Search and Seizure--motion to suppress evidence--unlawful entry--fruit of the poisonous
tree
The trial court erred in a first-degree murder case by denying defendant's motion to
suppress the evidence found during the search of the victim's residence at which defendant also
resided, and defendant is entitled to a new trial, where the victim's brother removed a window air
conditioner in order to enter the residence and allowed officers to enter, officers entered without a
search warrant and discovered what appeared to be bloodstains, and officers then obtained a
search warrant and discovered the victim's body in the residence, because: (1) defendant had an
expectation of privacy in the residence and had standing to challenge the officers' initial
warrantless entry into the residence; (2) exigent circumstances did not exist to justify the officers'
warrantless entry into the residence; (3) the State waived claims that defendant had abandoned the
residence and that the evidence would have been inevitably discovered by its failure to rely on
those claims to defeat defendant's motion to suppress at trial; and (4) the officers' initial
warrantless entry into the residence was unlawful and the subsequent search warrant was based
upon fruit of the poisonous tree.
Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Special Deputy Attorney
General Edwin W. Welch, for the State.
Paul F. Herzog for defendant-appellant.
TIMMONS-GOODSON, Judge.
Glenn Devon McKinney (defendant) appeals his conviction for
first-degree murder. For the reasons stated herein, we reverse.
The State's evidence presented at trial tends to show the
following: On 17 May 2003, law enforcement officers from the
Greensboro Police Department discovered the body of Jerry Louis
Alston (Alston) in the laundry room of his residence. Alston's
body was inside a city-issued trash can, which had been coveredwith a towel and two candles. Beneath the candles and towel was a
computer-generated note reading Glenn Devon McKinney did this.
Greensboro Police Department Sergeant Jane Allen (Sergeant
Allen) was the first law enforcement officer to enter Alston's
residence the day his body was discovered. Sergeant Allen had gone
to Drexel Road in Greensboro, North Carolina, in an effort to
investigate an assault [that] was supposed[] to have taken place.
Earlier that day, Greensboro Police Department Sergeant D.S. Morgan
(Sergeant Morgan) notified Sergeant Allen that someone named
Phoenix may have killed someone named Jerry somewhere on Drexel
Road. Sergeant Morgan subsequently informed Sergeant Allen that
an individual named Amy Millikan (Millikan) had said that her
roommate had told her that her roommate's friend had told her that
her boyfriend named Phoenix had advised that he had killed or
assaulted an individual named Jerry on Drexel Road. As Sergeant
Allen was approaching Drexel Road, she was informed that Alston's
residence was the house that seemed to match the description that
was being given by an individual named Aja Snipes (Snipes), as
well as neighbors.
When Sergeant Allen arrived at Alston's residence, she noticed
that the residence appeared to be secure[,] that the curtains or
blinds of the residence were drawn, and that there was a small dog
tied to a short leash near the rear of the residence. Sergeant
Allen did not force entry into the residence at that time, because
[a]t that point [she] needed more to go on and didn't know for
sure that an assault had occurred in there. Shortly thereafter,Sergeant Morgan notified Sergeant Allen that defendant was reported
to be driving Alston's vehicle. Sergeant Allen noticed that the
vehicle was not in Alston's driveway, and she began to speak to
Irma Alston (Irma), Alston's sister. Irma told Sergeant Allen
that Alston lived at the residence. Alston's brother, Ricky Alston
(Ricky), subsequently arrived at the residence. Ricky informed
Sergeant Allen that he, like his sister, had not heard from
[Alston] for at least several days . . . . Sergeant Allen
thereafter contacted Alston's employer. Although Ricky was
extremely concerned about the well-being of his brother[,] based
upon the information that had been presented to her, Sergeant Allen
did not believe it was necessary to enter the residence. Instead,
she believed she should continue her investigation in order to
determine whether forced entry was necessary.
Sergeant Allen then left briefly to use the restroom. When
she returned, Ricky had removed an air conditioning unit from a
window and entered the residence. After Ricky allowed Sergeant
Allen and Sergeant Morgan to enter, the officers walked through the
residence. In a bedroom of the residence, Sergeant Allen observed
what appeared to be some dark spots on the wall. Sergeant Allen
believed the spots were some sort of high velocity spatter[,] and
she considered the possibility that the spots might be blood and
that some sort of an assault . . . might have taken place within
the room. She noticed more dark colored liquid stains on the
television, bed, chair, and carpet. Sergeant Allen asked Ricky
whether he had seen the spots before. Ricky replied that he hadnot, and that he believed perhaps maybe it was paint or
something. Sergeant Allen thereafter decided that a search
warrant would be needed to proceed any further inside the
residence. Sergeant Allen instructed Ricky to leave the
residence, and she directed those officers outside the residence to
secure the residence while she obtained a search warrant.
After obtaining a search warrant, Sergeant Allen returned to
Alston's residence with Greensboro Police Department Detective
David Spagnola (Detective Spagnola). While crime scene
technicians investigated the bedroom, Sergeant Allen and Detective
Spagnola noticed a large, city-issued trash can in the laundry room
of the residence. The officers believed it was unusual for the
trash can to be inside, and Detective Spagnola attempted to lift
it. After Detective Spagnola was unable to lift it, Sergeant Allen
believed that there might be a victim inside the trash can. The
officers thereafter asked the crime scene technicians to photograph
the trash can and its contents. When the officers opened the trash
can, they discovered Alston's body inside.
Greensboro Police Department Corporal Michael McIntosh
(Corporal McIntosh) was speaking with Snipes while Alston's
residence was being searched. Corporal McIntosh had learned that
Snipes was defendant's girlfriend, and that defendant was living
with Alston at the residence. During their ensuing conversations,
Snipes informed Corporal McIntosh that she had spoken with
defendant earlier that week and that defendant had admitted
killing Alston. Snipes also informed Corporal McIntosh thatdefendant called her to apologize for g[etting] her involved in
the situation and to request that she wire him money in Florida.
Corporal McIntosh thereafter asked Snipes to aid him in convincing
defendant to turn himself over to the police.
Defendant subsequently turned himself over to the Greensboro
Police Department and, on 21 July 2003, he was indicted for the
first-degree murder of Alston. Defendant's trial began the week of
12 April 2004. Prior to trial, defendant filed a motion to
suppress the evidence seized during the search of Alston's
residence. Following a hearing on 8 April 2004, the trial court
denied defendant's motion. At trial, defendant testified that he
and Alston had been fighting the night of Alston's death, and that
he killed Alston in self-defense. On 16 April 2004, the jury found
defendant guilty of the first-degree murder of Alston. After
finding that defendant had a prior felony record level III, the
trial court sentenced defendant to life imprisonment without
parole. Defendant appeals.
*** Converted from WordPerfect ***