Title: State v. Brooks

State: washington

Issuer: Washington Supreme Court

Document:

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA 
 
No. 15–0101 
 
Filed December 23, 2016 
 
 
STATE OF IOWA, 
 
 
Appellee, 
 
vs. 
 
TROY RICHARD BROOKS, 
 
 
Appellant. 
 
 
 
On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals. 
 
 
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Rebecca 
Goodgame Ebinger, Judge. 
 
 
The defendant seeks further review of a court of appeals decision 
affirming the denial of his motion to suppress in a probation revocation 
proceeding.  DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AND JUDGMENT OF 
DISTRICT COURT AFFIRMED. 
 
 
Grant C. Gangestad and Robert G. Rehkemper of Gourley, 
Rehkemper & Lindholm, P.L.C., West Des Moines, for appellant. 
 
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Mary A. Triick, Assistant 
Attorney General, John Sarcone, County Attorney, and Mark Taylor, 
Assistant County Attorney, for appellee. 
 
 
 
2 
MANSFIELD, Justice. 
This case involves a defendant who was on probation after having 
been convicted of drug offenses related to methamphetamine.  The 
defendant’s sister and father, concerned that he had relapsed, contacted 
his probation officer.  They reported the defendant was using 
methamphetamine in the family home, was missing work, and had 
locked himself in his bedroom since the previous day.  Two probation 
officers were dispatched to the residence.  When they arrived, the father 
told them the defendant was upstairs and “out of his mind.”  With the 
father’s consent, and without objection from the defendant, the probation 
officers entered the defendant’s upstairs bedroom.  The defendant was 
observed disoriented and covered in feces.  He admitted he had relapsed 
and used methamphetamine. 
The State commenced a probation revocation proceeding.  The 
defendant filed a motion to suppress all statements and evidence 
obtained upon entry into his bedroom, claiming a violation of article I, 
section 8 of the Iowa Constitution.  The district court denied the motion, 
and on discretionary review, the court of appeals affirmed this denial. 
On further review, we also affirm the district court.  We conclude 
the warrantless entry into the defendant’s bedroom by probation officers 
carrying out a probation mission did not violate article I, section 8 under 
the circumstances presented here. 
I.  Background Facts and Proceedings. 
On October 22, 2013, Troy Brooks, who had a lengthy history of 
prior drug-related offenses, pled guilty in the Polk County District Court 
to 
conspiracy 
to 
manufacture 
a 
controlled 
substance 
(methamphetamine), a Class “C” felony in violation of Iowa Code section 
124.401(1)(c)(6) (2013), and possession of a controlled substance, third 
 
 
 
3 
offense (methamphetamine), a Class “D” felony in violation of Iowa Code 
section 124.401(5).  Sentencing took place on December 23.  At that 
time, Brooks received consecutive sentences of up to ten years in prison 
on the conspiracy offense and up to five years in prison on the 
possession offense. 
However, at the same time, the district court suspended Brooks’s 
prison sentences and placed him on probation for two years.  The 
sentencing order required Brooks to sign a probation agreement and 
otherwise submit to the supervision of the Fifth Judicial District 
Department of Correctional Services. 
Brooks’s written probation agreement included the following 
conditions: 
I will submit to a search of my person, property, residence, 
vehicle, or personal effects, at any time, with or without a 
search warrant or arrest warrant, if reasonable suspicion 
exists, by a peace officer or probation/parole officer. 
. . . . 
I shall not possess, ingest, inject or otherwise use any non-
prescribed drug. 
. . . . 
I will make myself and my residence available for visits at the 
discretion of my supervising officer. 
On September 15, 2014, Brooks’s regular probation officer, 
Michael Evans, received a voicemail from Brooks’s sister and eighty-year-
old 
father. 
 
The 
voicemail 
indicated 
Brooks 
had 
been 
using 
methamphetamine in the family house and had locked himself in his 
bedroom since the previous day.  The voicemail also stated that Brooks 
had been missing work due to drug use and had been concealing the 
results of drug tests with baking soda. 
 
 
 
4 
That same morning, Evans also received a phone message from the 
manager of a drug treatment facility Brooks had attended in the past.  
The manager confirmed Brooks’s drug relapse and stated that Brooks 
was “a real mess” and Evans should address the situation quickly. 
Evans was at a court hearing in Lucas County when he received 
the voicemails.  For this reason, he could not go to the Brooks family 
home.  Instead, Evans contacted Lance Wignall and Ryan Smith, who 
were also employed as probation officers by the Fifth Judicial District 
Department of Correctional Services.  He asked that “they respond to the 
address because [he] was indisposed at another hearing.” 
Wignall and Smith arrived at the Brooks home later that day.  
Brooks’s father opened the front door and told the officers that Brooks 
was upstairs and “out of his mind.”  He gave them permission to enter 
Brooks’s room.1  The probation officers knocked on Brooks’s bedroom 
door and concluded it was locked.  Brooks’s father advised there was no 
lock on the door, so the officers surmised that Brooks had somehow 
barricaded himself in.  Upon further knocking, the door opened.2  The 
probation officers noticed a large knife on the floor that appeared to have 
been wedged between the door and the doorframe.  It is not clear whether 
the knife had fallen out or Brooks had removed it. 
The officers saw Brooks immediately—surprised, disoriented, and 
covered in fecal matter.  The officers conducted a quick search of the 
1At the suppression hearing, Brooks testified that he had exclusive use of the 
bedroom and had rented it from his father.  There is no indication that the probation 
officers knew this beforehand. 
2Brooks testified at the hearing that he did not consent to the officers entering 
his room.  Wignall, however, testified that Brooks said repeatedly he was going to open 
the door until the door came open.  The district court found that Brooks “said 
repeatedly that he was going to open the door, but then did not do so.” 
                                                 
 
 
 
5 
room and placed Brooks in handcuffs.  Brooks admitted he had relapsed 
and had been using methamphetamine. 
Officer Evans filed a probation violation report as a result of the 
September 15 incident.  Prior to the probation revocation hearing, 
Brooks filed a motion to suppress the evidence obtained from the home 
visit as a violation of his rights under article I, section 8 of the Iowa 
Constitution. 
Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court denied Brooks’s 
motion.  The court reasoned, 
The facts of this case demonstrate the important 
difference between searches by law enforcement officers and 
actions by probation officers tasked with supervising 
individuals in the community.  Here, family members who 
had 
allowed 
Defendant 
to 
reside 
with 
them 
called 
Defendant’s probation officer.  They were scared.  They 
needed help.  They could not handle the situation by 
themselves and they wanted Defendant out of their home.  
The Defendant was “out of his mind” and had locked himself 
inside his room. 
The officers responded to the home as quickly as 
possible.  The Defendant’s assigned probation officer was 
unable to respond due to his presence at a court hearing in a 
different county, but he contacted probation officers who are 
specifically assigned to deal with emergency situations such 
as this one.  And this was an emergency situation.  An 
individual does not have to be nonresponsive or overdose to 
have an emergency.  Defendant’s state of mind when officers 
eventually made contact with him confirmed the family’s 
concerns were valid. . . .   
. . . . 
 . . .  [T]he Court finds that Defendant’s right to be free 
from unreasonable searches under Article I, section 8 of the 
Iowa Constitution was not infringed when probation officers 
entered his room on September 15, 2014 and conducted a 
cursory search. 
The court added,  
Even if the officers’ actions violated Defendant’s rights 
under Article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution, the Court 
 
 
 
6 
would follow the reasoning in Kain v. State, 378 N.W.2d 900 
(Iowa 1985), and find that evidence gathered illegally was not 
subject to exclusion in a probation revocation proceeding. 
On January 9, 2015, the district court revoked Brooks’s probation 
and imposed the original sentence of imprisonment for each offense.  
Brooks filed an application for discretionary review with this court and 
requested a stay of his incarceration.  See Iowa R. App. P. 6.106(1). 
We granted Brooks’s application and transferred the case to the 
court of appeals.  The court of appeals affirmed the district court on the 
basis of Kain.  Brooks then filed an application for further review, which 
we granted. 
II.  Standard of Review. 
We review the district court’s denial of a motion to suppress based 
on the deprivation of a constitutional right de novo.  State v. Ochoa, 792 
N.W.2d 260, 264 (Iowa 2010).  We make “an independent evaluation 
[based on] the totality of the circumstances as shown by the entire 
record.”  Id. (alteration in original) (quoting State v. Breuer, 577 N.W.2d 
41, 44 (Iowa 1998)).  “We give deference to the district court’s fact 
findings due to its opportunity to assess the credibility of witnesses, but 
we are not bound by those findings.”  In re Pardee, 872 N.W.2d 384, 390 
(Iowa 2015) (quoting State v. Tyler, 867 N.W.2d 136, 153 (Iowa 2015)). 
III.  Analysis. 
On appeal, Brooks argues that the probation officers’ entry into his 
bedroom violated his rights under article I, section 8 of the Iowa 
Constitution and that any information acquired as a result of that entry 
must be suppressed.  The State responds that the entry was lawful, and 
further argues that even if it was unlawful, the exclusionary rule does 
not apply in probation revocation proceedings. 
Article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution provides, 
 
 
 
7 
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, 
papers and effects, against unreasonable seizures and 
searches shall not be violated; and no warrant shall issue 
but on probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, 
particularly describing the place to be searched, and the 
persons and things to be seized. 
“We employ a two-step approach to determine whether there has been a 
violation of . . . article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution.”  State v. 
Kern, 831 N.W.2d 149, 164 (Iowa 2013) (quoting State v. Lowe, 812 
N.W.2d 554, 567 (Iowa 2012)).  “First, the defendant must show he or 
she has ‘a legitimate expectation of privacy in the area searched.’ ”  Id. 
(quoting Lowe, 812 N.W.2d at 567).  “Second, if so, we must determine 
whether the defendant’s rights were violated.”  Id.  “We jealously guard 
our right to construe a provision of our state constitution differently than 
its federal counterpart, though the two provisions may contain nearly 
identical language and have the same general scope, import, and 
purpose.”  State v. Jackson, 878 N.W.2d 422, 442 (Iowa 2016). 
A.  Brooks’s Expectation of Privacy.  At the time of the incident, 
Brooks was living with his sister and father.  Brooks’s father—the owner 
of the residence—freely and voluntarily consented to the probation 
officers entering the home in order to check on Brooks.  Nonetheless, 
Brooks argues he maintained a legitimate expectation of privacy in the 
room in which he was staying in his father’s home. 
To establish a legitimate expectation of privacy in his room, Brooks 
must show “(1) a subjective expectation of privacy and (2) this 
expectation of privacy was reasonable.”  Tyler, 867 N.W.2d at 168 
(quoting State v. Ortiz, 618 N.W.2d 556, 559 (Iowa 2000)).  “The 
determination of whether a person has a legitimate expectation of privacy 
with respect to a certain area is made on a case-by-case basis, 
 
 
 
8 
considering the unique facts of each particular situation.”  Id. (quoting 
State v. Fleming, 790 N.W.2d 560, 564 (Iowa 2010)). 
At the hearing on the motion to suppress, Brooks testified that he 
had exclusive possession of the room and had been paying his father 
monthly rent to solely occupy the room.  Brooks also testified that he 
believed no one had the right to enter his room without his consent, 
including his father. 
We have held that a tenant, unrelated to a landlord, may have a 
reasonable expectation of privacy in a rented bedroom under the Iowa 
Constitution.  See Fleming, 790 N.W.2d at 567.  In Fleming, we declined 
to adopt the “community-living exception” used by other jurisdictions, 
under which a person renting a room within a single-family home has no 
separate expectation of privacy.  Id. at 566–67.  Instead, we reasoned 
that tenants in a house do not reasonably believe they are “giving up the 
right to privacy in their personal space.”  Id. at 567.  While an individual 
may surrender his or her privacy in a communal space, such as a living 
room or a bathroom, we concluded it is reasonable that “the individual 
bedrooms remain private.”  Id. 
The entry here was not into a communal space, but instead, into 
Brooks’s personal bedroom.  Brooks testified that he rented the bedroom 
from his father, although there is no evidence the probation officers knew 
this.  We will assume for purposes of our decision that Brooks had a 
legitimate expectation of privacy in his bedroom. 
B.  Special-Needs Doctrine.  We must now determine whether 
Brooks’s rights under article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution were 
violated when Officers Wignall and Smith entered his bedroom.  Among 
other things, the State argues that the probation officers’ entry was 
justified by the special-needs doctrine.  We believe it would be helpful to 
 
 
 
9 
begin by reviewing our recent article I, section 8 caselaw concerning 
searches and seizures of probationers and parolees. 
In State v. Baldon, we concluded that a parole agreement 
containing a prospective consent-to-search provision is insufficient, by 
itself, to establish the voluntary consent necessary to justify a 
suspicionless search under article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution.  
See 829 N.W.2d 785, 802–03 (Iowa 2013).  In that case, the defendant 
had signed a parole agreement that included a blanket consent to future 
searches with or without a warrant or reasonable cause.  Id. at 787.  An 
on-duty police officer discovered that Baldon was staying in a motel well-
known for being a high-crime location.  Id. at 787–88.  A police sergeant 
called Baldon’s parole officer and requested permission to search 
Baldon’s motel room and vehicle pursuant to the parole agreement.  Id. 
at 788.  Police officers on the scene and the parole officer conducted the 
search together, which was “completely based on [the] agreement and 
nothing more.”  Id. (alteration in original).  The officers discovered 
marijuana in Baldon’s vehicle, which resulted in a charge of possession 
of marijuana with intent to deliver.  Id. 
On appeal, the only issue we addressed was “whether a parole 
agreement containing a consent-to-search clause renders suspicionless 
and warrantless searches of parolees reasonable under the search and 
seizure clause of the Iowa Constitution.”  Id. at 789–90.  We did not 
consider whether the State’s maintenance of a parole system presented 
“special needs[] beyond the normal need for law enforcement.”  Id. at 789 
(alteration in original) (quoting New Jersey v. T.L.O., 469 U.S. 325, 351, 
105 S. Ct. 733, 748, 83 L. Ed. 2d 720, 741 (1985) (Blackmun, J., 
concurring)).  Further, we “largely set aside” cases dealing with 
probationers and instead focused primarily on parolee cases.  See id. at 
 
 
 
10 
795.  We held that “the search provision contained in Baldon’s parole 
agreement does not represent a voluntary grant of consent within our 
constitutional meaning” and therefore the suspicionless search of 
Baldon’s car violated article I, section 8.  Id. at 803. 
Shortly after Baldon, we decided another parolee case in State v. 
Kern, 831 N.W.2d at 149.  In that case, Kern was on parole and had 
signed a parole agreement with a similar blanket consent-to-search 
provision.  Id. at 155–56.  A caseworker with the Iowa Department of 
Human Services received a complaint that marijuana was being grown, 
processed, and sold in the house where Kern resided.  Id. at 156.  Kern’s 
sixteen-year-old daughter and infant grandchild occasionally stayed at 
the house.  Id.  The caseworker visited the home, accompanied by two 
police officers, and asked Kern for consent to search the house.  Id.  Kern 
refused, and the caseworker removed the children from the home.  Id.  
Thereafter the police officers returned to the house, without Kern’s parole 
officer, and informed Kern that the officers were going to search the 
house “because Kern was a parolee and had consented to a search in her 
parole agreement.”  Id. at 156–57.  The officers found marijuana and 
guns in various rooms of the house and Kern was charged with four drug 
offenses.  Id. at 157. 
Kern challenged the police officers’ search as a violation of her 
constitutional rights, whereas the State argued the search was justified 
under several exceptions to the warrant requirement.  Id. at 157–58.  We 
determined that no exception to the warrant requirement justified the 
warrantless search of Kern’s home under article I, section 8 of the Iowa 
Constitution.  Id. at 177.  Although we ultimately concluded that it was 
unnecessary to decide whether the special-needs doctrine was “viable in 
the context of parole under the Iowa Constitution” based on the facts of 
 
 
 
11 
that case, we did outline the scope of the doctrine were we to recognize 
the existence of such an exception.  See id. at 170. 
First, we noted the “obvious limitation” that the doctrine would 
apply only to searches conducted by parole officers consistent with the 
parole mission.  Id.; cf. Ochoa, 792 N.W.2d at 294–95 (Cady, J., 
concurring specially) (recognizing the distinction between interests 
unrelated 
to 
general 
law 
enforcement 
and 
interests 
“involving 
enforcement of criminal laws”).  This limitation ensures that the search 
furthers the goals of parole rather than the interests in law enforcement.  
Kern, 831 N.W.2d at 170.  Second, we recognized that the special-needs 
doctrine “cannot be used by police to make an end-run around the 
constitutional protections otherwise available to parolees.”  Id.  Because 
the search conducted by the police officers was “instigated and 
dominated by the needs and interests of law enforcement,” we declined to 
consider applying the special-needs doctrine in Kern.  Id. at 172. 
We subsequently addressed a warrantless search of a probationer’s 
home by police officers in State v. Short, 851 N.W.2d 474 (Iowa 2014).  
Following a reported burglary, police officers received information that 
implicated the defendant, Justin Short.  See id. at 476.  Police officers 
obtained a search warrant for the wrong address.  Id.  Yet without getting 
a valid new warrant, they conducted a search of Short’s apartment 
anyway.  Id. at 476–77.  Short was on probation for unrelated crimes.  Id. 
at 477.  However, Short’s probation officer did not participate in the 
search, and it was undisputed that the search was not connected with 
Short’s probation, but was instead “an investigatory search by law 
enforcement related to new crimes.”  Id. at 477. 
On appeal, we considered whether law enforcement officers, “as 
distinguished from probation officers,” may conduct a warrantless search 
 
 
 
12 
for investigatory law enforcement purposes of a probationer’s home 
under article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution.  Id. at 481.  We held 
that the warrant requirement has “full applicability” to home searches of 
probationers by law enforcement.  Id. at 506.  Given the absence of a 
warrant, we reversed the denial of Short’s motion to suppress, while 
making it clear that we were not addressing “the legality of home visits or 
other types of supervision by probation officers pursuant to their 
ordinary functions, [or] . . . the question of whether a probationer may 
validly consent to warrantless home searches.”  Id. 
In our Short decision, we relied heavily upon State v. Cullison, 173 
N.W.2d 533, 540–41 (Iowa 1970), which had invalidated a warrantless 
search of a parolee’s home by a parole officer.  Id. at 492–96.  Although 
Cullison involved a parolee, not a probationer, we said in Short that “the 
analytic structure of Cullison applies with equal force to both.”  Short, 
851 N.W.2d at 492.  Importantly, the issue in Cullison was whether the 
parole officer could search the parolee’s house for evidence “relative to 
the prosecution of an offense separate and apart from that upon which 
he had been previously granted a parole.”  Cullison, 173 N.W.2d at 540.3 
Lastly, we returned to the special-needs doctrine in the 2015 case 
of State v. King, 867 N.W.2d 106 (Iowa 2015).  Like the defendants in 
Baldon and Kern, Donald King was a parolee.  Id. at 109.  He had been 
paroled following multiple convictions for possession and intent to deliver 
methamphetamine.  Id.  He had also signed a parole agreement with a 
3We added in Short, 
There is substantial authority, for instance, for the proposition that while 
evidence obtained through home visits, or searches by probation officers, 
may not be used in new criminal prosecutions, it may be used for 
purposes of establishing a violation of probation or parole. 
851 N.W.2d at 505. 
                                                 
 
 
 
13 
standard consent-to-search provision.  Id.  During meetings with his 
parole officer, King had complained about his drug treatment and 
generally “seemed to be losing his motivation to succeed at parole.”  Id.  
King’s parole officer was concerned that King was either “on the verge of 
another relapse” or would abscond from parole.  Id.  During a home visit, 
the parole officer decided to check King’s bedroom for signs of drug use.  
Id. at 110.  He informed King of his intention to search, and King did not 
refuse.  Id.  The parole officer noticed a sunglasses case in King’s 
bedroom, opened the case, and discovered two bags of marijuana.  Id.  
King was charged with possession of marijuana as a result of the search.  
Id.  He moved to suppress the results of the search based on article I, 
section 8.  Id. 
The State defended the parole officer’s search as justified by the 
special-needs doctrine.  Id.  We first acknowledged that we had not yet 
applied the special-needs doctrine to warrantless searches of parolees or 
probationers by parole or probation officers.  See id. at 116.  However, we 
ultimately concluded that the special-needs exception authorized the 
parole search at issue.  Id. at 126–27.  We balanced three factors in 
reaching that conclusion: (1) the nature of the privacy interest intruded 
upon by the search, (2) the character of the intrusion, and (3) the nature 
of the governmental concerns and the efficacy of the search policy.  See 
id. at 117–26. 
In our King opinion, we noted, “A distinction exists between 
searches to pursue the purposes of law enforcement and those to pursue 
the purposes of carrying out the mission of parole.”  Id. at 122.  We also 
stated, “The concerns that prompt the parole search in general need to 
be broad enough to achieve the purpose of parole, but narrow enough 
that the search not be arbitrary or depart from the parole mission.”  Id. 
 
 
 
14 
at 124.  With respect to the facts at hand, we said, “The immediacy of the 
government concerns [was] derived from the general mission of parole 
supervision.”  Id. at 126. 
We believe the King three-factor analysis supports the application 
of the special-needs doctrine to this probation case.  Critically, as in King, 
this was not an entry for law enforcement purposes.  Rather, two 
probation officers entered Brooks’s bedroom after being summoned by 
Brooks’s regular probation officer who was otherwise tied up but had 
received a family report of a drug relapse.  The intrusion was limited.  
The probation officers entered the bedroom, saw Brooks’s obviously 
disoriented condition, conducted a “cursory search” (which is not even at 
issue here), questioned Brooks, and arrested him for a probation 
violation.  As the district court put it, 
The officers had reasonable suspicion that Defendant was 
violating the terms of his probation based upon the 
statements made by the family members.  They came to the 
home, were invited in, and attempted to make contact with 
Defendant.  This is exactly what probation officers are 
supposed to do. 
Probationers are expected to abide by conditions of their probation, 
including in this case refraining from possessing or using illegal drugs.  
See Iowa Code § 907.6 (2015).  Probation officers are required by statute 
to “supervise, assist, and counsel [a] person during the term of the 
person’s probation.”  Id. § 907.8(1).  They are to “investigate all persons 
referred to them for investigation by the director of the judicial district 
department of correctional services which employs them.”  Id. § 907.2.  
They are to “keep informed of each person’s conduct and condition and 
shall use all suitable methods prescribed by the judicial district 
department of correctional services to aid and encourage the person to 
bring about improvements in the person’s conduct and condition.”  Id.  
 
 
 
15 
Probation officers “shall make reports to the court when alleged 
violations occur.”  Id.  Probation officers are peace officers.  Id.  This 
means they have authority to make arrests that the general public does 
not have.  See id. §§ 804.6–.7, .9. 
Close supervision of probationers furthers legitimate goals such as 
rehabilitating the probationer, protecting the community at large, and 
reducing recidivism.  See id. § 907.6; see also Griffin v. Wisconsin, 483 
U.S. 868, 875, 107 S. Ct. 3164, 3169, 97 L. Ed. 2d 709, 718 (1987).  
Consequently, the probation officer and probationer share an “ongoing 
relationship” that is not entirely adversarial in nature.  See King, 867 
N.W.2d at 121, 126.  Probation supervision—like parole supervision—
“necessarily involves” intrusion by the government as probationers 
assimilate to social norms.  Id. at 121. 
This is not a case like Short, where the probationary status of the 
defendant became an after-the-fact justification for a warrantless search 
of his residence for independent law-enforcement purposes.  This was a 
probation mission from the beginning (when the defendant’s probation 
officer received a call from the defendant’s sister and father) until the end 
(when the defendant was charged with violating the terms of probation 
and not a separate crime). 
Brooks disputes that the entry into his bedroom was performed by 
actual probation officers.  However, the district court found otherwise, 
and based on our de novo review of the record, we agree with the district 
court. 
Officer Evans was Brooks’s regular probation officer.  He testified 
that he asked two of his “coworkers”—Wignall and Smith—to respond to 
the calls he received from Brooks’s family and from the manager of the 
treatment facility.  Wignall, one of those coworkers, appeared at the 
 
 
 
16 
hearing and testified he is a probation officer employed by the Fifth 
Judicial District Department of Correctional Services.  This was further 
confirmed by the district court’s questioning: 
THE COURT:  One follow-up question, Mr. Evans.  
Were all of the officers that you asked to respond in your 
stead, since you were in court someplace else, were they all 
also probation/parole officers?  THE WITNESS:  Yes, ma’am, 
they were. 
For reasons not explored at the hearing, but which may have to do 
with reducing the risk of a misunderstanding with the public, Wignall 
regularly wore a police uniform with a “Polk County Sheriff” patch on the 
sleeve.  He also carried a firearm.  Yet Wignall explained that his position 
meant he only arrested probationers or parolees who had violated the 
terms of their probation or parole, even though he did have the general 
authority to make any arrest.  His job description meant he did not write 
tickets or citations, did not respond to calls for service, and did not 
respond to calls from dispatch. 
As a member of the fugitive unit in the Fifth Judicial District 
Department of Correctional Services, Wignall’s duties differed from those 
of an average probation officer because he was responsible for “folks that 
abscond supervision” and dealt with “situations that include home visits 
and high-risk situations.”4  Wignall acknowledged that he did not have a 
list of probationers he regularly supervised and did not normally conduct 
traditional home visits of probationers.  And the trip to the Brooks family 
home was not a preplanned home visit.  Still, it was a probation visit, as 
confirmed by the facts that Brooks’s regular probation officer initiated 
the visit and no independent criminal charges resulted from it.  In sum, 
4Evans belonged to the same fugitive unit, even while serving as Brooks’s 
regular probation officer. 
                                                 
 
 
 
17 
we agree with the district court and reject Brooks’s claim that Wignall 
and Smith entered his room “as law enforcement officers” and for law 
enforcement purposes. 
The record indicates that the Fifth Judicial District Department of 
Correctional Services has set up a separate unit of probation officers that 
have special training and carry firearms so they can deal with high-risk 
situations.  In our view, this does not alter the basic analysis under King.  
Some probationers present more risks than others, for example if they 
have been actively using methamphetamine.  Some probation-related 
duties are more hazardous than others.  It would not make sense to 
adopt a rule that a probation mission ceases to be a probation mission 
just because the probation officer is carrying a firearm for protection.  
The focus should remain, rather, on the activity itself: Was the probation 
officer engaged in supervision of a probationer (which can include an 
arrest for a probation violation) or was she or he conducting a separate 
law enforcement investigation? 
In this regard, the impromptu entry here can be contrasted with 
the investigative search that occurred in Cullison.  In that case, a parole 
officer visited a parolee and became suspicious when the parolee refused 
to unlock an interior door in the parolee’s apartment.  Cullison, 173 
N.W.2d at 534–35.  The parole officer left the apartment, came back with 
a set of master keys, and ultimately convinced the parolee that he should 
open the locked door for the officer.  Id. at 535.  The officer found stolen 
merchandise in the locked room and the parolee was charged with a new 
offense.  Id. 
On appeal, we took no issue with the parole officer’s initial entry 
because the parole officer went inside to determine why the parolee had 
not reported to work.  See id. at 539; see also King, 867 N.W.2d at 122 
 
 
 
18 
(“The initial intrusion by the parole officer in the apartment, however, 
was consistent with the mission of parole and was not part of the 
analysis that found the search of the home to be unconstitutional.” 
(discussing Cullison, 173 N.W.2d at 539)).  Instead, we concluded the 
parole officer’s further search of the locked room in the apartment, for 
the purpose of discovering independent criminal activity, “became 
intertwined with the state’s interest in law enforcement” and therefore 
required a warrant.  See King, 867 N.W.2d at 122 (discussing Cullison, 
173 N.W.2d at 539–40). 
The entry into Brooks’s bedroom arguably stands on stronger legal 
ground than the King search in several ways.  In King, the parole officer 
had at most “reasonable suspicion” of a parole violation.  Here, by 
contrast, the probation officers had more than reasonable suspicion.  
Brooks does not deny, in fact, that probable cause existed to believe he 
had violated the terms of his probation. 
Furthermore, unlike in King, the warrantless entry here did not 
result in an independent prosecution on a new charge.  It simply led to 
revocation of Brooks’s existing probation. 
It is true that Brooks, unlike the parolee in King, did not lead the 
officers into his bedroom.  But he did not object to their coming in, 
either, and instead told the probation officers he was going to open the 
door.  Shortly thereafter the door, in fact, opened. 
For the reasons stated, we find the special-needs doctrine applies, 
and the entry into Brooks’s room did not violate his rights under article I, 
section 8 of the Iowa Constitution.  In light of this conclusion, we need 
not reach the State’s argument that the entry into Brooks’s bedroom also 
should be sustained under the community caretaking exception to the 
warrant requirement.  See State v. Crawford, 659 N.W.2d 537, 543 (Iowa 
 
 
 
19 
2003) (setting forth the elements of this exception); State v. Carlson, 548 
N.W.2d 138, 140–41 (Iowa 1996) (considering police officers’ entry into a 
home under the community caretaking exception).  Likewise, we do not 
reach the State’s contention that the exclusionary rule does not apply in 
probation revocation proceedings.  See Kain, 378 N.W.2d at 902–03 
(holding that article I, section 8 does not require the exclusion of illegally 
obtained evidence in probation revocation proceedings). 
IV.  Conclusion. 
We conclude that the warrantless entry into Brooks’s bedroom did 
not violate article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution.  We affirm the 
decision of the court of appeals and the judgment of the district court. 
DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AND JUDGMENT OF 
DISTRICT COURT AFFIRMED. 
Cady, C.J., and Waterman and Zager, JJ., join this opinion.  Appel, 
J., files a dissenting opinion in which Wiggins and Hecht, JJ., join. 
 
 
 
 
 
20 
#15–0101, State v. Brooks 
APPEL, Justice (dissenting). 
 
I respectfully dissent from the opinion of the majority in this case.  
As previously indicated in State v. King, I view the so-called special-needs 
exception to the warrant requirement an unfortunate development.  867 
N.W.2d 106, 134–36 (Iowa 2015) (Appel, J., dissenting).  I view the 
majority’s bypass of the warrant requirement as unjustified.  I also have 
little doubt that the exclusionary rule, under article I, section 8 of the 
Iowa Constitution, applies in a probation setting. 
 
I.  Warrant Requirement as Bulwark to Liberty. 
 
In my view, it is imperative that effective limitations be placed on 
search and seizures by the government.  The mechanism selected by the 
drafters of the Iowa Constitution, article I, section 8, was the warrant 
requirement 
based 
upon 
probable 
cause 
which 
describes 
with 
particularity the place to be searched and the person to be seized.  See 
Iowa Const. art. I, § 8. 
 
The warrant requirement of article I, section 8 is one of the 
bulwarks of individual liberties in Iowa.  The warrant clause 
accomplishes a number of purposes.  By requiring that warrants be 
based on probable cause, the public is protected from unwarranted and 
arbitrary searches and seizures.  History has repeatedly shown that 
unfettered discretion by those with power inevitably leads to abuse of 
authority. 
 
Equally importantly, however, the warrant requirement limits the 
purposes of the search and the areas to be searched.  Thus, the warrant 
requirement means that law enforcement must not only demonstrate 
probable cause that a crime has been committed, but must also limit the 
 
 
 
21 
search to areas that would reasonably turn up evidence of the suspected 
crime. 
 
Finally, the warrant requirement is in writing.  This salutary 
feature ensures that we have a contemporaneous record of the reasons 
for the search, the nature of the supporting probable cause, and any 
limitation imposed by the court.  As can be seen, the warrant 
requirement does the heavy lifting of search and seizure law. 
 
The importance of search and seizure protections was emphasized 
by Justice Robert Jackson after his return from Germany as Chief 
Prosecutor for the United States at the Nuremberg Trials.  According to 
Justice Jackson, 
 
These [search and seizure provisions] are not mere 
second-class 
rights 
but 
belong 
in 
the 
catalog 
of 
indispensable freedoms.  Among deprivations of rights, none 
is so effective in cowing a population, crushing the spirit of 
the 
individual 
and 
putting 
terror 
in 
every 
heart.  
Uncontrolled search and seizure is one of the first and most 
effective 
weapons 
in 
the 
arsenal 
of 
every 
arbitrary 
government. 
Brinegar v. United States, 338 U.S. 160, 180, 69 S. Ct. 1302, 1313, 93 
L. Ed. 1879, 1893 (1949) (Jackson, J., dissenting). 
 
The great backbone of our constitutional tradition—the need for 
effective restraints against arbitrary government enforced by fearless 
courts—cannot be lost because of unpleasant factual contexts in which 
the issues present themselves.  As noted by Justice Frankfurter decades 
ago,  
It is a fair summary of history to say that the 
safeguards of liberty have frequently been forged in 
controversies involving not very nice people. . . .  [W]e must 
deal with [the defendant’s] case in the context of what are 
really the great themes expressed by the Fourth Amendment. 
 
 
 
22 
United States v. Rabinowitz, 339 U.S. 56, 69, 70 S. Ct. 430, 436, 94 
L. Ed. 653, 662 (1950) (Frankfurter, J., dissenting). 
 
Moreover, we should not succumb to tired notions of efficiency, 
reasserted by some on a decennial basis, to dilute the constitutional 
protections.  As noted by Justice Stewart, we must never forget that “the 
mere fact that law enforcement may be made less efficient can never by 
itself justify disregard of the Fourth Amendment.”  Mincey v. Arizona, 437 
U.S. 385, 393, 98 S. Ct. 2408, 2414, 57 L. Ed. 2d 290, 301 (1978). 
 
Further, because of the centrality of search and seizure law to our 
constitutional fabric, we must, as was done at the dawning of the last 
century, construe the search and seizure provision in article I, section 8 
“in a broad and liberal spirit.”  State v. Height, 117 Iowa 650, 657, 91 
N.W. 935, 937 (1902) (quoting People v. Forbes, 38 N.E. 303, 305 (N.Y. 
1894)).  If we are to do our job properly, every one of our draft search and 
seizure opinions should be held up against this standard before our work 
is completed. 
 
Most emphatically, search and seizure law cannot, and must not, 
devolve into a question of modern, pragmatic “reasonability” untethered 
from the warrant requirement.  For starters, the language of the 
constitutional provision, taken in context, does not allow it.  As noted by 
Justice Frankfurter, “One cannot wrench ‘unreasonable searches’ from 
the text and context and historic content of the Fourth Amendment.”  
Rabinowitz, 339 U.S. at 70, 70 S. Ct. at 436, 94 L. Ed. at 662; see also 
State v. Ochoa, 792 N.W.2d 260, 289 (Iowa 2010). 
 
Further, to do so lays the groundwork for unprincipled decision-
making based largely on after-the-fact calculations rooted in personal 
philosophies.  Indeed, every time a new “special needs” exception is 
developed or expanded, courts are rewriting the constitutional fabric of 
 
 
 
23 
search and seizure law to fit the court’s perception of a desired public 
policy.  The use of “reasonability” untethered to the warrant requirement 
as the touchstone of search and seizure law amounts to the following 
constitutional rule: The warrant requirement applies, unless we think it 
wise that it does not apply.  It is a short step to say that the warrant 
requirement is fine, as long as there are no adverse consequences.  Or, 
one might say, when an individual needs the protection of the warrant 
requirement the most, there will be an available off-the-shelf exception to 
avoid it.  Viewing search and seizure from the viewpoint of law 
enforcement, 
courts 
applying 
the 
“reasonability” 
approach 
risk 
functioning more as an internal police commission flagging only 
exceptionally flagrant violations rather than as an independent judicial 
tribunal jealously guarding individual rights. 
 
Of course, there have long been a few jealously guarded exceptions 
to the warrant requirement.  For example, searches in exigent 
circumstances where probable cause may be present but there is no time 
to obtain a warrant have traditionally been upheld. 
 
But the exceptions should be applied sparingly by the judiciary in 
order to fiercely guard the constitutional role of the warrant.  Such fierce 
defense of the warrant requirement is not evident in this case.  Indeed, 
the notion the warrant requirement is subject to only “jealously and 
carefully drawn exceptions,” a notion which we have repeatedly stated, is 
notably absent in this case.  Ochoa, 792 N.W.2d at 278 (quoting Jones v. 
United States, 357 U.S. 493, 499, 78 S. Ct. 1253, 1257, 2 L. Ed. 2d 
1514, 1519 (1958)); State v. Strong, 493 N.W.2d 834, 836 (Iowa 1992).  
The majority opinion seems more interested in jealously guarding the 
discretion of law enforcement but not the warrant requirement. 
 
 
 
24 
 
Here is why I draw that conclusion.  In King, we emphasized that 
parole was “divorced from the general interests of the state in law 
enforcement.”  867 N.W.2d at 122 (majority opinion).  Here, obviously, 
the “warrant team,” the sworn law enforcement officers trained to arrest 
people and who had no relationship with parolees, can only be regarded 
as part of law enforcement in any functional sense.  So, while King 
touted the “divorce” between parole and law enforcement, that divorce is 
not present here. 
 
Further, in King, the majority cited Griffin v. Wisconsin for the 
proposition that “[a]lthough a probation officer is not an impartial 
magistrate, neither is he the police officer.”  Id. at 126 (quoting 483 U.S. 
868, 876, 107 S. Ct. 3164, 3170, 97 L. Ed. 2d 709, 719 (1987)).  Here, of 
course, the searchers were police officers in every meaningful sense of 
the word. 
 
Second, King emphasized the “ongoing supervisory relationship” 
between the parole officer and the parolee.  Id. at 122 (quoting Griffin, 
483 U.S. at 879, 107 S. Ct. at 3171, 97 L. Ed. 2d at 721).  It cites “[t]he 
absence of an adversarial relationship” between the police and the parole 
officer.  Id. at 125.  But here there was no ongoing relationship between 
the law enforcement officers who conducted the search and the parolee.  
Unlike in King, it does not matter to the majority that the law 
enforcement officers here were strangers to the parolee. 
 
Third, King emphasized the limited nature of the holding.  In King, 
the majority concluded that “parole officers have a special need to search 
the home of parolees as authorized by a parole agreement and not 
refused by the parolee when done to promote the goals of parole.”  Id. at 
126.  The fact that the parolee had not refused the search by a parole 
 
 
 
25 
officer was an integral part of the holding.  Id. at 126–27.  The majority 
now abandons that limitation in King today. 
 
After filing a full-throated dissent in King, I nonetheless ended on a 
somewhat optimistic note, emphasizing the narrowness of the ruling.  I 
wrote  
the majority opinion is extremely limited.  It does not apply 
to the activities of law enforcement.  It does not endorse 
freestanding reasonableness, a hungry beast that could 
threaten the warrant requirement. . . .  It reserves the 
question of whether a parolee has a right to refuse the 
search.   
Id. at 136 (Appel, J., dissenting).  My optimism that the limits of King 
might hold has proved unfounded. 
 
We are left, at least for now, with a requirement of reasonable 
suspicion 
before 
law 
enforcement 
officers, 
who 
happen 
to 
be 
organizationally part of probation bureaucracies, may conduct a 
warrantless search of a probationer’s home.  And so, defenders of a 
vibrant search and seizure jurisprudence under article I, section 8 of the 
Iowa Constitution have no choice but to once again retreat to the next 
position and dig in.  Perhaps it is possible that the reasonable suspicion 
limitation may come to mean something under article I, section 8 of the 
Iowa Constitution.  See Ochoa, 792 N.W.2d at 287–91.  In other words, it 
may yet have real teeth. 
 
If reasonable suspicion does prove to have real teeth, the 
consequences of today’s ruling may be somewhat contained.  The 
benefits of a contemporaneous record that arises from a warrant 
requirement will be lost, of course, and the substantive protection 
against arbitrary search and seizures will be somewhat watered down.  If 
teeth are absent, however, our search and seizure law will slide further 
down the abyss of unfettered discretionary searches and seizures for 
 
 
 
26 
thousands of our citizens who are on probation.  For them, constitutional 
search and seizure protection under article I, section 8 will be rendered 
meaningless by courts responding to perceived pragmatic considerations 
rather than the command of the constitution itself.  If so, we will have 
drifted a long, long way from the declarations in State v. Cullison that 
parolees, and by implication probationers, do not suffer a diminution of 
constitutional protections from warrantless searches and seizures in 
their homes simply because of their status as parolees.  173 N.W.2d 533, 
537 (Iowa 1970). 
 
II.  Application of Exclusionary Rule in Parole Proceedings. 
 
Because the search, in my view, was invalid without a warrant, I 
now address the next question, namely, whether the exclusionary rule 
applies in probation revocation proceedings.  As noted by the parties, in 
State v. Swartz, 278 N.W.2d 22, 26 (Iowa 1979), and State v. Kain, 378 
N.W.2d 900, 903 (1985), we held the exclusionary rule did not apply in 
probation determinations.  In Swartz, we emphasized the purpose of the 
exclusionary rule was “to discourage unconstitutional acts by law 
enforcement officials.”  378 N.W.2d at 23.  Kain simply followed Swartz 
with no analysis.  Kain, 378 N.W.2d at 902–03. 
 
After Swartz and Kain were decided, however, we then decided 
State v. Cline, 617 N.W.2d 277 (2000), abrogated in part on other 
grounds in State v. Turner, 630 N.W.2d 601, 606 n.2 (Iowa 2001).  In 
Cline, we addressed the argument that the sole purpose of the 
exclusionary rule was to deter police misconduct.  617 N.W.2d at 289.  
As is apparent, the notion that the sole purpose of the exclusionary rule 
is to deter misconduct was the centerpiece in Swartz, 278 N.W.2d at 26, 
and its follower Kain, 378 N.W.2d at 903.  We also considered the 
 
 
 
27 
argument that the rule has no ameliorative effect on the judicial or 
legislative branches.  Cline, 617 N.W.2d at 289–90. 
 
In Cline, we disagreed with both propositions.  Id.  Unlike in 
Swartz, we stressed that the exclusionary rule serves purposes beyond 
deterrence of police misconduct.  Id. at 289.  We noted that in our early 
search and seizure cases we emphasized the exclusionary rule “provided 
a remedy for a constitutional violation and protected judicial integrity.”  
Id.; see also State v. Sheridan, 121 Iowa 164, 168, 96 N.W. 730, 731 
(1903) (stating that to admit illegally obtained evidence is to “emasculate 
the constitutional guarantee”). 
 
Thus, we emphatically stated in Cline that the exclusionary rule 
was constitutionally based, not simply a judicially created remedy, and 
that the exclusionary rule protects the integrity of the court by refusing 
to admit illegally obtained evidence.  617 N.W.2d at 289–90.  As a result, 
we joined a growing number of states declining, under state search and 
seizure constitutional provisions, to adopt the so-called “good faith” 
exception to the exclusionary rule created by the United States Supreme 
Court in United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 922, 104 S. Ct. 3405, 3420, 
82 L. Ed. 2d 677, 698 (1984).  Cline, 617 N.W.2d at 289–93; see, e.g., 
State v. Marsala, 579 A.2d 58, 66–68 (Conn. 1990); Gary v. State, 422 
S.E.2d 426, 428–29 (Ga. 1992); State v. Lopez, 896 P.2d 889, 902 (Haw. 
1995); State v. Guzman, 842 P.2d 660, 671–72 (Idaho 1992); State v. 
Novembrino, 519 A.2d 820, 854–57 (N.J. 1987); State v. Gutierrez, 863 
P.2d 1052, 1067 (N.M. 1993); Commonwealth v. Edmunds, 586 A.2d 887, 
905 (Pa. 1991); State v. Oakes, 598 A.2d 119, 126–27 (Vt. 1991); State v. 
Scull, 862 N.W.2d 562, 572 (Wis. 2015). 
 
In states that emphasize judicial integrity and the constitutional 
nature of the exclusionary rule, the exclusionary rule has been applied in 
 
 
 
28 
probation and parole settings.  The reasoning is obvious.  In State v. 
Marquart, the New Mexico Court of Appeals considered whether the 
search and seizure provision of the New Mexico Constitution required the 
exclusionary rule to be applied in probation revocation proceedings.  945 
P.2d 1027, 1031 (N.M. Ct. App. 1997).  The Marquart court noted that 
the New Mexico Supreme Court had rejected a good-faith exception to the 
exclusionary rule in Gutierrez, 863 P.2d at 1067.  945 P.2d at 1031.  It 
further noted that in doing so, the New Mexico Supreme Court 
emphasized that the exclusionary rule is not a “mere ‘judicial remedy’ ” 
but instead was a rule “to effectuate . . . the constitutional right of the 
accused.”  Id. (quoting Gutierrez, 863 P.2d at 1067).  The Marquart court 
held the exclusionary rule applied in probation revocation proceedings.  
Id. 
 
In State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. Rogers, the Supreme Court 
of Oregon considered the application of the exclusionary rule under 
Oregon’s constitutional provision related to search and seizure in 
probation revocation proceedings.  836 P.2d 127, 129 (Or. 1992).  The 
Oregon court, also emphasizing the “personal right to be free from an 
unlawful search and seizure,” found the exclusionary rule applied in 
probation proceedings.  Id. at 129–30.  Similar reasoning with 
comparable results may be found in State v. Dodd, 419 So. 2d 333, 335 
(Fla. 1982), Mason v. State, 838 S.W.2d 657, 659 (Tex. Ct. App. 1992), 
and Howard v. State, 308 S.E.2d 424, 425 (Ga. Ct. App. 1983). 
 
In my view, the logic of Cline compels application of the 
exclusionary rule in parole and probation proceedings.  Under Cline, the 
exclusionary rule is not merely a judicially created remedy but 
enforcement of a personal constitutional right.  617 N.W.2d at 289.  
 
 
 
29 
Further, the integrity of the court is equally affected by introduction of 
tainted evidence in a parole proceeding as it is in any other case. 
 
III.  Conclusion. 
 
For the above reasons, I would conclude that the search without a 
warrant in this case was invalid under article I, section 8 of the Iowa 
Constitution.  Further, as a result of the constitutional violation, 
evidence obtained from the search is inadmissible in a probation 
revocation proceeding.  As a result, I would reverse the decision of the 
district court in this case. 
 
Wiggins and Hecht, JJ., join this dissent.