W.D.Wash.: Not applying exclusionary rule here would put all at risk of police excessive searches

“Here, the Court finds that the officers did not unreasonably extend the scope or duration of the stop. The officers were permitted to ask basic questions of Mr. Russell, including whether he had identification or whether he had any weapons in the vehicle, as well as running a search of his license.” “Mr. Russell insists that the stop should have concluded when he pointed out his temporary plate to Officer French …, but the officers were permitted to further investigate the possibility of a marijuana DUI after smelling marijuana both upon approaching the car and on Mr. Russell, as well as observing marijuana in the pocket of the driver-side door.” The plain view in the door, however, was based on the officer pushing it open further and it is excluded. United States v. Russell, 2024 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 202361 (W.D. Wash. Nov. 6, 2024):

There is, of course, an elephant in the room (or vehicle): a gun—stolen, loaded with ammunition, and apparently fully functional …—was recovered as a result of the traffic stop. And today’s ruling excludes from trial this crucial evidence against Mr. Russell. But “while it is true that applying the exclusionary rule in this case will mean that a guilty defendant goes free, that is true of applying the exclusionary rule in essentially every case,” and “[n]othing about this case calls for a remedy other than ‘[t]he typical remedy for a Fourth Amendment violation,’ which ‘is the exclusion of evidence discovered as a result of that violation from criminal proceedings against the defendant.'” United States v. Ngumezi, 980 F.3d 1285, 1291 (9th Cir. 2020) (quoting United States v. Garcia, 974 F.3d 1071, 1075 (9th Cir. 2020)). To bless the search and arrest in this matter would be to license the search and arrest of virtually any driver in Seattle or Washington State who has merely consumed marijuana—a lawful act under local and state law—and driven a vehicle, regardless of the drug’s actual effects on their ability to drive.

[N.B.: Point taken: If we don’t exclude here, what about the next time this happens? And I never bought the anti-exclusionary rule argument that “police are not deterred.” They are. When I was a prosecutor as a baby lawyer 50 years ago, the police said they didn’t like losing when they did it wrong, usually in denial they did it wrong. They were deterred. They said so. They also said they didn’t get how the Fourth Amendment worked because they were trained so poorly. With the good faith exception today, only a small portion of what was suppressed back then is today. I’m kind of a convert. Some of the good faith exception now makes great sense to me; some of it never will.]

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