Jeff Fisher gets another cert grant: Herring v. U.S.

SCOTUS has granted cert in Herring v. United States, No. 07-513, decision below 492 F.3d 1212 (11th Cir. 2007), posted here July 18.

The issue, as stated by Willamette Law School:

Whether the exclusionary rule requires the suppression of evidence obtained as a result of a search that was conducted on a good faith mistake that the defendant had an outstanding warrant for his arrest.

The summary from Willamette:

The issue is whether the exclusionary rule requires the suppression of evidence obtained as a result of a search that was conducted on a good faith mistake that the defendant had an outstanding warrant for his arrest. A county police officer who saw defendant Herring checking on his impounded vehicle at the sheriff’s lot, and who had good reason to believe that defendant had a warrant out for his arrest, called the warrant clerk in a neighboring county to verify. The warrant clerk confirmed that there was such a warrant and the officer arrested defendant pursuant to that warrant. A subsequent search of defendant’s vehicle produced methamphetamine and a firearm. Meanwhile, the warrant clerk was searching for a copy of the warrant and could not find it. She asked her supervisor who informed her that the warrant had been recalled. The clerk called back immediately to inform the inquiring office of its mistake. However, at that time, the defendant had already been arrested. Defendant was indicted on charges of possession of methamphetamine and a felon in possession of a firearm. The trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress and a jury convicted defendant on both counts. The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the trial court’s decision finding that the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule does not shelter evidence that was obtained in an unconstitutional arrest or search that was based on objectively unreliable information when the costs of doing so do not outweigh the benefits of obtaining that evidence.

Update: Linda Greenhouse’s take in the NYTimes is here.

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