Court Opinion

ID: 9381551
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-23 15:01:13.380964+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:33.125776
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
                            For the Eighth Circuit
                        ___________________________

                                No. 22-1408
                        ___________________________

                             United States of America

                        lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellee

                                           v.

                                Elmer Wayne Zahn

                       lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellant
                                       ____________

                     Appeal from United States District Court
                    for the District of South Dakota - Northern
                                   ____________

                           Submitted: October 21, 2022
                              Filed: March 23, 2023
                                  ____________

Before KELLY, WOLLMAN, and KOBES, Circuit Judges.
                          ____________

WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge.

       Elmer Wayne Zahn entered a conditional guilty plea to possessing with intent
to distribute 50 grams or more of methamphetamine, in violation of 21 U.S.C.
§ 841(a)(1). He appeals the district court’s1 denial of his motion to suppress
evidence. We affirm.

      1
       The Honorable Charles B. Kornmann, United States District Judge for the
District of South Dakota, adopting the Report and Recommendation of the Honorable
Mark A. Moreno, United States Magistrate Judge for the District of South Dakota.
       Zahn was released on bond after being charged with state-law violations in
Brown County, South Dakota. A July 18, 2019, magistrate-judge-issued warrant for
Zahn’s arrest was delivered to the sheriff’s office for service. After Zahn pleaded
guilty to a misdemeanor on July 29, 2019, the remaining charges were dismissed.
The deputy clerk sent an email to two sheriff’s office employees the next day, asking
that the warrant be returned to the clerk’s office. The warrant was not returned,
however, and remained in the sheriff’s office’s computer system and on file.

       Office Manager Kathy Neitzel, who had worked in the sheriff’s office for more
than thirty years, was responsible for handling warrants throughout her tenure there.
Neitzel explained how the sheriff’s office handled warrants upon their receipt. She
or a co-worker entered the warrant into the computer system, placed it into a folder,
and filed it with the other recently issued warrants. If a warrant was recalled, Neitzel
or a co-worker would pull the warrant from the file, remove it from the computer
system, and send it to the office that had recalled it. Although she had received the
email recalling Zahn’s warrant, Neitzel could not explain why it had not been
removed from the computer system or returned to the clerk’s office.

       Deputy Sheriff Scott Kolb had also worked in the sheriff’s office for more than
thirty years. He spent most of his time working warrants and thus regularly reviewed
the file containing the recently issued warrants. Kolb had seen the June 18 warrant
for Zahn’s arrest and had tried to serve it on him. On November 7, 2019, Kolb drove
past Zahn’s Aberdeen apartment and spotted a man he believed to be Zahn. Kolb
pulled up Zahn’s information on his in-car computer, which displayed a photo of
Zahn, as well as a red bar indicating an active warrant.

       Kolb exited his patrol car and approached Zahn. After a brief struggle, Kolb
took Zahn to the ground, where he was eventually handcuffed. A pat-down search
revealed, among other things, drug paraphernalia and a chewing-tobacco container
that held five plastic baggies of methamphetamine.

                                          -2-
       After delivering Zahn to jail staff, Kolb retrieved the warrant from the sheriff’s
office’s file, signed it, gave it to jail staff, and gave a copy to Zahn. Kolb thereafter
obtained a warrant authorizing a search of Zahn’s apartment, during which the
execution thereof resulted in the discovery of additional methamphetamine and other
evidence of drug distribution. Zahn was eventually released, and a warrant was later
issued relating to the November 7 incident.

       Investigator Wes Graff and other law enforcement officers were dispatched to
an Aberdeen hotel on November 23, 2020. After officers resolved the issue, hotel
staff requested further assistance with an unrelated commotion in one of the hotel’s
rooms. Graff went to the room and saw Zahn and three other occupants therein.
Knowing that Zahn and two of the other occupants had active arrest warrants, Graff
entered the room, handcuffed Zahn, and saw drug paraphernalia lying on the floor.
During the subsequent warrant-authorized search of the room, officers discovered
methamphetamine, heroin, and other evidence of drug distribution.

        A federal grand jury returned an indictment that charged Zahn with drug
offenses stemming from the November 7, 2019, and the November 23, 2020, arrests
and related searches. Zahn moved to suppress the evidence, arguing that it should be
excluded as fruits of his unconstitutional November 7 arrest. Neitzel, Kolb, and Graff
testified during the suppression hearing, following which the district court denied the
motion after declining to apply the exclusionary rule.

       “The Fourth Amendment forbids ‘unreasonable searches and seizures,’ and this
usually requires the police to have probable cause or a warrant before making an
arrest.” Herring v. United States, 555 U.S. 135, 136 (2009). Kolb had neither when
he arrested Zahn. Accepting the parties’ assumption that the November 7, 2019,
arrest violated Zahn’s Fourth Amendment rights, we must determine whether the
district court should have applied the exclusionary rule. In doing so, we review for
clear error the court’s findings and de novo its conclusions of law. United States v.
Szczerba, 897 F.3d 929, 936 (8th Cir. 2018).

                                          -3-
       In Herring, the Supreme Court considered circumstances similar to those
presented here. An officer arrested the defendant after being told that there was an
active warrant. A search incident to arrest revealed contraband. The warrant had
been recalled five months earlier, however. “For whatever reason, the information
about the recall of the warrant . . . did not appear in the database.” 555 U.S. at 138.
The county warrant clerk soon realized the error, but by the time the officer was
alerted, the defendant had already been arrested and searched.

       The Court held that the exclusionary rule does not apply when “an officer
reasonably believes there is an outstanding arrest warrant, but that belief turns out to
be wrong because of a negligent bookkeeping error by another police employee.” Id.
at 137. The Court explained that “the exclusionary rule serves to deter deliberate,
reckless, or grossly negligent conduct, or in some cases recurring or systemic
negligence.” Id. at 144. The error in Herring was the result of mere negligence, and
thus any marginal benefit of suppressing evidence “obtained in objectively reasonable
reliance on a subsequently recalled warrant” did not “justify the substantial costs of
exclusion.” Id. at 146 (second quotation from United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897,
922 (1984)).

      Zahn argues that his unconstitutional arrest stemmed from the Brown County
Sheriff’s Office’s reckless conduct, i.e., its failure to establish any procedure to
handle recalled warrants. Zahn contends that the office should have implemented a
review system, suggesting that “[a] simple, routine process of a weekly review would
have caught the error.” Appellant’s Br. 9.

       Neitzel’s and Kolb’s testimony regarding the sheriff’s office’s procedure for
handling warrants revealed “no evidence that errors in [Brown County’s] system are
routine or widespread.” See Herring, 555 U.S. at 147. As recounted above, Neitzel
explained that after receiving phone or email notification of a warrant’s recall, she or
a co-worker would remove the warrant from the file and the computer system and
return it to the appropriate office. When asked how often she or her co-workers had

                                          -4-
failed to remove a recalled warrant, Neitzel replied, “Very rarely.” Similarly, Deputy
Kolb testified that he had no doubt that Zahn’s warrant was valid when he saw it in
his in-car computer system. Both Neitzel and Kolb testified that there likely had
been occasions during their decades-long careers with the sheriff’s office when a
warrant was not removed after it was recalled. Neither could point to any specific
incidents, however, in which a recalled warrant was not removed or in which a
defendant had been arrested on a recalled warrant. On this record, then, we conclude
that it was employee negligence—not reckless disregard of constitutional
requirements—that resulted in the failure to remove Zahn’s recalled warrant from the
file and the computer system.

       Like the officer in Herring, Kolb wrongly but reasonably believed that there
was an outstanding warrant for Zahn’s arrest. Neitzel’s and her co-worker’s negligent
conduct “was not so objectively culpable as to require exclusion” of the evidence
garnered after Zahn’s arrests. See Herring, 555 U.S. at 146; id at 147–48 (“[W]hen
police mistakes are the result of negligence such as that described here, rather than
systemic error or reckless disregard of constitutional requirements, any marginal
deterrence does not ‘pay its way.’” (quoting Leon, 468 U.S. at 907–08 n.6)).

       In light of our conclusion that the exclusionary rule does not apply, we need
not consider the government’s alternate ground for admission of the evidence, i.e.,
that Zahn’s resistance to his illegal arrest furnished grounds for a second, legitimate
arrest. See United States v. Schmidt, 403 F.3d 1009, 1016 (8th Cir. 2005).

      The judgment is affirmed.
                     ______________________________

                                         -5-