Supreme Court of Florida
____________
No. SC15-2125
____________
CHRISTOPHER L. CARPENTER,
Petitioner,
vs.
STATE OF FLORIDA,
Respondent.
[November 2, 2017]
REVISED OPINION
LEWIS, J.
Christopher L. Carpenter seeks review of the decision of the First District
Court of Appeal in State v. Carpenter, 158 So. 3d 693 (Fla. 1st DCA 2015), on the
basis that it expressly and directly conflicts with the decision of the Second District
Court of Appeal in Willis v. State, 148 So. 3d 480 (Fla. 2d DCA 2014), on a
question of law. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(3), Fla. Const.
FACTS AND BACKGROUND
On April 2, 2013, Carpenter was charged with one count of traveling to meet
a minor to commit an unlawful sex act, one count of soliciting a minor to commit
an unlawful sex act, and three counts of transmission of material harmful to a
minor. At the time of the incident, law enforcement already had extensive
evidence that Carpenter, who was twenty-eight years old, had engaged, through e-
mail and text message, in a series of sexually explicit conversations in response to
a Craigslist ad with an undercover officer posing as a fourteen-year-old girl. These
conversations ultimately resulted in Carpenter and the undercover officer planning
to meet. Upon his arrival at the agreed-upon address, officers arrested Carpenter.
At the time of Carpenter’s arrest, the arresting officers conducted a search
incident to arrest and seized his cell phone, separating Carpenter from the cell
phone. These officers then transported the cell phone in a special protective
covering to a specialty technician who later entered into and searched the phone at
a distant location without first obtaining a warrant. Sexually explicit text messages
and photos were found on the seized cell phone.
Carpenter filed a motion to suppress the evidence found on his cell phone,
relying on Smallwood v. State (Smallwood II), 113 So. 3d 724 (Fla. 2013), to
support his assertion that the warrantless search of his cell phone violated his
Fourth Amendment rights.
At the suppression hearing, Investigator Josh Scioners testified that he
performed the forensic examination of Carpenter’s cell phone. Scioners also
testified that cell phones present issues with regard to the potential for the contents
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to be removed or destroyed remotely, thus necessitating turning off the device or
using a Faraday bag, which blocks any signals from coming in or out of the device.
While Faraday bags do help prevent the cell phone’s data from being remotely
erased, these bags are not a guaranteed method of data protection and the cell
phone still must be removed from the Faraday bag to be examined, risking that the
data be compromised. Investigator Scioners further testified that he relied on
Smallwood v. State (Smallwood I), 61 So. 3d 448 (Fla. 1st DCA 2011), when he
searched Carpenter’s phone. He did, however, note that it would have taken a
short time to obtain a warrant and that Carpenter would likely not have had the
opportunity to make any calls while he was detained in the patrol car or initially
transported to the station.
After the suppression hearing, the trial court granted Carpenter’s motion to
suppress, relying on the holding in Smallwood II that warrantless cell phone
searches are unconstitutional. The First District reversed, relying on Davis v.
United States, 564 U.S. 229 (2011), to support the position that, because the
officers were relying in good faith on the holding in Smallwood I, the appellate
precedent at the time of the search, the evidence recovered from Carpenter’s cell
phone was not subject to the exclusionary rule because the good-faith exception
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applied.1 Carpenter, 158 So. 3d at 697. This review follows.
ANALYSIS
In Davis, the United States Supreme Court announced the application of the
good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule in cases where officers have
reasonably relied on binding appellate precedent when conducting a search, even
when that appellate precedent is later overruled and the search is deemed to be
1. Willis also involved a warrantless cell phone search conducted after
Smallwood I but before Smallwood II. The Second District found that the
warrantless search at issue was permitted at the time because Smallwood I was a
decision then binding in Florida under Pardo v. State, 596 So. 2d 665 (Fla. 1992).
Willis, 148 So. 3d at 482.
The Second District nevertheless noted that the case law with regard to what
constitutes “binding appellate precedent” permitting “objectively reasonable
reliance” was still unsettled. Id.
The rule in Pardo was created to establish consistency within Florida
law in light of our unique system in which the intermediate appellate
courts are intended to be the normal final courts of review. . . . But an
opinion from a single district court is not binding on another district
court in Florida. We are not inclined to believe that the rule
announced in Pardo should be used in the Fourth Amendment context
to determine whether evidence from a warrantless search is
admissible.
Id. at 482-83 (citations omitted). The Second District expressed its doubts that the
rule announced in Pardo was intended to establish that “one recent decision from
another Florida district court of appeal on such a controversial issue [was
sufficient] to create ‘binding precedent,’ at least in other districts, for purposes of
the good-faith exception as announced in Davis.” Id. at 483. Thus, the Second
District in Willis found that the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule did
not apply. Id.
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unconstitutional. 564 U.S. at 232. Davis involved the search of a vehicle
passenger compartment after the police had removed the individuals from the
vehicle and secured two arrestees in the back of patrol cars. Id. at 235. The
officers, in conducting the search, were relying on the United States Supreme
Court’s holding in New York v. Belton, 453 U.S. 454, 459 (1981), which had been
utilized and controlling for almost thirty years, and which held that “when a
policeman has made a lawful custodial arrest of the occupant of an automobile, he
may, as a contemporaneous incident of that arrest, search the passenger
compartment of that automobile.” Davis, 564 U.S. at 233 (quoting Belton, 453
U.S. at 459-60). For almost thirty years, courts across the United States had
uniformly read Belton’s holding as authorizing vehicle searches incident to arrest,
regardless of whether the arrestee was secured in a patrol car or within reaching
distance of the vehicle. Id.
While Davis’s appeal was pending in the United States Court of Appeals for
the Fourth Circuit, the United States Supreme Court released its decision in
Arizona v. Gant, 556 U.S. 332 (2009), which created a new rule that limited
Belton’s holding. In discussing the new Gant decision, the Supreme Court
emphasized in Davis that the exclusionary rule’s purpose is to deter future Fourth
Amendment violations: “For exclusion to be appropriate, the deterrence benefits of
suppression must outweigh its heavy costs.” Davis, 564 U.S. at 237.
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The Supreme Court explained that Davis’s claim turned on the lack of police
culpability, and determined that penalizing officers for continuing to follow the
then-binding law, which had been clearly controlling for almost thirty years at the
time of the search, would not have the requisite deterrent effect needed to justify
exclusion. Id. at 240-41.
About all that exclusion would deter in this case is
conscientious police work. Responsible law-enforcement officers will
take care to learn “what is required of them” under Fourth
Amendment precedent and will conform their conduct to these rules.
But by the same token, when binding appellate precedent specifically
authorizes a particular police practice, well-trained officers will and
should use that tool to fulfill their crime-detection and public-safety
responsibilities. An officer who conducts a search in reliance on
binding appellate precedent does no more than “ ‘ac[t] as a reasonable
officer would and should act’ ” under the circumstances. The
deterrent effect of exclusion in such a case can only be to discourage
the officer from “ ‘do[ing] his duty.’ ”
That is not the kind of deterrence the exclusionary rule seeks to
foster. We have stated before, and we reaffirm today, that the harsh
sanction of exclusion “should not be applied to deter objectively
reasonable law enforcement activity.” Evidence obtained during a
search conducted in reasonable reliance on binding precedent is not
subject to the exclusionary rule.
Id. at 241 (emphasis and alterations in original) (citations omitted). Thus, the
Supreme Court in Davis held that the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule
applied when officers acted with objectively reasonable reliance on binding
judicial precedent that had been in place and followed for almost thirty years.
The State and our dissenting colleagues in this case seek to expand Davis to
the significantly different facts here. We reject that expansion.
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In Davis, the officers, in conducting the later-invalidated search, were
relying on the 1981 holding in Belton, which had been the law from the United
States Supreme Court for almost thirty years and had been uniformly applied
across the country before Gant was decided in 2009.2 Conversely, Smallwood I
was decided on April 29, 2011, and was under active consideration by this Court
when the search of Carpenter’s cell phone was conducted on June 14, 2012.
Unlike the law under Belton, which had been in force for almost thirty years when
the officers in Davis relied on Belton, the officers in this case were relying on an
opinion that was not only not well-established, but on the face of the Smallwood I
opinion, doubt was expressed and the case was certified to this Court for final
Florida consideration. Moreover, the Second District’s decision in Willis, holding
that the exclusionary rule applied to a warrantless cell phone search, further fuels
the notion that the issue of warrantless cell phone searches was a significant and
still-developing area of law and thus not one that the officers should have relied
upon as being well-established precedent under Davis. See Willis, 148 So. 3d at
482.
The holding in Davis was logical, based on the longstanding, thirty-year
2. In fact, a cursory search of Westlaw reveals at least 3,086 cases
referencing Belton from the time of its release until the release of Gant.
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precedent that had been overruled by Gant. The State, however, asks us to expand
Davis to a case where the facts present a highly uncertain area of law and the
precedent relied upon demonstrates on its face that it was certified to a higher court
for resolution. The face of the opinion reflected this status. The State’s attempt to
cherry pick favorable parts of a district court of appeal opinion while ignoring
other portions of that same opinion defies logic and expands Davis in a way that
we cannot endorse.
Recognizing the rapidly developing nature of technology, the First District
in Smallwood I expressed its concern with the holding, which would permit
warrantless cell phone searches, and thus certified the question to this Court for
final resolution as one of great public importance. 61 So. 3d at 461-62. In
expressing its unease, however, the First District was clearly satisfying the state-
required procedural hurdle of issuing a decision for this Court to exercise
jurisdiction to review and decide the issue, rather than issuing a final ruling that
was contemplated to be the final Florida determination on the matter of warrantless
cell phone searches. As we explained in Floridians for a Level Playing Field v.
Floridians Against Expanded Gambling,
In order to have discretionary jurisdiction based on a certified
question, there are essentially three prerequisites that must be met.
First, it is essential that the district court of appeal pass upon the
question certified by it to be of great public importance. . . . Second,
there must be a district court “decision” to review. See art. V, §
3(b)(4), Fla. Const. For instance, where a district court is unable to
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reach a clear majority decision on an issue and elects to certify a
question without resolving the merits, we are without jurisdiction to
answer such a question under article V, section 3(b)(4) of the Florida
Constitution. . . . Third, . . . the question must be in fact “certified” by
a majority decision of the district court.
967 So. 2d 832, 833 (Fla. 2007) (emphasis added) (footnote omitted); see also art.
V, § 3(b)(4), Fla. Const. (The Florida Supreme Court “[m]ay review any decision
of a district court of appeal that passes upon a question certified by it to be of great
public importance . . . .” (emphasis added)). Thus, absent issuing an actual
decision, the First District would not have been able to certify the question to this
Court for final consideration and determination.
Furthermore, in the Smallwood I opinion, the First District certified the
precise question to this Court with regard to the new subject of cell phone searches
as one of great public importance, thus placing law enforcement officers on actual
notice that the case was subject to further consideration on the face of the opinion.
61 So. 2d at 462. Until this Court issued either an order declining review or an
opinion deciding the issue, Smallwood I was not final, well-settled, unequivocal, or
clearly established. See Davis, 564 U.S. at 251 (Sotomayor, J., concurring in
judgment); see also United States v. Sparks, 711 F.3d 58, 64-66 (1st Cir. 2013)
(elaborating on the meaning of “well-settled law”); United States v. Lee, 862 F.
Supp. 2d 560, 568-69 (E.D. Ky. 2012) (stating that officers must rely on
unequivocal and well-settled decisions of binding legal authority); Willis, 148 So.
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3d at 483 n.2 (“[W]hen a Fourth Amendment issue is rapidly evolving, it is hard to
justify an approach to the good-faith exception that allows the first defendant to
reach the United States Supreme Court to receive the benefit of the exclusionary
rule while other defendants in the legal pipeline do not.”). While the State relies
on Pardo to argue the binding nature of the Smallwood I decision, it misapplies
Pardo’s underlying premise from a different context that an opinion from a Florida
district court of appeal is not final if it is still being reviewed by this Court. See
Pardo, 596 So. 2d at 666 (“This Court has stated that ‘[t]he decisions of the district
courts of appeal represent the law of Florida unless and until they are overruled by
this Court.’ ” (emphasis added)). In fact, the rule announced in Pardo was not
designed or intended to describe the parameters of Fourth Amendment search and
seizure law, especially for a case pending review in this Court; rather, it was a rule
geared toward promoting judicial convenience in Florida’s uniquely constructed
judicial system. E.g., Willis, 148 So. 3d at 483 (“We are not inclined to believe
that the rule announced in Pardo should be used in the Fourth Amendment context
to determine whether evidence from a warrantless search is admissible.”).
Moreover, while an opinion from a district court of appeal may be binding on
lower trial courts in Florida under a Pardo theory, this fact does not necessarily
justify law enforcement’s reliance on that decision as “binding” law authorizing a
warrantless cell phone search, especially when on actual notice of the pending
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review in this Court. Indeed, this issue can be likened to that of Schrödinger’s Cat,
where a decision of a district court of appeal may be both binding and not binding,
while under review in this Court, until a decision is rendered by this Court
ultimately answering the question.
Additionally, Davis made clear that the exclusionary rule is only to be
applied if the underlying deterrent effect on law enforcement will be achieved,
which was found not to be the case in Davis. 564 U.S. at 237 (“Where suppression
fails to yield ‘appreciable deterrence,’ exclusion is ‘clearly . . . unwarranted.’ ”
(quoting United States v. Janis, 428 U.S. 433, 454 (1976))). In Carpenter’s case,
however, suppression would further the exclusionary rule’s intended deterrence
because law enforcement officers would now, in areas of unsettled law, be
reminded to err on the side of caution by obtaining a search warrant instead of
relying on nonfinal, unsettled questions of law still under active review in this
Court. The “conscientious police work” discussed in Davis requires that officers
not engage in warrantless searches unless clearly authorized by law to do so. Thus,
if the law on a particular issue is still developing, it is not reasonable for officers to
rely on questionable decisions in pipeline cases to justify warrantless searches
when the nonfinal nature of the decision is noted on the face of the opinion. Our
conclusion is again buttressed by the Second District’s opinion in Willis.
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Perhaps the most instructive aspect of Davis, for our purposes, is Justice
Sotomayor’s opinion concurring in judgment, which predicted the issue arising in
the present case and explicitly stated that the holding in Davis did not answer the
question of the good-faith exception’s application to areas of law that were
unsettled at the time of the search. Davis, 564 U.S. at 250-51 (Sotomayor, J.,
concurring in judgment). This is such a case. Aside from the national variation on
the issue of warrantless cell phone searches incident to arrest, the very fact that the
case on which the officers relied was under active review in this Court indicates
that the law was not yet settled as to the issue of warrantless cell phone searches in
Florida at the time of Carpenter’s search for purposes of the Davis analysis. The
First District’s certified question to this Court only furthers the notion that the
officers in Carpenter’s case should not have relied on Smallwood I as being the
final controlling judicial precedent in this area of constitutional law while the case
was certified to this Court for final decision. Since the issue decided in Smallwood
I was one concerning a rapidly developing area of unsettled law at the time of the
officers’ alleged reliance, the State’s reliance on the United States Supreme
Court’s holding in Davis to justify the search is misplaced. Furthermore, the
dissent attempts to broadly force cases with vastly different facts into Davis’s
application, which is precisely what Justice Sotomayor predicted would happen.
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Finally, in determining whether exclusion is warranted in this case, we must
determine whether the deterrent benefits of exclusion outweigh the heavy societal
costs.
If, as the Government argues, all rulings resolving unsettled Fourth
Amendment questions should be nonretroactive, then, in close cases,
law enforcement officials would have little incentive to err on the side
of constitutional behavior. Official awareness of the dubious
constitutionality of a practice would be counterbalanced by official
certainty that, so long as the Fourth Amendment law in the area
remained unsettled, evidence obtained through the questionable
practice would be excluded only in the one case definitively resolving
the unsettled question.
Davis, 564 U.S. at 250-51 (Sotomayor, J., concurring in judgment) (quoting United
States v. Johnson, 457 U.S. 537, 561 (1982)); see also Lee, 862 F. Supp. 2d at 569
(“If law enforcement could ‘rely on non-binding authority . . .’ officers would ‘beg
forgiveness rather than ask permission in ambiguous situations involving . . . basic
civil rights.’ ” (citations omitted)). The scenario described above is the exact
scenario at issue in Carpenter’s case. Holding that the good-faith exception applies
when officers rely on developing law that facially demonstrates the status of
further review is a slippery slope which essentially abrogates the exclusionary rule
in cases concerning unsettled law. The deterrent benefits of exclusion in
Carpenter’s case outweigh the societal costs because exclusion reminds law
enforcement officers that warrantless searches are the exception to the rule and that
this exception should only be used when specifically authorized by law. The rule
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on searches in questionable areas of law is simple and unequivocal: Get a warrant.
See Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. 443, 454-55 (1971) (“[T]he most basic
constitutional rule in this area is that ‘searches conducted outside the judicial
process, without prior approval by judge or magistrate, are per se unreasonable
under the Fourth Amendment—subject only to a few specifically established and
well-delineated exceptions.’ ” (emphasis added)); see also Riley v. California, 134
S. Ct. 2473, 2493 (2014) (“Our cases have historically recognized that the warrant
requirement is ‘an important working part of our machinery of government,’ not
merely ‘an inconvenience to be somehow “weighed” against the claims of police
efficiency.’ ” (quoting Coolidge, 403 U.S. at 481, 491)).
Therefore, contrary to the dissent, we hold that, under Davis, the good-faith
exception to the exclusionary rule does not apply to Carpenter’s case because the
officers were not relying on the type of longstanding, thirty-year appellate
precedent at issue in Davis, but rather on a nonfinal, pipeline case still under active
review in this Court at the time of the search.
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we quash the First District’s decision below in Carpenter and
hold that the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule does not apply to the
officers’ warrantless search of Carpenter’s cell phone in this case. Moreover,
although Willis reached the correct result, we do not adopt the reasoning used in
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reaching that result. As such, we disapprove of the opinion in Willis to the extent
that it conflicts with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
LABARGA, C.J., and PARIENTE, and QUINCE, JJ., concur.
LAWSON, J., dissents with an opinion, in which CANADY and POLSTON, JJ.,
concur.
NO MOTION FOR REHEARING WILL BE ALLOWED.
LAWSON, J., dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. Article I, section 12, of the Florida Constitution, as
amended in 1982, mirrors the protection against unreasonable searches and
seizures found in the Fourth Amendment, but also mandates that this protection
“shall be construed in conformity with the 4th Amendment to the United States
Constitution, as interpreted by the United States Supreme Court.” Id.3 Clearly, we
are bound by the United States Supreme Court’s Fourth Amendment jurisprudence,
including the majority opinion in Davis v. United States, 564 U.S. 229 (2011).
In Davis, the United States Supreme Court held that the exclusionary rule is
not to be applied “when the police conduct a search in objectively reasonable
reliance on binding judicial precedent.” Id. at 239, 241. The majority mistakenly
3. “The commentary to the 1982 amendment states that the amendment was
necessary to modify the exclusionary rule [in Florida] and to allow adherence by
the Florida courts to the good faith exception adopted by the federal courts.” Crain
v. State, 914 So. 2d 1015, 1022-23 (Fla. 5th DCA 2005) (en banc).
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fails to follow this binding precedent and, instead, applies the analysis in Justice
Sotomayor’s separate opinion, in which she expresses her disagreement with the
rule announced by the six-person Davis majority but explains that she would
nevertheless reach the same result in Davis, given the facts of that case. By
“facts,” here, I mean the state of the law at issue in Davis. In other words, Justice
Sotomayor would have excluded the evidence in that case if the law relied upon by
police was merely “binding precedent,” but agreed to application of the “good faith
exception” in Davis because the law in question had also become well-settled. See
id. at 250 (Sotomayor, J., concurring in judgment). That is the analysis of our
majority here. However, we are bound to follow Davis, which properly fashioned
a different rule—one grounded in the Davis majority’s clear understanding of the
purpose and limits of the exclusionary rule, as well as the interests at stake.
As explained in Davis:
The Fourth Amendment protects the right of the people to be
secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
unreasonable searches and seizures. The Amendment says nothing
about suppressing evidence obtained in violation of this command.
That rule—the exclusionary rule—is a prudential doctrine, created by
this Court to compel respect for the constitutional guaranty.
Exclusion is not a personal constitutional right, nor is it designed to
redress the injury occasioned by an unconstitutional search. The
rule’s sole purpose, we have repeatedly held, is to deter future Fourth
Amendment violations. Our cases have thus limited the rule’s
operation to situations in which this purpose is thought most
efficaciously served. Where suppression fails to yield appreciable
deterrence, exclusion is clearly unwarranted.
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Id. at 236-37 (internal citations, quotation marks, and quotations omitted). The
Davis majority further explained that, although “[r]eal deterrent value is a
necessary condition for exclusion, . . . it is not a sufficient one.” Id. at 237
(internal quotation omitted). This is the critical juncture at which our majority, like
Justice Sotomayor, diverges from the opinion of the Court in Davis in its
philosophical view as to how the exclusionary rule should be applied. Both would
prefer a rule grounded solely in deterrence of potential Fourth Amendment
violations. But, as explained in Davis:
The analysis must also account for the substantial social costs
generated by the rule [because] [e]xclusion exacts a heavy toll on both
the judicial system and society at large. It almost always requires
courts to ignore reliable, trustworthy evidence bearing on guilt or
innocence. And its bottom-line effect, in many cases, is to suppress
the truth and set the criminal loose in the community without
punishment. Our cases hold that society must swallow this bitter pill
when necessary, but only as a last resort. For exclusion to be
appropriate, the deterrence benefits of suppression must outweigh its
heavy costs.
Id. (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
Factoring in the reality of these societal costs, the United States Supreme
Court’s focus has shifted from the deterrent effect of exclusion to “the flagrancy of
the police misconduct at issue.” Id. at 238 (internal quotation omitted). Given that
focus, it is easy to see why the United States Supreme Court chose the rule that it
did in this context over the rule that Justice Sotomayor and our majority prefer:
There is simply no way that reliance on binding legal precedent—whether well-
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settled or not—can be cast as police misconduct, much less “flagrant” police
misconduct.
The officer in this case relied upon case law that bound every trial court in
Florida. The fact that the opinion had been issued by an intermediate appellate
court, or that the appellate court had certified the question to our Court, does not
change the relevant “facts”: (1) at the time of the search in this case, only one
Florida appellate court had addressed the issue; (2) this sole appellate opinion held
that no warrant was needed to search the contents of a cell phone lawfully seized
incident to a valid arrest; and (3) this law was binding precedent throughout the
State of Florida. Pardo v. State, 596 So. 2d 665, 666 (Fla. 1992) (holding that
decisions of a district court of appeal constitute binding appellate precedent and
“represent the law of Florida unless and until they are overruled by this Court”
(internal quotation omitted)).
Our majority’s attempted explanation of the Davis majority opinion as also
justified based upon the “well-settled” understanding of the “search incident to
arrest” rule announced in New York v. Belton, 453 U.S. 454 (1981), is simply not
plausible. Although Davis recognized that Belton was “[f]or years . . . widely
understood to have set down a simple, bright-line rule,” Davis, 564 U.S. at 233, the
Davis majority pointed out that “[n]ot every court . . . agreed with this reading of
Belton.” Id. at 234. However, the only contrary case cited by the Davis majority,
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State v. Gant, 162 P.3d 640 (Ariz. 2007), aff’d, Arizona v. Gant, 556 U.S. 332
(2009), was decided approximately three months after Mr. Davis’s arrest “[o]n an
April evening in 2007 . . . in Greenville, Alabama.” Davis, 564 U.S. at 234-235.
Clearly, the Davis majority could have framed the issue as preferred by Justice
Sotomayor with the same result.
Instead, the Davis majority analyzed the issue based upon controlling
precedent from the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, which was binding in the
Middle District of Alabama, where and when the search occurred. Id. at 235, 239-
40. The Court ultimately concluded that because police conducted the search in
reliance upon “binding judicial precedent” in their federal district, the “absence of
police culpability dooms Davis’s claim [that the exclusionary rule should apply].”
Id. at 239-40. Were we to apply this same analysis here, we would disapprove the
Second District’s opinion and approve the First District’s opinion—and the
evidence in this case would not be suppressed.
Finally, it is worth noting that our majority’s opinion is antithetical to a
significant proposition underlying the good-faith exception, which is also
addressed by the Davis majority: the exclusionary rule should not be used to
penalize an officer for judicial errors. Id. at 241. This is not a new or novel idea,
but the very “rationale behind” the good-faith exception, beginning with the
seminal United States Supreme Court case addressing the exception, United States
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v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897 (1984). See State v. McGill, 125 So. 3d 343, 352 (Fla. 5th
DCA 2013) (“The rationale behind the good faith exception is that the
exclusionary rule ‘is designed to deter police misconduct rather than to punish the
errors of judges and magistrates.’ ” (quoting Leon, 468 U.S. at 916)). It would
defy logic to suggest that a rule designed to allow law enforcement to rely upon the
judgment of a single magistrate would have the same law enforcement officer
question a rule of law announced in precedent from the appellate court binding in
his or her jurisdiction. Cf. State v. Watt, 946 So. 2d 108, 110 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007)
(“In order to reject the application of the good faith exception in this case, we
would need to conclude that an objectively reasonable police officer would have a
better understanding of the law of search and seizure and probable cause than did
the trial judge who issued the warrant.”).
In contrast to this Court’s novel approach, the majority in Davis would
encourage law enforcement officers to stay abreast of the law in their jurisdictions
and govern themselves based upon the pronouncements in binding appellate
precedent:
About all that exclusion would deter in this case is
conscientious police work. Responsible law-enforcement officers will
take care to learn what is required of them under Fourth Amendment
precedent and will conform their conduct to these rules. But by the
same token, when binding appellate precedent specifically authorizes
a particular police practice, well-trained officers will and should use
that tool to fulfill their crime-detection and public-safety
responsibilities. An officer who conducts a search in reliance on
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binding appellate precedent does no more than act as a reasonable
officer would and should act under the circumstances. The deterrent
effect of exclusion in such a case can only be to discourage the officer
from doing his duty.
That is not the kind of deterrence the exclusionary rule seeks to
foster. We have stated before, and we reaffirm today, that the harsh
sanction of exclusion should not be applied to deter objectively
reasonable law enforcement activity. Evidence obtained during a
search conducted in reasonable reliance on binding precedent is not
subject to the exclusionary rule.
Davis, 564 U.S. at 241 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
We should apply Davis, as our Constitution requires, and hold that because
the officers in this case acted in good-faith reliance on binding appellate precedent,
the sexually explicit messages and images revealed during their search of Mr.
Carpenter’s cell phone are not subject to the exclusionary rule. Therefore, I
dissent.
CANADY and POLSTON, JJ., concur.
Application for Review of the Decision of the District Court of Appeal – Direct
Conflict of Decisions
First District - Case No. 1D13-6199
(Bay County)
Ross A. Keene of Ross Keene Law, P.A., Pensacola, Florida,
for Petitioner
Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Trisha Meggs Pate, Bureau Chief, and
Virginia Harris, Assistant Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida,
for Respondent
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