United States v. Taurus Cooper ( 2022 )


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  •                                RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 22a0023p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    ┐
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    │
    Plaintiff-Appellee,      │
    >        No. 21-5209
    │
    v.                                                  │
    │
    TAURUS COOPER,                                             │
    Defendant-Appellant.        │
    ┘
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Tennessee at Memphis.
    No. 2:19-cr-20339-1—Thomas L. Parker, District Judge.
    Argued: October 20, 2021
    Decided and Filed: February 3, 2022
    Before: BATCHELDER, LARSEN, and READLER, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Michael J. Stengel, MICHAEL J. STENGEL, P.C., Memphis, Tennessee, for
    Appellant. Naya Bedini, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, Memphis, Tennessee, for
    Appellee. ON BRIEF: Michael J. Stengel, MICHAEL J. STENGEL, P.C., Memphis,
    Tennessee, for Appellant. Naya Bedini, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, Memphis,
    Tennessee, for Appellee.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    LARSEN, Circuit Judge. Taurus Cooper pleaded guilty to possessing a firearm as a
    felon, 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g), but reserved the right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress
    the gun underlying the charge. On appeal, Cooper contends that the district court erred in
    applying the inevitable discovery exception to the exclusionary rule. Because the district court
    No. 21-5209                                 United States v. Cooper                                           Page 2
    focused on the wrong legal test, we VACATE the district court’s judgment and REMAND for
    further proceedings.
    I.
    Several law enforcement agencies executed a warrant for Cooper’s arrest on suspicion of
    firearms and narcotics charges. Among them was the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    Fugitive Apprehension Team, which had been called in to assist. At a pre-arrest meeting, the
    Team learned that Cooper was known to be a high-ranking gang member; and the Team was
    shown a Facebook photo of Cooper holding a Glock handgun with a fully loaded high-capacity
    magazine. Officers from the Team and other police agencies traveled to the home of Cooper’s
    girlfriend, Angel Walton, where they expected to find Cooper.
    When Officer Joshua Fox knocked on the door, Walton answered. Through the doorway,
    Fox saw Cooper sitting on the living room couch. Concerned about spooking Cooper into
    fleeing, Fox showed Walton a photograph of another individual (someone he knew was not at
    Walton’s home) and asked if that person was there. Walton, as expected, said “no.” Fox
    nonetheless asked whether he could come inside to look for the individual, and, according to
    Fox’s later testimony, Walton agreed.1 Fox proceeded to arrest Cooper while the rest of the
    officers—at least five more—rushed into the home and spread out to conduct a protective sweep.
    Aiming to discover any armed confederates who might ambush them, the officers swiftly
    checked each room of the house, “wherever a body c[ould] hide.” Jeffrey Jensen, the officer
    checking the back bedroom, noticed a lump in the mattress, flipped it over, and discovered the
    Glock handgun depicted in Cooper’s Facebook post.
    As soon as Jensen called out his discovery, Fox retrieved rights-waiver and consent-to-
    search forms from his vehicle. He went over both with Walton. The first form listed Walton’s
    Miranda rights and included spaces to fill in information about the recently found firearm; the
    second asked whether Walton consented to a search of her home. Walton placed her initials next
    to lines stating that she was consenting freely, that she had not been threatened or coerced, and
    1Walton   testified that she never consented to officers entering her home to look for the faux suspect, but the
    district court found her testimony incredible and credited Fox’s version of events instead. We defer to that
    credibility finding. See United States v. Johnson, 
    344 F.3d 562
    , 567 (6th Cir. 2003).
    No. 21-5209                         United States v. Cooper                                Page 3
    that she had been treated fairly. With Walton’s consent, officers conducted a more thorough
    search but recovered only a hat matching the one Cooper had been wearing in his Facebook
    photo.
    Charged with possessing a firearm as a felon, 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g), Cooper moved to
    suppress the gun seized during the sweep of Walton’s house.            The district court held an
    evidentiary hearing at which Fox, Jensen, and Walton testified.          Their testimony focused
    primarily on the protective sweep and consent form, with little discussion of the situation before
    the sweep. The court denied Cooper’s motion. Although the court concluded that the protective
    sweep was unlawful, the court determined that Walton’s subsequent consent was voluntary, that
    her consent was sufficiently attenuated from the illegal sweep, and that officers inevitably would
    have discovered the gun in the lawful consent search. Cooper pleaded guilty, reserving the right
    to appeal the suppression ruling. He was sentenced to 77 months’ imprisonment.
    II.
    In reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, we review legal questions de novo and
    the district court’s factual findings for clear error. United States v. Abdalla, 
    972 F.3d 838
    , 844
    (6th Cir. 2020).    The government does not challenge the district court’s holding that the
    protective sweep violated the Fourth Amendment. That means the gun, the primary fruit of an
    unlawful search, must be suppressed unless an exception to the exclusionary rule applies. Utah
    v. Strieff, 
    136 S. Ct. 2056
    , 2061 (2016). The only relevant exception is inevitable discovery.
    The case turns, therefore, on whether the district court properly applied that exception.
    A.
    “[T]he inevitable discovery doctrine allows for the admission of evidence that would
    have been discovered even without the unconstitutional source.” 
    Id.
     The doctrine flows from
    the deterrence goals underpinning the exclusionary rule itself: If the same evidence surely would
    have been found without the illegality, “then the deterrence rationale has so little basis that the
    evidence should be received.” Nix v. Williams, 
    467 U.S. 431
    , 444 (1984). In short, this
    exception ensures that the exclusionary rule puts police in the same position they would have
    been in without the illegality, not a worse one. Murray v. United States, 
    487 U.S. 533
    , 541
    No. 21-5209                           United States v. Cooper                           Page 4
    (1988). The government bears the burden of showing that the exception applies. Nix, 
    467 U.S. at 444
    ; United States v. Alexander, 
    540 F.3d 494
    , 502 (6th Cir. 2008).
    Our cases recognize two scenarios in which inevitable discovery operates. First, the
    doctrine applies when there is “an independent, untainted investigation” that was bound to
    uncover the same evidence. United States v. Kennedy, 
    61 F.3d 494
    , 499 (6th Cir. 1995). Nix, for
    example, involved two parallel, independent efforts to locate a victim’s corpse: an interrogation
    by detectives and a volunteer grid search. 
    467 U.S. at
    435–37. No one argues that this first
    category applies here, where the same group of officers conducted a single investigation, so we
    focus on the second.      Inevitable discovery also applies when “other compelling facts”
    demonstrate that discovery was inevitable. Kennedy, 
    61 F.3d at 499
    . A few paradigmatic
    examples of “other compelling facts” demonstrate what we mean. The doctrine applies when the
    evidence would have been discovered pursuant to a “routine procedure,” such as an airline’s
    standard policy of opening lost luggage. 
    Id. at 500
    . And it has repeatedly been employed when,
    after seizing evidence during an illegal search, police obtain and execute a search warrant based
    on probable cause developed before the illegal search. E.g., United States v. Bowden, 240 F.
    App’x 56, 61 (6th Cir. 2007); United States v. Keszthelyi, 
    308 F.3d 557
    , 573–75 (6th Cir. 2002).
    As long as the “evidence discovered during [the] illegal search would have been discovered
    during a later legal search[,] and the second search inevitably would have occurred in the
    absence of the first,” then the evidence may be admitted. Keszthelyi, 
    308 F.3d at 574
    .
    The government argues, and the district court agreed, that Cooper’s gun should not be
    suppressed because it inevitably would have been found in the ensuing consent search. In
    attempting to prove that claim, the government focuses exclusively on whether Walton’s consent
    was voluntary and untainted by the illegal sweep. The district court largely adopted that same
    framework, invoking the “attenuation” factors used to assess whether a statement acquired as a
    product of illegality is “sufficiently an act of free will to purge the primary taint.” Brown v.
    Illinois, 
    422 U.S. 590
    , 602 (1975) (quoting Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 486
    (1963)). But the attenuation doctrine laid out in Brown and Wong Sun is distinct from the
    inevitable discovery exception. Before addressing how the inevitable discovery rule applies
    here, some housekeeping is in order.
    No. 21-5209                          United States v. Cooper                               Page 5
    Start with the basics. The exclusionary rule prohibits introduction of evidence directly
    acquired by an unlawful search or seizure, as well as “derivative evidence, both tangible and
    testimonial, that is the product of the primary evidence.” Murray, 
    487 U.S. at
    536–37. In
    assessing whether illegally seized evidence should be suppressed, but-for causation is a
    necessary, but not sufficient condition. Hudson v. Michigan, 
    547 U.S. 586
    , 592 (2006); United
    States v. Elmore, 
    18 F.4th 193
    , 202 (6th Cir. 2021). Both inevitable discovery and attenuation
    “involve the causal relationship between the unconstitutional act and the discovery of evidence.”
    Strieff, 136 S. Ct. at 2061. But importantly, the two doctrines test different aspects of the causal
    chain.
    Under the inevitable discovery doctrine, if the evidence would have been lawfully
    discovered without the unconstitutional source, then it should be admitted.          Id.   That test
    necessarily involves some hypothesizing. We must ask: “[V]iewing affairs as they existed at the
    instant before the unlawful search, what would have happened had the unlawful search never
    occurred[?]” Kennedy, 
    61 F.3d at 498
     (quoting United States v. Eng, 
    971 F.2d 854
    , 861 (2d Cir.
    1992)); see also Murray, 
    487 U.S. at
    542 n.3 (“To determine whether the warrant was
    independent of the illegal entry, one must ask whether it would have been sought even if what
    actually happened had not occurred . . . .”).
    The attenuation doctrine, by contrast, tests something akin to proximate cause: whether
    the causal link has “become so attenuated as to dissipate the taint.” Nardone v. United States,
    
    308 U.S. 338
    , 341 (1939). A finding of attenuation does not mean that but-for causation is
    lacking. See Hudson, 
    547 U.S. at 592
     (“[B]ut-for cause, or ‘causation in the logical sense alone,’
    can be too attenuated to justify exclusion.” (quoting United States v. Ceccolini, 
    435 U.S. 268
    ,
    274 (1978))). Wong Sun, the seminal attenuation case, made that clear by holding that a
    defendant’s confession was admissible even though police would never have located the
    defendant but-for an earlier illegal arrest. 
    371 U.S. at 491
    ; see also Elmore, 18 F.4th at 202
    (holding that evidence sufficiently attenuated from illegal searches should not be suppressed
    even though searches may have been a but-for cause of obtaining the evidence); United States v.
    Castillo, 
    238 F.3d 424
    , 
    2000 WL 1800481
    , at *5–6 (6th Cir. 2000) (table) (fleeing from arrest
    No. 21-5209                        United States v. Cooper                               Page 6
    “in response to police misconduct” is an “intervening event” sufficient to purge the taint of the
    stop (quotation marks omitted)).
    The two exceptions also serve different goals. In most cases, the attenuation doctrine,
    unlike inevitable discovery, is not intended to restore law enforcement to the position it held
    before the illegal search.   Attenuation instead “attempts to mark the point at which the
    detrimental consequences of illegal police action become so attenuated that the deterrent effect
    of the exclusionary rule no longer justifies its cost.” United States v. Leon, 
    468 U.S. 897
    , 911
    (1984) (quoting Brown, 
    422 U.S. at 609
     (Powell, J., concurring)). Nor does the attenuation
    doctrine concern the admissibility of the primary products of a constitutional violation. See
    Elmore, 18 F.4th at 199. Whereas the inevitable discovery exception can save from exclusion
    any evidence connected to an illegal search—direct or derivative—the attenuation doctrine
    concerns secondary fruits. It asks whether an initial illegality so infects derivative evidence,
    discovered through subsequent lawful means, as to render it inadmissible.
    These distinctions explain why many of the cases the parties rely on are out of place here.
    Take United States v. Calhoun, 
    49 F.3d 231
     (6th Cir. 1995), which the government says is
    “controlling.” There, upon executing a controlled delivery of narcotics, officers arrested the
    defendant and conducted an illegal protective sweep of her apartment. 
    Id. at 233
    . The sweep
    uncovered no evidence. 
    Id.
     at 233–34. Officers then obtained the defendant’s consent and found
    a shotgun under her bed. 
    Id. at 234
    . We held that the district court was right not to suppress the
    gun. 
    Id.
     The illegal sweep uncovered no evidence and did not taint the defendant’s consent to
    the subsequent search that did produce evidence.        
    Id.
       Although it cited some inevitable
    discovery decisions, Calhoun is an attenuation case. The question it answered was whether
    evidence discovered pursuant to a consent search should have been suppressed as the “secondary
    fruit” of the illegal protective sweep.    Calhoun had no occasion to consider the question
    presented here: whether, had the illegal sweep never occurred, the homeowner would have
    consented to a search that would have unearthed the gun. 
    Id. at 235
    .
    The same pattern emerges in many of the other cases referenced by the parties: officers
    conduct an illegal search, then obtain the defendant’s consent to a subsequent search, and find
    the contested evidence in that subsequent search. The admissibility of that later-discovered
    No. 21-5209                          United States v. Cooper                               Page 7
    evidence turns on attenuation. See, e.g., United States v. Beauchamp, 
    659 F.3d 560
    , 571 (6th
    Cir. 2011) (evidence discovered during consent search conducted after illegal seizure suppressed
    because the “taint” of the seizure had not “dissipated”); United States v. Lopez-Arias, 
    344 F.3d 623
    , 626, 628–30 (6th Cir. 2003) (evidence found during consent search executed after unlawful
    seizure suppressed because there was “no intervening act of free will sufficient to break the
    causal chain”); United States v. Buchanan, 
    904 F.2d 349
    , 355–57 (6th Cir. 1990) (same).
    By contrast, Nix provides an instructive example of a true inevitable discovery analysis.
    There, officers were conducting a large-scale search for the corpse of a murder victim;
    meanwhile, the suspect, Robert Williams, agreed to lead two other detectives to the corpse. 
    467 U.S. at
    434–36. In light of Williams’ statements, the officers called off the search. 
    Id. at 436
    .
    Williams then led the officers to the body. 
    Id.
     Williams later moved to suppress the body and
    related evidence. Despite finding a Fifth Amendment violation, 
    id. at 437
    , the Court asked
    whether the corpse—the same evidence discovered using Williams’ illegally obtained
    statements—inevitably would have been found anyway, 
    id. at 448
    . The Court answered that
    question by looking at the state of affairs before Williams’ illegal interrogation: the intentions of
    the officer coordinating the search, the direction the search was moving, its proximity to the
    body, and the instructions given to the searchers. 
    Id.
     at 448–49. Based on that evidence, the
    Court concluded that “the volunteer search teams would have resumed the search had Williams
    not earlier led the police to the body and the body inevitably would have been found.” 
    Id.
     at
    449–50. Put simply, the Court determined what would have happened had the illegality never
    occurred.
    This court’s inevitable discovery cases use the same mode of analysis. The disputed
    evidence is first discovered through an illegal search, and admissibility turns on whether the
    evidence still would have come to light had the search not happened. See, e.g., Kennedy, 
    61 F.3d at
    500–01 (drugs found during unlawful police search of lost luggage were admissible because,
    pursuant to company policy, airline would have opened the luggage anyway); Bowden,
    240 F. App’x at 62 (drugs discovered during unlawful search were admissible because officers
    formed both the intention to seek and facts sufficient to obtain a warrant before starting the
    search, then actually obtained that warrant); United States v. Kimes, 
    246 F.3d 800
    , 804 (6th Cir.
    No. 21-5209                         United States v. Cooper                               Page 8
    2001) (knives found during unlawful vehicle search were admissible because they would have
    been found during a standard inventory search when the vehicle was impounded).
    B.
    Our cases provide some useful guideposts for answering the hypothetical demanded by
    the inevitable discovery exception. While doing so inherently requires some conjecture, United
    States v. Leake, 
    95 F.3d 409
    , 412 (6th Cir. 1996), courts must “keep speculation at a minimum
    by focusing on ‘demonstrated historical facts capable of ready verification or impeachment,’”
    United States v. Ford, 
    184 F.3d 566
    , 577 (6th Cir. 1999) (quoting Nix, 
    467 U.S. at
    444 n.5). Our
    cases usually entail little guesswork because they involve routine practices: that an airline
    would, pursuant to its official policy, open the defendant’s lost luggage, Kennedy, 
    61 F.3d at 500
    ; that police would follow standard procedure to inventory a vehicle before having it towed,
    United States v. Pritchett, 
    749 F.3d 417
    , 437 (6th Cir. 2014); Kimes, 
    246 F.3d at 804
    ; or that
    upon arresting a suspect, police would routinely search his person, United States v. Mohammed,
    512 F. App’x 583, 589 (6th Cir. 2013), or ask for his name, United States v. Stamper, 91 F.
    App’x 445, 459 (6th Cir. 2004). Even without such a routine, evidence of police officers’
    intentions in a particular case may inform our judgment about what they would have done absent
    the illegality. See, e.g., Keszthelyi, 
    308 F.3d at 575
    ; Bowden, 240 F. App’x at 62; see also
    Murray, 
    487 U.S. at
    540 n.2 (suggesting courts may rely on officers’ post hoc, plausible
    assurances that they would have taken certain action). The risk of intolerable speculation
    increases, however, when the government’s theory of discovery relies on the irregular actions of
    third parties. See, e.g., United States v. Stokes, 
    733 F.3d 438
    , 447 (2d Cir. 2013) (finding it not
    inevitable that hotel staff would have opened bag left in guest room because there was no
    evidence of such a policy or routine). In all events, the court must “view[] affairs as they existed
    at the instant before the unlawful search” and focus on “demonstrated historical facts,” Kennedy,
    
    61 F.3d at 498
    , to determine what would have happened in the absence of the unlawful search.
    That’s not to say that events during and after an unlawful search are off the table. The
    scope of a later search may, for example, inform whether a hypothetical search would have
    uncovered the disputed evidence. Comparing Nix and our decision in Keszthelyi is instructive in
    this regard. In Nix, the independent investigation never actually discovered the challenged
    No. 21-5209                         United States v. Cooper                                Page 9
    evidence, so the Court’s analysis focused on what the investigation would have revealed. 
    467 U.S. at
    448–50. Keszthelyi, by contrast, had a ready answer to that question. After an officer
    seized cocaine during an illegal search of the defendant’s home, the same officer was part of a
    nearly identical search two days later that was supported by probable cause developed
    independently of the illegal search. 
    308 F.3d at
    574–75. “The fact that the lawful . . . search
    covered the same area, and involved many of the same agents, as the illegal . . . search
    minimize[d] our need to speculate about whether the cocaine inevitably would have been
    discovered during the later lawful search.” 
    Id. at 575
    .
    More to the point here, our unpublished decision in United States v. Pihlblad, 
    142 F.3d 437
    , 
    1998 WL 165150
     (6th Cir. 1998) (table) (per curiam), illustrates how consent given after an
    illegal search may play a role in an inevitable discovery analysis that, as in this case, must ask
    not only whether certain evidence would have been found, but whether consent would have been
    given, absent the illegal search. The defendant, Jeffrey Pihlblad, lived in Misty Parker’s home
    while on parole. 
    Id. at *1
    . The two got into an argument late one evening that ended with Parker
    fleeing the house and calling police to report that Pihlblad was suicidal. 
    Id.
     Police arrived at the
    home and, after persuading Pihlblad to come out peacefully, conducted a protective sweep that
    recovered a rifle. 
    Id.
     Parker then voluntarily signed consent-to-search forms. 
    Id.
     We affirmed
    the denial of Pihlblad’s motion to suppress the rifle because the inevitable discovery exception
    applied, even though Parker’s consent came after the protective sweep. 
    Id. at *5
    . And on those
    facts, it made good sense to conclude that Parker would have consented even if the protective
    sweep had never occurred. After all, it was Parker herself who initially contacted police because
    “she wanted them to help [Pihlblad],” 
    id. at *1
    , a sentiment reinforced by her later consent.
    But subsequent events also carry an entanglement problem. Because inevitable discovery
    asks what would have happened had the illegality not occurred, courts may rely on post-illegality
    events only if they would have occurred in that counterfactual scenario.          Sometimes it is
    relatively easy to isolate the causal effects of the illegality. Courts, for example, may excise the
    tainted portions of a warrant application and reassess probable cause. E.g., Keszthelyi, 
    308 F.3d at 575
    . But disentanglement is often not that easy, and it’s particularly difficult—though not
    impossible—when the contested evidence is an oral statement. See United States v. Vasquez De
    No. 21-5209                          United States v. Cooper                            Page 10
    Reyes, 
    149 F.3d 192
    , 195–96 (3d Cir. 1998) (“[A] statement not yet made is, by its very nature,
    evanescent and ephemeral. Should the conditions under which it was made change, even but a
    little, there could be no assurance the statement would be the same.”).         When relying on
    subsequent events to prove inevitability, “what counts is whether the actual illegal search had
    any effect” on those events. Murray, 
    487 U.S. at
    542 n.3.
    C.
    With these principles in mind, we turn back to this case. The district court largely
    engaged in an attenuation analysis focused on whether Walton’s subsequent consent was
    sufficiently attenuated from the illegal protective sweep. That was the wrong legal test. The
    district court’s finding of attenuation shows merely that the causal link was too remote to justify
    suppression of any evidence found during the consent search. Strieff, 136 S. Ct. at 2061. But
    there was no such evidence. The gun was seized during the initial unlawful search, so inevitable
    discovery, not attenuation, is the right tool for the job. When the district court did briefly use
    that tool, the court did not, as it should have, examine the circumstances as they existed just
    before the protective sweep to determine what would have happened had the protective sweep
    never occurred.
    In fairness, the district court bears little blame for the mistake. In response to the
    suppression motion, the government offered an inevitable discovery argument consisting of a
    few conclusory sentences, and the parties offered even less on the topic during the suppression
    hearing, which was largely focused on the legality of the protective sweep. The record likewise
    contains scant evidence of the state of affairs just before the protective sweep, facts surely
    relevant to properly applying inevitable discovery. But the district court nonetheless focused on
    the wrong legal standard, which warrants a remand so the district court can apply the correct test
    in the first instance. On remand the court should focus on the following questions: If the illegal
    protective sweep had never happened, would officers have sought Walton’s consent to search?
    Would Walton have given her consent in such a hypothetical world? And would the ensuing
    consent search have led to the gun? The inevitable discovery exception applies only if the
    answer to all three questions is “yes.”
    No. 21-5209                    United States v. Cooper                        Page 11
    ***
    We VACATE the district court’s judgment and REMAND for further proceedings.