicle because the
    defendant’s legs were hanging out of the window. He contends that his case is analogous to
    State v. Jonathan Frederick Walker, No. W2008-00757-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2009 WL 2998915
    ,
    (Tenn. Crim. App. Sept. 21, 2009), in which this court affirmed the trial court’s finding that
    an officer lacked reasonable suspicion or probable cause to initiate a traffic stop based upon
    a suspected seatbelt violation. However, this case is distinguishable from Jonathan
    Frederick Walker.
    In Jonathan Frederick Walker, the officer’s headlights illuminated the interior of the
    17
    defendant’s vehicle, he observed the defendant “slumped over to the center of the front seat,”
    and he did not observe the defendant wearing a seatbelt. Id. at *1. The trial court found that
    the officer’s testimony was not credible with regard to his ability to determine that the
    defendant had not fastened his seatbelt. Id. at *2. This court affirmed the decision,
    concluding that there was “no basis for disturbing the trial court’s credibility determinations.”
    Id. at *3. Here, the trial court credited the testimony of Officer Cadden, unlike the trial court
    in Jonathan Frederick Walker. The court found that Officer Cadden had reasonable
    suspicion to make the stop to investigate a possible violation of the seatbelt law. We
    conclude that the evidence does not preponderate against the trial court’s findings. The trial
    court is in the best position to assess the credibility of witnesses, weigh and evaluate the
    evidence, and resolve conflicts in the evidence. See State v. Odom, 
    928 S.W.2d 18
    , 23
    (Tenn. 1996). Therefore, we affirm the denial of the motion to suppress and conclude that
    the defendant is not entitled to any relief as to this issue.
    II. GPS Device
    The defendant argues that the trial court erred when it denied the motion to suppress
    evidence obtained from the warrantless installation of the GPS tracking device on the
    defendant’s vehicle in light of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in United States v. Jones,
    — U.S. —, 
    132 S. Ct. 945
     (2012). Specifically, he contends that no good-faith exception to
    the exclusionary rule exists because there was no binding precedent that existed prior to the
    Jones decision to justify the warrantless use of the GPS device. He also contends that the
    good-faith exception is not applicable because the State did not raise it in response to the
    motion to suppress.
    The State responds that Supreme Court precedent prior to Jones would lead a
    reasonable officer to believe that placing a GPS device on the defendant’s vehicle was not
    a search and that it is not precluded from raising the good faith exception because the trial
    court’s ruling was “squarely based” on Davis v. United States, — U.S. —, 
    131 S. Ct. 2419
    (2011). The State did note that, although not mentioned by the defendant, “Tennessee courts
    have declined to recognize a ‘good faith’ exception to the exclusionary rule in other
    contexts” and argued that “[t]his case may be appropriate for a limited application of” the
    good faith exception to the exclusionary rule. The State cites State v. Clifford Deleon
    Thomas, No. E2012-01956-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2013 WL 4715660
     (Tenn. Crim. App. Aug. 30,
    2013), where this court dismissed an appeal of a certified question of law regarding the
    constitutionality of a city ordinance because the issue was not dispositive of the
    constitutionality of the traffic stop in question. Id. at *1, 3 (“[T]here is no language
    appearing anywhere in the certified question that asks this court to consider the issue of
    whether the traffic stop was in fact unconstitutional-and suppression of the evidence
    warranted-in the event that this court should agree with the defendant that the ordinance at
    18
    issue was invalid.”).
    In denying the defendant’s motion to suppress, the trial court found that the Jones
    decision did not apply retroactively. The trial court relied on the reasoning of a Montana
    federal district court, which concluded that Jones was not retroactive due to the good faith
    exception to the warrant requirement. United States v. Heath, No. CR 12-4-H-DWM, 
    2012 WL 1574123
    , at *1 (D.Mont. May 3, 2012) (quoting Davis, — U.S. —, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2422
    (“Searches conducted in objectively reasonable reliance on binding appellate precedent are
    not subject to the exclusionary rule.”)). The trial court also found that the case was
    distinguishable from Jones because officers in the present case relied on the GPS device to
    locate the vehicle and observe its location at the Ilawood address but completed the
    remainder of the investigation through police observation.
    Both the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section
    7 of the Tennessee Constitution protect an individual from “unreasonable searches and
    seizures[.]” Our supreme court has stated that “[w]e are free to interpret the provisions of
    our state constitution to afford greater protection than the federal constitution.” State v. Cox,
    
    171 S.W.3d 174
    , 183 (Tenn. 2005). A warrantless search is presumed unreasonable under
    both the federal and state constitutions, and evidence seized from the warrantless search is
    subject to suppression, unless the State demonstrates by a preponderance of the evidence that
    the search was “conducted pursuant to one of the narrowly defined exceptions to the warrant
    requirement.” State v. Simpson, 
    968 S.W.2d 776
    , 780 (Tenn. 1998); see Coolidge v. New
    Hampshire, 
    403 U.S. 443
    , 454-55 (1971).
    Here, Metro Police officers attached a GPS device to the defendant’s vehicle without
    obtaining a search warrant. In United States v. Jones, a case decided after officers conducted
    the search in the case sub judice but before the defendant proceeded to trial, the United States
    Supreme Court held that the placement of a GPS tracking device on the defendant’s vehicle
    constituted a search for the purposes of the Fourth Amendment. Jones, 
    132 S. Ct. at 946
    .
    The Court relied on a trespass theory to conclude that a search had occurred. See 
    id.
     at 952-
    53. Thus, under Jones, the use of the GPS device in this case constituted a search and
    because officers conducted the search without a warrant, the evidence obtained from the
    search must be excluded unless the search falls within one of the exceptions to the warrant
    requirement.
    The primary exceptions to the warrant requirement are: (1) consent to search; (2)
    search incident to arrest; (3) plain view; (4) stop and frisk; (5) hot pursuit; and (6) search
    under exigent circumstances, and others.” See State v. Meeks, 
    262 S.W.3d 710
    , 722 (Tenn.
    2008); State v. Brock, 
    327 S.W.3d 645
    , 681 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2009). However, none of
    these exceptions are applicable to justify the warrantless use of the GPS device. Neither the
    19
    defendant nor the owner of the car consented to permit police to attach the GPS device. See
    State v. Bartram, 
    925 S.W.2d 227
    , 230 (Tenn. 1996) (stating that “[i]t is, of course, well
    settled that one of the exceptions to the warrant requirement is a search conducted pursuant
    to consent.”) (citations omitted). The search was not conducted incident to the defendant’s
    arrest because the search occurred before police arrested the defendant, and “a search
    incident to arrest may not proceed the arrest and serve as part of the justification for the
    arrest.” State v. McMahan, 
    650 S.W.2d 383
    , 387 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1983) (citing Sibron v.
    New York, 
    392 U.S. 40
    , 63 (1968)). The “plain view” exception cannot save the search
    because officers did not have the right to be in a position to view the results of the GPS
    search. See State v. Hawkins, 
    969 S.W.2d 936
    , 938 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997) (stating that
    question of whether officers had a right to be in a position to view contraband seized after
    a warrantless search of a defendant’s vehicle depended “on whether the initial approach of
    the vehicle was constitutionally permissible.”). The “stop and frisk” exception is
    inapplicable because the search did not involve the detention of the defendant for
    investigatory purposes. See Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 21 (1968). The search was not
    conducted under a theory of “hot pursuit” because the GPS device was not attached during
    a period immediately following a crime, and a necessary delay to obtain a search warrant did
    not endanger the lives of the investigating officers. See McMahan, 
    650 S.W.2d at 387
    .
    Finally, the record contains no proof that exigent circumstances existed to “give rise to an
    objectively reasonable belief that there was a compelling need to act and insufficient time to
    obtain a warrant.” State v. Meeks, 
    262 S.W.3d 710
    , 723 (Tenn. 2008).
    The State asks this court to adopt the “good faith” exception to the exclusionary rule
    to find that the search was constitutional. In United States v. Leon, 
    468 U.S. 897
     (1984), the
    Supreme Court established what is now recognized as the “good faith” exception to the
    warrant requirement. 
    Id. at 913
    . In Leon, the Court held that evidence seized in good faith
    reliance upon a search warrant that was later found to be defective was admissible at trial.
    
    Id. at 913
    . This exception has evolved since the Court’s decision in Leon, and it functions
    to permit the prosecution to introduce into its case-in-chief evidence obtained in the violation
    of the Fourth Amendment when the officers obtaining the evidence acted in good faith. See
    Davis, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2434
     (holding that the “good faith” exception did not require suppression
    when officers conducted a search “in objectively reasonable reliance on binding appellate
    precedent.”); Herring v. United States, 
    555 U.S. 135
    , 137, 144 (2008) (holding that isolated
    and nonrecurring error by police employee in maintaining records in an arrest warrant
    database did not warrant suppression of evidence); Arizona v. Evans, 
    514 U.S. 1
    , 14 (1995)
    (holding that good faith exception applied when police officers reasonably relied on
    erroneous information about an arrest warrant in a database maintained by judicial
    employees); Illinois v. Krull, 
    480 U.S. 340
    , 349-50 (1987) (holding that good faith exception
    extended to a search conducted in reasonable reliance on a statute that was later found
    unconstitutional). The Court reasoned that the purpose of the exclusionary rule is not to
    20
    “‘redress the injury’” caused by an unconstitutional search but to deter future Fourth
    Amendment violations by law enforcement. Davis, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2426
     (quoting Stone v.
    Powell, 
    428 U.S. 465
    , 486 (1976)). Therefore, exclusion is only appropriate when the
    deterrence benefits of suppression outweigh its heavy societal costs. Id. at 2427.
    However, Tennessee has not adopted the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule.
    State v. Carter, 
    16 S.W.3d 762
    , 768 n.8 (Tenn. 2000) (“Moreover, this Court has yet to adopt
    the exception, and we decline to address its validity under the Tennessee Constitution until
    the issue is squarely presented.”); State v. Bearden, 
    326 S.W.3d 184
    , 188 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    2010); State v. Clifford Deleon Thomas, 
    2013 WL 4715660
    , at *3 (“Tennessee courts have
    repeatedly passed on other opportunities to recognize an officer’s ‘good faith’ as an
    exception to the exclusionary rule in other contexts.”). In State v. Lonnie Taylor, No. 86-
    144-lll, 
    1987 WL 25417
     (Tenn. Crim. App. Dec. 4, 1987), this court opined that:
    The good faith exception created by Leon is nothing more than a federal
    rule of evidence. In Leon the United States Supreme Court said the federal
    exclusionary rule is not “a necessary corollary of the Fourth Amendment” or
    “required by the conjunction of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments.” Leon, 
    468 U.S. at 906
    . See Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U.S. at 655-657. According to the Court,
    the Fourth Amendment “ ‘has never been interpreted to proscribe the
    introduction of illegally seized evidence in all proceedings or against all
    persons.’ ” Leon, 
    468 U.S. at 906
    , quoting from Stone v. Powell, 
    428 U.S. at 486
    . The Court described the rule as “a judicially created remedy designed to
    safeguard Fourth Amendment rights generally through its deterrent effect,
    rather than a personal constitutional right of the person aggrieved.” Leon, 
    468 U.S. at 906
    , quoting from United States v. Calandra, 
    414 U.S. 338
    , 348
    (1974).
    Id. at *7 (some citations omitted). In declining to apply the good faith exception, this court
    reasoned that the public interest did not require and the Tennessee Constitution did not
    permit the modification of the exclusionary rule. Id. at *8. The court noted that Tennessee
    courts “have been reluctant to relax the exclusionary rule because it impugns the integrity of
    the judicial branch of government.” Id. It is not the role of the courts to permit the State “‘to
    utilize the wrong thus committed against the citizen to punish the citizen of his wrong.’” Id.
    (quoting Hughes v. State, 
    238 S.W.2d 588
    , 594 (Tenn. 1922)). By admitting such evidence,
    the court “‘condone[s] this lawlessness and in the process dirty their hands with the
    unconstitutional spoils.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Novembrino, 
    491 A.2d 37
    , 46 (N.J. App.
    Div.1985). Preventing the use of one wrong to prosecute another “is one of the most
    compelling reasons to exclude evidence seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment.” 
    Id.
    21
    In this case, the good faith exception created in Davis appears to be squarely before
    this Court because both parties premise their arguments as to the GPS device on the
    definition of “binding appellate precedent.” Theoretically, there is nothing to prevent this
    court from considering whether binding precedent existed upon which officers could have
    reasonably relied to attach the GPS device without a warrant. However, this court functions
    as an error-correcting court. See Aslip v. Johnson City Medical Center, No. E2004-00831-
    COA-R9-CV, 
    2005 WL 1536192
    , at *7 (Tenn. Ct. App. June 30, 2005) (stating that
    Tennessee Court of Appeals is “an error-correcting intermediate appellate court”). We have
    previously stated that “neither the trial court nor this court has the authority to create a good
    faith exception to the Tennessee exclusionary rule since an inferior court may not modify,
    revise, modernize, or overrule a rule created by the Supreme Court.” State v. Lonnie Taylor,
    
    1987 WL 25417
    , at *7. Our supreme court has yet to recognize good faith as an exception
    to the exclusionary rule, and thus we believe that it is not our role to do so in this case.
    Because Tennessee has yet to recognize a good faith exception to the exclusionary
    rule, we must conclude that the trial court’s analysis, while well-reasoned, was incorrect.
    Jones explicitly held that the placement of a GPS tracking device constituted a search for the
    purposes of the Fourth Amendment. Therefore, we conclude that the use of the GPS device
    in this case was a search. Because the good faith exception does not apply, and the State
    does not contend that any other exceptions exist to validate the warrantless use of the GPS
    device, we must conclude that the search was unlawful.2 However, this conclusion does not
    end our inquiry because we must address the trial court’s finding that GPS information was
    not the only source of information regarding the location of the defendant’s vehicle. See
    Odom, 
    928 S.W.2d at 23
     (“[A] trial court’s findings of fact in a suppression hearing will be
    upheld unless the evidence preponderates otherwise.”).
    Having concluded that the search was unlawful, we must determine the effect of this
    illegality on the admissibility of the defendant’s subsequent statement to police. In
    determining whether a confession obtained from an illegal search or seizure is admissible,
    this court applies the “fruit of the poisonous tree” analysis. Brown, 422 U.S. at 591-92; State
    v. Huddleston, 
    924 S.W.2d 666
    , 674 (Tenn. 1996); State v. Ford, 
    30 S.W.3d 378
    , 380 (Tenn.
    Crim. App. 2000). This analysis focuses on whether the evidence was obtained through an
    exploitation of the Fourth Amendment illegality. Huddleston, 
    924 S.W.2d at
    674 (citing
    Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 488 (1963)). The Brown court suggested four
    factors to assist courts in making this determination: “(1) the presence or absence of Miranda
    warnings; (2) the temporal proximity of the arrest and the confession; (3) the presence of
    2
    There is no need to address either party’s arguments of whether “binding appellate
    precedent” existed to justify the officers’ actions because we concluded that good faith reliance
    on such precedent was not an exception to the exclusionary rule.
    22
    intervening circumstances; and finally, of particular significance, (4) the purpose and
    flagrancy of the official misconduct.” 
    Id.
     (citing Brown, 422 U.S. at 603-604).
    Here, the defendant was given Miranda warnings, read a waiver of rights form, and
    signed the form, although officers did state that they could not discuss the reason for the
    defendant’s arrest until he signed the rights form. Although not determinative, this indicates
    that the defendant was aware of his right against self-incrimination and weighs slightly
    against suppression. See State v. Carter, 
    16 S.W.3d 762
    , 767 (Tenn. 2000). The temporal
    proximity of the arrest to the confession weighs in favor of suppression because the time
    period between the defendant’s arrest and incriminating statements was less than three hours.
    See Taylor v. Alabama, 
    457 U.S. 687
    , 691 (stating that a six-hour period between a
    defendant’s arrest and confession was insignificant when the defendant was in police
    custody, unrepresented by counsel, questioned on several occasions, fingerprinted, and
    subjected to a lineup); State v. Ford, 
    30 S.W.3d 378
    , 381 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2000) (stating
    that period of four to five hours between illegal search and written confession weighed in
    favor of suppression of the written statement). The third factor also weighs in favor of
    suppression because there is no evidence that the defendant spoke with anyone before giving
    his statements. See Huddleston, 
    924 S.W.2d at 675
     (stating that one example of an
    intervening circumstance “is the arrestee’s consultation with an attorney, relative, friend, or
    priest prior to the time a statement is given.”). The fourth factor weighs slightly in favor of
    attenuation. There is nothing in the record to suggest that officers in this case were
    attempting to purposefully violate the defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights, rather than
    mistakenly believing that they had probable cause to arrest the defendant. See State v. Linda
    Greene, No. E2008-00884-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2009 WL 3011108
    , at *9 (Tenn. Crim. App. Sep.
    22, 2009) (stating that although the purpose and flagrancy of official misconduct weighed
    against suppression when there was “no evidence that the officers in this case were
    attempting to circumvent the Defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights in conducting official
    police activity, rather than mistaking whether their actions were constitutionally
    permissible[,]” suppression was warranted when other factors weighed in favor of
    suppression). Considering all of the factors, we conclude that the defendant’s confession was
    not sufficiently attenuated from the illegal search.
    III. Warrantless Arrest
    The defendant argues that officers did not have probable cause to arrest him because
    the only physical link between the defendant and the burglaries was the gold Cadillac that
    belonged to Ms. Stewart and because he did not commit the crime of criminal impersonation.
    He contends that the trial court misinterpreted the facts; no proof showed that the Cadillac
    belonged to him, and the jewelry was not discovered until the defendant was taken into
    custody.
    23
    “[T]he general rule is that a warrantless search or seizure is presumed unreasonable
    and any evidence discovered is subject to suppression.” State v. Echols, 
    382 S.W.3d 266
    ,
    277 (Tenn. 2012). However, an arrest supported by probable cause is an exception to the
    warrant requirement. Echols, 382 S.W.3d at 277 (citing State v. Hanning, 
    296 S.W.3d 44
    ,
    48 (Tenn. 2009); see also Brown v. Illinois, 
    422 U.S. 590
    , 598 (1975)). Probable cause exists
    when the facts and circumstances as they are known to the officers at the time of the arrest
    are “‘sufficient to warrant a prudent [person] in believing that the [defendant] had committed
    or was committing an offense.’” Echols, 382 S.W.3d at 277-78 (citations omitted).
    However, “the fruits of an unlawful search cannot provide probable cause for an arrest.)
    United States v. McCarthy, 
    648 F.3d 820
    , 839 (9th Cir. 2011) (citing Johnson v. United
    States, 
    333 U.S. 10
    , 16-17 (1948)). After the motion to suppress hearing, the trial court
    found that police observation independent of the use of the GPS device was utilized to lead
    to the defendant’s arrest. The court also found that police had probable cause to arrest the
    defendant for burglary based upon the location of the defendant’s vehicle at the Ilawood
    address, the discovery of a recent burglary, the subsequent discovery of the vehicle at the
    defendant’s address, and police observation of the defendant walking away from his
    residence. The trial court also noted that police had probable cause to arrest the defendant
    for criminal impersonation because he presented police with a false identification.
    After reviewing the record, we are not persuaded that independent police observation
    separate from the use of the GPS device led to the defendant’s arrest. Without the use of the
    GPS tracking device, officers would have been unaware of the vehicle’s location at the
    Ilawood address and unaware of the burglary that occurred. The GPS device placed officers
    in a position to visually observe the defendant’s vehicle at his mother’s residence moments
    after the burglary and to locate the defendant walking up the street. Without using the
    device, officers likely would not have located and stopped the defendant. The GPS device
    played an integral role in the discovery of the Ilawood burglary and subsequent arrest of the
    defendant. Based upon the evidence, we conclude that the probable cause to arrest the
    defendant was not generated from a means independent of the constitutional violation.
    Because the defendant was subject to a warrantless arrest that lacked probable cause, we
    conclude that the seizure of the defendant was illegal.
    IV. Waiver of Miranda Rights
    The defendant argues that the trial court erred in finding that his waiver of his
    Miranda rights was knowing and voluntary. Specifically, he contends that the totality of the
    circumstances indicate that the defendant’s waiver was “a product of intimidation, coercion,
    and deception.”
    Both the United States and the Tennessee Constitutions protect a defendant against
    24
    compelled self-incrimination. State v. Walton, 
    41 S.W.3d 75
    , 81 (2001). The Self-
    Incrimination Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that
    “[n]o person . . . shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.”
    Article I, section 9 of the Tennessee Constitution provides that “in all criminal prosecutions,
    the accused . . . shall not be compelled to give evidence against himself.”
    In order to protect the right against self-incrimination, the prosecution may not use the
    statement of a defendant resulting from a custodial interrogation unless officers first advise
    the defendant of the right to remain silent and the right to counsel. Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 444 (1966). A defendant may waive these rights so long as the waiver is made
    “voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently.” 
    Id.
     A confession is not voluntary when it is the
    product of coercive state action. State v. Downey, 
    259 S.W.3d 723
    , 733 (Tenn. 2008). The
    test of voluntariness is broader under the state than under the federal constitution, and a
    confession “must not be the product of ‘any sort of threats or violence, . . . any direct or
    implied promises, however slight, nor by the exertion of any improper influence.’” 
    Id.
     at 733-
    34 (quoting Smith v. State, 
    42 S.W.3d 101
    , 109 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2000)). However,
    “[p]romises of leniency by state officers do not render subsequent confessions involuntary
    per se.” State v. Smith, 
    933 S.W.2d 450
    , 455 (Tenn. 1996). The critical question is whether
    the conduct of law enforcement officers was of a nature to overbear the defendant’s will to
    resist. 
    Id. at 455-56
    . This court must determine “whether the accused was so gripped by the
    hope of leniency that he did not or could not freely and rationally choose among the available
    courses of action.’” State v. Kelly, 
    603 S.W.2d 726
    , 729 (Tenn. 1980) (quoting Hunter v.
    Swenson, 
    372 F.Supp. 287
    , 300 (W.D. Mo. 1974)). Courts must examine the totality of the
    circumstances to determine whether a waiver of Miranda rights was voluntary, knowing, and
    intelligent. State v. Climer, 
    400 S.W.3d 537
    , 568 (Tenn. 2013). Factors to consider in
    determining voluntariness include: the age and background of the defendant, the level of
    education and intelligence, reading and writing skills, demeanor and responsiveness to
    questions, prior experience with police, any mental disease or disorder, any intoxication at
    the time of waiver, and the manner, detail, and language in which the Miranda rights were
    explained. 
    Id.
    The trial court likened the failure to inform the defendant as to the true reason for his
    arrest to a case where a suspect asks police officers about the evidence against him, and
    officers tell him that they cannot discuss the evidence until the suspect executes a waiver of
    his rights. See State v. Miller, 
    674 S.W.2d 279
    , 283 (stating that when the accused asked
    officers what evidence they had against him, the officers “properly advised” him that they
    could not discuss the matter until the accused signed a waiver of his rights). The court found
    “that the police interview was not a model interrogation” and questioned why officers
    withheld the true reason for the defendant’s arrest, but the court found that the defendant
    voluntarily waived his Miranda rights. The court noted that the defendant was an educated
    25
    individual who had several prior police interviews over the preceding years. The court
    further noted that he did not invoke his rights when he was placed on notice with questions
    about the recent burglary. The defendant testified that when he was initially detained,
    officers advised him that a burglary had been committed “right down the street” and that
    during the ride to the precinct, they accused him of committing more than twenty burglaries
    at an apartment complex.
    We agree with the trial court that the failure to disclose the true reason for the
    defendant’s arrest is puzzling, but we conclude that such failure with this case did not fatally
    invalidate the defendant’s waiver of his rights. The defendant was well-educated; he had two
    associate degrees, and he had prior experience with police due to his four previous felony
    convictions for burglary. The defendant also asserted multiple times that he understood
    everything the officer told him about waiving his Miranda rights. Although the defendant
    was not specifically informed that officers wished to question him about a recent burglary,
    the defendant did not invoke his rights after learning why he was arrested but instead asked
    for a break to smoke a cigarette and continued talking to the officers.
    The officer’s statements regarding the consequences of the defendant’s execution of
    a waiver of his rights presents a much closer question. After officers refused to disclose the
    reason for the arrest, the defendant stated, “If I am under arrest, I am under arrest. Let’s
    go[.]” The defendant stood, and as one detective replied “Okay,” gathered his papers, and
    moved to get up, the second detective remained seated and asked the defendant, “Where are
    you going to go?” Contrary to the defendant’s testimony, the detective did not “bang his fists
    on the table” and scare the defendant into sitting back down. The detective asked the
    defendant if he wanted “to try to clear this up or not[][,]” and the defendant asked if officers
    were “going to let [him] go[.]” The detective replied, “It’s a good possibility[,]” prompting
    the defendant to ask, “A possibility or yes or no?” The detective then told the defendant, “I
    guarantee it won’t hurt you.” The detective later clarified his comment regarding the
    defendant’s release, stating, “If you convince us – I said if you convince us you were not
    involved in anything then, yeah, you’re gone.” This exchange occurred prior to the
    defendant’s execution of his waiver.
    Standing alone, the statement “I guarantee it won’t hurt you” appears to be the exact
    promise of leniency that the Fifth Amendment prohibits. However, this court must consider
    the totality of the circumstances to determine whether the defendant’s will was “completely
    overborne” and thus incapable of executing a voluntary waiver of his rights. When the
    phrase is examined in the context of the entire interview, it appears that the officer used the
    word “guarantee” not to indicate that the defendant’s statement would not be used against
    him but to convey to the defendant that being truthful would help demonstrate his
    cooperation to the district attorney. This statement also occurred prior to, rather than
    26
    subsequent to, the defendant’s signing of the waiver. The defendant was a thirty-two year
    old man with two associate degrees and prior police experience, as he had four previous
    convictions for burglary. The interrogation lasted about two and a half hours but was paused
    for the defendant to take a lengthy break to smoke a cigarette. The defendant was only
    briefly detained before the interrogation and was advised of his constitutional rights by the
    detective. The defendant stated twice that he “underst[ood] everything” the detective said
    regarding his Miranda rights. He told police that he did not feel intoxicated, and officers did
    not believe him to be intoxicated. There is nothing in the record to indicate that police
    physically abused the defendant or threatened him with abuse. We conclude that the
    defendant’s waiver was knowing and voluntary, and the defendant is not entitled to any relief
    as to this issue.
    V. Unavailable Witness
    The defendant argues that the trial court erred in declaring Jongho Lim unavailable
    and admitting his prior testimony as substantive evidence. Specifically, the defendant
    contends that his right to confront witnesses against him was violated because Mr. Lim stated
    that he was willing to return to the United States and testify if the State paid the costs of
    airfare. The State argues that this issue is waived for failure to include the trial court’s
    factual findings in the appellate record. Alternatively, the State argues that the trial court did
    not abuse its discretion because the State made a good-faith effort to locate Mr. Lim, and the
    defendant received the opportunity to cross-examine Mr. Lim during the preliminary hearing.
    A party seeking appellate review has “a duty to prepare a record which conveys a fair,
    accurate and complete account of what transpired with respect to the issues forming the basis
    of the appeal.” State v. Ballard, 
    855 S.W.2d 557
    , 560 (Tenn. 1993). The failure to include
    a transcript of the proceedings germane to the issue challenged on appeal precludes this court
    from considering the issue. 
    Id. at 560-61
    . Here, the trial court stated at the motion for new
    trial, “And about the victim unavailability, I believe we went over that pretrial. So I’ll rely
    upon my -- I’m relying on that.” The defendant has failed to include a transcript from this
    hearing as part of the record on appeal. Accordingly, we conclude that the defendant has
    failed to properly preserve this issue for appeal. See Tenn. R. App. P. 24(b).
    VI. Consecutive Sentencing
    The defendant argues that the trial court erred by imposing consecutive sentences.
    Specifically, he contends that it was error to order consecutive sentences based upon the
    defendant’s use of a knife because its use was due to a mistake made by the defendant in
    believing the residence was unoccupied.
    27
    This court reviews the imposition of consecutive sentences under an abuse of
    discretion standard accompanied by a presumption of reasonableness. State v. James Allen
    Pollard, — S.W.3d —, No. M2011-00332-SC-R11-CD, 
    2013 WL 6732667
    , at *9 (Tenn.
    Dec. 20, 2013). The trial court’s exercise of its discretionary authority to impose consecutive
    sentences is afforded deference if “it has provided reasons on the record establishing at least
    one of the seven grounds listed in Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-35-115(b).” 
    Id.
    When the trial court orders consecutive sentencing based upon its classification of the
    defendant as a dangerous offender, it “must make specific findings regarding the severity of
    the offenses and the necessity to protect society[.]” State v. Lane, 
    3 S.W.3d 456
    , 460-61
    (Tenn. 1999) (citing State v. Wilkerson, 
    905 S.W.2d 933
    , 939 (Tenn. 1995)). “So long as a
    trial court properly articulates reasons for ordering consecutive sentences, thereby providing
    a basis for meaningful appellate review, the sentences will be presumed reasonable and,
    absent an abuse of discretion, upheld on appeal.” Pollard, — S.W.3d —, 
    2013 WL 6732667
    ,
    at *9.
    The trial court found that consecutive sentences reasonably related to the severity of
    the offenses because the defendant committed an aggravated burglary where the victim was
    at home, and the defendant pulled a knife on the victim and threatened to kill him. The court
    also found that in addition to his prior criminal record, the defendant was responsible for
    “about forty-three other burglaries,” with property only recovered from some of the
    burglaries. Consecutive sentences were necessary to protect the public from further serious
    criminal activity committed by the defendant because the defendant was on probation for
    reckless aggravated assault at the time he committed the burglary that led to his conviction.
    The court found that the defendant had previously violated his probation, and rather than
    utilize the “opportunities to correct his criminal activity. . . . he continue[d] in that stead.”
    The record reflects that the trial court made the requisite findings to support
    consecutive sentences. We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    ordering consecutive sentences. According, the defendant is not entitled to relief as to this
    issue.
    VII. Cumulative Error
    The defendant argues that he is entitled to relief based upon the cumulative errors of
    the trial court. Having concluded that the defendant is entitled to relief based upon the denial
    of his motion to suppress, we need not address the issue of cumulative error.
    CONCLUSION
    Based upon the foregoing, we affirm the trial court’s denial of the defendant’ motion
    28
    to suppress with regard to the traffic stop, its finding that the defendant knowingly and
    voluntarily waived his Miranda rights, the declaration of Jongho Lim as an unavailable
    witness, and the imposition of consecutive sentences. We reverse the trial court’s denial of
    the motion to suppress with respect to the evidence acquired as a result of the warrantless
    search of the defendant’s vehicle with the GPS tracking device and remand for a new trial.
    _________________________________
    JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, JUDGE
    29