05/22/2019
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
May 23, 2018 Session1
STATE OF TENNESSEE V. ANTHONY JEROME MILLER
Appeal by Permission from the Court of Criminal Appeals
Criminal Court for Greene County
No. 15CR342 Alex E. Pearson, Judge
No. E2016-01779-SC-R11-CD
We granted permission to appeal in this case in order to determine whether Tennessee
Code Annotated section 39-17-1007, which provides that “[n]o process, except as
otherwise provided, shall be issued for the violation of [the statutes proscribing the
offenses of sexual exploitation of a minor] unless it is issued upon the application of the
district attorney general of the district,” applies to search warrants sought and obtained
prior to the commencement of a prosecution for sexual exploitation of a minor. In this
case, a police officer applied for and obtained the search warrant by which pornographic
images of minors were recovered from the Defendant’s computer. The Defendant sought
to suppress the evidence on the basis that the search warrant was not applied for by the
district attorney general. The trial court denied the Defendant’s motion to suppress, and
the Defendant subsequently pled guilty to one count of sexual exploitation of a minor,
reserving as a certified question the efficacy of the search warrant. The Court of
Criminal Appeals affirmed the trial court’s ruling and the Defendant’s conviction. We
hold that Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-17-1007 does not require search warrants
to be applied for by the office of the district attorney general. Accordingly, we affirm the
judgment below.
Tenn. R. App. P. 11 Appeal by Permission;
Judgment of the Court of Criminal Appeals Affirmed
JEFFREY S. BIVINS, C.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which CORNELIA A. CLARK,
SHARON G. LEE, HOLLY KIRBY, and ROGER A. PAGE, JJ., joined.
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We heard oral argument in this case at Tennessee Technological University in Cookeville,
Tennessee, as part of the Tennessee American Legion Boys State S.C.A.L.E.S. (Supreme Court
Advancing Legal Education for Students) project.
Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Andrée S. Blumstein, Solicitor
General; Jonathan David Shaub, Assistant Solicitor General; Dan E. Armstrong, District
Attorney General; and Ritchie Collins, Assistant District Attorney General, for the
appellee, the State of Tennessee.
Leroy Tipton, Jr., Greeneville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Anthony Jerome Miller.
OPINION
Factual and Procedural Background
The Defendant, Anthony Jerome Miller, was charged with one count of knowingly
possessing more than fifty images of a minor engaged in sexual activity in violation of
the statute proscribing the offense of sexual exploitation of a minor, a Class C felony.
See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-1003(a), (d) (2014). The Defendant was alleged to have
committed the offense on or about January 8, 2015.
The Defendant was indicted after Detective Michael O’Keefe of the Morristown
Police Department obtained and executed a search warrant for the Defendant’s residence
and computers. During the search, Detective O’Keefe seized the Defendant’s computer,
and the ensuing forensic examination of the computer yielded the illegal images. After
being indicted, the Defendant filed a motion to suppress the evidence seized during the
search.
The Defendant based his motion to suppress on Tennessee Code Annotated
section 39-17-1007, which provides that “[n]o process, except as otherwise provided,
shall be issued for the violation of [section] 39-17-1003 . . . unless it is issued upon the
application of the district attorney general of the district.” The Defendant contended that
the search warrant constituted “process” under the statute and, because the search warrant
was obtained by a police officer, the search warrant was void under section -1007. At the
hearing on the Defendant’s motion to suppress, the following proof was adduced.
Investigator Jason Mark Lowe of the Buchanan County Sheriff’s Office located in
Buchanan County, Virginia, testified that he was assigned to investigate internet crimes
against children. On December 23, 2014, he was investigating an internet provider (“IP”)
address that was possibly involved in the “possession and distribution of certain child
sexual exploitation images.” Investigator Lowe downloaded images of child
pornography from this IP address.
Investigator Lowe obtained two subpoenas and served them on the internet
provider. He obtained from the internet provider the subscriber information pertaining to
the IP address from which he had downloaded the pornographic images. Initially, the
information he obtained indicated that the subscriber was located in Smith County,
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Virginia, but he later learned that the subscriber actually was located in Greene County,
Tennessee. Given this information, Investigator Lowe contacted Detective Michael
O’Keefe of the Morristown, Tennessee, Police Department who also investigated internet
crimes against children. Investigator Lowe sent Detective O’Keefe the materials that he
had downloaded from the IP address.
After reviewing the materials sent to him by Investigator Lowe, Detective
O’Keefe obtained a search warrant for the residence associated with the subscriber of the
subject IP address.2 Before doing so, Detective O’Keefe called the District Attorney
General’s office and spoke with Assistant District Attorney General Cecil Mills on
January 12, 2015. General Mills indicated his agreement with Detective O’Keefe’s
intention to seek a search warrant.
Detective O’Keefe prepared an eight-page affidavit dated January 28, 2015, and
obtained a search warrant on that same day. Detective O’Keefe testified that he executed
the search warrant on January 29, 2015. Initially, no one was present at the residence
when Detective O’Keefe began his search. During the search, however, the Defendant
arrived.
Detective O’Keefe read the Defendant his Miranda rights and asked the Defendant
to sign a waiver. The Defendant refused. Nevertheless, Detective O’Keefe proceeded to
question the Defendant. Detective O’Keefe told the Defendant that he was not under
arrest, and Detective O’Keefe testified that he did not arrest the Defendant that day.
Pursuant to the search warrant, Detective O’Keefe removed the following items
from the Defendant’s residence:
a Westell wireless router, a Logitech flash drive, Kingston SD card,
Kingston micro SD adapter, LG flip phone, three pieces of paper with
notes, eight gigabytes Scandisk memory stick, five CDRs, HP computer,
three VHS tapes, a JVC video camera, a 32 gigabyte Scandisk from a
camera and Bart router and Samsung cell phone and ninety CD and DVDs.
Detective O’Keefe subsequently performed a “computer forensics exam” on these items.
His examination revealed “seventy-five images and four videos of child pornography.”
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In the affidavit in support of the search warrant he was seeking, Detective O’Keefe stated that
he was a detective with the Morristown Police Department “assigned to conduct criminal investigations in
Morristown, Hamblen County, Tennessee.” The Defendant’s residence is located in Greene County,
Tennessee, and the Defendant was prosecuted in Greene County, Tennessee. The judge who issued the
search warrant was a judge of Greene County. The Defendant has raised no issue in his certified question
regarding Detective O’Keefe’s participation in a Greene County investigation and prosecution.
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On cross-examination, Detective O’Keefe testified that he did not request the
District Attorney General’s office to assist him in obtaining the search warrant.
At the end of the hearing, the trial court ruled as follows:
The court finds, number one, that the issuance of a search warrant is not
process as is contemplated under 39-17-1007. The court finds that that is
referring to something that would be of [sic] an arrest warrant like a
presentment or an indictment or an arrest warrant. That was not the case
here.
The court finds that a search warrant is an investigatory tool. There
was no way at the time that the officers executed the search warrant, due to
the fact the nature of computers and computer-related crime, they didn’t
know if somebody had hacked into this gentleman’s account, had used this
IP address, didn’t know what was happening. They just knew there was
probable cause to believe that there was going to be child pornography
found on a computer at that location and they acted on it. So the court
finds, number one, there was no process.
Number two, the court finds even if a search warrant is process, the
investigators complied with that by speaking with the District Attorney’s
Office and not just speaking with the District Attorney’s Office but
specifically putting in the affidavit that they had consulted with General
Cecil Mills and that was contained in the affidavit and that would be
sufficient to put the court on notice that, in fact, the District Attorney’s
office was approving this application.
It is the opinion of the court that a search warrant is not process as
contemplated by 39-17-1007. But even if it is, the court is confident that
the District Attorney’s office sufficiently approved this application.
Thus, the trial court denied the Defendant’s motion to suppress, rejecting the Defendant’s
argument that the search warrant and supporting affidavit were invalid under Tennessee
Code Annotated section 39-17-1007.
On August 19, 2016, the Defendant pled guilty to the charged offense and was
sentenced to six years of incarceration, suspended after the service of 180 days. As part
of his plea, the Defendant reserved the following certified question of law: “Whether the
affidavit in support of search warrant and search warrant were subject to and complied
with the requirements of T.C.A. § 39-17-1007?”
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Upon its review, the Court of Criminal Appeals initially determined that the
Defendant had properly reserved the certified question of law. State v. Miller, No.
E2016-01779-CCA-R3-CD, 2017 WL 2839745, at *4-5 (Tenn. Crim. App. July 3, 2017),
perm. app. granted (Tenn. Nov. 16, 2017). Turning to the merits of the Defendant’s
issue, our intermediate appellate court agreed with the trial court and the State that the
statute did not apply to search warrants. Id. at *6-8. Accordingly, the Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment. Id. at *8.
Because this is an issue of first impression before this Court, and because the
decisions of different Court of Criminal Appeals panels on this issue are inconsistent, we
granted the Defendant’s application for permission to appeal.
Analysis
The resolution of this case requires us to construe a statute. We begin, then, with a
reprisal of our role in statutory construction:
The overriding purpose of a court in construing a statute is to
ascertain and effectuate the legislative intent, without either expanding or
contracting the statute’s intended scope. Legislative intent is first and
foremost reflected in the language of the statute. We presume that the
Legislature intended each word in a statute to have a specific purpose and
meaning. The words used in a statute are to be given their natural and
ordinary meaning, and, because words are known by the company they
keep, we construe them in the context in which they appear and in light of
the general purpose of the statute. We endeavor to construe statutes in a
reasonable manner which avoids statutory conflict and provides for
harmonious operation of the laws.
Wallace v. Metro. Gov’t of Nashville, 546 S.W.3d 47, 52-53 (Tenn. 2018) (quotation
marks and citations omitted). Additionally,
It is the duty of the Court to reconcile inconsistent or repugnant provisions;
to place a construction thereon which will not be prejudicial to the public
interest; to construe a statute so that no part will be inoperative,
superfluous, void or insignificant, and the one section will not destroy
another; and further to give effect to every word, phrase, clause and
sentence of the act in order to carry out the legislative intent.
Tidwell v. Collins, 522 S.W.2d 674, 676-77 (Tenn. 1975) (citations omitted).
The statute at issue in this matter, Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-17-1007,
provides, in full, as follows: “No process, except as otherwise provided, shall be issued
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for the violation of [sections] 39-17-1003—39-17-1005 unless it is issued upon the
application of the district attorney general of the district.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-
1007 (2014). The issue in this case is whether the “process” referred to in section 39-17-
1007 includes a search warrant.
Section -1007 is a provision contained within Part 10 of our criminal code, which
Part is “known and may be cited as the ‘Tennessee Protection of Children Against Sexual
Exploitation Act of 1990.’” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-1001 (2014) (“the Act”). The Act
currently contains eight sections. Section 39-17-1001 sets forth the title of the Act;
section -1002 sets forth definitions applicable to the Act (but does not include a definition
of “process”); and sections -1003 through -1005 set forth the offenses of sexual
exploitation of a minor, aggravated sexual exploitation of a minor, and especially
aggravated sexual exploitation of a minor. Section -1006 sets forth provisions allowing
the district attorney general to request a temporary restraining order or a temporary
injunction to prevent the removal of suspected child pornography from the jurisdiction
prior to indictment. Section -1008, the final provision of the Act and not enacted until
2006, provides for the “[f]orfeiture of any conveyance or real or personal property used
in commission of an offense under [the Act].”
Our Court of Criminal Appeals has reached inconsistent results on whether the
“process” referred to in section -1007 includes search warrants. In State v. Davis, E2003-
02162-CCA-R3-CD, 2004 WL 2378251, at *7 (Tenn. Crim. App. Oct. 25, 2004), aff’d
on other grounds 185 S.W.3d 338, 347 (Tenn. 2006), our intermediate appellate court
considered a defendant who had been convicted by a jury of four counts of rape of a child
and one count of aggravated sexual exploitation of a minor. 2004 WL 2378251, at *1.
The defendant contended, among other things, that evidence seized pursuant to a search
warrant should have been suppressed under section -1007 because “the District Attorney
General’s office had no involvement in seeking or obtaining issuance of the search
warrant.” Id. at *7. The Court of Criminal Appeals upheld the search warrant as
“independently justified by the alleged violations of rape of a child,” id., but stated in
passing that section -1007 “is broad enough to include a search warrant and . . .
involvement of the district attorney general was required under the Sexual Exploitation of
Minors Act,” id. The intermediate appellate court engaged in no particular analysis to
arrive at this conclusion, which clearly was dictum.
Several years later, the Court of Criminal Appeals reviewed a case involving a
defendant who had been convicted of, inter alia, four counts of sexual exploitation of a
minor. State v. Doria, No. M2014-01318-CCA-R3-CD, 2016 WL 1694120, at *1 (Tenn.
Crim. App. Apr. 26, 2016), perm. app. denied (Tenn. Aug. 17, 2016). The defendant
filed a motion to suppress evidence that had been gathered from his home pursuant to a
search warrant, arguing that the warrant was void because it was not issued upon the
application of the district attorney general as required by section -1007. Id. at *6. The
Doria panel characterized the dictum in Davis as a holding, id. at *8, but distinguished
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the case before it on the basis that the assistant district attorney general had signed the
application for the warrant at issue, id. Noting that “the District Attorney General
possesses the authority to delegate his duties under Tennessee Code Annotated section
8-7-103(7),” id. at *9, the Doria panel held that the search warrant complied with section
-1007 and that the defendant was not entitled to suppression on this basis, id.
In the instant case, the Court of Criminal Appeals concluded that “‘process’ as
used in section 39-17-1007 was not intended to include search warrants.” Miller, 2017
WL 2839745, at *7. The Miller panel distinguished Davis as “inapposite because the
court ultimately relied on other facts to resolve the issues before it on appeal.” Id. The
Miller panel did not refer to Doria. Instead, it relied upon an analysis of other provisions
within the same Act.
For various reasons, rather than simply analyzing section -1007 within the limited
context of the Act, we think the better approach is to take into consideration the general
law regarding the issuance of search warrants. In Title 40, Chapter 6 of our criminal
code, the legislature has set forth the general law regarding the issuance of search
warrants. See Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 40-6-101 through -110 (2018). Not a single one of
these provisions so much as hints that applications for search warrants must be made,
under any circumstances, only by a district attorney general. Similarly, the general law
applicable to search warrants set out in Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(a)
contains no such limitation. To the contrary, Rule 41(a) specifically provides that “[t]he
district attorney general, assistant district attorney general, criminal investigator, or any
other law-enforcement officer may request a search warrant.” Tenn. R. Crim. P. 41(a)
(emphasis added). Because Rule 41(a) specifically lists those who may apply for a
search warrant, and because the General Assembly has not expressly departed from this
general law in section -1007, we should not interpret section -1007’s use of the general
term “process” as including search warrants and thereby limiting the very specific
provisions of Rule 41(a). Had the General Assembly intended section -1007 to include
search warrants, we are confident that it would have said so explicitly.
Moreover, the Defendant’s arguments that the process referred to in section -1007
includes search warrants are not persuasive. The Defendant’s primary contention is that
the Davis case properly construed section -1007 as applying to search warrants. As set
forth above, however, the statement in Davis upon which the Defendant relies is mere
dictum and, moreover, is unsupported by any specific or compelling analysis. For the
reasons set forth above, we reject the Davis panel’s claim that section -1007 “is broad
enough to include a search warrant.”
The Defendant also argues that Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-17-125
supports his position. Section 40-17-125 allows a district attorney general or assistant
district attorney general to issue an administrative subpoena to an internet service
provider for the production of records “upon reasonable cause to believe that an internet
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service account has been used in the exploitation or attempted exploitation of a minor.”
Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-17-125(a) (2018). This statute was passed in 2010. See 2010
Tenn. Pub. Acts ch. 613, § 1. Because section 40-17-125 was passed many years after
section -1007, and because it makes no reference to section -1007, and because it pertains
specifically to subpoenas and not to search warrants, we also deem this argument
unpersuasive and, therefore, reject it.
In sum, we hold that the “process” referred to in section -1007 does not include
search warrants. To the extent that Davis and Doria hold otherwise, they are overruled.
Conclusion
The search warrant and supporting affidavit at issue were not required to comply
with Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-17-1007. Accordingly, although based upon
different reasoning, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Criminal Appeals.
______________________________________
JEFFREY S. BIVINS, CHIEF JUSTICE
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