DocketNumber: S18A0711
Citation Numbers: 819 S.E.2d 37, 304 Ga. 406
Judges: Peterson
Filed Date: 9/10/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
**406Phillip Warren Kennebrew brings this interlocutory appeal of the trial court's denial of his motion to suppress certain physical evidence the State wishes to introduce in prosecuting him for murder. We previously reversed Kennebrew's convictions for malice murder and other crimes on the ground that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at trial, including counsel's failure to pursue suppression of the evidence in question. See Kennebrew v. State,
As we previously explained, Kennebrew was tried with two others for robbing and murdering Breyon Alexander. DNA evidence and witness testimony placed Kennebrew at the victim's apartment at the time of the crimes, and Kennebrew pursued a mere presence defense. But several pieces of evidence recovered from two backpacks belonging to Kennebrew undermined this defense, particularly a knife the State suggested had been used in the stabbing of the victim, shotgun shells like some that had been stolen from the victim's apartment and recovered *40from a co-defendant's house, and bullets like some that had been stolen from the victim's apartment.
We reversed Kennebrew's convictions on appeal, based on two areas of ineffectiveness by his trial counsel: (1) counsel's failure to object when the prosecutor commented during closing argument on Kennebrew's silence; and (2) counsel's failure to pursue suppression of the evidence recovered from Kennebrew's backpacks. We noted that the police seized the backpacks only after Kennebrew had been handcuffed and removed from the room and did not search the backpacks until six days later, meaning that the State could not avoid the Fourth Amendment's warrant requirement under the search incident to arrest exception.
On remand, new counsel filed a motion to suppress evidence collected from Kennebrew's backpacks. Denying the motion in a June 2017 order, the trial court concluded that the seizure of Kennebrew's **408backpack was "reasonable based upon facts and circumstances presented by the State at the hearing and furthermore that the items inside the backpack would have inevitably been discovered through a lawful inventory search." The trial court found that, after police handcuffed Kennebrew and removed him from his girlfriend's dorm room on October 20, 2011, she gave police her consent to search her room. She also identified Kennebrew's belongings to police, the trial court found. The trial court recounted testimony by DeKalb Police Sgt. Neal that, based on department policy, he could not have left Kennebrew's items with the girlfriend, because police are responsible for those items in the possession of an arrested person and the girlfriend could have destroyed or hidden items. The trial court also relied on DeKalb Police testimony that for safety of police, chain of custody purposes, and to protect the department from potential false claims of theft, DeKalb Police policy mandates that closed containers be inventoried prior to their submission to the property room. The trial court found that Kennebrew's backpack "was briefly inventoried by Sgt. Neal at the scene for officer safety and then secured by CSI Woolford" and noted that the State conceded that CSI Woolford "searched" the backpack six days later, i.e., October 26, 2011.
On appeal, Kennebrew argues both that our decision in his prior appeal precluded the trial court from denying his motion to suppress and that the discovery of the evidence in the backpacks cannot be justified as "inevitable" through a lawful inventory search.
*41Because we agree that the State has not met its burden of showing that any search of the bags qualified as an inventory search, and because the State cannot avoid suppression of the evidence recovered on an inevitable discovery theory, either, we need not reach the law of the case argument raised by Kennebrew.
**409In reviewing a ruling on a motion to suppress, we review the trial court's factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions de novo. See Vansant v. State,
an appellate court must construe the evidentiary record in the light most favorable to the trial court's factual findings and judgment. An appellate court also generally must limit its consideration of the disputed facts to those expressly found by the trial court.
Caffee v. State,
The State argues for affirmance of the trial court's order under either an inventory search or inevitable discovery theory. Specifically, the State argues that DeKalb Police performed two inventory searches-once at the scene of the seizure of the backpacks on October 20, and again on October 26. We consider each of these possibilities in turn.
1. The United States Supreme Court has held that an inventory search-i.e., the search of the personal property of a person under lawful arrest as part of a routine administrative procedure incident to booking and jailing the suspect-is an exception to the warrant requirement. See Illinois v. Lafayette,
**410(a) The State contends that the trial court's finding that "the backpack in this case was briefly inventoried by Sgt. Neal at the scene" amounts to a finding that an inventory search was performed on October 20. But this factual finding is clearly erroneous: the record contains no evidence whatsoever that Sgt. Neal searched or conducted any sort of inventory of any backpack on October 20. The State seeks to salvage the core of this finding by claiming that the record shows that Sgt. Neal was present while CSI Woolford searched the backpacks when they were seized on October 20. But even if the trial court's statement were meant to reflect a finding that law enforcement actually opened the bags and searched their contents on that date, such a finding would find no support in the record.
*42The State's position on appeal-that CSI Woolford performed an inventory search at the scene on October 20-both is not supported by any evidence and conflicts directly with its concession at multiple points during the suppression hearing that the backpacks were not searched or "fully inventoried" until six days after Kennebrew was arrested. The State points to testimony from Sgt. Neal at the suppression hearing that it says shows CSI Woolford conducted an inventory search on October 20. But that testimony does not show that CSI Woolford actually looked inside the bags on that date.
(b) The State also argues that an inventory search of the backpacks was performed on October 26. Again, the State has failed to meet its burden of proving that the requirements of the inventory search exception have been met as to the October 26 search.
Here, the trial court apparently credited DeKalb Police testimony that for the safety of police, chain of custody purposes, and to protect the department from potential false claims of theft, DeKalb Police policy mandates that closed containers be inventoried before **411their submission to the property room. Indeed, Sgt. Neal testified that department policy required such to ensure "a bomb or anything else is not put in the property room"-a purpose that would be achieved only if it required items be inventoried prior to their submission to the property room. But the trial court made no findings as to whether the October 26 search took place before the backpacks were placed in the property room or as to the location of the backpacks during the six days prior to that search. And the State points to no record evidence that the October 26 search took place before the backpacks were placed in the property room. The State thus has not shown that the October 26 search was done in accordance with standard, established inventory procedures. See Clay v. State,
Addressing the six-day gap between seizure of the backpacks and the purported inventory search on October 26, the State contends that a "delayed" inventory is not an unconstitutional inventory. In support, the State cites Cooper v. California,
Here, the evidence credited by the trial court shows that the applicable procedure mandated the inventory be performed before the backpacks were submitted to the property room. The State has not met its burden of proving that the evidence in question was discovered in accordance with that procedure, and thus has not proven that the search conducted on October 26 was a valid inventory search rather than a rummaging to discover incriminating evidence.
2. Perhaps recognizing the flaws in the State's inventory search theory, the trial court premised denial of the motion to suppress on its conclusion that the evidence in question inevitably would have been discovered through a lawful inventory search. But an inevitable discovery theory is not supported by the trial court's findings, either.
Inevitable discovery is an exception to the exclusionary rule that applies in circumstances in which "exclusion of the evidence puts the police in a worse position than they would have been absent any error or misconduct because the evidence ... would have been discovered as a matter of course if independent investigations were allowed to proceed." Teal v. State,
Here, the government did not meet its burden of establishing a reasonable probability that the evidence in question would have been discovered via a lawful inventory search. To the extent that the State means to suggest that the evidence was discovered during an illegal search on October 20, but nonetheless is admissible because it inevitably would have been discovered later through a proper inventory search, that argument is based on the false premise that any search took place on October 20. And to the extent that the State somehow means to argue that the evidence was discovered in an illegal search on October 26 but is nonetheless admissible because it would have been discovered eventually through a later, proper **413inventory search, that argument fails. The record would not support a finding that the October 26 search took place somewhere other than the DeKalb Police property room.
Judgment reversed.
Melton, C.J., Nahmias, P.J., Benham, Hunstein, Blackwell, and Boggs, JJ., concur.
The trial court's order did not mention search warrants for the backpacks that the State obtained on remand from our prior decision, at which point the backpacks apparently were in the possession of the District Attorney's office. The State expressly disclaims reliance on those search warrants in arguing for affirmance of the trial court's order, and so we need not consider Kennebrew's argument on appeal that the search warrants obtained by the State on remand could not cure the constitutional defect in the search of the bags.
Defense counsel suggested at oral argument that the seizure of the bags may have been unlawful, stating that he believed Kennebrew had raised such an argument in his motion to suppress. But Kennebrew does not appear to have preserved that argument below, and he does not include it in his enumerations of error or supporting briefing, so we do not consider it. See Clay v. State,
We note that it's not obvious from the record that Kennebrew preserved his law of the case argument.
CSI Woolford did not testify at the suppression hearing.
Although we of course cannot make our own factual findings in reviewing the trial court's order, the State's concession below that no search took place on October 20 is consistent with an affidavit given in support of a search warrant application on remand, in which an investigator averred that police "opened" the backpacks "[d]ays" after their seizure. Moreover, even in its primary brief in this appeal, the State avers that upon seizing "the backpack," CSI Woolford photographed "it," without implying that Woolford opened the backpack at that time, and states that "the search" occurred six days after the seizure. We also note that at Kennebrew's prior trial, CSI Woolford testified that she did not search the backpacks until six days after collecting them.
The State also cites State v. Betterley,
CSI Woolford testified at trial that she searched the bags on October 26 "back at our lab[.]" Testimony at the suppression hearing equated the "property room" and "crime lab."