dissenting:
I dissent from the holding of the Court. I write separately to again question the Court’s incorporation in the ease sub judice of Syl. pt. 3, Miller v. Toler, 229 W.Va. 302, 729 S.E.2d 137 (2012), which held, “The judicially-created exclusionary rule is not applicable in a civil, administrative driver’s license revocation or suspension proceeding.” As set forth in my dissenting opinion in Toler, I am disturbed that the majority opinion makes this Court eomplicit in the improper and unconstitutional acts of Executive Branch officials.
I do not believe the constitutional protections against unreasonable searches and seizures, which are not by their terms limited only to criminal prosecutions, sanctions the “ends justifies the means” test adopted by the Majority. Constitutional rights do not stop at the door of either a criminal or noncriminal proceeding, especially where the State’s gathering of evidence was for the dual purpose of criminal and non-criminal prosecutions. To presume that the Legislature would recognize procedural rights, but *486not search and seizure rights, highlights the illogie of the majority opinion.
Indeed, even if one were to use a “balancing” approach, the majority opinion’s reasoning is unpersuasive. This approach not only inoculates the State from the consequences of its unlawful conduct, it also diminishes the objectivity requirement of our search and seizure jurisprudence. The majority opinion seriously compromises the integrity of this Court and the process at issue.