United States v. Logan ( 2022 )


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  • Appellate Case: 20-3202     Document: 010110724390       Date Filed: 08/15/2022     Page: 1
    FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                         Tenth Circuit
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                          August 15, 2022
    _________________________________
    Christopher M. Wolpert
    Clerk of Court
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.                                                          No. 20-3202
    (D.C. No. 6:19-CR-10094-EFM-1)
    COREY A. LOGAN, a/k/a Corey Antonio                          (D. Kan.)
    Logan,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    _________________________________
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
    _________________________________
    Before BACHARACH, MORITZ, and EID, Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________
    Corey Logan was shot by an unknown assailant at his mobile home. Shortly
    after first responders carried Logan outside, officers checked his residence for
    additional victims of the shooting. No victims were found, but officers observed
    hallucinogenic mushrooms and a marijuana pipe. Logan refused to consent to a
    search, so the officers obtained a warrant to look for evidence of the shooting, the
    mushrooms, and the marijuana. Indicted on two counts related to the mushrooms,
    Logan moved to suppress the mushroom evidence. The district court denied Logan’s
    motion on the ground that the initial warrantless sweep for victims was justified by
    *
    This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines
    of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for
    its persuasive value consistent with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
    Appellate Case: 20-3202    Document: 010110724390        Date Filed: 08/15/2022      Page: 2
    exigent circumstances. Alternatively, the district court held that the inevitable
    discovery exception to the exclusionary rule applied because the officers would have
    uncovered the mushrooms while executing a warrant limited to the shooting. Logan
    entered a conditional guilty plea and appeals the suppression issue. Assuming
    without deciding that the warrantless search of Logan’s home was not justified by
    exigency, we conclude that the district court’s application of the inevitable discovery
    exception was not in error. Exercising jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    , we
    affirm.
    I.
    On March 29, 2018, at around two o’clock in the morning, there was repeated
    knocking at the front door of Corey Logan’s mobile home in Wichita, Kansas.
    Before Logan could answer the door, an unknown assailant opened fire and fled the
    scene. Also in the home was Samantha Case, who called the police once she realized
    Logan had been shot.
    At 2:19 a.m., Wichita Police Officer Steven McKenna arrived. He found Case
    in the doorway calling for help and followed her to the mobile home’s south
    bedroom, where Logan was on the floor with a gunshot wound to his left side. At
    2:22 a.m., medical personnel reached the bedroom and started evacuating Logan to a
    hospital. Meanwhile, more police officers arrived outside. These officers spotted
    five bullet holes on the mobile home’s exterior, just north of the front door, plus
    corresponding shell casings, which suggested that multiple bullets entered the home’s
    north bedroom. Officers also found blood on the floor near the front door.
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    Officer McKenna requested Logan’s permission to search the home. Logan
    refused. Officers reentered the home anyway, looking for more victims of the
    shooting. The officers conducting this sweep found neither victims nor evidence of
    the shooter’s identity—but they did find Logan’s hallucinogenic mushrooms. When
    Wichita Police Officer Cale Carson opened the interior door to the north bedroom, he
    immediately recognized a psilocybin grow operation; he also spotted a marijuana
    pipe in the living room. Having found no more victims of the shooting, the officers
    left the home, secured it, and obtained a search warrant from a county judge. The
    warrant permitted law enforcement to reenter Logan’s home to investigate the
    shooting, the mushrooms, and the marijuana.
    In June 2019, a federal grand jury in the District of Kansas returned a two-
    count indictment charging Logan under 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
     with manufacturing a
    controlled substance and possessing with intent to distribute a controlled substance.
    Both counts involved the hallucinogenic mushrooms discovered by police after
    Logan was shot. Logan moved to suppress the evidence and the district court held a
    suppression hearing.
    The court denied Logan’s motion in February 2020. The court held that the
    search that first discovered the mushrooms, although warrantless, was justified by
    exigent circumstances because “the officers had an objectively reasonable basis to
    believe that another victim could have been in the residence.” R. Vol. I at 56.
    Alternatively, the court held that the inevitable discovery exception to the
    exclusionary rule applied because, even if the sweep for victims had never occurred,
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    the government had demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that
    “investigators would have nevertheless discovered evidence of the mushroom grow
    operation while executing a warrant to discover further evidence of the shooting.”
    
    Id. at 58
    .
    With the motion to suppress denied, Logan entered a conditional guilty plea to
    the manufacturing count and the government dismissed the possession count. In the
    plea agreement, Logan reserved the right to appeal the suppression issue. The district
    court sentenced Logan to five years’ probation. Logan timely appealed.
    II.
    On appeal, Logan argues that the district court erred by denying his motion to
    suppress the mushroom evidence. He challenges both the district court’s finding of
    exigent circumstances and its alternative application of the inevitable discovery
    doctrine. Assuming without deciding that the initial search was not justified by
    exigency, we affirm the district court’s application of inevitable discovery.
    a.
    The Fourth Amendment “protects the people from unreasonable searches and
    seizures of ‘their persons, houses, papers, and effects.’” Soldal v. Cook Cty., 
    506 U.S. 56
    , 62 (1992) (quoting U.S. Const. amend. IV). A warrantless search of the
    home is generally presumed unreasonable. See Brigham City v. Stuart, 
    547 U.S. 398
    ,
    403 (2006). Here, the district court found that an exigency—specifically, the need to
    check Logan’s mobile home for victims of the shooting—rendered the initial search
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    reasonable. See 
    id.
     (discussing exigency exception to presumption that warrantless
    home searches are unreasonable).
    The “principal judicial remedy to deter Fourth Amendment violations” is the
    exclusionary rule, which “often requires trial courts to exclude unlawfully seized
    evidence in a criminal trial.” Utah v. Strieff, 
    579 U.S. 232
    , 237 (2016). Here, Logan
    invoked the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule in moving to suppress the
    mushroom evidence on the ground that the initial search of his mobile home was
    unlawful. But the exclusionary rule is subject to several exceptions. See, e.g.,
    Murray v. United States, 
    487 U.S. 533
    , 537 (1988) (independent source); United
    States v. Leon, 
    468 U.S. 897
    , 913 (1984) (good faith). Here, the district court
    invoked the inevitable discovery exception to the exclusionary rule as an alternative
    ground for denying the motion to suppress.
    Courts apply the inevitable discovery exception where “the prosecution can
    establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the information ultimately or
    inevitably would have been discovered by lawful means.” Nix v. Williams, 
    467 U.S. 431
    , 444 (1984). If so, the Supreme Court has explained, “the deterrence rationale”
    underlying the exclusionary rule “has so little basis that the evidence should be
    received.” 
    Id.
     The inevitable discovery inquiry is premised on “probability,”
    specifically “how likely it is that a warrant would have been issued and that the
    evidence would have been found pursuant to the warrant.” United States v. Souza,
    
    223 F.3d 1197
    , 1204 (10th Cir. 2000). “What makes a discovery ‘inevitable’ is not
    probable cause alone . . . but probable cause plus a chain of events that would have
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    led to a warrant (or another justification) independent of the search.” 
    Id.
     (alteration
    omitted) (quoting United States v. Brown, 
    64 F.3d 1083
    , 1085 (7th Cir. 1995)).
    “[I]nevitable discovery involves no speculative elements but focuses on demonstrated
    historical facts capable of ready verification.” United States v. Shrum, 
    908 F.3d 1219
    , 1235 (10th Cir. 2018) (quoting Nix, 
    467 U.S. at
    444 n.5).
    In the past, we have found several factors useful in navigating the inevitable
    discovery exception. These include: (1) “the extent to which the warrant process has
    been completed at the time those seeking the warrant learn of the search”; (2) “the
    strength of the showing of probable cause at the time the search occurred”;
    (3) “whether a warrant ultimately was obtained, albeit after the illegal entry”; and
    (4) “evidence that law enforcement agents ‘jumped the gun’ because they lacked
    confidence in their showing of probable cause and wanted to force the issue by
    creating a fait accompli.” United States v. Cunningham, 
    413 F.3d 1199
    , 1203–04
    (10th Cir. 2005) (quoting Souza, 
    223 F.3d at 1204
    ).
    We will assume without deciding that the initial warrantless search of Logan’s
    mobile home was not justified by exigent circumstances and focus instead on the
    district court’s finding that the inevitable discovery exception to the exclusionary
    rule applies. “When this court reviews the denial of a motion to suppress, we view
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the government and accept the district
    court’s factual findings unless clearly erroneous.” United States v. Berg, 
    956 F.3d 1213
    , 1216 (10th Cir. 2020). When a party appeals a district court’s inevitable
    discovery analysis, “[w]e review the district court’s factual determinations for clear
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    error and its ultimate Fourth Amendment conclusions de novo.” United States v.
    Christy, 
    739 F.3d 534
    , 540 (10th Cir. 2014).
    We agree with the government that the district court’s finding that police
    officers would have found the mushroom evidence while executing a lawful warrant
    is a factual finding that we review for clear error. See United States v. Sanchez, 
    608 F.3d 685
    , 692 (10th Cir. 2010). “Findings of fact are clearly erroneous when they are
    unsupported in the record, or if after our review of the record we have the definite
    and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” La Resolana Architects, PA v.
    Reno, Inc., 
    555 F.3d 1171
    , 1177 (10th Cir. 2009) (quoting TransWestern Publ’g Co.
    LP v. Multimedia Mktg. Assocs., Inc., 
    133 F.3d 773
    , 775 (10th Cir. 1998)).
    b.
    On appeal, Logan argues that the district court erred by only analyzing
    whether probable cause supported a warrant application and ignoring whether the
    mushroom evidence would have been discovered without the initial sweep. He
    contends that the government “made no effort to establish that the evidence would
    still have been in the same location to be discovered at the time the warrant was
    executed.” Aplt. Br. at 33. He emphasizes that the warrant process had not begun
    when police officers checked the home for additional victims, and further argues that
    the government did not offer any evidence about the investigation’s timeline or
    whether the home was secured. Logan also suggests that the district court’s decision,
    if affirmed, “impermissibly creates a crime scene exception for inevitable discovery.”
    Aplt. Br. at 34.
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    The government responds that the district court’s finding that law enforcement
    inevitably would have discovered the mushroom evidence was not clearly erroneous.
    The same is true, in the government’s view, of Logan’s suggestion that the
    mushrooms may not have remained in the home while the government sought a
    warrant, which the government would ask us to review for plain error. Additionally,
    the government contends that the district court did not focus solely on probable cause
    and that it did not create any exception for crime scenes.
    c.
    The factual findings that supported the district court’s application of the
    inevitable discovery exception were not clearly erroneous. First, the district court did
    not clearly err in finding that officers would have obtained a valid warrant to search
    Logan’s mobile home, even if they had not observed the mushrooms while looking
    for additional victims of the shooting. Second, the district court did not clearly err in
    implicitly finding that officers executing such a warrant would have found the
    mushroom evidence. Finally, we reject Logan’s argument about a so-called crime
    scene exception to the Fourth Amendment.
    The district court did not clearly err by finding that, “[e]xtracting the evidence
    of a mushroom grow operation from the search warrant, . . . investigators would have
    nevertheless . . . execut[ed] a warrant to discover further evidence of the shooting.”
    R. Vol. I at 58. Testimony at the suppression hearing provided a reasonable basis for
    that finding. Officer Carson testified that after checking the mobile home for
    additional victims, he “knew that there was going to be a warrant regardless . . . for
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    evidentiary purposes in relation to the shooting.” R. Vol. III at 63. Asked,
    hypothetically, whether law enforcement would have still sought a warrant without
    finding the mushroom evidence, he responded in the affirmative, indicating that
    officers would have been looking for “any evidence” of the shooting. 
    Id.
     The
    district court did not commit clear error by crediting Officer Carson’s uncontradicted,
    sworn testimony, and concluding that law enforcement would have sought a warrant
    to search Logan’s residence even if the mushrooms had not been found.
    The district court likewise did not commit clear error by finding that officers
    would have obtained and executed the warrant they would have sought. That is so
    even though the warrant process had not started when officers checked the mobile
    home for additional victims. See Christy, 739 F.3d at 543 (“[A]n effort to obtain a
    warrant is but one factor of the inevitable discovery doctrine in this circuit.”). After
    all, a warrant—albeit one reflecting a warrant application that also covered the
    mushrooms and marijuana—was obtained and executed within a few hours of the
    shooting. Even without the mushroom and marijuana component of the warrant, it
    was essentially a certainty that evidence of the shooting would be found if the mobile
    home were searched. See Cunningham, 
    413 F.3d at 1204
    . It also does not appear
    that “law enforcement agents ‘jumped the gun’ because they lacked confidence in
    their showing of probable cause.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Souza, 
    223 F.3d at 1204
    ). Rather,
    they pursued a warrant on multiple grounds, and to the extent we are assuming two of
    those grounds were invalid, the district court still had adequate support for its
    conclusion that a warrant would have issued in due course with respect to solely the
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    shooting. The court’s finding that law enforcement would have obtained and
    executed a valid warrant to search the mobile home for evidence of the shooting was
    not clearly erroneous.
    Before turning to the second factual finding required to apply the inevitable
    discovery exception here—that the evidence at issue would have been found pursuant
    to the lawful warrant—we reject Logan’s legal argument that the district court failed
    to find that the mushroom evidence would have still been found in the north bedroom
    if officers executed a warrant limited to the shooting. We review this argument de
    novo. See Christy, 739 F.3d at 540. It is true, as Logan contends, that probable
    cause alone is insufficient to apply inevitable discovery. See Souza, 
    223 F.3d at 1204
    . However, the district court covered more ground in its findings than Logan
    suggests. The district court stated that, “while executing a warrant to discover
    further evidence of the shooting,” the officers “would have nevertheless discovered
    evidence of the mushroom grow operation.” R. Vol. I at 58. That statement
    contained the very factual finding that inevitable discovery requires—that the
    evidence would have been found on a valid warrant. Logan’s legal argument
    therefore fails because the district court made the findings that it needed to make to
    hold that the inevitable discovery exception applied. Although the district court did
    not make an explicit finding that the mushroom evidence would have been in the
    same spot, at the same time, if a valid warrant were executed, we think that finding is
    implicit within the factual finding that we have excerpted. That only leaves the
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    question whether the finding had enough support in the record to withstand clear
    error review. It did.
    The district court did not commit clear error by finding that the mushroom
    evidence likely would have been found if officers executed a warrant limited to the
    shooting. Unlike in some inevitable discovery cases, this district court had detailed
    evidence of a warrant execution process that would have been remarkably similar, in
    both scope and timing, to the process associated with the hypothetical, more limited
    warrant that, as we have explained, the district court did not clearly err in finding law
    enforcement would have sought, obtained, and executed. As far as scope, officers
    testified at the suppression hearing that bullet holes and shell casings indicated that
    evidence of the shooting would be found in the north bedroom. A hypothetical
    warrant would have thus led officers into that bedroom, where they would have
    located the mushroom evidence. 1 As far as timing, nothing suggests a warrant
    limited to evidence of the shooting would have been obtained on a slower timeline.
    The comparable warrant process in this case provided the district court with
    “demonstrated historical facts capable of ready verification,” Shrum, 908 F.3d at
    1235 (quoting Nix, 
    467 U.S. at
    444 n.5), that directly supported the court’s finding
    that the mushroom evidence would have inevitably been located by police.
    1
    Although the mushrooms would fall outside the scope of the hypothetical
    search warrant, the plain view doctrine would likely apply. See United States v.
    Muhtorov, 
    20 F.4th 558
    , 597–98 (10th Cir. 2021).
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    The district court also did not commit clear error by its related, implicit
    finding that the mushrooms would not have been moved by the time law enforcement
    officers executing a lawful warrant reached the north bedroom. 2 Testimony at the
    suppression hearing supported the district court’s finding that law enforcement
    officers “secured” the scene while waiting for the warrant to issue. R. Vol. I at 53.
    Specifically, Officer McKenna testified that while Logan was being treated for his
    wounds, other officers remained at the mobile home. Officer Carson also testified
    that it would be “standard procedure” to stand over shell casings “to preserve the
    evidence.” R. Vol. III at 58. When Officer Carson arrived at Logan’s mobile home,
    that is exactly what officers were doing. Notably, this testimony suggests that
    officers were motivated to secure the scene because of the shooting, not because of
    the mushrooms. Moreover, video evidence showed police officers preventing
    individuals unrelated to the investigation from approaching the mobile home. The
    district court did not clearly err by finding that the mushroom evidence would not
    have been moved in a hypothetical timeline where officers were executing a warrant
    to search for evidence of the shooting.
    Finally, we are unpersuaded by Logan’s argument that affirming the inevitable
    discovery issue would create a crime scene exception to the Fourth Amendment.
    Here, the district court did not apply the inevitable discovery exception “just because
    2
    The government suggests that Logan forfeited this specific argument, so we
    should review for plain error. Logan disagrees and seeks de novo review. We need
    not determine which position prevails because the argument fails under any standard.
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    a crime had occurred,” as Logan suggests on appeal. Aplt. Br. at 34. Instead, the
    district court’s inevitable discovery holding was based on factual findings that law
    enforcement would have obtained a valid warrant and uncovered the mushroom
    evidence while executing that warrant.
    In sum, it is undisputed that law enforcement officers executing a warrant to
    search Logan’s mobile home for mushroom, marijuana, and shooting evidence found
    the mushroom evidence in the north bedroom. The district court thus had abundant
    factual support, rooted in the real-life execution of essentially the same warrant, for
    its finding that officers executing a hypothetical warrant to search the mobile home
    for solely shooting evidence would have done so on the same timeline and found the
    mushroom evidence in the north bedroom. The court did not err by applying the
    inevitable discovery exception.
    III.
    We AFFIRM the district court’s denial of Logan’s motion to suppress.
    Entered for the Court
    Allison H. Eid
    Circuit Judge
    13