F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
PUBLISH
JUN 25 2003
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
PATRICK FISHER
Clerk
TENTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
v.
No. 01-7151
DAVID WAYNE HATFIELD,
Defendant - Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Oklahoma
(D.C. No. CR-00-82-01-S)
Donn F. Baker of Baker & Baker, Tahlequah, Oklahoma, for Defendant-
Appellant.
D. Michael Littlefield, Assistant United States Attorney (Sheldon J. Sperling,
United States Attorney, with him on the brief), Muskogee, Oklahoma, for
Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before EBEL, BALDOCK, and KELLY, Circuit Judges.
EBEL, Circuit Judge.
David Wayne Hatfield pled guilty to possession with intent to distribute
marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(D), and 18 U.S.C. § 2,
and of maintaining a place for the purpose of manufacturing, distributing, and
using methamphetamine and marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 856(a)(1) and
856(a)(2), and 18 U.S.C. § 2. He was sentenced by the United States District
Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma to imprisonment for thirty-six months.
Before Hatfield entered his guilty plea, the district court had denied Hatfield’s
motion to suppress evidence seized at his home pursuant to a warrant. As part of
his plea agreement with the United States, Hatfield reserved the right to appeal
that decision. In this appeal, Hatfield challenges the denial of the suppression
motion, arguing that the evidence seized pursuant to the warrant was “fruit of the
poisonous tree.” He claims that there were two poisonous trees in this case: two
unconstitutional searches conducted prior to the issuance of the warrant that
produced facts used by the police to obtain the warrant. Our jurisdiction arises
under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we find that the police activity Hatfield complains of
did not amount to searches triggering the protections of the Fourth Amendment.
Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of Hatfield’s motion to
suppress.
I
In the afternoon of October 10, 2000, the Sheriff’s Department of Adair
County, Oklahoma, received an anonymous tip that Hatfield was growing
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marijuana behind his house. Undersheriff Gary Sinclaire dispatched Lieutenant
Tim McCullum and Deputy Linda Sinclaire to Hatfield’s home to conduct a
“knock and talk” interview. The purpose of the interview was to inform Hatfield
of the tip and ask his permission to search his property for marijuana.
Officers McCullum and Sinclaire arrived at Hatfield’s house at about 4:00
P.M. and parked their police car behind Hatfield’s pickup on the east side of the
house on a concrete parking pad. When they got out of their car, Officer
Sinclaire went to the front door on the north side of the house to make contact
with Hatfield, and McCullum walked up the parking pad approximately twenty
feet until he was alongside the passenger door of the pickup truck. McCullum did
not leave the parking pad or enter the back yard, which lies to the south of the
house. He took his position for protective purposes, in case someone exited the
house from the rear and moved toward the front of the house via the parking pad.
From his position on the parking pad, Officer McCullum could see into the back
yard. As soon as McCullum heard that Hatfield had answered the door and was
speaking to Officer Sinclaire, McCullum left his position alongside the pickup
truck and returned to the passenger side of the patrol car where he could observe
Hatfield and Sinclaire.
Officer McCullum heard Sinclaire tell Hatfield about the phone call
informing them that marijuana was growing on Hatfield’s property and ask him if
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he would give them permission to search the property. Hatfield refused to
consent to a search and told the Officers that they could not search his property
without a warrant. McCullum and Sinclaire told Hatfield they would get a
warrant, returned to their patrol car, and backed out onto the county road. Once
they were parked on the road, they notified their superior by radio what had
transpired and he told them to wait there until he arrived.
Overhearing the conversation on the radio, Deputy Dale Harrold proceeded
to Hatfield’s home and arrived at the scene next. Harrold conferred with Officers
McCullum and Sinclaire on the county road. They told him that they had received
a tip that marijuana was growing behind Hatfield’s house, that they had sought
Hatfield’s consent to a search of the property, but that Hatfield had refused to
give his consent to the search. Officer Harrold also testified at the suppression
hearing that Officer McCullum had told him he had seen small structures in the
backyard in which marijuana might be growing.
Officer Harrold had several years of experience and training as a marijuana
spotter with the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics, and after he was apprized of the
situation at Hatfield’s residence he walked west down the county road for
approximately fifty or sixty feet alongside a fenced pasture to a point from which
he could look behind Hatfield’s house. From his vantage point on the county
road, Harrold could see a tin shed and what appeared to be a chicken coop in the
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back yard, and he reported to be able to see what appeared to be marijuana
growing behind the tin shed and inside the chicken coop. Wanting to confirm
what he had seen from the road before arresting Hatfield, Officer Harrold walked
back east along the county road to the fence separating Hatfield’s yard from the
pasture, crossed into the pasture, and walked south along the fence toward the
back of Hatfield’s house. When he reached a point along the fence across from
the structures behind Hatfield’s house, he confirmed that marijuana was growing
there.
While Officer Harrold was walking along the pasture-side of the fence
toward the back of the house, Hatfield, too, was walking toward the back of the
house, but in his yard, on the other side of the fence. Hatfield was yelling
expletives at Harrold and repeatedly told him that he was trespassing and to get
off of his property. Once Harrold had sighted the marijuana from inside the
pasture, however, he instructed Hatfield to walk back to where the other officers
were standing on the county road and Hatfield complied. When he reached the
officers, Harrold instructed them to place Hatfield under arrest for cultivation of
marijuana. The officers then conducted a protective sweep through the house to
be sure no one else was present. The sweep lasted no more than thirty to forty-
five seconds and disclosed no one else on the premises.
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After the officers secured the premises, Officer Harrold left to obtain a
search warrant. Harrold swore out an affidavit in support of the issuance of a
warrant in which he stated that the Sheriff’s Office had received an anonymous
tip that marijuana was growing at Hatfield’s residence and that he had personally
seen “approximately 12 marijuana plants in plain view in the yard” at Hatfield’s
residence. A warrant was issued to search the house and the structures behind the
house, and Harrold returned to Hatfield’s property to execute the warrant. During
the ensuing search, the officers seized marijuana plants growing in the chicken
coop and in other locations in the back yard. They also seized marijuana plants
hung for drying in another of the structures behind the house and an ice chest
containing sixty-nine marijuana starter plants.
After the Government filed an initial indictment, Hatfield was charged in a
fifteen-count superseding indictment on January 18, 2001, that alleged various
drug and firearm crimes. Hatfield moved to suppress the evidence gathered at the
search of his home and property, arguing that the search violated his Fourth
Amendment rights because (1) the search of his property was based upon an
uncorroborated, anonymous tip; (2) the marijuana was growing in the curtilage of
Hatfield’s home and Officer Harrold illegally trespassed on Hatfield’s property to
see it; and (3) the protective sweep of Hatfield’s house had constituted an
additional warrantless search.
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The district court held a suppression hearing at which several of the
officers who participated in the events testified. After considering the record
created by the hearing, the district court issued an order denying Hatfield’s
suppression motion. The district court concluded first that the anonymous tip
formed only the basis for the officer’s “knock and talk” interview, not the basis
for obtaining a search warrant. Once Hatfield had refused consent to a search, the
officers retreated to the county road in front of his house. The nature of the tip,
the court concluded, therefore was irrelevant to the validity of the subsequent
searches. Next, the court ruled that under the “open fields” doctrine Officer
Harrold properly could have entered the pasture adjoining Hatfield’s property, and
his sighting of the marijuana from the pasture was not an unreasonable search in
violation of the Fourth Amendment. Finally, the district court concluded that, not
only was the protective sweep proper, but that Hatfield’s objection to it was
merely “academic” because the officers found no evidence during that sweep.
After his motion was denied, Hatfield entered into a plea agreement with
the Government under which he pled guilty to one count of possession with intent
to distribute marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(D), and 18
U.S.C. § 2, and to one count of maintaining a place for the purpose of
manufacturing, distributing, and using methamphetamine and marijuana in
violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 856(a)(1) and 856(a)(2), and 18 U.S.C. § 2. In
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exchange for this guilty plea, the Government agreed to drop the other counts in
the indictment. The agreement also specifically reserved, pursuant to Fed. R.
Crim. P. 11(a)(2), Hatfield’s right to appeal the district court’s denial of his
motion to suppress. The district court accepted Hatfield’s plea and entered a
judgment of conviction against him on November 13, 2001, in which the court
sentenced Hatfield to two concurrent thirty-six month terms of imprisonment.
Hatfield timely filed a notice of appeal to challenge the district court’s denial of
his motion to suppress.
II
In reviewing the decision of a district court to deny a motion to suppress,
“we accept its factual findings unless clearly erroneous and view the evidence in
the light most favorable to the government.” United States v. Le, 173 F.3d 1258,
1264 (10th Cir. 1999). “It is the province of the trial court to assess the
credibility of witnesses at the suppression hearing and to determine the weight to
be given to the evidence presented, and we must give such determinations due
deference.” Id. Nevertheless, “‘[t]he ultimate determination of reasonableness
under the Fourth Amendment . . . is a question of law which we review de novo,
considering the totality of the circumstances.’” Id. (quoting United States v.
Hargus, 128 F.3d 1358, 1361 (10th Cir. 1997)).
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On appeal, Hatfield reframes the challenge he made below to the seizure of
evidence at his home. He drops the arguments that the anonymous tip did not
justify the knock and talk interview and that the protective sweep through his
house constituted an impermissible, warrantless search. Instead, he builds upon
his argument made to the district court that Harrold conducted an unconstitutional
search of the back yard while standing in the pasture. Before us Hatfield argues
that the evidence seized pursuant to the warrant was “fruit of the poisonous tree”
because the key fact cited in the affidavit to establish probable cause for the
issuance of the search warrant—Officer Harrold’s statement that he saw
marijuana in plain view in Hatfield’s back yard—was based upon two alleged
unconstitutional searches. First, Hatfield says that Officer McCullum conducted
an unconstitutional search of the back yard of his home during the knock and talk
interview, and that his observations of the back yard directed Officer Harrold to
examine the chicken coop where the marijuana was discovered during his
subsequent search. Second, Hatfield argues that Harrold’s observation was an
unconstitutional search because Officer Harrold trespassed into Hatfield’s
adjacent pasture to see into the back yard and the chicken coop. Hatfield urges
that because the warrant was issued based upon facts gleaned from these alleged
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unconstitutional searches, the evidence seized pursuant to the warrant was fruit of
those poisonous trees and it should have been suppressed. 1
Under the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine, the exclusionary rule bars
the admission of physical evidence and live testimony obtained directly or
indirectly through the exploitation of unconstitutional police conduct. Wong Sun
v. United States, 371 U.S. 471, 485–88 (1963); United States v. Lin Lyn Trading,
Ltd., 149 F.3d 1112, 1116 (10th Cir. 1998). It is clear under the doctrine that if
Officer Harrold’s observation of the marijuana occurred during or as a result of
an unconstitutional search, the evidence seized during the later search conducted
pursuant to warrant would be inadmissible as fruit of the poisonous tree. See
Murray v. United States, 487 U.S. 533, 542–44 (1988). The core premise of
1
Hatfield also briefly raises the argument that the warrant was defective
because it was issued without probable cause. Hatfield fails to fully develop this
argument, and, in any event, it has no merit. The facts in Officer Harrold’s
affidavit are undisputed: an anonymous informant told the Sheriff’s Office that
Hatfield was growing marijuana behind his house and Officer Harrold personally
observed the marijuana. “A magistrate’s determination that probable cause exists
is entitled to ‘great deference,’ and ‘we ask only whether the issuing magistrate
had a ‘substantial basis’ for determining probable cause existed.’” Le, 173 F.3d at
1265 (quoting United States v. Wittgenstein, 163 F.3d 1164, 1172 (10th Cir.
1998)). We think the facts asserted in the affidavit were sufficient to give the
magistrate a “substantial basis” upon which to conclude that the probable cause
standard had been met—i.e., that there was “a fair probability that contraband or
evidence of a crime [would] be found” at Hatfield’s home. Illinois v. Gates, 462
U.S. 213, 238 (1983). The proper framing of Hatfield’s legal claim, and the one
that we engage in detail in this opinion, is whether the evidence seized pursuant
to the warrant should nevertheless be suppressed because that evidence was fruit
of prior unconstitutional searches.
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Hatfield’s fruit of the poisonous tree argument is that Officers McCullum and
Harrold conducted unconstitutional searches that acquired information used to
obtain the search warrant that led to the seizure of the marijuana. However,
because we conclude that neither officer engaged in an unconstitutional search,
we reject Hatfield’s argument and affirm the district court’s denial of Hatfield’s
motion to suppress.
A
Hatfield claims that McCullum, while standing within the curtilage of
Hatfield’s home, conducted an unconstitutional search of the backyard during the
knock and talk interview and passed on what he learned to Officer Harrold.
Hatfield argues that he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in his backyard
and McCullum’s inspection of it without a warrant constituted a search in
violation of the Fourth Amendment. We find this argument unavailing.
Even if Officer McCullum could have observed the marijuana growing in
Hatfield’s back yard from his vantage point on the parking pad, it would not have
amounted to an impermissible search. “[W]hen the police come on to private
property to conduct an investigation . . . and restrict their movements to places
visitors could be expected to go (e.g., walkways, driveways, porches),
observations made from such vantage points are not covered by the Fourth
Amendment.” 1 Wayne R. LaFave, Search & Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth
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Amendment §2.3(f), at 506–08 (3d ed. 1996) (footnotes omitted); see also United
States v. Reyes, 283 F.3d 446, 465–67 (2d Cir. 2002) (holding that it is not a
Fourth Amendment violation for officers standing on driveway to observe
marijuana growing in the yard); United States v. Smith, 783 F.2d 648, 650–52
(6th Cir. 1986) (holding that Fourth Amendment was not violated when, before
applying for a state search warrant, a detective drove seventy-five to one hundred
yards up defendant’s unobstructed driveway to investigate informant’s tip that a
large marijuana plant was growing by the house); State v. Merrill, 563 N.W.2d
340, 344 (Neb. 1997) (holding that because “any member of the public could have
entered upon Merrill’s property in the same manner the officers did,” the
observation of marijuana in plain view from the driveway was not a search under
the Fourth Amendment).
In the instant case, Hatfield’s driveway was open to the public, permitting
the Officers to park their patrol car directly behind Hatfield’s pickup. The
openness and accessibility of a driveway to the public has been an important
factor that courts have used to conclude that an owner does not have a reasonable
expectation of privacy and that police observations made from the driveway do
not constitute a search. See, e.g., Reyes, 283 F.3d at 465 (noting that “‘driveways
that are readily accessible to visitors are not entitled to the same Fourth
Amendment protection as are the interiors of defendants’ houses’”) (quoting
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United States v. Reilly, 76 F.3d 1271, 1279 (2d Cir. 1996)); Smith, 783 F.2d at
651 (“The fact that a driveway is within the curtilage of a house is not
determinative if its accessibility and visibility from a public highway rule out any
reasonable expectation of privacy.”); 1 LaFave, supra, § 2.3(f) at 507 n.197
(collecting cases that emphasize the public accessibility of driveways in courts’
conclusions that Fourth Amendment protections did not apply). Officer
McCullum did not leave the parking pad, and when he heard that Officer Sinclaire
was speaking to Hatfield, he retreated to a point from which he could observe
their conversation while keeping in view the side of the house adjacent to the
parking pad. Thus, any observations made by Officer McCullum while standing
on Hatfield’s driveway do not constitute a search under the Fourth Amendment. 2
2
We note, furthermore, that the record is clear that Officer McCullum did
not see any marijuana from his vantage point on the driveway. At most, he might
have seen the chicken coop in the back yard. We do not see, therefore, how any
observations made by Officer McCullum would have influenced Officer Harrold’s
later decision to investigate the back yard himself from the adjoining pasture and
have tainted Harrold’s observation. Hatfield suggests that Officer Harrold would
not have inspected the chicken coop if Officer McCullum had not told him about
it. But Harrold knew that the anonymous tip had specifically indicated that the
marijuana was in Hatfield’s back yard. Harrold knew, because the anonymous tip
directed the officers to the back yard, that if he were to look for marijuana he
would look behind the house.
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B
We turn next to Hatfield’s contention that Officer Harrold’s inspection of
Hatfield’s back yard from the pasture was an unconstitutional search. He argues
that the “open fields” doctrine does not apply to the pasture adjacent to his yard
and, accordingly, Officer Harrold’s presence in the field without a warrant
violated the Fourth Amendment. We disagree that Officer Harrold’s observation
of the marijuana constituted an unconstitutional search.
“The touchstone of Fourth Amendment analysis is whether a person has a
‘constitutionally protected reasonable expectation of privacy.’” California v.
Ciraolo, 476 U.S. 207, 211 (1986) (quoting Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347,
360 (1967) (Harlan, J., concurring)). Usually, we determine whether a person has
a constitutionally protected reasonable expectation of privacy by making two
inquiries: first has the person exhibited a subjective expectation of privacy in the
place or thing searched? Katz, 389 U.S. at 361 (Harlan, J., concurring). Second,
is the person’s expectation of privacy one that society is prepared to recognize as
reasonable? Id.
The “prototypical . . . area of protected privacy” is the interior of a home.
Kyllo v. United States, 533 U.S. 27, 35 (2001). Linked to that core area of
protected privacy is a home’s curtilage. “At common law, the curtilage is the area
to which extends the intimate activity associated with the sanctity of a man’s
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home and the privacies of life, and therefore has been considered part of [the]
home itself for Fourth Amendment purposes.” Oliver v. United States, 466 U.S.
170, 180 (1984) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). In contrast,
“open fields do not provide the setting for those intimate activities that the
[Fourth] Amendment is intended to shelter from government interference or
surveillance,” id. at 179, and “the government’s intrusion upon the open fields is
not one of those ‘unreasonable searches’ proscribed by the text of the Fourth
Amendment.” 3 Id. at 177; see also Hester v. United States, 265 U.S. 57, 59
(1924) (“[T]he special protection accorded by the Fourth Amendment to the
people in their ‘persons, houses, papers, and effects,’ is not extended to the open
fields. The distinction between the latter and the house is as old as the common
law.”).
In this case, the location of the marijuana observed by Officer Harrold was
in a well-defined yard behind Hatfield’s residence, in and among several small
structures standing close to the back of the house. The area could not be observed
clearly from the street, as illustrated by the fact that Officer Harrold was not
certain that he had seen marijuana when he looked into the backyard from a
position west of the house on the county road. We hold that the marijuana was
3
“[T]he term ‘open fields’ may include any unoccupied or undeveloped area
outside of the curtilage. An open field need be neither ‘open’ nor a ‘field’ as
those terms are used in common speech.” Oliver, 466 U.S. at 180 n.11.
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located in the curtilage of Hatfield’s home because “the area in question is so
intimately tied to the home itself that it should be placed under the home’s
‘umbrella’ of Fourth Amendment protection.” United States v. Dunn, 480 U.S.
294, 301 (1987). Officer Harrold, however, never physically invaded the
curtilage when he observed the marijuana. The question before us, therefore, is
whether an observation of the curtilage by the police from a vantage point in an
adjacent open field violates an expectation of privacy that is reasonable.
Although privacy in the interior of a home and its curtilage are at the core
of what the Fourth Amendment protects, there is no reasonable expectation that a
home and its curtilage will be free from ordinary visual surveillance. “The Fourth
Amendment protection of the home has never been extended to require law
enforcement officers to shield their eyes when passing by a home on public
thoroughfares.” Ciraolo, 476 U.S. at 213. In Ciraolo, the Supreme Court held
that it was not a search in violation of the Fourth Amendment for police officers
to make naked-eye observations into a fenced yard that was within the curtilage of
a home from a plane flying 1,000 feet above the property. Id. at 213–14. The
Court held that the homeowner did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy
from such observations. Id. at 214. The Court reasoned that although the yard
was fenced and thus not visible from ground level, it was exposed to persons
flying above the property or to “a power company repair mechanic on a pole
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overlooking the yard,” id. at 215, and “‘[w]hat a person knowingly exposes to the
public, even in his own home or office, is not a subject of Fourth Amendment
protection.’” Id. at 213 (quoting Katz, 389 U.S. at 351). Thus, Hatfield would
have had no expectation of privacy from Officer Harrold’s observation of the
marijuana had Harrold been standing on property owned by Hatfield’s neighbor
when he made it, for in that situation Hatfield would have exposed the marijuana
to the view of his neighbors and anyone they invited onto their land. See, e.g., 1
LaFave, supra, § 2.3(g) at 512–13 (“Certainly no justified expectation [of privacy]
is present when the physical facts are such that the incriminating objects or
activities were readily visible to persons on neighboring lands.”) (citing United
States v. Campbell, 395 F.3d 848 (4th Cir. 1968)).
In the instant case, of course, Officer Harrold was not standing on a
neighbor’s property or on a public thoroughfare when he saw the marijuana in
Hatfield’s yard. The observation was made from Hatfield’s own pasture, and
Hatfield makes much of the fact that Officer Harrold was trespassing in the
pasture and in Oklahoma trespassing is a crime. The crux of the issue before us,
then, is whether the fact that the pasture was owned by Hatfield himself, and that
persons in the field are trespassers, created a reasonable expectation of privacy
from observations of Hatfield’s curtilage made from the pasture. We conclude
that the Supreme Court’s decision in Dunn and our decision in Fullbright v.
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United States, 392 F.2d 432, 433–35 (10th Cir. 1968), dictate that the answer to
that question is “no.”
In Dunn, the Court upheld a search by two trespassing officers in which
they stood on the defendant’s property outside of a barn, looked in through an
open space in the main doorway of the barn, and discovered drug paraphernalia.
480 U.S. at 297, 304. The Court first concluded that the barn was not situated
within the curtilage of the residence, which was located more than fifty yards
from the barn and surrounded by its own fence. Id. at 301–03. Thus, the officers
were standing upon the defendant’s open field and a warrant was not required to
justify their presence. Id. at 304.
The Court then addressed the question of whether it was a Fourth
Amendment violation for the officers, while standing in an open field, to search
the interior space of the barn by looking into it. Assuming, but not deciding, that
the interior space of the barn was protected by the Fourth Amendment, id. at 303,
the Court held that it was nevertheless permissible for the officers to visually
examine the interior of the barn without a warrant from a vantage point in an open
field. Id. at 304–05. The Supreme Court explained that under its precedents,
“there is no constitutional difference between police observations conducted
while in a public place and while standing in the open fields.” Id. at 304.
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Therefore, that which is in plain view from an open field may be observed by the
police without it being a search under the Fourth Amendment.
Furthermore, the Court said that, “the fact that the objects observed by the
officers lay within an area that we have assumed . . . was protected by the Fourth
Amendment does not affect our conclusion.” Id. The Court emphasized that “the
officers never entered the barn, nor did they enter any other structure on
respondent’s premises.” Id. Instead, “[o]nce at their vantage point, they merely
stood, outside the curtilage of the house and in the open fields upon which the
barn was constructed, and peered into the barn’s open front.” Id. Thus, “standing
as they were in the open fields, the Constitution did not forbid them to observe
the [drug] laboratory located in respondent’s barn.” Id.
Similarly, Fullbright involved law enforcement officers who, while
trespassing on the defendant’s open fields, observed from a distance the interior
of an open shed located in the property’s curtilage. 392 F.2d at 433–34. We held
the officers’ observation of an illegal distilling operation in the shed was not a
search prohibited by the Fourth Amendment. Id. at 434. We explained, however,
that “[i]f the investigators had physically breached the curtilage there would be
little doubt that any observations made therein would have been proscribed. But
observations from outside the curtilage of activities within are not generally
interdicted by the Constitution.” Id; see also 1 LaFave, supra, § 2.3(g), at 515
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(reasoning that police observation of incriminating objects or activity “is
unobjectionable—even if what is seen is itself within the protected area called the
‘curtilage’—if the police vantage point was itself in the ‘open fields’”).
Following Dunn and Fullbright, we hold that police observation of a
defendant’s curtilage from a vantage point in the defendant’s open field is not a
search under the Fourth Amendment. Even though we can conclude that Hatfield
had a subjective expectation of privacy in the space immediately behind his
house, this is not an expectation of privacy that society regards as reasonable, at
least with respect to visual observations made from an adjoining open field. Had
Officer Harrold physically invaded the curtilage to make his observation, that
would have constituted a search subject to the proscriptions of the Fourth
Amendment. See Dunn, 480 U.S. at 304; Fullbright, 392 F.2d at 434. But there
is no reasonable expectation of privacy from visual observations made by the
police from the open fields because “an individual has no legitimate expectation
that open fields will remain free from warrantless intrusion by government
officers.” 4 Oliver, 466 U.S. at 181. Indeed, the police can enter open fields at
4
We note, however, that some police observations made from an open field
could constitute an unconstitutional search. For example, in Kyllo, the Supreme
Court held that “obtaining by sense-enhancing technology any information
regarding the interior of the home that could not otherwise have been obtained
without physical intrusion into a constitutionally protected area constitutes a
search—at least where (as here) the technology in question is not in general
(continued...)
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any time for investigative purposes without violating the Fourth Amendment. See
United States v. Pinter, 984 F.2d 376, 379 (10th Cir. 1993) (“The open fields
doctrine does not require that law enforcement officials have some objective
reason—either probable cause or reasonable suspicion—before entering an open
field.”).
Hatfield relies heavily on the fact that Officer Harrold’s presence in the
pasture violated Oklahoma’s criminal trespass statute. This fact does not,
however, change our analysis. The Oklahoma criminal trespass statute to which
Hatfield points, Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 21, § 1835 (West 2000), has been on the
books in one form or another since 1913. See id. (Historical and Statutory
Notes). Despite the law’s longevity, we have never found it to be relevant to
Fourth Amendment analysis of whether an officer was properly in an open field in
cases arising in Oklahoma. For example, the relevant provision of the statute that
was in force during the events of the instant case was also in force in 1993 when
we decided Pinter. In Pinter, two DEA agents trespassed onto the defendant’s oil
(...continued)
4
public use.” 533 U.S. at 34 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). In
Kyllo, law enforcement officers used a thermal imaging device from a vantage
point on a public street to scan the exterior of a home for signs that high-intensity
lamps were being used to grow marijuana. Id. at 30. This type of observation,
the Court concluded, constituted an impermissible warrantless search. Id. at 40.
It would likewise be a search if a thermal imaging device like the one at issue in
Kyllo were used from a position in an open field. The instant case, however, only
involves visual observations made by police, unaided by any invasive technology.
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lease in Oklahoma while surveilling him. 984 F.2d at 377–79. After stating that
the open fields doctrine applied in that case, and making no mention of the fact
that trespass is a crime in Oklahoma, we stated that, “The fact that the officers
trespass onto private property does not transform their actions into a ‘search’
within the meaning of the fourth amendment.” Id. at 379. Nor did we consider
the fact that trespass is a crime in Oklahoma when we decided Fullbright. 392
F.2d at 433–35 (10th Cir. 1968) (applying open fields doctrine to trespassing
federal agents without any reference to the fact that trespass was a crime in
Oklahoma). Consistently with these cases, we explicitly hold that the fact that a
state may have chosen to protect the property interests of its citizens by making
trespass a crime under state law does not affect the analysis of a person’s Fourth
Amendment interest. See Oliver, 466 U.S. at 183.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Hatfield did not have a
constitutionally protected privacy interest in being free from police observations
of his curtilage made from his adjoining pasture. Officer Harrold’s sighting of
the marijuana in Hatfield’s back yard therefore did not constitute a Fourth
Amendment search.
III
We hold that neither the actions of Officer McCullum nor the actions of
Officer Harrold constituted an impermissible search. Accordingly, the affidavit
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supporting the search warrant did not contain tainted factual allegations, and the
evidence seized pursuant to the warrant was not fruit of a poisonous tree. We
therefore AFFIRM the district court’s decision denying the motion to suppress.
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