IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
NO. PD-0388-19
CHASE ERICK WHEELER, Appellant
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS
ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
FROM THE SECOND COURT OF APPEALS
TARRANT COUNTY
SLAUGHTER, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which RICHARDSON,
YEARY, NEWELL, WALKER, and MCCLURE, JJ., joined. HERVEY, J., filed a dissenting
opinion in which KELLER, P.J., and KEEL, J., joined.
OPINION
In applying for a blood-alcohol search warrant, a police officer submitted an unsworn
probable-cause affidavit. Finding that the affidavit articulated probable cause but not realizing that
it was unsworn, the magistrate signed and returned the search warrant. The same police officer
then executed that search warrant. There is no question that the officer’s failure to take the oath
Wheeler - 2
and swear to his probable-cause affidavit was improper. The question is whether despite this defect
and assuming a valid warrant issued, the good-faith exception to the Texas exclusionary rule 1
applies such that the blood-alcohol evidence is admissible. We hold that, under the facts of this
case, the good-faith exception is inapplicable and the evidence is subject to suppression. We agree
with the court of appeals that the officer in this case was objectively unreasonable in executing a
search warrant he knew was unsupported by a sworn probable-cause affidavit, such that he cannot
be said to have acted in objective good-faith reliance upon the warrant. Therefore, we affirm the
judgment of the court of appeals.
I. Background
The facts of this case are largely undisputed. Early on the morning of July 9, 2016, Officer
Tyler Bonner, the sole officer on duty for the Pantego Police Department, arrested Appellant,
Chase Erick Wheeler, for driving while intoxicated. Wheeler refused to submit to field sobriety
tests and also refused a blood or breath test. As such, Bonner took Wheeler to the police department
to obtain a search warrant for Wheeler’s blood.
A. The search warrant
In applying for the search warrant, Bonner used preprinted, fill-in-the-blank/check-the-box
forms for the probable-cause affidavit, search warrant, return, and an order for assistance. The
probable-cause affidavit form included statements indicating that an oath was required and must
be sworn before another person. 2 The jurat provided: “Subscribed and sworn to before me on this
1
See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 38.23(a), (b).
2
The very first line of the probable-cause affidavit form contains a recital that the “undersigned
Affiant, a peace officer under the laws of the State of Texas, and after first being duly sworn, on
oath makes the following statements and accusations.”
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9 day of July, 2016, by an official authorized to administer and authorize this oath pursuant to
TEX. GOV’T CODE § 602.002.” Despite the recital in the jurat, Bonner never swore to the
affidavit before anyone. Instead, he merely signed the affidavit on the line immediately above the
jurat labeled “affiant,” filled in the blanks for the date in the jurat, and gave it to the dispatcher,
leaving the signature for the jurat blank. 3 The dispatcher then electronically submitted the
documents to the magistrate, Sara Jane Del Carmen. Del Carmen, not realizing that the affidavit
was unsworn, signed the jurat and the search warrant. 4 Bonner then executed the warrant. 5
B. Motion to Suppress
After being charged with driving while intoxicated, Wheeler filed a motion to suppress the
blood-alcohol evidence. He argued that because Bonner’s affidavit was not sworn under oath as
required by the Texas Constitution and Code of Criminal Procedure, 6 it must be excluded pursuant
3
The signature blank for the jurat was labeled “Judge / Peace Officer / Notary.”
4
The search warrant also contained language indicating that Bonner had sworn to his probable-
cause affidavit before Del Carmen, stating, “Whereas, the Affiant, whose name appears on the
Affidavit attached hereto is a peace officer under the laws of Texas and did heretofore this day
subscribe and swear to said affidavit before me . . . .”
5
Notably, it is unclear from the record whether Del Carmen ever actually sent the signed warrant
to the police department. Although Del Carmen testified that she ordinarily would have
electronically uploaded the signed warrant to the “Dropbox” used to transfer documents to the
police department, she did not have any personal recollection of doing so in this instance.
Furthermore, by the time of the criminal proceedings in this case, the Pantego Police Department
did not have in its possession a printed or electronic copy of the signed search warrant. The District
Attorney’s office had to contact Del Carmen to ask for a copy of the signed warrant, which she
provided. Officer Bonner testified that the ordinary procedure upon receiving a signed search
warrant in the Dropbox was for the dispatcher to print out a copy and give it to the executing
officer. Officer Bonner could not recall if he ever saw a signed search warrant, instead asserting
that he had been verbally notified by the dispatcher that the signed warrant had been received.
Thus, given the circumstances, it appears likely that Officer Bonner executed the search warrant
without having seen a signed copy of it, either because Del Carmen never sent it or the dispatcher
did not print it out for the department’s files.
6
See TEX. CONST. art. I, § 9 (“[N]o warrant to search any place, or to seize any person or thing,
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to the Texas Exclusionary Rule in Code of Criminal Procedure Article 38.23(a). At the hearing on
Appellant’s motion to suppress, Bonner admitted that he did not swear an oath before Magistrate
Del Carmen or anyone else. But, he claimed that he believed an oath was not required pursuant to
Pantego Police Department policy. Bonner testified that in the fourteen months he had been
employed with the Pantego Police Department, he had not sworn to a single probable-cause
affidavit. Bonner also stated that he understood that the facts in his affidavit were not properly
sworn but that he was not aware of any defects in the warrant and believed it to be valid at the time
of execution.
Additionally, Bonner admitted that in the police academy (from which he had graduated
only fourteen months prior to this incident) he learned about the Constitution and laws pertaining
to searches and seizures. He stated that he received specific training on the requirements of the
U.S. Constitution’s Fourth Amendment and the Texas Constitution’s Article I, Section 9. He also
acknowledged that as part of this training, he was instructed that officers must swear an oath before
a qualified individual when submitting a probable-cause affidavit to obtain a search warrant.
Del Carmen also testified at the motion to suppress hearing. She indicated that in her
experience as a magistrate working with the Pantego Police Department, an officer typically would
swear the oath in front of another officer. The officer accepting the oath would write his/her badge
number next to the signature line on the probable-cause affidavit to indicate that it had been sworn.
In this case, Del Carmen failed to realize that there was no officer’s badge number or notary’s
shall issue without describing them as near as may be, nor without probable cause, supported by
oath or affirmation.”); TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. arts. 1.06 (codifying requirements of Texas
Constitution in Article I, § 9); 18.01(b) (“A sworn affidavit setting forth substantial facts
establishing probable cause shall be filed in every instance in which a search warrant is
requested.”).
Wheeler - 5
stamp on Bonner’s affidavit, thus she signed the warrant even though the affidavit was unsworn.
Del Carmen acknowledged that she was mistaken in signing the jurat and warrant based on the
unsworn probable-cause affidavit. But at the time she believed Bonner’s affidavit established
probable cause and did not notice any defects in the affidavit.
After hearing the evidence, the trial court denied the motion, stating that this situation fell
within the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure
Article 38.23(b). Based on the denial of his motion to suppress, Appellant pleaded guilty and then
appealed the trial court’s ruling.
C. Court of Appeals
The court of appeals reversed the trial court’s denial of Appellant’s motion to suppress.
Wheeler v. State, 573 S.W.3d 437, 446 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2019). The State had argued on
appeal that the oath recitation in the affidavit’s and warrant’s preambles were sufficient to support
a finding that the oath requirement had been satisfied. The court of appeals, however, disagreed.
It reasoned that the evidence failed to show that Bonner signed the affidavit with “‘a sense of
seriousness and responsibility’ or with a ‘sense of [his] moral duty to tell the truth,’” such that it
could not find that the purposes of the oath had been satisfied. Id. at 443 (quoting Smith v. State,
207 S.W.3d 787, 790 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006)). This, coupled with the affirmative evidence from
Del Carmen and Bonner that no oath or its equivalent actually occurred, foreclosed a finding that
the oath requirement had been satisfied. Id. at 443-44. Thus, the court of appeals held the warrant
was defective and proceeded to consider whether the good-faith exception applied. In concluding
that it did not, the court reasoned that Officer Bonner was objectively unreasonable in relying on
a warrant he knew was based on an unsworn affidavit. Id. at 446. Relying primarily on this Court’s
decision in McClintock v. State, the court of appeals explained:
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No objectively reasonable officer could believe that sworn affidavits are not
required in seeking search warrants. Indeed, they are “indispensable.” Bonner’s
submission of an unsworn affidavit was not close to the line of validity; therefore,
an objectively reasonable officer preparing such an affidavit could not have
believed that the subsequent warrant was not tainted by the complete absence of
this constitutional and statutory requirement. Because Bonner’s failure to swear to
the truth of his affidavit facts is a long-distance call away from the line of validity,
he could not have acted in good-faith reliance on the issued warrant.
Id. (citing Clay v. State, 391 S.W.3d 94, 97-98 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013); McClintock v. State, 541
S.W.3d 63, 73 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017)).
After determining that the trial court had erred in denying Appellant’s motion to suppress,
the court of appeals performed a harm analysis, found the error harmful, and reversed and
remanded the case back to the trial court. Id. The State then filed a petition for discretionary review
with this Court, which we granted on a single ground to consider the court of appeals’ conclusion
that the good-faith exception was inapplicable. 7
II. Analysis
Under the Texas Exclusionary Rule, evidence obtained in violation of any provision of
state or federal law cannot be used at trial in a criminal prosecution. 8 There is, however, an
exception to this exclusionary rule for evidence “obtained by a law enforcement officer acting in
7
The State’s petition for discretionary review presented two grounds:
(1) Is an affidavit considered sworn if the affiant testifies that he did not swear to the
affidavit in front of a person authorized to administer oaths, but the affidavit itself
contains oath-affirming language?
(2) Can an officer act in objective good faith by relying on the magistrate’s approval
of a warrant that is defective in form?
We granted review only as to the second ground regarding the proper application of the good-faith
exception to this scenario. We limit our analysis in this opinion accordingly.
8
See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 38.23(a) (“No evidence obtained by an officer or other person
in violation of any provisions of the Constitution or laws of the State of Texas, or of the
Constitution or laws of the United States of America, shall be admitted in evidence against the
accused on the trial of any criminal case.”).
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objective good faith reliance upon a warrant issued by a neutral magistrate based on probable
cause.” TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 38.23(b). The exception plainly requires objective, rather than
subjective, good-faith reliance upon a search warrant. We agree with the court of appeals that,
applying this objective standard to the facts here, this requirement was not met because no
objectively-reasonable officer would execute a search warrant knowing that it was procured
through an unsworn probable-cause affidavit. Accordingly, the good-faith exception does not
apply and the statutory exclusionary rule prohibits admission of the blood evidence that was
obtained in violation of Texas law.
A. A sworn probable-cause affidavit is a critical requirement under Texas
law.
One of the most fundamental tenets of search and seizure law is that a search warrant must
be supported by a probable-cause affidavit that is sworn “by oath or affirmation.” TEX. CONST. art.
I, § 9. This oath or affirmation requirement is so critical that our Legislature codified it numerous
times in the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 1.06 (“No warrant
to search any place or to seize any person or thing shall issue without . . . probable cause supported
by oath or affirmation.”); art. 18.01(b) (“A sworn affidavit setting forth substantial facts
establishing probable cause shall be filed in every instance in which a search warrant is
requested.”); art. 18.01(b-1)(1) (“The magistrate may examine an applicant for a search warrant . . .
[but that] person must be placed under oath before the examination . . .”); art. 18.01(c) (stating that
a search warrant may not be issued under Article 18.02(a)(10) unless the “sworn affidavit required
by Subsection (b) sets forth sufficient facts to establish probable cause”); art. 18.01(f) (same, with
respect to warrants issued under Article 18.021); art. 18.01(g) (same, with respect to warrants
issued under Article 18.02(a)(12)). Thus, it is well established under Texas law that a search
warrant cannot properly issue without a probable-cause affidavit made under oath. “An oath is any
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form of attestation by which a person signifies that he is bound in conscience to perform an act
faithfully and truthfully.” Vaughn v. State, 146 Tex. Crim. 586, 589, 177 S.W.2d 59, 60 (1943).
“The difference between an affidavit and an oath is that an affidavit consists of a statement of fact,
which is sworn to as the truth, while an oath is a pledge.” Id. (citing 39 Am. Jur. 494). Texas law
has always required that the oath must be made “before” or in the presence of another to convey
the solemnity and critical nature of being truthful. See Clay v. State, 391 S.W.3d 94, 98–99 (Tex.
Crim. App. 2013) (“[T]his Court has held for the better part of a hundred years that, before a
written statement in support of a search warrant will constitute a ‘sworn affidavit,’ the necessary
oath must be administered ‘before’ a magistrate or other qualified officer.”).
The oath requirement is for good reason. After all, in a probable-cause affidavit, the police
officer is asking that the government be allowed to invade someone’s constitutional right to
privacy. It is not too much to ask that the officer swear before another that he or she is telling the
truth about the necessity of such a violative intrusion. See id. at 100 (“That the affidavit must be
sworn to fulfills the constitutional requirement that it be executed under oath or affirmation so as
‘to impress upon the swearing individual an appropriate sense of obligation to tell the truth.”’).
Thus, while we have recognized that certain types of procedural irregularities may not affect the
validity of a search warrant, we have been unwavering in emphasizing that the oath requirement
is essential. See Smith, 207 S.W.3d at 792 (upholding validity of warrant where affiant failed to
sign affidavit; “Although the affiant’s signature on an affidavit serves as an important
memorialization of the officer’s act of swearing before the magistrate, it is that act of swearing,
not the signature itself, that is essential.”); Clay, 391 S.W.3d at 97 (upholding warrant where
affidavit was sworn out telephonically and the magistrate recognized the officer’s voice, but
emphasizing that “an oath is both constitutionally and statutorily indispensable . . .”). Thus, an
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officer’s failure to take the oath and swear to the facts of his probable-cause affidavit renders
defective any search warrant issued on the basis of the unsworn probable-cause affidavit. If the
warrant still validly issues in spite of this defect, 9 then the question becomes whether the good-
faith exception applies to allow the admissibility of the improperly-obtained evidence.
B. The good-faith exception is inapplicable here because the officer did
not act in objective good faith.
Given the foregoing law that establishes the critical nature of a sworn probable-cause
affidavit to support issuance of a search warrant, we agree with the conclusion reached by the court
of appeals that the statutory good-faith exception is inapplicable here. To justify application of the
exception, Article 38.23(b) plainly requires that an officer act in objective, not merely subjective,
good faith. TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 38.23(b) (requiring that the “law enforcement officer act[]
in objective good faith reliance upon a warrant issued by a neutral magistrate based on probable
cause” for application of the exception). Thus, determining whether Officer Bonner acted in
objective good faith requires us to examine whether a reasonable police officer in Officer Bonner’s
position would have believed the warrant was valid. McClintock, 541 S.W.3d at 73 (determining
whether the good-faith exception applies requires a court to focus on what an “objectively
9
Appellant has not argued that the lack of an oath or affirmation prevented the search warrant
from ever issuing, such that the good-faith exception is categorically inapplicable. See TEX. CODE
CRIM. PROC. art. 38.23(b) (good-faith exception applies to officer acting “in objective good faith
reliance upon a warrant issued by a neutral magistrate based upon probable cause”) (emphasis
added). Instead, Appellant focuses his arguments on the question of whether the officer’s conduct
was objectively reasonable. Accordingly, we do not consider, as we have in other cases, whether
the defect at issue prevented the warrant from technically issuing such that the good-faith exception
could not apply under its plain terms. See, e.g., Dunn v. State, 951 S.W.2d 478, 479 (Tex. Crim.
App. 1997) (considering and rejecting argument that lack of magistrate’s signature on arrest
warrant prevented the warrant from ever issuing such that good-faith exception could not apply;
totality of the record reflected that the defect was a result of inadvertent error by the magistrate
and warrant was otherwise supported by probable cause, thus the warrant had “issued for purposes
of the good faith exception of article 38.23(b)”).
Wheeler - 10
reasonable officer” would have believed about whether the warrant was valid at the time of its
execution); see also Flores v. State, 367 S.W.3d 697, 703 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2012)
(stating that courts must “assess the objective—not subjective—good faith of the officer executing
the warrant”).
As legal scholars have noted, courts (including this Court) have frequently overlooked the
statutory language requiring that an officer act in objective good faith. See George E. Dix & John
M. Schmolesky, 40 Tex. Prac., Criminal Practice & Procedure § 7:69 (3d ed.) (“Article 38.23(b)
should be required as demanding that the officer’s conduct meet a requirement of objective
reasonableness. Amazingly, however, the case law makes little reference to such a requirement,
has not enforced it, and has sometimes failed to discuss it when the circumstances would seem to
demand its consideration.”). This Court, however, addressed this issue recently in McClintock, 541
S.W.3d at 72-73.
In McClintock, we considered a situation in which a police officer had used a drug-
detection dog to conduct a warrantless dog sniff outside the door of a defendant’s residence. Id. at
65. The officer then referred to the dog sniff evidence in his probable-cause affidavit and used the
evidence to obtain a warrant to search the residence, leading to the discovery of drugs. Id. Later,
while McClintock’s drug conviction was pending on appeal, the Supreme Court decided Jardines
v. Florida, in which it held that use of a drug-detection dog within the curtilage of a residence
constitutes a search for which a search warrant must be obtained. 569 U.S. 1, 11-12 (2013). In
spite of this holding that undermined the legality of the methods used to establish probable cause
in McClintock’s case, we nevertheless held that the evidence was not subject to suppression by
applying the statutory good-faith exception in Article 38.23(b). We explained that, where an
officer’s conduct is “‘close enough to the line of validity’ that an objectively reasonable officer
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preparing the affidavit or executing the warrant would believe that the information supporting the
warrant was not tainted by unconstitutional conduct,” then the good-faith exception may apply to
exempt the evidence from exclusion, notwithstanding the underlying constitutional violation.
McClintock, 541 S.W.3d at 73. On the other hand, we recognized that “[a]n officer who has
included information in a search warrant affidavit that he knows—or should know—to be illegally
obtained cannot be said, we think, to have acted in good-faith reliance upon any warrant that may
issue that depends for its probable cause upon that tainted information.” Id. at 72 (emphasis added).
Finding that the officer’s conduct in McClintock was close enough to the line of validity to be
objectively reasonable, we held the evidence was exempted from suppression, noting that doing
so was entirely consistent with the language of Article 38.23(b). Id. at 73-74. McClintock thus
solidified that it is the objective reasonableness of the officer’s conduct, based on the facts and
circumstances he knows at the time, that dictates whether the statutory good-faith exception
applies. The officer’s subjective intentions or beliefs about whether his conduct was lawful or
reasonable are irrelevant under the statutory terms.
Both the State and dissenting opinion contend that McClintock is factually distinguishable
and thus its reasoning is inapplicable to these circumstances. With respect to this contention, we
observe that McClintock is at its core a case about the proper statutory interpretation of Article
38.23(b). 10 As such, although our analysis in McClintock was necessarily focused on determining
whether the good-faith exception applied to the distinct facts at issue there, our statutory analysis
was in no way limited to those facts. Rather, our analysis of the statutory requirements giving rise
10
Indeed, the very first sentence in McClintock states, “This case involves the proper construction
of Article 38.23(b) of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, the statutory good-faith exception to
our statutory exclusionary rule.” McClintock, 541 S.W.3d at 64.
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to a finding of good faith apply beyond the narrow confines of McClintock’s unusual
circumstances. More to the point, our statements in McClintock regarding law enforcement
conduct that is “close enough to the line of validity” and the “objectively reasonable officer” were
intended to expound upon, not supplant, the statutory requirement of objective good faith. In this
sense, while McClintock aids our analysis of the instant issue by highlighting the sometimes-
overlooked requirement of objective good faith, in reality it is merely a restatement of the
requirements set forth by the Legislature in Article 38.23(b). Our holding today would be the same
even without McClintock because we are bound to adhere to the statutory language. Given these
considerations, we cannot agree that McClintock is inapplicable here or that the court of appeals
erred by relying on it.
Applying the statute’s requirement of objective good faith to the situation at hand, we
conclude that no objectively-reasonable police officer would have believed that the warrant here
was valid when it was knowingly obtained by an unsworn probable-cause affidavit. In fact, it was
wholly unreasonable for any officer in Officer Bonner’s shoes to believe that there was no need to
attest to a probable-cause affidavit when: (1) the oath requirement has been a constitutional
mandate for all law enforcement officers for well over a century; (2) the Texas Legislature has
codified and repeatedly emphasized the oath requirement in the Code of Criminal Procedure; (3)
this Court’s opinions have consistently held that the oath requirement is critical to obtaining a
search warrant; (4) law enforcement officers are taught in the police academy that they must swear
to the truthfulness of their probable-cause affidavits before a magistrate or other qualified person; 11
11
Officer Bonner admitted that in the police academy he was trained about the oath requirement.
He also testified that he was taught the Code of Criminal Procedure as well as U.S. and Texas
constitutional requirements including those pertaining to search and seizure issues.
Wheeler - 13
and (5) the forms used by Officer Bonner in this case for the probable-cause affidavit and search
warrant both refer to the oath requirement and state that the documents were “verified” and/or
“sworn before” a magistrate. 12
The State’s brief places great emphasis on Bonner’s subjective belief that the warrant was
valid at the time of its execution, but that is not the standard that the good-faith exception requires.
An inquiry into Officer Bonner’s subjective state of mind is only relevant to determining the
circumstances under which he acted. It is wholly irrelevant when it comes to determining whether
he acted in good faith as measured from the perspective of an objectively-reasonable officer under
those same circumstances. Under the facts here, the court of appeals was correct in its assessment
that, given how fundamental the oath requirement is, no objectively-reasonable officer could have
believed that an oath was not required to support his probable-cause affidavit; therefore, an officer
preparing such an affidavit could not have reasonably believed that the subsequent warrant was
not tainted by this defect. See Wheeler, 573 S.W.3d at 446. This was not a mere procedural
irregularity with respect to how the affidavit was sworn. It was not sworn at all. The complete
12
As noted by the dissent, it is true that the magistrate also made a mistake in this case by signing
the jurat and warrant even though she never administered the oath to Bonner. We agree with the
dissent that, as a general matter, a law enforcement officer should be permitted to rely on a search
warrant signed by a neutral magistrate and supported by probable cause without having to “second
guess” the magistrate’s determination. That principle, however, cannot apply to situations such as
the instant one where an objectively-reasonable officer would have personal knowledge of a
significant defect in the process used to obtain the warrant (here, the absence of an affidavit sworn
under oath). Under those circumstances, even if the magistrate then mistakenly approves the
warrant, the objectively-reasonable officer would still know of the underlying defect that
ultimately renders the resulting warrant tainted. Such an officer is not being made to “second guess”
the magistrate’s approval of a warrant that he honestly and reasonably believes to be free of defects;
rather, he simply is not permitted to rely on a warrant that he knows is tainted, regardless of the
magistrate’s approval. Thus, the instant situation is distinguishable from those in which the officer
is wholly innocent and, unbeknownst to him, some flaw in the warrant process is discovered after
the fact.
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absence of this indispensable constitutional and statutory requirement is nowhere close to the line
of valid law enforcement conduct that would bring this situation within the ambit of the good-faith
exception. See McClintock, 541 S.W.3d at 73.
III. Conclusion
The court of appeals correctly held that the officer’s conduct in submitting an unsworn
probable-cause affidavit and then executing the subsequent search warrant was objectively
unreasonable, such that the officer cannot be said to have acted in “objective good faith reliance”
on the search warrant. TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 38.23(b). Therefore, we affirm the judgment
of the court of appeals which reversed the trial court’s ruling denying Appellant’s motion to
suppress.
Delivered: February 10, 2021
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