IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 18-2202
Filed December 18, 2019
STATE OF IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
TROY J. FORD,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Cheryl E. Traum,
District Associate Judge.
A defendant appeals his conviction for third-offense possession of
marijuana. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Mark C. Smith, State Appellate Defender, (until withdrawal) and Shellie L.
Knipfer, Assistant Appellate Defender, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Tyler J. Buller, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
Considered by Doyle, P.J., Tabor, J., and Vogel, S.J.*
*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206 (2019).
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TABOR, Judge.
A Davenport police officer mistakenly arrested Troy Ford based on an
outstanding warrant for a different individual. Ford argues the search incident to
that invalid arrest was unreasonable and the district court should have suppressed
the marijuana found. Because the officer did not act reasonably in searching Ford
before verifying his identity as the person named in the warrant, we reverse the
suppression ruling and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. Facts and Prior Proceedings
Davenport police officers Ryan Leabo and Angela Jarrin responded to a
domestic disturbance just after 10:00 p.m. in late January 2018, according to the
minutes of testimony. The dispatch reported “a black male had been assaulting a
white female on the porch.” When the officers arrived, they could hear arguing
inside the house.
Finding six people inside, the officers separated to speak with different
factions. The residents asked Officer Jarrin to remove a female guest. That guest
told the officer the disturbance at the house was “only a verbal argument.”
Meanwhile, Officer Leabo asked resident Troy Ford to come outside so he “could
interview him about the incident.” Officer Leabo wrote the following in his case
report narrative:
I gathered Troy’s information and ran a standard wanted check on
Troy. Dispatch informed me he had multiple warrants. I asked
dispatch if the warrants were valid. Dispatch informed me they were.
I placed Troy in properly spaced and double locked handcuffs. Troy
stated he did not believe the warrants were valid and he had been
mixed up with another Troy Ford before.
I walked Troy back to my squad car. A search incident to
arrest revealed 2.10 grams of marijuana (confirmed with a Valtox
test) in the defendant’s right pocket. I initially was not sure if the
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narcotics was marijuana due to the fact it was finely ground. Troy
excitedly uttered it was marijuana when I asked him if it was heroin.
Dispatch asked me to confirm Troy’s information. I gathered
Troy’s social security number and included that with his name and
date of birth. Dispatch informed me they thought I had a different
Troy Ford and the person I had was not wanted.
The State charged Ford with possession of marijuana, third or subsequent
offense. See Iowa Code § 124.401(5) (2018). Ford moved to suppress the
marijuana, alleging the search violated his rights under the Fourth Amendment to
the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 8 of the Iowa Constitution. The
parties stipulated to the facts asserted in the defense motion and the State’s
resistance, presenting no evidence at the suppression hearing. The district court
denied the motion to suppress.
After that denial of his motion to suppress, Ford waived his right to a jury
and agreed to a bench trial on the minutes of testimony. The court found Ford
guilty as charged. Ford now appeals. He raises two claims: (1) the district court
erred in denying his motion to suppress and (2) the court erred by not conducting
a full hearing to determine whether his stipulation to the prior drug offenses was
knowing and voluntary. Because our ruling on his first claim is dispositive, we do
not reach his second issue.
II. Scope and Standard of Review
“Because this case concerns the constitutional right to be free from
unreasonable searches and seizures, our review of the district court’s suppression
ruling is de novo.” State v. Gaskins, 866 N.W.2d 1, 5 (Iowa 2015) (citing State v.
Watts, 801 N.W.2d 845, 850 (Iowa 2011)). Our task is to evaluate independently
the totality of the circumstances appearing in the record—that includes the
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evidence from both the suppression hearing and the trial. State v. Vance, 790
N.W.2d 775, 780 (Iowa 2010).
III. Analysis
We presume Officer Leabo’s warrantless search of Ford’s pocket was
unreasonable unless the State can establish an exception to the warrant
requirement. See Gaskins, 866 N.W.2d at 7. Here, the State relies on the
exception for searches incident to arrest. “A lawful arrest is, of course, a predicate
for a lawful search incident to the arrest.” State v. Ceron, 573 N.W.2d 587, 589
(Iowa 1997).
So first we must ask: Was Ford’s arrest lawful? The State acknowledges
Officer Leabo made a mistake in arresting Ford. The warrants flagged by dispatch
were for a different person.
But the State claims that mistake was reasonable, citing a line of cases in
which the police mistook the arrestee for the subject of a warrant. See Hill v.
California, 401 U.S. 797, 802 (1971); State v. Payton, 401 N.W.2d 219, 220 (Iowa
Ct. App. 1986). Hill held: “When the police have probable cause to arrest one
party, and when they reasonably mistake a second party for the first party, then
the arrest of the second party is a valid arrest.” 401 U.S. at 802. The Hill court
emphasized the objective nature of the test, explaining “subjective good-faith belief
would not in itself justify either the arrest or the subsequent search.” Id. at 804.
“But sufficient probability, not certainty, is the touchstone of reasonableness under
the Fourth Amendment,” according to Hill, which found “on the record before us
the officers’ mistake was understandable and the arrest a reasonable response to
the situation facing them at the time.” Id.
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In Payton, our court followed Hill, finding the mistaken arrest of a son on his
father’s outstanding warrant was reasonable based on their identical names and
the son’s lack of proper identification. 401 N.W.2d at 221. Police stopped Donald
Devern Payton II driving a van with a temporary paper plate. Id. at 220. When
asked for his driver’s license, Payton instead handed officers a Department of
Transportation form. Id. The officers ran a check based on that form and found
an outstanding warrant and a driver’s license suspension notice for a Donald
Payton. Id. Police arrested the driver and searched the van, finding illegal guns.
Id. Police later discovered the warrant was for Payton’s father. We reasoned:
“Generally evidence is properly admissible against a person mistakenly arrested if
(1) the arresting officer acts in good faith and (2) has reasonable, articulable
grounds to believe the suspect is the intended arrestee.” Id. at 220–21.
But in a more recent case, our court found a mistaken-identity arrest to be
unreasonable. See State v. Jacobsen, No. 06-1867, 2007 WL 3085910, at *3
(Iowa Ct. App. Oct. 24, 2007). We invalidated a search incident to arrest where
the officer arrested Joshua Jacobsen based on word from dispatch that a person
with the same name had an outstanding arrest warrant. Id. Although Jacobsen
told the officer he was not the person identified in the warrant, the officer performed
the search without verifying the arrest warrant against Jacobsen’s social security
number. Id.
Jacobsen cited Hill, 401 U.S. at 803, for the common-sense notion that
“aliases and false identifications are not uncommon” in this context. Jacobsen,
2007 WL 3085910, at *3. At the same time, we counterbalanced that reality with
this “apt” advisory: “Should doubt as to the correct identity of the subject of [the]
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warrant arise, the arresting officer obviously should make immediate reasonable
efforts to confirm or deny the applicability of the warrant to the detained individual.”
Id. (quoting Sanders v. United States, 339 A.2d 373, 379 (D.C. 1975)).
Ford’s situation is closer to the facts of Jacobsen than to those in Payton.
Like the officer in Jacobsen, Officer Leabo did not take immediate reasonable
efforts to confirm or deny that the arrest warrant located by dispatch applied to this
Troy Ford. The officer failed to do so even after the accused explained he had
been “mixed up before” with another Troy Ford.
To defend the suppression ruling, the State contends: “Requiring police to
engage in some level of undefined additional verification in every case is an
unworkable rule that is inconsistent with the reasonableness mandate contained
in both the Fourth Amendment and Article I, section 8.” The State’s contention is
overblown. It was not unworkable for the officer to give Ford’s social security
number to dispatch to be sure he was the person named in the warrant. Indeed,
Officer Leabo did so moments after finding the marijuana in Ford’s pocket. The
State cannot explain why Officer Leabo needed to effectuate the arrest before
ensuring one was authorized. With the minimal additional effort of providing
dispatch Ford’s social security number at the same time as his name, Officer
Leabo would have discovered the information did not match and spared Ford this
unjustified intrusion on his liberty.
The State agrees providing only a suspect’s name when investigating
possible search warrants, as in Jacobsen, may be unreasonable. See 2007 WL
3085910, at *2. But the State asserts Officer Leabo gave dispatch more than just
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Ford’s name before the arrest. Citing the suppression ruling, the State contends
the officer provided the defendant’s name, date of birth, ethnicity, and gender.
Because Ford’s constitutional rights are at stake, we review his suppression
challenge by independently examining the totality of circumstances as shown by
the entire record.1 See State v. Pals, 805 N.W.2d 767, 771 (Iowa 2001). We are
not bound by the district court’s factual findings. State v. Lane, 726 N.W.2d 371,
377 (Iowa 2007). Often we defer to those findings because the district court has
a chance to evaluate the credibility of the witnesses. Id. But here no such
evaluation occurred because the parties presented no testimony at the
suppression hearing. Instead, the prosecutor and defense counsel “stipulated” to
the facts asserted in the motion to suppress and the State’s resistance. But the
assertions in the State’s resistance to the motion to suppress do not appear
anywhere else in our record.2
What does appear elsewhere is not entirely consistent with the information
detailed in the State’s resistance to the motion to suppress. For instance, Officer
Leabo’s field narrative—attached to the minutes of testimony—does not mention
providing Ford’s date of birth explicitly until after dispatch asked him to “confirm
Troy’s information” after his arrest.
1
The parties stipulated not just to the suppression record but also to the minutes of
testimony and attached police reports, to determine Ford’s guilt at the bench trial.
2
The State’s resistance presents a detailed rendition of Officer Leabo’s interaction with
Ford, even placing certain statements in quotations. But the assistant county attorney
does not attribute the information to any source. At the suppression hearing, defense
counsel agrees “the facts themselves are not in dispute” and further states: “So I guess,
in other words, we would stipulate to the fact pattern that’s I guess, been reported at this
point.” We recognize the parties’ stipulation but note a factfinder may reject stipulated
evidence. See State v. Roe, 642 N.W.2d 252, 254 (Iowa 2002).
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And the odds are long that Ford shared an exact birthdate with the individual
in the outstanding warrants identified by dispatch. The district court tackled that
mystery by writing: “No evidence was presented that the Defendant’s name, date
of birth, sex, or race did not match that of the Troy Ford named in the arrest
warrant.” But that observation misplaces the burden. The burden rested with the
State to prove a valid arrest as a predicate to the search-incident-to-arrest
exception to the warrant requirement. The State did not present evidence that
defendant’s date of birth (or his sex, race, or social security number) did match the
information listed on the outstanding warrant for a different individual named Troy
Ford. Only such a match would allow a court to find Officer Leabo’s mistake was
“understandable” and the arrest a reasonable response to the situation facing
police at the time. On these facts, the State did not establish the reasonableness
of the mistaken-identity arrest under the Fourth Amendment.
That bottom line would not change even if we assume Officer Leabo did
provide dispatch with Ford’s date of birth before placing him under arrest on the
outstanding warrants. According to the stipulated facts in the State’s resistance,
Ford persisted in telling the officer that he had the “wrong guy” and the officer
informed Ford they would “figure out what is going on when they get to the squad
car.” The officer handcuffed and searched Ford before placing him the squad car.
The county attorney wrote: “It was after this, that it is confirmed through dispatch
that the warrants were, in fact, for a different Troy Ford.” This case is unlike Payton
where the driver failed to provide police with identification that could have
distinguished him from his father. See 401 N.W.2d at 221. Here, Officer Leabo
was able to “gather Troy’s social security number” directly after his arrest and
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confirm with dispatch that the warrants were not for this Troy Ford. It was
unreasonable for the officer not to do so before the arrest. Thus we find this search
violated the Fourth Amendment.
Ford advances another reason exists for reversing the suppression ruling.
Even if the search following Officer Leabo’s mistaken-identity arrest was
reasonable under the federal constitution, Ford argues article I, section 8 of the
Iowa Constitution provides greater protection. Payton is based on a “good faith”
exception for officers who mistakenly, but reasonably believe the suspect is the
intended arrestee. Id. at 220–21. But fourteen years after Payton, our supreme
court rejected the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule under Iowa law.
See State v. Cline, 617 N.W.2d 277, 290 (Iowa 2000), abrogated on other grounds
by State v. Turner, 630 N.W.2d 601 (Iowa 2001); see also State v. Prior, 617
N.W.2d 260, 268 (Iowa 2000).
In both Cline and Prior, our supreme court held that an illegal search and
seizure would result in exclusion of the evidence from trial under the state
constitution, even if an officer held an objectively reasonable belief that his or her
conduct was lawful. 617 N.W.2d at 292–93; 617 N.W.2d at 268. The Cline court
reasoned that “the exclusionary rule serves a deterrent function even
when . . . officers act in good faith.” 617 N.W.2d at 290. By providing a remedy
for a constitutional violation, the rule also “protects the integrity of the courts” and
“tend[s] to encourage lawmakers to take care to ensure that any law they enact
passes constitutional muster.” Id. at 289–90. “Consequently, to adopt a good faith
exception would only encourage lax practices by government officials in all three
branches of government.” Id. at 290.
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Ford is correct that under the Cline and Prior line of cases, the State cannot
avoid suppression based on an officer’s good faith reliance on information from
dispatch. A similar situation is illustrative. In Arizona v. Evans, the United States
Supreme Court applied a good faith exception to the exclusionary rule for an arrest
based on an expired warrant that remained on police computers due to data entry
errors. 514 U.S. 1, 14–15 (1995). But because Iowa does not recognize the good
faith exception to the exclusionary rule, our court declined to apply Evans when a
defendant claimed he was arrested on a recalled warrant. See State v. Rolan, No.
06-1105, 2007 WL 1827524, at *2 (Iowa Ct. App. June 27, 2007). To be consistent,
we must reject a good faith exception to a mistaken-identity arrest when the officer
has not provided dispatch with enough information to verify if the subject of the
warrant is the detained person. See Grant v. State, 262 S.E.2d 553, 553 (Ga. Ct.
App. 1979) (“An arrest warrant is valid only against the person named in it . . . .
And even though [the officer] acted in good faith in arresting another than the
person named, the warrant will not justify the action.”).
We reverse the suppression ruling and remand for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Doyle, P.J., concurs; Vogel, S.J., dissents.
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VOGEL, Senior Judge (dissenting).
Because the Davenport police acted reasonably in arresting Troy Ford on
outstanding warrants for a different individual and searching him incident to that
arrest, I respectfully dissent.
“Generally evidence is properly admissible against a person mistakenly
arrested if (1) the arresting officer acts in good faith and (2) has reasonable,
articulable grounds to believe the suspect is the intended arrestee.” State v.
Payton, 401 N.W.2d 219, 220–21 (Iowa Ct. App. 1986); see also Hill v. California,
401 U.S. 797, 802 (1971) (finding an arrest based on mistaken identity is valid
when officers “have probable cause to arrest one party” and “reasonably mistake
a second party for the first party”). “Sufficient probability, not certainty, is the
touchstone of reasonableness under the Fourth Amendment.” Payton, 401
N.W.2d at 221.
Ford argues the officers did not act reasonably in mistaking him for the Troy
Ford named in the warrants. He faults the officer for arresting and searching him
after the initial warrant check without verifying “the matter further with a simple
check of his social security number or some other specific identification.” The
arresting officer need not identify Ford with absolute certainty prior to the arrest.
See id. As the district court found on the stipulated facts, the arresting officer
verified Ford’s identity using his name, sex, birthdate, and ethnicity before arresting
him based on the initial match with outstanding warrants. The officer then
searched and moved Ford to his patrol vehicle for safety due to the chaotic scene
before further verifying Ford’s identity. Based on the officer using multiple
identifying characteristics to match Ford with the warrants initially, plus the need
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to secure Ford quickly in the patrol vehicle for safety, the officer acted reasonably
in arresting Ford before further verifying his identity. See id. (“We determine
defendant’s name, coupled with the fact he lacked a driver’s license, identification
and registration, support a finding the officer was acting under a reasonable belief
the defendant was the person named in the parking warrant.”); see also Hill v.
Scott, 349 F.3d 1068, 1073–74 (8th Cir. 2003) (“This is a case where further
investigation would have cast doubt on whether [the defendant] was the subject of
the warrant. But that is always the case where an arrestee denies being the
subject of a facially valid warrant; there can always be more investigation to verify
identity. The question is, how much investigation does the Constitution require?”);
People v. Gordon, 723 N.E.2d 1249, 1255–56 (Ill. App. Ct. 2000) (finding a
mistaken arrest was reasonable when the officer learned “there was an active
warrant for a person whose name, sex, race, and date of birth either matched or
nearly matched” the defendant’s information); State v. Bateman, 99 P.3d 656, 660
(Mont. 2004) (finding an arrest based on mistaken identity was reasonable when
the officers had evidence the arrestee and the wanted man had identical first and
last names, “had similar ages, lived in the same area, and had similar physical
characteristics”).
The majority likens Ford’s claim to State v. Jacobsen, No. 06-1867, 2007
WL 3085910 (Iowa Ct. App Oct. 24, 2007). There, an officer investigated a
suspicious person behind a convenience store named Joshua James Jacobsen.
Jacobsen, 2007 WL 3085910, at *1. The officer believed he requested a warrant
check using “Jacobsen’s first, middle, and last name, but he was not sure.” Id.
The dispatcher initially found no matching warrants but later reported “a warrant
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on ‘James Jacobson’ or ‘Joshua Jacobsen.’” Id. The officer then arrested
Jacobsen based on the initial match, though officers later determined Jacobsen’s
middle name and social security number did not match the person named in the
warrant. Id. By contrast, the arresting officer here provided Ford’s name and other
information for the initial warrant check, and the dispatcher conclusively found
multiple warrants matching this information. The arresting officer here also faced
the pressure of quickly separating Ford from the chaotic scene and securing him
in his police vehicle for safety. This additional information and the need to act
quickly for safety supports the reasonableness of the officer’s actions in initially
arresting Ford.
Ford’s suppression hearing was on the minutes with stipulated facts, and I
acknowledge the minutes are unclear on exactly what information the arresting
officer provided for the initial warrant check. The arresting officer’s narrative only
specifies he “gathered Troy’s information” for the first “standard” warrant check,
and he “gathered Troy’s social security number and included that with his name
and date of birth” for the second warrant check. In its resistance to the motion to
suppress, the State asserted the arresting officer “provided Dispatch with the
Defendant’s name, date of birth, and described him as a black male.” At the
suppression hearing, Ford’s counsel took no issue with the facts alleged in the
State’s resistance and explicitly stipulated to them, stating
Prior to filing this motion there was an informal conversation between
[the State’s attorney] and I regarding the facts and, frankly, they are
not—the facts themselves are not in dispute, so we would not require
a record being made about the facts themselves. So I guess, in other
words, we would stipulate to the fact pattern that’s, I guess, been
reported at this point.
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Accordingly, the court found the arresting officer “provided dispatch with the
Defendant’s name, date of birth, and described him as a black male” for the initial
warrant check. I believe the record supports this finding, and Ford does not dispute
this finding on appeal.
Because I believe the district court properly denied Ford’s motion to
suppress based on the arresting officer reasonably matching Ford with the
outstanding warrants, I would affirm his conviction and sentence.