United States v. Bowden , 240 F. App'x 56 ( 2007 )


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  •                 NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 07a0617n.06
    Filed: August 24, 2007
    No. 06-1072
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                         )
    )
    Appellee,                                  )
    )
    v.                                                )    ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    )    STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
    RICHARD LEE BOWDEN,                               )    WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
    )
    Appellant.                                 )
    Before: KENNEDY, MARTIN and SUTTON, Circuit Judges.
    SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Richard Bowden challenges the district court’s decision, after a
    Booker remand, to sentence him to a 168-month term of imprisonment, the same sentence he
    originally received. Relying on an intervening Fourth Amendment decision, he also challenges his
    underlying conviction for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute upon which the original (and
    subsequent) sentence is based. We affirm the sentence and reject Bowden’s new challenge to his
    conviction.
    I.
    Early in the afternoon of September 6, 2001, Officers Brian Beauchamp and Michael Hecht
    of the Kalamazoo (Michigan) Valley Enforcement Team, an undercover narcotics group, went to 521
    Harding Place to investigate an informant’s tip that Richard Bowden was selling crack from the
    No. 06-1072
    United States v. Bowden
    residence. The home was owned and occupied by Bowden’s 77-year-old father, Cleveland, but
    Bowden maintained a room there and stayed at the residence from time to time. When the officers
    arrived, Bowden consented to a walk-through search of the residence on the condition that the
    officers would not open drawers or look under couches or beds.
    During the walk-through, the officers discovered a plastic baggie with the corners ripped off
    in a bedroom and a similar baggie on top of the refrigerator containing pills. Bowden claimed that
    the pills were Vicodin prescribed to treat pain associated with a tooth ailment, but he could not locate
    the prescription or the prescription bottle nor name the doctor who prescribed the pills or the
    pharmacy that filled the prescription. Officer Beauchamp asked Bowden about his criminal history;
    Bowden acknowledged one prior conviction, but a subsequent call to the dispatcher revealed that he
    had two prior convictions.
    At that point, Officer Beauchamp asked Bowden for his consent to a thorough search of the
    residence. Bowden declined, explaining that he had to go somewhere with his sister. The officers
    told him that he was free to leave but that they would secure the house in his absence and obtain a
    search warrant.
    After Bowden left, Officer Hecht informed Cleveland, who was in his room, what had
    happened. Cleveland said that he would allow the officers to search the house, save for Bowden’s
    bedroom, so long as his daughter Dorothy was present. While waiting for her to arrive, Officer
    Beauchamp performed a protective sweep of the basement (observing baggies he thought could be
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    No. 06-1072
    United States v. Bowden
    used for drug packaging and a marijuana roach) and called for backup. Sergeant Earle Martin and
    Officer Brett Hake responded to the call and soon arrived at the home.
    Upon Dorothy’s arrival, Sergeant Martin verified Cleveland’s continued assent and the
    officers began searching the house. Bowden soon reappeared on the scene (about 20 minutes after
    he had left), and Officer Beauchamp secured his consent to search his bedroom. There the officer
    found what appeared to be drug tabulations and began asking Bowden about an individual the
    informant had advised was a drug associate. Bowden responded by revoking his consent to the
    search.
    Officer Beauchamp immediately stopped searching, left the bedroom and descended the
    stairs. As he exited the house, he received a two-way-radio call from Officer Hake asking that he
    come to the garage. On the way there, Officer Beauchamp encountered Cleveland and several other
    family members, who had congregated on the front porch. Cleveland informed him that he too was
    now revoking his consent to the search.
    Officer Beauchamp proceeded to the garage, where Officer Hake showed him crack cocaine
    that he had found in a sock. Beauchamp determined that the cocaine had been located prior to either
    revocation. The officers then obtained a warrant to search the residence. In accordance with the
    warrant, they found a .22 caliber gun near where the officers found the drugs and a men’s shaving
    kit containing $15,520 and two pay stubs made out to Bowden hidden in the basement ceiling.
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    No. 06-1072
    United States v. Bowden
    A federal grand jury charged Bowden with possessing 50 grams of cocaine base with intent
    to distribute. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), (b)(1)(A)(iii). Bowden filed a motion to suppress the
    evidence found at his father’s residence, which the district court denied. A jury found Bowden guilty
    of the charge. The district court calculated a guidelines range of 168–210 months and sentenced him
    to 168 months’ imprisonment.
    Bowden appealed his conviction and sentence, arguing among other things that the police
    did not obtain proper consent to search the residence and that the district court incorrectly applied
    a firearm-possession enhancement to his sentence. We rejected both arguments and affirmed. See
    United States v. Bowden, 
    380 F.3d 266
    (6th Cir. 2004).
    The Supreme Court asked us to reconsider the sentence based on its recently decided Booker
    decision. Bowden v. United States, 
    544 U.S. 902
    (2005). On remand, we “reinstate[d] our
    opinion . . . affirming Bowden’s conviction,” vacated his sentence and remanded for resentencing.
    United States v. Bowden, 
    408 F.3d 847
    , 847 (6th Cir. 2005).
    On remand, after exercising its post-Booker discretion, the district court imposed a 168-
    month prison sentence. The court entered the amended judgment on January 4, 2006; Bowden
    appealed that judgment on January 12; and the Supreme Court decided Georgia v. Randolph, 
    547 U.S. 103
    (2006), on March 22.
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    United States v. Bowden
    II.
    Bowden raises two issues on appeal—(1) that his new sentence is procedurally and
    substantively unreasonable and (2) that his conviction rests on improperly admitted evidence because
    the police violated the Fourth Amendment, as interpreted by Randolph, when they searched the home
    on the basis of his father’s consent after Bowden expressly declined to consent to the search.
    A.
    A procedural challenge to a sentence requires us to consider whether the district court
    appreciated the advisory nature of the guidelines, correctly calculated the guidelines range and
    considered the 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) factors in exercising its independent judgment in imposing a
    sentence. United States v. McBride, 
    434 F.3d 470
    , 476 (6th Cir. 2006). Because Bowden did not
    object on any of these procedural grounds when the district court gave him the chance to do so at the
    end of the sentencing hearing, we limit our review on that score to plain error. See JA 283 (After
    announcing the sentence, the district court asked whether any “objections . . . complaints, comments,
    or anything else for the record” “ha[d] emerged”; Bowden’s counsel responded, “No, Judge.”);
    United States v. Bostic, 
    371 F.3d 865
    , 872–73 (6th Cir. 2004); see also United States v. Bailey, 
    488 F.3d 363
    , 367 (6th Cir. 2007) (explaining that “when the district court asks at sentencing whether
    there are any objections to the sentence and the appellant raises none, we review the sentence only
    for plain error”); United States v. Saffore, 216 F. App’x 531, 532–33 (6th Cir. Feb. 6, 2007)
    (unpublished); United States v. Harden, 195 F. App’x 382, 385 (6th Cir. Aug. 16, 2006)
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    United States v. Bowden
    (unpublished); United States v. Carroll, 189 F. App’x 450, 454 (6th Cir. July 19, 2006)
    (unpublished).
    The district court did not commit plain error. It acknowledged the “discretionary” nature of
    the guidelines range. JA 270–71. It “confirm[ed]” that 168–210 months was “the correct guideline
    range calculation,” JA 270, a finding Bowden does not contest. And it considered the § 3553(a)
    factors. In addition to the guidelines range, 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(4), the court expressly touched upon
    the nature and circumstances of Bowden’s offense, 
    id. § 3553(a)(1);
    his history and personal
    characteristics, id.; the treatment he should receive while in prison, 
    id. § 3553(a)(2)(D);
    the kinds
    of sentences available, 
    id. § 3553(a)(3);
    see also United States v. Williams, 
    436 F.3d 706
    , 708 (6th
    Cir. 2006); and the goal of sentencing similar defendants consistently, 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(6).
    While Bowden claims that the court failed to consider his mitigation arguments, see United
    States v. Richardson, 
    437 F.3d 550
    , 554 (6th Cir. 2006), the sentencing transcript does not back him
    up. The court acknowledged receiving Bowden’s sentencing memoranda, summarized Bowden’s
    mitigation arguments and explained that the goal of the hearing was to “guide the Court with respect
    to” its discretionary sentencing decision. JA 269–70. The court then responded to several of
    Bowden’s contentions during the hearing. It explained that “the activities that the defendant has
    engaged in [in prison] are the kinds of self-improvement activities which [it] would normally expect
    as a baseline minimum in terms of behavior.” JA 271. While the court “underst[ood]” one of
    defendant’s argument[s]” to be “predicated mainly on the idea that the defendant had some kind of
    lack of intense parental monitoring growing up,” it rejected the contention, noting that to do
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    United States v. Bowden
    otherwise would suggest that “the Court should be encouraged to impose a harsher sentence for
    someone who had the opportunity for parental guidance.” JA 277–78. The court questioned
    Bowden’s alleged remorse, characterizing his apology as expressing that “he’s sorry that he was
    found in a position which . . . made him responsible through constructive possession, but he really
    didn’t do anything anyway.” JA 279.
    While Bowden complains that the district court did not expressly address each of his
    arguments, such as his employment record and his family responsibilities, nothing shows that it
    failed to consider them. And when the district court adequately explains all of the reasons for the
    sentence it did select, as here, it need not expressly reject all of the reasons for the sentence it did not
    select. See United States v. Gale, 
    468 F.3d 929
    , 940 (6th Cir. 2006); United States v. Jones, 
    445 F.3d 865
    , 871 (6th Cir. 2006). “[G]iven the straightforward, conceptually simple arguments before
    the judge, the judge’s statement of reasons here, though brief, was legally sufficient.” Rita v. United
    States, 
    127 S. Ct. 2456
    , 2468 (2007).
    Bowden’s substantive challenge to his sentence fares no better. He first urges us to “re-visit”
    our practice of giving procedurally proper, within-guidelines sentences a presumption of
    reasonableness. Br. at 22; see 
    Williams, 436 F.3d at 708
    . The Supreme Court’s Rita decision,
    however, upholds that presumption. See 
    Rita, 127 S. Ct. at 2462
    .
    The 168-month sentence imposed by the district court is reasonably calculated to comply
    with the purposes of sentencing set out in § 3553(a)(2). The sentence is at the very bottom of the
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    United States v. Bowden
    applicable guidelines range. Nothing about Bowden’s specific circumstances demonstrates that such
    a sentence is unreasonable. While he relies heavily upon his behavior in prison between the two
    sentencing hearings, we have generally held that “[p]ost-sentencing events or conduct simply are not
    relevant” in Booker remands. United States v. Worley, 
    453 F.3d 706
    , 709 (6th Cir. 2006) (internal
    quotation marks omitted); see also United States v. Monday, 218 F. App’x 419, 424–25 (6th Cir.
    Feb. 26, 2007) (unpublished) (same); United States v. Smith, 208 F. App’x 425, 427 (6th Cir. Dec.
    18, 2006) (unpublished) (vacating reduced sentence entered on Booker remand because district court
    based reduction upon “post-sentencing rehabilitation efforts”); cf. U.S.S.G. § 5K2.19
    (“Post-sentencing rehabilitative efforts, even if exceptional, undertaken by a defendant after
    imposition of a term of imprisonment . . . are not an appropriate basis for a downward departure
    when resentencing the defendant for that offense.”). Bowden attempts to distinguish these cases by
    saying that the evidence corroborates his claim that he is an industrious, responsible, good person
    who made a mistake, not that he has reformed since the initial sentencing hearing. Even if we were
    to accept this distinction, which we need not decide today, Bowden’s insistence that he can be a
    productive member of society does not cut completely in his favor—for he has turned to crime in
    the past despite this ability. Cf. United States v. Roberson, 
    474 F.3d 432
    , 435 (7th Cir. 2007) (“The
    better off a defendant is, the better chance he has to go straight when he is released from prison—but
    the more inexcusable his criminal conduct.”). It also remains difficult to gauge Bowden’s claim that
    his crime was an “aberrational act,” Br. at 22, since he has never forthrightly confessed that what he
    did was wrong or for that matter ever explained why he committed the crime.
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    United States v. Bowden
    Bowden persists that a sentencing court “could well conclude” that a within-guidelines
    sentence was too lengthy given the “specific and somewhat unusual facts” of his case. Br. at 24.
    Maybe so. But that is not the question; the question is whether the district court reasonably exercised
    its discretion in imposing this sentence—which it did and which is all we have authority to consider
    in deciding whether to affirm this aspect of the sentence.
    B.
    Bowden also attacks the propriety of his conviction, a conviction that we have affirmed not
    once but twice. The Supreme Court moreover directed us to reconsider this case only “in light of
    United States v. Booker,” 
    Bowden, 544 U.S. at 902
    , not with regard to any other matters. See United
    States v. Haynes, 
    468 F.3d 422
    , 426 (6th Cir. 2006) (“Remands ‘in light of Booker’ are concerned
    with sentencing . . . . [H]ad the Supreme Court intended that the remand be in regard to any other
    issue, it would have so stated.”). Bowden responds that a criminal judgment generally is not treated
    as final until the conviction and sentence have been established; that under Griffith v. Kentucky, 
    479 U.S. 314
    , 328 (1987), he is entitled to the benefit of Supreme Court decisions issued while his case
    is on direct review—most notably, Georgia v. Randolph, 
    547 U.S. 103
    (2006); and that he therefore
    may challenge his conviction based on Randolph. In his view, Randolph requires suppression of the
    evidence obtained from the garage because his father, the owner of the house, could not give valid
    consent to search the premises once Bowden revoked his own prior consent to search the house.
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    United States v. Bowden
    We need not resolve this debate because, even if we were permitted to reconsider the
    propriety of this conviction based on Randolph and even if Randolph covered this search—two
    points we need not decide—Bowden faces a separate problem. As the district court correctly found,
    the inevitable-discovery doctrine bars his claim.
    As an exception to the “fruit of the poisonous tree” doctrine, see Nix v. Williams, 
    467 U.S. 431
    , 441–42 (1984), the inevitable-discovery doctrine provides that, where “the tainted evidence
    would be admissible if in fact discovered through an independent source, it should be admissible if
    it inevitably would have been discovered,” Murray v. United States, 
    487 U.S. 533
    , 539 (1988). The
    doctrine thus avoids “put[ting] the police in a worse position than they would have been in absent
    any error or violation.” 
    Nix, 467 U.S. at 443
    . We have applied the rule in two settings: (1) when
    an “independent, untainted investigation . . . inevitably would have uncovered the same evidence”;
    or (2) when there exist “other compelling facts establishing that the disputed evidence inevitably
    would have been discovered.” United States v. Kennedy, 
    61 F.3d 494
    , 499 (6th Cir. 1995). As we
    have made clear, “an alternate, independent line of investigation is not required for the inevitable
    discovery exception to apply.” 
    Id. at 499–500.
    And in trying to predict what would have happened
    had the initial search been suspended, we “focus[] on demonstrated historical facts capable of ready
    verification or impeachment.” United States v. Ford, 
    184 F.3d 566
    , 577 (6th Cir. 1999) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    The Supreme Court and our circuit have applied the doctrine in several cases where, like this
    one, a potentially illegal search was followed by a search conducted in accordance with a valid
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    United States v. Bowden
    search warrant premised on evidence of probable cause developed independently of the initial search.
    See, e.g., 
    Murray, 487 U.S. at 541
    –43 (remanding case for consideration of the inevitable-discovery
    doctrine where police conducted an initial, illegal search and later conducted a second, legal search
    in which they seized marijuana); Segura v. United States, 
    468 U.S. 796
    , 813–16 (1984) (holding that
    contraband would have been inevitably discovered where agents conducted a warrantless search
    while obtaining a search warrant and later conducted a second, legal search in which agents
    discovered contraband); United States v. Keszthelyi, 
    308 F.3d 557
    , 574 (6th Cir. 2002) (“Thus,
    Murray teaches that the inevitable discovery exception . . . applies when, as in the instant case,
    evidence discovered during an 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.”).
    Keszthelyi in particular involved facts quite similar to those here. Consistent with a search
    warrant, agents searched the defendant’s home for cocaine on October 8 and found guns, cash, a
    digital scale, pills, syringes and surveillance equipment, but not cocaine. 
    Id. at 563.
    On October 9,
    an agent returned to the home because he believed that “there was something there that had not been
    located during the initial search,” and he discovered cocaine behind a moveable oven in the
    defendant’s kitchen. 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). On October 11, the agent obtained a
    new search warrant based on an affidavit summarizing the information from the searches conducted
    on October 8 and 9. 
    Id. Nothing was
    found in the last search on October 11. 
    Id. at 564.
    We held
    that although the October 9 search was illegal, “the district court properly denied defendant’s motion
    to suppress the fruits of the October 9 search” because “the cocaine seized during [the October 9]
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    United States v. Bowden
    search inevitably would have been discovered during the lawful execution of a second search warrant
    on October 11.” 
    Id. at 573.
    As in Keszthelyi, the officers here collected information prior to the allegedly illegal search
    that, by itself, sufficed to establish probable cause for the second search. At “the instant before”
    Cleveland’s daughter arrived at the residence and the police began searching, 
    Kennedy, 61 F.3d at 498
    (internal quotation marks omitted), the following information connected the residence to illegal
    drug activity: (1) An informant told the police that Richard Bowden, who drove a “burgundy drop-
    top Buick” and stayed in a “pink house on Harding Place,” was selling drugs, JA 113; (2) the
    informant’s testimony was corroborated when the police arrived at 521 Harding Place (a pink house),
    observed the vehicle parked in the street (a like-colored Buick) and met Richard Bowden; (3) during
    the initial consensual walk-through, the police observed a baggie that they suspected was used for
    drug trafficking in the bedroom and a baggie full of Vicodin pills in the kitchen whose legal source
    Bowden could not identify; (4) during the same walk-through, Bowden gave an incomplete answer
    regarding his criminal history, which included two prior drug convictions (for possessing with intent
    to distribute and manufacturing an imitation controlled substance); and (5) during the protective
    sweep of the basement, an officer observed drug-packaging materials and a marijuana roach, see
    United States v. Taylor, 
    248 F.3d 506
    , 513 (6th Cir. 2001) (“[T]he police may conduct a limited
    protective sweep to ensure the safety of those officers . . . left behind to secure the premises while
    a warrant to search those premises is obtained.”).
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    As the district court found, the officers already had formed the “intent to obtain . . . a search
    warrant” before they commenced the allegedly illegal search. JA 247. That is what they told
    Bowden they would do when he initially left the residence. And that is what they did when the
    father, Cleveland, revoked his consent to a search. The officers submitted an affidavit in support of
    the search warrant that “sets forth in paragraph C the facts relied upon by the police in connection
    with their tip to visit [Bowden’s] house,” JA 229–30, and it “sets forth the contacts which the police
    had with the defendant and his father, the alleged consents to search, the discovery of various
    suspicious items, including suspicious baggies and a baggie containing Vicodin pills, and the
    discovery of the crack cocaine.” Defendant’s Memo to D. Ct. at 3; JA 19. As in Keszthelyi, “the
    untainted portions of the affidavit were sufficient to motivate the [legal] search and would have been
    sufficient to convince a neutral magistrate of the existence of probable cause.” 
    Keszthelyi, 308 F.3d at 575
    ; see also Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 238 (1983) (probable cause to search a residence
    exists when “there is a fair probability that contraband . . . will be found in a particular place”).
    Nor is there any reason to think that the officers, once in possession of a warrant, would not
    have discovered the drugs in the garage. One of the officers previously (and legally) had seen
    Bowden acting suspiciously there before he left the premises. See JA 122. And given that the same
    officer searched the garage after the warrant was obtained, there can be little doubt that he would
    have located the cocaine. See JA 218; see also 
    Keszthelyi, 308 F.3d at 575
    (“The fact that the lawful
    October 11 search covered the same area, and involved many of the same agents, as the illegal
    October 9 search minimizes our need to speculate about whether the cocaine inevitably would have
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    been discovered during the later lawful search.”). On this record, the inevitable-discovery doctrine
    applies, and accordingly Bowden’s challenge to his conviction must fail.
    This analysis also helps to answer the question posed by Nix: What position would the police
    have been in had the search in connection with the father’s allegedly invalid consent never occurred?
    See 
    Nix, 467 U.S. at 443
    . As found by the district court, this evidence would have been discovered.
    The police already had sufficient information from the prior legal search and an informant to obtain
    a warrant. The officers planned to obtain a warrant and secure the premises if consent to search had
    not been given, a strategy allowed by 
    Segura, 468 U.S. at 810
    , 814. After the officers believed they
    no longer had authority to continue searching, they did exactly what they had planned; they secured
    the premises and obtained a search warrant. If they had done this before the alleged violation, they
    would have discovered all of the evidence Bowden asks us to suppress. To suppress this evidence
    “would put the police in a worse position”—just what the Supreme Court has proscribed. 
    Nix, 467 U.S. at 443
    .
    Doubtless, the inevitable-discovery doctrine does not permit police, who have probable cause
    to believe a home contains contraband, to enter a home illegally, conduct a warrantless search and
    escape the exclusionary rule on the ground that the “police could [have] obtain[ed] a warrant yet
    cho[]se not to do so.” Dissent at 3. We have not applied the doctrine to so-called “one-search
    case[s],” in which the evidence was not independently discovered in connection with “a second
    search pursuant to a valid warrant” that was not tainted by the original search. 
    Dice, 200 F.3d at 985
    –86 (rejecting the inevitable-discovery doctrine where police violated the knock-and-announce
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    United States v. Bowden
    requirement while executing a warrant and did not conduct a second search), abrogated on other
    grounds by Hudson v. Michigan, 
    126 S. Ct. 2159
    (2006). No such problem occurred here, however.
    Police act well within constitutional limits when they seek consent for a search, continue the search
    until consent is withdrawn, then obtain and execute a search warrant based on information collected
    during the consented-to search. Prior to Bowden’s revocation of consent, the police already had
    gathered sufficient information to support the search warrant they later obtained. Where such
    “compelling facts establish[] that the disputed evidence inevitably would have been discovered,”
    
    Keszthelyi, 308 F.3d at 574
    , suppressing the evidence “would put the police (and society) not in the
    same position they would have occupied if no violation occurred, but in a worse one,” 
    Murray, 487 U.S. at 541
    ; see also 
    Nix, 467 U.S. at 443
    .
    United States v. Haddix, 
    239 F.3d 766
    (6th Cir. 2001), does not lead to a different outcome.
    A police helicopter “spotter” identified marijuana growing behind the defendant’s home, and police
    illegally entered the home without a search warrant, discovered guns and marijuana and arrested the
    defendant. 
    Id. at 766.
    In response to the defendant’s claim that the evidence should be suppressed,
    the government argued that the inevitable-discovery doctrine should apply whenever “the police
    could have obtained a warrant but did not do so—that is, whenever probable cause would have
    existed had a magistrate considered the question in advance of the search.” 
    Id. at 768.
    Worse than
    that, the government maintained that “evidence that would constitute probable cause for a warrant,
    even when that evidence’s existence is unknown to the police, is inherently destined to be ‘inevitably
    discovered.’” 
    Id. Under this
    theory, the police would need a warrant whenever they could not get
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    United States v. Bowden
    one (because there was insufficient evidence of probable cause before or after the search), and they
    would not need a warrant whenever they could get one (because they already had evidence of
    probable cause or discovered it during the illegal search). That is not what the court means by
    inevitable discovery or inevitable non-discovery. Otherwise, as Haddix correctly observed, the
    warrant requirement would be “completely obviate[d].” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    What we mean by inevitable discovery is that the government obtained the evidence “through an
    independent source,” 
    Murray, 487 U.S. at 539
    , untainted by the initial illegal (or, as here, initial
    allegedly illegal) search. Here, unlike Haddix, the government did not need to rely on evidence
    discovered on an allegedly illegal basis to support the warrant it obtained. The legal evidence the
    government previously had was sufficient to support the warrant and accordingly the inevitable-
    discovery doctrine applies.
    III.
    For these reasons, we affirm.
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    Page 17
    BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge, dissenting. I disagree with the majority’s
    interpretation of the inevitable discovery doctrine, and therefore respectfully dissent.
    I.
    The Supreme Court has stated that inevitable discovery is “an extrapolation from the
    independent source doctrine: Since the tainted evidence would be admissible if in fact discovered
    through an independent source, it should be admissible if it inevitably would have been discovered.”
    Murray v. United States, 
    487 U.S. 533
    , 539 (1988). The Court’s seminal inevitable discovery case
    was Nix v. Williams, in which police obtained a statement from the defendant in violation of his
    Sixth Amendment rights that led to the discovery of the body of his murder victim. 
    467 U.S. 431
    (1984). The Court reversed a grant of habeas to the defendant based on the use of evidence
    regarding the body at trial, finding that the exclusionary rule should not bar admission of evidence
    related to the body. 
    Id. at 449-50.
    The Court held that the “inevitable discovery” exception to the
    exclusionary rule applied because a search party, conducted entirely independently of the police
    interrogation of the defendant, was in the area of the body and would have discovered it even without
    the defendant’s statement. 
    Id. See also
    Murray, 487 U.S. at 542 
    (holding that the related
    independent source rule could potentially apply on remand despite illegal police entry into a
    warehouse containing marijuana where police had legitimately gained probable cause prior to entry
    and separately obtained a warrant for entry if “the search pursuant to warrant was in fact a genuinely
    independent source of the information and tangible evidence”).
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    Page 18
    This court has articulated that the inevitable discovery doctrine may apply in situations where
    there is either an independent, untainted investigation as in Nix, see United States v. Dice, 
    200 F.3d 978
    , 986 (6th Cir. 2000); United States v. Haddix, 
    239 F.3d 766
    , 769 (6th Cir. 2001), or where there
    exist “other compelling facts establishing that the disputed evidence inevitably would have been
    discovered,” United States v. Keszthelyi, 
    308 F.3d 557
    , 574 (6th Cir. 2002); United States v. Leake,
    
    95 F.3d 409
    , 412 (6th Cir. 1996); United States v. Johnson, 
    22 F.3d 674
    , 684 (6th Cir. 1994). The
    “other compelling facts” inquiry is not entirely open-ended, however. The most common scenario
    in which other compelling facts would justify inevitable discovery is where the government can
    show that “routine procedures that police would have used regardless of the illegal search would
    have resulted in the discovery of the disputed evidence.” 
    Keszthelyi, 308 F.3d at 574
    . For example,
    where a law enforcement policy calls for the seizure and inventory of a lost suitcase or an impounded
    car, such a policy — if legal — can be used to demonstrate that the evidence would inevitably have
    been discovered. United States v. Kennedy, 
    61 F.3d 494
    , 499 (6th Cir. 1995) (lost suitcase);
    
    Johnson, 22 F.3d at 674
    (discussing in dicta an inventory search of an impounded car).
    In this case, the government does not attempt to make any showing of either an independent,
    untainted investigation or of a routine police procedure that would have led to the discovery of the
    crack cocaine. Instead it argues simply that the police could have obtained a warrant, if they had
    attempted to do so, once Bowden revoked his consent and they no longer had lawful authority for
    the search. Whatever confusion might be raised by the “other compelling facts” inquiry of inevitable
    - 18 -
    No. 06-1072
    United States v. Bowden
    Page 19
    discovery, the argument that police could have obtained a warrant but simply chose not to is one that
    has been rejected by this court in no uncertain terms. For example in Haddix, we held as follows:
    [T]he United States urges us to interpret the inevitable discovery doctrine to admit
    evidence when the police could have obtained a warrant but did not do so — that is,
    whenever probable cause would have existed had a magistrate considered the
    question in advance of the search, regardless of whether a magistrate in fact did.
    Under such a theory, evidence that would constitute probable cause for a warrant,
    even when that evidence’s existence is unknown to the police, is inherently destined
    to be “inevitably discovered.” Let it be absolutely clear: this is untenable. As we
    have noted before, this position of the United States would “completely obviate the
    warrant requirement” and would constitute, to say the least, a “radical departure from
    the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement precedent.”
    Haddix, 
    239 F.3d 766
    , 768 (6th Cir. 2001) (quoting 
    Johnson, 22 F.3d at 683-684
    ); see also United
    States v. Buchanan, 
    904 F.2d 349
    , 357 (6th Cir. 1990) (“[P]olice who believe they have probable
    cause to search cannot enter a home without a warrant merely because they plan subsequently to get
    one. Any other view would tend in actual practice to emasculate the search warrant requirement of
    the Fourth Amendment.”).
    The cases that discuss this issue speak in terms of an initial illegal entry, in contrast to the
    situation here where the entry into the home was initially justified by the consent of an occupant,
    with subsequent revocation of the consent rendering the ongoing search and police presence in the
    home unlawful. There is no meaningful distinction between police entering a home unlawfully and
    police unlawfully overstaying their welcome in this context. Of course any evidence discovered
    during the consensual search would not be excluded. Even if such evidence itself gave rise to
    - 19 -
    No. 06-1072
    United States v. Bowden
    Page 20
    probable cause, however, the existence of probable cause on its own is insufficient to continue the
    search merely because police could obtain a warrant yet choose not to do so under this Court’s clear
    precedent. Absent specific exceptions not present here, the Fourth Amendment requires a search
    warrant, not probable cause coupled with the mere intent to get a search warrant. The majority’s
    holding today renders the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement toothless, and allows police to
    completely circumvent constitutionally guaranteed protections against unreasonable searches and
    seizures by after-the-fact justifications.
    Accordingly, I would hold that the inevitable discovery doctrine should not apply and I would
    reverse Bowden’s conviction based on the district court’s erroneous denial of his motion to suppress.
    - 20 -