Court Opinion

ID: 9892746
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-10-24 19:05:28.256853+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:47:35.725134
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

AARON GARNETT,                       §
                                     §   No. 376, 2022
     Defendant Below,                §
     Appellant,                      §   Court Below: Superior Court
                                     §   of the State of Delaware
           v.                        §
                                     §   Cr. ID No. 2003009148 (K)
STATE OF DELAWARE,                   §
                                     §
     Appellee.                       §

                        Submitted: July 26, 2023
                        Decided:   October 24, 2023

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, TRAYNOR, LEGROW, and
GRIFFITHS, Justices constituting the Court en banc.

Upon appeal from the Superior Court. AFFIRMED.

ELLIOT M. MARGULES, Esquire, (argued) and NICOLE M. WALKER, Esquire,
OFFICE OF DEFENSE SERVICES, Wilmington, Delaware, for Appellant Aaron
Garnett.

ANDREW J. VELLA, Esquire, DELAWARE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
Wilmington, Delaware, for Appellee State of Delaware.
TRAYNOR, Justice, for the Majority:

      After arresting Aaron Garnett in whose care were three young children, the

police promptly sought to locate the children’s parent or guardian. This search,

initiated before sunrise on a cold and rainy day, led the police to a house where they

were told the children’s mother lived and was sleeping. Once there, the police

knocked, then banged, on the front door and loudly announced their presence. When

no one answered, one of the officers went to the rear of the house where, after

another round of knocking and announcing, the officer noticed the back door was

unlocked. He pushed open the unlocked door and, peering into the interior of the

residence with the benefit of a flashlight, saw a motionless body under a blanket at

the foot of a stairway. Joined now by his fellow officers, he entered the residence

and found the lifeless body of Naquita Hill, the mother of one of the children whose

welfare had motivated the police’s efforts.         Seven or so hours later, Garnett

confessed that, during a heated argument, he had choked Hill until she slumped to

the floor and beat her with his fist after that. After a jury trial, Garnett was convicted

of Naquita Hill’s murder, and we now consider his appeal.

      Although the officer was not looking for contraband or other evidence when

he opened the unlocked back door, Garnett contended below—and the State tacitly

conceded—that the opening of the door and all that followed it was a search

                                            2
implicating the Fourth Amendment. Hence, he moved to suppress the evidence

police seized following their warrantless entry of the residence. This, according to

Garnett, included Hill’s body and the resulting forensic testing of it. He also moved

to suppress his confession, arguing that it was derivative of the illegal entry. In two

separate opinions,1 the Superior Court denied Garnett’s motion. The court found

that the body and physical evidence found in the residence would have been

discovered through lawful means in the absence of the illegal entry and, therefore,

under the inevitable-discovery exception to the exclusionary rule, should not be

suppressed. Likewise, the court concluded that Garnett’s incriminatory statements

to the police were admissible under the same inevitable-discovery exception and

that, even if they were not, they were sufficiently attenuated from the illegality and

thus not subject to exclusion. Garnett appeals both rulings.

       For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the evidence Garnett asked the

Superior Court to exclude was properly admitted at Garnett’s trial. Consequently,

we affirm his convictions.

                                                I

       Because Garnett’s appeal challenges the Superior Court’s denial of his motion

to suppress physical evidence and his confession and does not claim any error at

1
 State v. Garnett, 2021 WL 6109797 (Del. Super. Ct. Dec. 23, 2021) (“Garnett I”); State v. Garnett,
2022 WL 610200 (Del. Super. Ct. Mar. 1, 2022) (“Garnett II”).
                                                3
trial, our discussion of the factual background, unless otherwise noted, is drawn from

the suppression-hearing record.2

                                                 A

       Shortly after 5:30 in the morning on March 15, 2020, several officers of the

Dover Police Department responded to the Wawa convenience store on Forest

Avenue in Dover, having received a report of an apparent “domestic incident” in

progress there. The report was described variously as “a physical altercation

between a parent and a child”3 and an “adult male . . . grabb[ing] a juvenile by the

neck.”4

       Corporal Anthony Toto was the first officer to arrive on the scene. When

Corporal Toto entered the store, a store employee pointed to Garnett, who had three

children with him. The oldest child, M.S.,5 was ten years old. The next oldest was

F.L., who was five years old. And Garnett was holding his five-month-old son, A.G.

2
  The Superior Court held a hearing on Garnett’s motion to suppress on December 3, 2021. At this
hearing, the court heard from seven police witnesses. In Garnett I, issued on December 23, 2021,
the court denied Garnett’s motion as to “Ms. Hill’s body and all forensic testing resulting
therefrom, all physical evidence seized from the home located at 32 Willis Road and photographs
taken therein, and all clothing seized from Mr. Garnett[.]” Garnett I, at *7. But the court was not
satisfied with the development of the factual record as to Garnett’s statement and deferred ruling
on its admissibility pending “an evidentiary hearing . . . outside the presence of the jury, pursuant
to Delaware Rule of Evidence 104(a) and 104(c)(1).” Id. That hearing, at which the court heard
from one of the previously testifying police witnesses, took place in January 2022 and resulted in
Garnett II, issued three weeks before Garnett’s trial began. We consider the suppression-hearing
record as consisting of the evidence taken at both hearings.
3
  App. to Opening Br. at A58.
4
  Id. at A81.
5
  The Superior Court and the parties have referred to the children by their initials; we do the same
here.
                                                 4
Corporal Toto described Garnett’s demeanor at the time of their encounter as “very

strange.”6 Among other things, he was holding his infant son not as “a normal parent

would hold a baby”7 or “cradling the baby like a normal parent”;8 instead, with his

arms “extended out,”9 he was holding the baby away from his body. Although it

was a cold and rainy morning, none of the children was “dressed for the weather.”10

       Corporal Toto asked Garnett to step outside the store, leaving the children

with other officers. Once outside, Garnett identified himself as Aaron Edwards and

stated that his date of birth was July 18, 1995. He said that he came from Maryland

to take custody of the children because their mother was in prison, but he was either

unable or unwilling to provide the mother’s name. Oddly enough, Garnett had no

diaper bag, stroller, or other gear one would expect to see upon confronting an adult

preparing to travel with three small children.

       When Corporal Toto was unable to locate any records of an individual named

Aaron Edwards born on July 18, 1995, he confronted Garnett with that fact. Garnett

promptly admitted that he had provided “a fake name.”11 Around this time, Sergeant

Jennifer Lynch joined the conversation. Garnett told Corporal Toto and Sergeant

Lynch that the infant was his son and the other two boys were his nephews. He said

6
  App. to Opening Br. at A60.
7
  Id. at A61.
8
  Id.
9
  Id.
10
   Id. at A81.
11
   Id. at A65.
                                          5
that he and the children had walked from an area Sergeant Lynch recognized as “the

Towne Point neighborhood”12 to the Wawa store on Forest Avenue. As the children

soon disclosed, Garnett and the children had walked from 32 Willis Road, which is

adjacent to Towne Point and over three miles from the Wawa store. Because Garnett

had misidentified himself, Corporal Toto arrested him for criminal impersonation,

placed him in handcuffs, and asked Patrol Officer Brandyn Clancy to transport

Garnett to the Dover Police Department for processing.

          Meanwhile, Patrol Officer Alicia Corrado took control of the children. When

Officer Corrado first approached the children, M.S., who appeared nervous, was

holding the baby. She noticed that none of the children was adequately dressed,

given the weather. M.S. and F.L. related to Officer Corrado that Garnett had woke

them up that morning “to take a walk.”13 The two young boys together were able to

provide their address—32 Willis Road—with M.S. providing the street name and

F.L. recalling the house number. They also told Officer Corrado that their mother—

Naquita Hill—was at home sleeping. (It was later learned that Hill was A.G.’s

mother and that, although the two older boys referred to Hill as their mother, she

was actually their aunt). Officer Corrado noticed a scratch on M.S.’s neck and asked

where it came from. M.S. said that Garnett had caused the mark.

12
     Id. at A83.
13
     Id. at A120.
                                           6
       After Officer Corrado and Corporal Toto brought the children back to the

police station, she noticed two large items in M.S.’s pockets. M.S. shared that

Garnett had given him the items and “told him to hide them in his pockets.” 14 In

short order, M.S. took the items out of his pocket and handed them over to Officer

Corrado; they consisted of Garnett’s cell phone and credit card and Naquita Hill’s

Social Security Card and driver’s license. M.S. did not know why Garnett gave him

these items to hide.

       Meanwhile, three officers—Sergeant Lynch, PFC Joshua Krumm, and Patrol

Officer Dale Starke—having learned where M.S. and F.L. resided, went to 32 Willis

Road in the hope of locating the children’s parent or custodian. The residence at

that address is an end-unit row home. As Sergeant Lynch “stood off in the grass in

the front yard,”15 PFC Krumm and Officer Starke went to the front door and knocked

on it, according to Sergeant Lynch, for “[o]ff and on . . . probably about two or three

minutes.”16 These knocks, Officer Starke testified, were not “gentle knocks,”17 and

as he and PFC Krumm knocked they announced their presence as members of the

Dover Police Department. They also shined their flashlights in the windows but to

no avail.

14
   Id. at A124–25.
15
   Id. at A90.
16
   Id. at A91.
17
   Id. at A146.
                                          7
          Frustrated by his inability to elicit a response, Officer Starke made his way to

the back door, while PFC Krumm and Sergeant Lynch stayed out front. Officer

Starke knocked on the back door several times while announcing his presence but,

as in the front, so in the back: no one responded. This caused Officer Starke, who

understood that he was performing a “welfare check,” to be concerned, so he

checked the back-door handle; it was unlocked. Officer Starke radioed to Sergeant

Lynch and PFC Krumm to let them know of the unlocked door. As PFC Krumm

came around to the back door, Officer Starke pushed it open. Remaining outside,

he peered inside with the aid of his flashlight and saw “a limb that was partially

covered with a blanket.”18 Officer Starke and PFC Krumm again announced their

presence, “calling from the door, trying to make announcements[.]”19

          By this time, Sergeant Lynch had come to the back door. She described how

the officers then discovered Naquita Hill’s brutally battered body:

          I peek in. And pretty much from the back door, you can look straight
          through to the front residence. It’s a row home. It’s not very big. As
          soon you open the door, you are in the kitchen and in the living room
          and then the front door. And there are steps that go upstairs right at the
          front door. So as soon as you open the back door, you have a clear view
          of the victim that was laying on the ground. . . .

          So . . . I saw someone covered in a blanket. I saw fans of feet. I saw a
          right arm of someone. And I saw a reddish stain on the front of the
          blanket where, if it was a person, it would be where their face and head
          would be.

18
     Id. at A149.
19
     Id. at A92.
                                              8
          Immediately I thought we needed to check on this person. So we made
          entry into the house. I pulled the blanket back. And I saw the victim
          with bad trauma, severe trauma all over her face, swollen, bloody, a
          laceration on her forehead, a large pool of blood underneath her head
          from where she was laying. And I felt for a pulse.20
          Feeling none, Sergeant Lynch, along with Officer Starke and PFC Krumm,

made sure that the house was clear of assailants or other victims, attempted to

administer first aid, and called for an ambulance. The officers did not search for

evidence at that time. Naquita Hill, was “pronounced deceased”21 at the scene. It

was 6:50 a.m., about an hour and a half after the police encountered Garnett and the

three children at Wawa convenience store.

          The discovery of Naquita Hill’s body was roughly contemporaneous with

Officer Corrado’s discovery that M.S. was, at Garnett’s direction, hiding Hill’s

Social Security card and driver’s license. And it was around that same time that

Officer Clancy, while processing Garnett back at the station, noticed what appeared

to be a blood stain of a “decent size” on one of Garnett’s socks. Officer Clancy,

upon seeing the stain, asked Garnett if he was injured; Garnett did not reply.

          Eventually, the police secured a search warrant for 32 Willis Road. The

application described, among other things, the officers’ warrantless entry into the

residence and their discovery of Naquita Hill’s body. Unfortunately, the record is

20
     Id. at A92–93.
21
     Id. at A179.
                                           9
unclear as to when the police applied for the warrant or when it was issued, and what,

if any physical evidence was seized under the warrant. There is some evidence

suggesting that the warrant was “executed” at 10:40 a.m.22 We do know, however,

that before the search warrant was issued, Detective Nolan Matthews, a Dover P.D.

crime-scene investigator, entered 32 Willis Road. Detective Matthews described

what he did upon his arrival.

       [W]e conducted an initial walk-through just to understand what
       consisted inside that scene. And when we realized that the victim on
       the floor had substantial injury and there was certain blood and other
       evidence inside the residence, that we didn’t know how long it would
       take for the search warrant to be obtained at that point. So we wanted
       to make sure to preserve it as it sat before anyone had touched any piece
       of evidence, had collected anything. We wanted to try and preserve it
       through photography just so in the event that it takes several hours to
       take get a search warrant or, in this case, it did take several hours for
       the medical examiner’s office to arrive, they would be able to even rely
       on our photos to better understand the injuries to the victim.23

Other than the photographs, no evidence was collected and “[n]othing was

touched”24 during this process.

       At approximately 2:00 p.m., Detective Timothy Mullaney, Jr. and Detective

Chris Bumgarner questioned Garnett. At the outset of the interrogation, Detective

Mullaney tried to focus Garnett on what happened before Garnett and the children

walked crosstown to the Wawa:

22
   Id. at A239.
23
   Id. at A161.
24
   Id. at A162.
                                          10
              DET. MULLANEY:                So obviously, you know, we contacted
                                            you at the Wawa.
              GARNETT:                      Mh hm.

              DET. MULLANEY:                Officers came there and talked to you
                                            there. We’re more interested in what
                                            led up to obviously coming to the
                                            Wawa. You know, obviously went
                                            out to the house.

              GARNETT:                      Mh hm.

              DET. MULLANEY:                I just want you to tell me what
                                            happened, okay?
              GARNETT:                      I want to tell you a story.25
       At first, in a confusing ramble that seems to have conflated his walk with the

children to the Wawa that morning with a walk to the Wawa by himself either the

night before or earlier that morning, Garnett claimed that he had discovered Hill’s

body on the floor upon returning to 32 Willis Road after walking to and from the

Wawa. This, he claimed, prompted him, for reasons he could not explain, to flee the

residence with the children. He insisted that he had nothing to do with Hill’s death

and was shocked by it. But the detectives confronted Garnett with Hill’s journal,

which they had lawfully obtained from Garnett’s backpack following his arrest and

which suggested that Garnett and Hill had a troubled relationship, and the tide began

to turn. And approximately one hour into the interview, Garnett confessed that he

25
  The statements quoted herein are from a video recording admitted as State’s Exhibit 6 at trial
and attached in DVD format to the App. to Opening Br. at A307.
                                              11
“did do that shit . . .”26 and that he lost his temper during an argument with Hill, “got

mad . . . and choked her.”27 When Hill fell to the floor, Garnett continued to choke

her and hit her with his fist. When asked if Hill stopped breathing, Garnett replied:

“I don’t know. I just know she was just laying there . . . And I didn’t know what

else to do . . . So I grabbed everybody . . . I grabbed my son. I grabbed the boys, and

I’m like, ‘Let’s just go.’”28 The crosstown trek on foot from Willis Road to the

Wawa store followed.

                                           B

       Based on the factual background outlined above, Detective Mullaney applied

for and was granted a warrant for Garnett’s arrest for first-degree murder and three

counts of endangering the welfare of a child. Less than three months later, a Kent

County grand jury returned an indictment, charging Garnett with murder in the first

degree, two counts of endangering the welfare of a child, and offensive touching.

The endangering counts charged that Garnett had murdered Hill knowing that the

crime was witnessed, by sight or sound, by two of the children, M.S. and F.L. The

offensive touching count related to Garnett’s physically abusive grabbing of M.S. as

reported to the police shortly after their encounter with Garnett earlier that morning.

26
   App. to Opening Br. at A307.
27
   Id.
28
   Id.
                                           12
          The Superior Court entered a scheduling order that included a pretrial motion

deadline in August 2021 in anticipation of a trial in the fall of that year. Garnett

filed a motion to suppress evidence—specifically, “[t]he body and all forensic

testing resulting therefrom; . . . [a]ll physical evidence seized from the residence

located at 32 Willis Road and photographs taken therein; . . . [a]ll clothing seized

from Mr. Garnett; [and] . . . Mr. Garnett’s taped statement.”29

          In his motion, Garnett alleged that he was a resident of 32 Willis Road and

thus had standing to object to the search of the residence. He depicted the police

officers’ entry into the residence as “an unlawful warrantless search in violation of

[his] Federal and State Constitutional rights . . . ,”30 citing the Fourth Amendment to

the United States Constitution and Article I, § 6 of the Delaware Constitution.

Anticipating the State’s response, Garnett argued that neither the emergency

doctrine nor the inevitable-discovery exception was applicable to the warrantless

entry into the residence. Hence, according to Garnett, all the evidence seized from

the residence and his subsequent statement to the detectives was “fruit of the

poisonous tree” subject to suppression.

          The State responded by challenging Garnett’s standing on two grounds—that

Garnett was not a resident of Willis Road and, even if he were, he had abandoned

29
     Id. at A27.
30
     Id. at A23.
                                            13
the residence. And as Garnett expected, the State invoked the emergency doctrine

and the inevitable-discovery exception. For the State, the police had reasonable

grounds to believe that there was an emergency at hand and “to respond to [the]

residence for the dual purpose of checking on the safety of the [infant’s] mother and

finding the [other] children’s guardian.”31 Entering the residence, according to the

State, was reasonable under these circumstances. The evidence, moreover, that

Garnett claimed to have been illegally obtained would inevitably have been

discovered through legitimate means and therefore was not subject to suppression

under the exclusionary rule. On the morning when the hearing on Garnett’s motion

was scheduled to begin, the State withdrew its challenge to Garnett’s standing.

                                          C

       After hearing from seven police witnesses, on whose testimony our earlier

factual discussion is based, the Superior Court, in two separate opinions,32 denied

Garnett’s motion to suppress. Although it did not explicitly say so, in Garnett I, the

Superior Court presupposed that the discovery of Naquita Hill’s body was the

product of an “illegal entry” into 32 Willis Road—“an invasion of the sanctity of the

home.”33 Even so, its factual findings rejected Garnett’s description of the “entry”

in his motion to suppress. In his motion, Garnett alleged that:

31
   Id. at A41.
32
   See supra note 2.
33
   Garnett I, at *4.
                                         14
       MCPL Lynch, PFC Krum and PTLM Starke responded to 32 Willis
       Road to attempt to make contact with the mother or guardian of the
       children. Upon arrival, they knocked on the front door with no
       response. Ptlm. Starke went to the rear door of the residence and found
       it unlocked. Ptlm. Starke and Pfc. Krum, with guns drawn, opened the
       rear door and entered residence. Upon entry, they noticed a person on
       the floor covered with a blanket. They called EMS and attempted to
       give first aid[]. Ultimately, EMS arrived and pronounced Naquita Hill
       deceased.34

       The Superior Court’s factual findings differ from this account in one essential

respect: in the court’s findings, the police entered the residence only after they “saw

what appeared to be a body covered by a blanket, with blood nearby.”35

       Upon arrival at the home, the officers knocked for two to three minutes
       at the front door, giving loud announcements, identifying themselves,
       and receiving no response. Patrolman Starke then headed to the rear of
       the home and knocked on the back door. After knocking very briefly–
       a minute–Patrolman Starke checked the doorknob and noticed that it
       was unsecured.

       Immediately thereafter, Patrolman Starke radioed to the other officers
       that there was an unsecured door, and, without asking for permission
       from his supervisor, Sergeant Lynch (who was still at the front of the
       home), Patrolman Starke turned the knob and pushed the door inward.
       With or without stepping into the home, Patrolman Starke and PFC
       Krumm shined flashlights into the home and saw what appeared to be
       a body covered by a blanket, with blood nearby. As soon as Sergeant
       Lynch made her way to the rear of the home and confirmed what
       Patrolman Starke and PFC Krumm had identified, the three officers
       entered the home and found the dead body of Naquita Hill.36

34
   App. to Opening Br. at A22 (emphasis added).
35
   Garnett I, at *2.
36
   Id. In a footnote, the court expressed its view that “[b]ased on the testimony, whether or not the
officers stepped into the home is unclear.” Id. at *2 n.5. This observation is difficult to square
with the testimony of Patrolman Starke, who said that “[a]s soon as the door opened, I could see a
limb that was partially covered with a blanket.” App. to Opening Br. at A149. This is consistent
                                                15
       Because the entry after the officers noticed the body would have been, in the

absence of some other illegality, lawful,37 we must assume that for the court, unlike

for Garnett, the opening of the door was the intrusion that triggered the Fourth

Amendment’s warrant requirement, absent the applicability of its exceptions. As

neither party has found this distinction relevant, we need not address it further.

                                                 D

       The Superior Court’s opinion in Garnett I is devoted to a review of the State’s

arguments that:        (1) the officer’s warrantless search was justified under the

emergency doctrine, and (2) the inevitable-discovery exception to the exclusionary

rule rendered suppression of the evidence obtained after the initial illegality

inappropriate.

       Under the emergency doctrine that this Court recognized in Guererri v.

State,38 the State was required to prove that:

       (1) [t]he police [had] reasonable grounds to believe that there is an
       emergency at hand and an immediate need for their assistance for the
       protection of life or property[;] (2) [t]he search [was] not . . . primarily
       motivated by intent to arrest and seize evidence[; and] (3) [t]here [was]

with the previously quoted testimony of Sergeant Lynch. See supra pp. 8–9. (“[A]s soon as you
open the back door, you have a clear view of the victim that [sic] was laying [sic] on the ground. .
. . I saw someone covered in a blanket[]. . . [a]nd I saw a reddish stain on the front of the blanket
where, if it was a person, it would be where their face and head would be. . . . So we made entry
into the house.”).
37
    See State v. Henderson, 892 A.2d 1061, 1066 (Del. 2006) (“The plain view doctrine is an
exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement for searches and seizures. Under that
doctrine, ‘the mere observation of an item in plain view does not constitute a Fourth Amendment
search.’”).
38
    922 A.2d 403, 406 (Del. 2007).
                                                16
       some reasonable basis, approximating probable cause, to associate the
       emergency with the area or place to be searched.39
       The Superior Court determined that the emergency doctrine was inapplicable,

not because the facts could not support an inference that the children’s guardian was

in danger, but because the testimony of the officers themselves undermined that

inference. Sergeant Lynch, for instance, testified that, had Patrol Officer Starke not

opened the back door, the officers would have left the residence and returned later.

And as the court put it, “the testimony of the officers who conducted the warrantless

search was devoid of any indication that the Wawa incident . . . created a sense that

the guardian of the children was in danger.”40 Thus, the court concluded that “at the

time Patrolman Starke breached the ‘sanctity’ of the home, it was not a welfare

check, as the State contended. It was an action by Dover PD to locate the guardian

of the three children, not for the guardian’s welfare but for the children’s welfare.”41

And because the children were safely in the custody of the police, there was no

justification for entering the home at that time.

       The Superior Court was receptive, however, to the State’s invocation of the

inevitable-discovery exception to the exclusionary rule. Under that exception, if

evidence found because of a Fourth Amendment violation would inevitably have

39
   Id. (quoting People v. Bondi, 474 N.E.2d 733, 736 (Ill. App. Ct. 1984)).
40
   Garnett I, at *4.
41
   Id. at *5.
                                                17
been discovered through lawful means in the absence of the illegality, it would not

be excluded.42

       The Superior Court found as a factual matter that “at some point in the near

future from when the officers warrantlessly entered the home, the officers would

have re-attempted contact with the guardian and discovered the body pursuant to

routine police procedures.”43 In the court’s view, the lawful means untethered to the

earlier illegality through which the police would have gained access to the residence

were two-fold.

       First, the court was satisfied that, though there was no emergency at hand

when the police entered the residence at 6:42 a.m., additional facts had come to light

around the time of or not long after the first entry sufficient to justify a warrantless

entry under the emergency doctrine. The court pointed specifically to the discovery

of the blood stain on one of Garnett’s socks and the decedent’s Social Security card

and driver’s license in M.S.’s pocket, which Garnett had instructed M.S. to hide.

When these facts were considered together with the facts known at the time of the

initial entry—Garnett’s bizarre crosstown walk in the rain with the inadequately

42
   See Cook v. State, 374 A.2d 264, 267–68 (Del. 1977) (“This exception, which has found
increasing judicial favor, provides that evidence, obtained in the course of illegal police conduct,
will not be suppressed if the prosecution can prove that the incriminating evidence ‘would have
been discovered through legitimate means in the absence of official misconduct.’”) (quoting
Harold S. Novikoff, The Inevitable Discovery Exception to the Constitutional Exclusionary Rules,
74 Col. L. Rev. 88, 90 (1974)).
43
   Garnett I, at *5.
                                                18
clothed children; surveillance footage from the Wawa store; the scratch on M.S.’s

neck indicative of Garnett’s violent interaction with M.S., and Garnett’s inability to

provide a coherent account of his reasons for being at the Wawa store—the police’s

concern for the welfare and safety of the children’s guardian inside the residence on

Willis Road would have been sufficiently elevated, in the court’s opinion, to justify

an emergency entry of the residence.

       Alternatively, the Superior Court posited a second scenario that would have

led the police to lawfully discover Naquita Hill’s body and any related evidence in

the residence:       a search warrant “sought and obtained”44 independently from

information learned during the earlier misbegotten entry. This hypothetical search

warrant would have been based on the same facts as would have justified the

emergency entry, all of which were unknown to the officers who entered the Willis

Road residence, but gathered by other officers around the time of or shortly after the

entry. And importantly, none of those facts would have drawn upon the knowledge

gained by the police when they entered the residence earlier that morning.

       Based on these findings, the Superior Court concluded that “the inevitable

discovery exception applie[d] to the physical evidence obtained from the home[]”45

44
  Garnett I, at *6.
45
  Garnett I, at *7. In its conclusion in Garnett I, the court wrote that the State had “justified the
warrantless search [of the residence] pursuant to the inevitable discovery exception.” To the extent
that this statement suggests that the exception renders the initial illegality blameless, it is, in our
view, misleading. The exception, properly understood, is to the exclusionary rule and not to the
Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures.
                                                 19
and denied Garnett’s motion to suppress as to that evidence and the clothing seized

from Garnett. But the court was not satisfied that the record had been adequately

developed as to the statements Garnett made during the interrogation several hours

after the discovery of Ms. Hill’s body. The court noted, more specifically, that:

       [t]here was little focus upon that statement at the hearing. Specifically,
       it is unclear whether law enforcement confronted Mr. Garnett during
       his statement with physical evidence obtained from the home and
       whether, and to what extent, that may have led to his ultimate
       confession. The timing of the statement itself is also unclear. In short,
       it is conceivable that had the physical evidence been discovered legally,
       and at a later time, Mr. Garnett’s statement to police might have
       differed, and he might not have confessed to the crime.46
Consequently, the court deferred its ruling on the admissibility of the statement and

scheduled “a Rule 104(a) hearing outside the presence of the jury regarding Mr.

Garnett’s statement to determine whether that evidence will be suppressed.”47

                                                E

       Detective Mullaney, the State’s sole witness at the supplemental hearing,

established a timeline of the relevant events, starting with the Dover Police

Department’s receipt of the complaint from the Wawa store employee through

Garnett’s admission that he had choked and battered Naquita Hill. The timeline can

be summarized as follows:

46
  Id.
47
   Id.; D.R.E. 104(a) (“The court must decide any preliminary questions about whether . . .
evidence is admissible. In so deciding, the court is not bound by the evidence rules, except those
on privilege.”).
                                               20
      5:35 a.m.           Dover P.D. receives complaint.

      5:37 a.m.           First officer arrives at Wawa.

      6:18 a.m.           Police transport Garnett to Dover P.D.

      6:25 a.m.           M.S. and F.L. provide 32 Willis Road address.

      6:26 a.m.           Corporal Toto and Patrol Officer Corrado transport
                          children to Dover P.D.

      App. 6:26 a.m.      Officers dispatched to 32 Willis Road.

      6:42 a.m.           Officers discover Naquita Hill’s body;
                          simultaneously (or nearly so), back at Dover P.D.,
                          police discover Garnett’s bloody sock and Naquita
                          Hill’s social security card and driver’s license in
                          M.S. pocket.
      6:50 a.m.           Emergency medical technicians arrive at 32 Willis
                          and, shortly thereafter, pronounce Naquita Hill
                          dead.

      8:13 a.m.           Dover P.D. detectives “clear” the scene.
      10:40 a.m.          Search warrant executed.
      10:46 a.m.          Child Advocacy Center (“CAC”) interviews of
                          M.S. and F.L.

      2:00 p.m.           Police begin interview of Garnett.
Although Detective Mullaney did not provide the precise times of other investigative

steps, he described other police activity preceding Garnett’s interview. This activity

included contacting Naquita Hill’s sister, Rasheeda Hill, and Garnett’s family, and

arranging CAC interviews of M.S. and F.L. The record reflects that the CAC

                                         21
interviews occurred before Garnett was interviewed, but the substance of the

children’s statements does not appear in the record.

      Detective Mullaney then outlined the steps the investigating officers would

have taken following Garnett’s arrest had the officers not entered the residence at 32

Willis Road and discovered Naquita Hill’s body that morning. The police would

have first contacted a school resource officer and secured the school-age children’s

emergency contact information. That would have disclosed that Naquita Hill was

the children’s “mother” and that the children resided at 32 Willis Road. They also

would have learned Rasheeda Hill’s address through Criminal Justice Information

Services. Following routine investigatory procedures, the police would have then

contacted Rasheeda Hill in the hope that she would facilitate access to the home at

32 Willis Road.

      Detective Mullaney then explained that, had the effort to gain access to the 32

Willis Road property with Rasheeda Hill’s aid failed, the police would have

promptly applied for a search warrant.         The warrant application would have

highlighted the unusual encounter with Garnett in the pre-dawn hours, Garnett’s

demeanor throughout, the children’s statements regarding their “mother’s”

whereabouts, the unexplained bloody sock, and Garnett’s instructions to M.S. to hide

Naquita Hill’s identification cards in his pocket.

                                          22
          Detective Mullaney also testified about the circumstances surrounding his

2:00 p.m. interview of Garnett. He acknowledged that he told Garnett early in the

interview that the police “obviously went out to the house,” 48 but, from the

detective’s perspective, neither he nor Detective Bumgarner confronted Garnett with

any evidence from the warrantless entry during the interview. The court also viewed

and listened to the video recording of Garnett’s interview while Detective Mullaney

was on the stand.

                                            F

          With the suppression-hearing record thus fortified, the Superior Court turned

in Garnett II to the admissibility of Garnett’s statement. The court harkened back

to its finding in Garnett I “that Ms. Hill’s body and the other physical evidence

found in the home would inevitably have been discovered through lawful police

investigative procedures shortly after their actual discovery.”49 And based on the

testimony offered at the supplemental hearing, the court found that the State had

proved by a preponderance of the evidence that Garnett would not have been

released before the inevitable, though necessarily hypothetical, discovery of the

body. The court ticked off the reasons why it believed that Garnett would have

48
     App. to Opening Br. at A307.
49
     Garnett II, at *6.
                                            23
remained in custody at least as long as it would have taken for the police to discover

Naquita Hill’s body through lawful means. Those reasons included:

           1) the bloody sock and the information regarding Garnett’s instructing
           M.S. to “hide” Ms. Hill’s identification cards . . . discovered almost
           simultaneously with the illegal entry; 2) [that] Garnett was being
           investigated, but not yet charged, for a domestic incident involving
           M.S. that had been substantiated on multiple levels; and 3) [that] there
           was a high likelihood that CAC interviews of the children would have
           been undertaken given the totality of the circumstances.50

           This led the court to conclude that the timing of Garnett’s interview would not

have been materially different had the police not entered the residence unlawfully

earlier that day. Put differently, had the police not entered the residence unlawfully

that morning but the body had been—as was found to be likely in Garnett I—

inevitably discovered later that morning, Garnett’s statement would have been taken

under “the exact same circumstances as actually occurred. . . .”51 Under this

scenario, however, the initial illegality would be irrelevant because the police would

have come into possession of the incriminating evidence lawfully. Put differently,

the fruit the police possessed under the inevitable-discovery scenario came not from

a poisonous tree but from a tree not tainted by the illegality. Thus, through this

extrapolation of the inevitable-discovery exception, the court ruled that Garnett’s

statement should not be suppressed.

50
     Id.
51
     Id.
                                             24
       The Superior Court also found that “[e]ven if Garnett’s statement is not

admissible under the inevitable discovery doctrine, the attenuation doctrine renders

his statement admissible.”52 In so finding, the court took heed of this Court’s

articulation of the doctrine in Lopez-Vasquez v. State:53

       The attenuation doctrine exception permits courts to find that the
       poisonous taint of an unlawful search and seizure has dissipated when
       the causal connection between the unlawful police conduct and the
       acquisition of the challenged evidence becomes sufficiently attenuated.
       Thus, even if there is an illegal search or seizure, direct or derivative
       evidence . . . may still be admissible if the taint is sufficiently purged.54
When the derivative evidence is the defendant’s custodial statement, Miranda

warnings, by themselves, are insufficient to break the causal connection. In addition

to Miranda warnings, whether the taint of a prior illegality has been purged, the court

noted, should be determined with reference to three factors: “(1) the temporal

proximity of the illegality and the acquisition of the evidence to which the instant

objection is made; (2) the presence of intervening circumstances; and (3) the purpose

and flagrancy of the official conduct.”55

       The court found that the “temporal proximity” factor was “neutral”56 and that

the third factor—the purpose and flagrancy of the official misconduct—weighed

52
   Id.
53
   956 A.2d 1280 (Del. 2008).
54
   Id. at 1293 (footnotes and quotation marks omitted).
55
   Garnett II, at *7 (quoting Lopez-Vasquez, 956 A.2d at 1293); see also Brown v. Illinois, 422 U.S.
590, 603–04 (1975).
56
   Garnett II, at *7.
                                                25
heavily against excluding Garnett’s statement.57 But at the heart of the court’s

attenuation analysis was its identification of a critical intervening circumstance—

“Garnett’s own voluntary, unelicited admission . . . near the beginning of the taped

statement, that he was aware of the presence of Ms. Hill’s dead body at 32 Willis

Road.”58 Of equal importance was the court’s conclusion that “[n]o evidence from

the illegal search was used by the officers to confront Garnett.”59 In the court’s eyes,

Hill’s journal was the only evidence with which the police confronted Garnett, and

the journal had been lawfully seized, itself another intervening circumstance. For

the Superior Court

        it was not the questioning officers who disclosed to Garnett the
        discovery of the body and other evidence obtained at the home, thereby
        exploiting that evidence to obtain a confession, but it was Garnett who
        first disclosed that he was aware of the evidence. That circumstance
        cured the illegally obtained evidence of any taint that could have
        resulted had the officers initially disclosed the illegally obtained
        evidence to Garnett. Put another way, Garnett’s confession is “remote”
        from the illegal police conduct due to Garnett’s own disclosure that he
        was aware of the presence of the body.60
        Accordingly, the Superior Court denied Garnett’s motion to suppress the

recorded statement.

57
   Id. at *9.
58
   Id. at *8.
59
   Id.
60
   Id.
                                          26
                                           G

       Garnett’s jury trial in Superior Court took place over the course of four days

in March 2022. For the most part, the testimony at trial tracked the suppression-

hearing testimony. But the jury also heard from four witnesses who did not testify

during the suppression hearing.

       In very brief testimony, a Wawa store employee confirmed that there were

surveillance cameras in the store; the court then admitted the video without

objection. And the forensic pathologist from the Delaware Division of Forensic

Science who performed Naquita Hill’s autopsy offered her opinion that the cause of

Naquita Hill’s death was “compression of [the] neck and chest and multiple blunt

force injuries.”61 But the two witnesses who tied Garnett to those injuries were M.S.

and F.L., twelve and seven years old, respectively, at the time of trial.

       M.S. described how Garnett had woke him up around 5:00 a.m. on the day he,

Garnett, and his two brothers walked from Willis Road to the Wawa store in west

Dover. According to M.S., Garnett “told us to put our stuff on and then just walked

us out the house.”62 But before they left the house, he saw “Naquita laying on the

floor . . . [c]lose to the steps,”63 with a blanket covering her face. As they left, M.S.

61
   App. to Answering Br. at B190.
62
   Id. at B127.
63
   Id. at B128.
                                           27
watched as Garnett “stomped on her face.”64 M.S. also explained that on their walk

to the Wawa store, they stopped at a Royal Farms store, where Garnett gave M.S.

his aunt’s phone and wallet. Garnett told M.S. to throw away the phone and wallet,

but he put them in his pocket. Once at the Wawa store, Garnett admonished M.S.:

“say something again and I’ll kill you.”65 And then, in M.S.’s words, “he choked

me out.”66

       F.L.’s testimony was briefer than, but consistent with, M.S.’s testimony. He

described how Garnett, who he identified as his cousin, “woke us up with his foot .

. . and . . . brung us to Wawa.”67 Before leaving the house, he saw Naquita Hill

“covered up”68—next to the stairs. As F.L. put his shoes on, he saw Garnett

“stepping on Naquita.”69

       After the prosecution rested its case, Garnett’s counsel advised the court that

the defense would not call any witnesses. The following day, after hearing counsel’s

closing arguments and the court’s instructions, the jury returned its verdict, finding

Garnett guilty as charged on all counts. The court revoked bond and ordered a

presentence investigation.     The Superior Court later sentenced Garnett to

incarceration for the balance of his natural life plus one year and 30 days.

64
   Id. at B131.
65
   Id. at B129.
66
   Id.
67
   Id. at B134–35.
68
   Id. at B135–36.
69
   Id. at B136.
                                         28
                                                  H

          Garnett raises three arguments on appeal. First, he challenges the Superior

Court’s finding that, had the police not entered the home at 32 Willis Road without

a warrant, they would have, in relatively short order, entered it lawfully and

discovered Naquita Hill’s body. This, according to Garnett, was an abuse of the

court’s discretion. Next, Garnett argues that the Court erred in finding that Garnett’s

confession was not the unattenuated fruit of the unlawful entry into the home.

According to Garnett, this, too, was an abuse of the court’s discretion. And finally,

Garnett contends that the Superior Court erroneously rejected his contention that

there should be no inevitable-discovery exception under Article I, § 6 of the

Delaware Constitution.

                                                  II

          We review the trial court’s order denying a motion to suppress under a mixed

standard of review.70 We review findings of fact for clear error, but we exercise de

novo review over legal determinations.71 “[A] [t]rial [c]ourt’s determination that . .

. evidence would have been inevitably discovered constitutes a finding of fact. . . .

70
     See Lopez-Vazquez, 956 A.2d at 1285 & nn.1, 2; Banther v. State, 823 A.2d 467, 486 (Del. 2003).
71
     Id.
                                                 29
Such a finding, unless clearly erroneous and not supported by the record, may not

be overturned[.]”72

                                               III

                                               A

       In Jones v. State, this Court observed that “[a]n individual’s right to be free of

unlawful searches and seizures in Delaware is secured by two independent, though

correlative sources.”73 The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution

provides that

       [t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers,
       and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
       violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause,
       supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place
       to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.74

Article I, § 6 of the Delaware Constitution contains similar, though not identical

language:

       The people shall be secure in their persons, houses, papers and
       possessions, from unreasonable searches and seizures; and no warrant
       to search any place, or to seize any person or thing, shall issue without
       describing them as particularly as may be; nor then, unless there be
       probable cause supported by oath or affirmation.

72
   DeShields v. State, 534 A.2d 630, 638 (Del. 1987) (citing Nix v. Williams, 476 U.S. 431, 448–50
(1984)).
73
   745 A.2d 856, 860 (Del. 1999).
74
   U.S. CONST. amend. IV.
                                               30
       The United States Supreme Court has interpreted the Fourth Amendment as

“safeguard[ing] the privacy and security of individuals against arbitrary invasions

by governmental officials.”75 This interpretation follows from the historical context

in which the amendment was drafted; it was intended as a response to “the reviled

‘general warrants’ and ‘writs of assistance’ of the colonial era [that] allowed British

officers to rummage through homes in an unrestrained search for evidence of

criminal activity.”76

       The amendment limits intrusion into citizens’ private lives by permitting the

government to make only “reasonable” searches and seizures, which generally

requires that law enforcement procure a warrant before conducting a search of

something over which a citizen holds a reasonable expectation of privacy: “[w]here

a search is undertaken by law enforcement officials to discover evidence of criminal

wrongdoing . . . reasonableness generally requires the obtaining of a judicial

warrant.”77 “In the absence of a warrant, a search is reasonable only if it falls within

a specific exception to the warrant requirement.”78

75
   Carpenter v. United States, 138 S. Ct. 2206, 2213 (2018) (quoting Camara v. Mun. Ct. of City
and Cnty. of San Francisco, 387 U.S. 523, 528 (1967)).
76
   Riley v. California, 573 U.S. 373, 403 (2014).
77
   Vernonia Sch. Dist. 47J v. Acton, 515 U.S. 646, 653 (1995).
78
   Riley, 573 U.S. at 382.
                                              31
       The warrant requirement would be toothless, however, without an

enforcement mechanism to provide a remedy for and deter violations of it.79 Enter

the exclusionary rule, which precludes the introduction of evidence at trial obtained

in violation of a defendant’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from illegal searches

and seizures, including evidence derivatively acquired as a result of the

unconstitutional search or seizure (referred to as “fruit of the poisonous tree”).80 The

rule achieves its deterrence function “by removing the incentive to disregard it[,]”81

because there is no reason for law enforcement to seek out evidence of a crime in an

unlawful manner when doing so disqualifies its use at trial. In so ensuring that

investigations are conducted in accordance with constitutional prescripts, the

exclusionary rule prevents courts from becoming “accomplices in the willful

disobedience of a Constitution [that] they are sworn to uphold.”82

79
   See Weeks v. United States, 232 U.S. 383, 393 (1914) (“If letters and private documents can thus
be seized and held and used in evidence against a citizen accused of an offense, the protection of
the 4th Amendment, declaring his right to be secure against such searches and seizures, is of no
value, and, so far as those thus placed are concerned, might as well be stricken from the
Constitution.”).
80
   Elkins v. United States, 364 U.S. 206, 209 (1960). See Jones v. State, 745 A.2d at 872 (“The
exclusionary rule acts as a remedy for a violation of a defendant’s right to be free of illegal searches
and seizures. It provides for the exclusion from trial of any evidence recovered or derived from
an illegal search and seizure.”). See also United States v. Williams, 615 F.3d 657, 668 (6th Cir.
2010) (“[the] exclusionary rule is supplemented by the ‘fruit of the poisonous tree’ doctrine, which
bars the admissibility of evidence which police derivatively obtain from an unconstitutional search
or seizure.”).
81
   Elkins, 364 U.S. at 217.
82
   Id. at 223.
                                                  32
       Even so, all evidence that comes to light but for an unlawful action by law

enforcement is not necessarily “fruit of the poisonous tree.”83 As Justice Powell

noted in his concurring opinion in Brown v. Illinois, “in some circumstances strict

adherence to the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule imposes greater cost on the

legitimate demands of law enforcement than can be justified by the rule’s deterrent

purposes.”84 Accordingly, the United States Supreme Court long ago chose not to

extend the exclusionary rule where the police learn of the challenged evidence from

an independent source85 or where “the connection between the lawless conduct of

the police and the discovery of the challenged evidence has ‘become so attenuated

as to dissipate the taint.’”86 Undergirding these exceptions is the principle that,

“while the government should not profit from its illegal activity, neither should it be

placed in a worse position than it would otherwise have occupied.”87

       Similar considerations form the foundation of yet another exception—the

inevitable-discovery exception—which is at center stage in this appeal. First clearly

applied in the World War II-era case of Somer v. United States,88 and later

recognized by this Court in 1977 in Cook v. State,89 “[t]his exception . . . provides

83
   Williams, 615 F.3d at 668.
84
   422 U.S. at 608–09 (Powell, J. concurring).
85
   Silverthorne Lumber Co. v. United States, 251 U.S. 385, 392 (1920).
86
   Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U.S. 471, 487 (1963) (quoting Nardone v. United States, 308
U.S. 338, 341 (1939)).
87
   Murray v. United States, 487 U.S. 533, 542 (1988).
88
   138 F.2d 790 (2d Cir. 1943).
89
   374 A.2d 264.
                                             33
that evidence, obtained in the course of illegal police conduct, will not be suppressed

if the prosecution can prove that the incriminating evidence would have been

discovered through legitimate means in the absence of official misconduct.”90

          In Cook, three men suspected of armed robbery were detained and subjected

to a weapons-frisk, which uncovered a shotgun shell and cash. The men were then

transported to a police station where a routine inventory of their personal property

led to the discovery of more cash. The men were convicted of the robbery and

appealed, arguing that the money discovered during the weapons-frisk was the

product of an unlawful search and thus should have been excluded during their trial.

          In analyzing the defendants’ claim, this Court assumed, without deciding, that

the “seizure of the currency exceeded the scope of a reasonable search for weapons,”

but concluded “that the evidence [wa]s admissible under the inevitable-discovery

exception to the exclusionary rule[].”91 The Court noted that, in light of the routine

inventory search conducted at the police station, the defendants’ case was “clear[ly]

[] the type of situation intended to fall within the purview of the exception” as

          [t]he majority of the cases employing the inevitable
          discovery exception involve instances in which the illegal police
          conduct occurred while an investigation was already in progress and
          resulted in the discovery of evidence that would have eventually been
          obtained through routine police investigatory procedure. The
          illegalities in such cases, therefore, had the effect of simply accelerating

90
     Id. at 267–68 (quotation marks omitted).
91
     Id. at 267.
                                                34
          the discovery. In general, where the prosecution can show that the
          standard prevailing investigatory procedure of the law enforcement
          agency involved would have led to the discovery of the questioned
          evidence, the exception will be applied to prevent its suppression.92

In short, because the defendants in Cook would have been arrested and subjected to

the routine inventory search of their belongings regardless of the evidence uncovered

during the weapons-frisk, the discovery of the cash on their person was, “inevitable”

and that cash was thus admissible.

          Despite the “increasing judicial favor” with which the exception was received

in the 1960’s and 70’s, it was not recognized by the United States Supreme Court

until 1984 in Nix v. Williams.93 The facts of Nix are well-known. A man murdered

a ten-year-old girl in Des Moines, Iowa and was asked by police, in violation of his

right to counsel, where he had left the body. His decision to guide the officers to the

spot where his victim lay allowed local police to call off an ongoing search of the

area. The Iowa Supreme Court—ruling on the defendant’s motion to suppress the

evidence of the body, in addition to evidence derived from an autopsy of the body—

held that the evidence was admissible under the inevitable-discovery exception

because it would have been discovered by the search party if not for the defendant’s

assistance.

92
     Id. at 268 (quoting Harold S. Novikoff, supra note 42 at 91).
93
     467 U.S. 431.
                                                  35
       The Supreme Court, acknowledging that the “‘vast majority’ of all courts,

both state and federal, recognize an inevitable-discovery exception to the

exclusionary rule[,]”94 upheld the Iowa court’s finding, noting that “[i]f the

prosecution can establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the information

ultimately or inevitably would have been discovered by lawful means—here the

volunteers’ search—then the deterrence rationale [for the exclusionary rule] has so

little basis that the evidence should be received.”95 Importantly, the court explicitly

rejected the notion advanced by the defendant that, for the inevitable-discovery

doctrine to apply, “the prosecution must prove the absence of bad faith,” holding

that such a requirement “would place courts in the position of withholding from

juries relevant and undoubted truth that would have been available to police absent

any unlawful police activity [and would also] put the police in a worse position than

they would have been in if no unlawful conduct had transpired.”96

       Nix is most often cited for the twin guardrails that it built into the doctrine,

requiring proponents of improperly obtained evidence to demonstrate, under a

“preponderance evidentiary burden,” that the discovery of the tainted evidence was

inevitable.97 Put differently, Nix demands that prosecutors invoking the exception

94
   Id. at 440.
95
   Id. at 444.
96
   Id. at 445.
97
   Tonja Jacobi & Elliot Louthen, The Corrosive Effect of Inevitable Discovery on the Fourth
Amendment, 171 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1, 10–11 (2022).
                                            36
prove: “first, that police legally could have uncovered the evidence; and second, that

police would have done so.”98

                                                 B

       We first address Garnett’s contention that the Superior Court erred “by

holding [that] the Delaware Constitution incorporates the inevitable discovery

doctrine as described in Nix v. Williams.”99 By this, we understand him to mean that,

as a matter of state constitutional law, we should not recognize the inevitable-

discovery exception to the exclusionary rule. Were we to agree, our consideration

of Garnett’s other arguments would be superfluous.

       Garnett points out—and correctly so—that a provision of our state

constitution can provide broader protection than is found in an analogous federal

constitutional provision. Seizing upon this principle, Garnett asks us to establish a

greater degree of protection under Article I, § 6 of the Delaware Constitution than is

provided by the analogous Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. His

plea is not altogether foolhardy as “it is well established that this Court will, where

appropriate, extend our state constitutional prohibition against unreasonable

searches and seizures beyond the protections recognized in the United States

Supreme Court’s Fourth Amendment jurisprudence.”100 But Garnett seems to argue

98
   United States v. Alston, 941 F.3d 132, 138 (4th Cir. 2019) (emphasis in original).
99
   Opening Br. at 27.
100
    Juliano v. State, 254 A.3d 369, 378 (Del. 2020).
                                                37
that because we can provide—and have in the past provided—greater protection, we

must do so here. We have never approached the interpretation of the protections

afforded by Article I, § 6 in that manner. Instead, our state constitutional analysis in

this context has two steps:

       First is the determination whether, as a general matter, the state
       constitutional provision under which a person seeks refuge provides
       different and broader protection than a similar federal constitutional
       provision. Second, and the step that is in play here, is whether that
       broader protection is properly applied to the police conduct . . .
       challenged in the case before us.101
       Garnett clears the first hurdle; indeed, we removed it in Jones v. State,102 this

Court’s decision a quarter century ago in which we recognized that Article I, § 6

“reflected different and broader protections than those guaranteed by the Fourth

Amendment.”103 But Garnett fails to persuade us that the inevitable-discovery

exception to the exclusionary rule is inconsistent with Article I, § 6’s prohibition

against unreasonable searches and seizures.

       Garnett’s principal argument in favor of rejecting the inevitable-discovery

exception is that, while the primary purpose of the federal exclusionary rule is to

deter future unlawful police conduct, the exclusionary rule under our state

constitution operates as “a remedy for a violation of a defendant’s right to be free of

101
    Id. at 379.
102
    745 A.2d 856.
103
    Id. at 866 (emphasis in original).
                                          38
illegal searches and seizures.”104           But this argument conflates the remedy of

suppression, which excludes evidence that the police would not have found but for

unlawful conduct and the reward that would attend the suppression of evidence that

the police would inevitably have found absent the illegality.

          Put another way, the suppression of evidence that would inevitably have been

discovered in the counterfactual world in which law enforcement has not misstepped

in the first instance would confer a benefit on the accused that far outstrips the

remedial aspect of the exclusionary rule.               The remedy of exclusion, properly

administered, puts the accused where he would have been absent the illegality. The

prosecution is deprived of evidence that it would not have collected except by way

of law enforcement’s unlawful conduct.                 By contrast, the remedy as Garnett

envisions it, puts the accused in a far better place by excluding evidence that would

have been lawfully collected absent the illegality. We are not persuaded that Article

I, § 6 of the Delaware Constitution contemplates such generous redress.

          We are satisfied, moreover, that our conclusion that the inevitable-discovery

exception is compatible with Article I, § 6 is consistent with this Court’s

jurisprudence under that section. We note specifically that the case upon which

Garnett relies most heavily for the proposition that Article I, § 6 provides broader

protections than does the Fourth Amendment recognized the viability of exceptions,

104
      Opening Br. at 29 (quoting Dorsey v. State, 761 A.2d 807, 818 (Del. 2000)).
                                                 39
including the inevitable-discovery exception, to the exclusionary rule. In Jones,

cited and quoted above, this Court, on state constitutional grounds, declined to

follow the United States Supreme Court’s definition of “seizure” under the Fourth

Amendment. The Court also discussed the parameters of the exclusionary rule as it

applied to the seizure of evidence during an unlawful arrest, which Jones had

resisted. But the Court was careful to distinguish the facts before it from other cases

in which the exclusionary rule is in play:

       The exclusionary rule acts as a remedy for a violation of a defendant’s
       right to be free of illegal searches and seizures. It provides for the
       exclusion from trial of any evidence recovered or derived from an
       illegal search and seizure. But the United States Supreme Court has
       found exceptions to this rule in situations where . . . the police
       inevitably would have discovered the evidence. We have held that
       official misconduct should not fatally taint evidence that would have
       been discovered absent that official misconduct. The case before us is
       different, however.105

       In short, Garnett has not convinced us that the inevitable-discovery exception

to the exclusionary rule is inherently inconsistent with Article I, § 6 of the Delaware

Constitution.106 We do believe, however, that a court considering the exception’s

105
    Jones, 745 A.2d at 872–73 (emphasis added) (quotations omitted).
106
    We are not surprised that a review of opinions from around the United States addressing the
inevitable-discovery exception under state constitutional provisions has not uncovered a case
presenting the unique facts that we encounter here. It bears noting, however, that the majority of
the states that have considered the inevitable-discovery exception under their state constitutions
have recognized its validity, though some, as we do here, have limited its application. See Smith
v. State, 948 P.2d 473, 478–81 & n.6 (Alaska 1997) (recognizing under Alaska Constitution art. I,
§ 22 but limiting application “where the police have intentionally or knowingly violated a suspect’s
rights.”); State v. Ault, 724 P.2d 545, 551–52, 556 (Ariz. 1986) (recognizing under art. 2, § 8 of
                                                40
the Arizona Constitution but limiting application); McDonald v. State, 119 S.W.3d 41, 47, 44 &
n.2 (Ark. 2003) (recognizing under art. 2, § 15 of the Arkansas Constitution); People v. Diaz, 53
P.3d 1171, 1175–76 (Colo. 2002) (recognizing the exception in reviewing the suppression of
evidence under both the Fourth Amendment and art. II, § 7 of the Colorado Constitution); State v.
Correa, 264 A.3d 894, 903, 936 (Conn. 2021) (recognizing under art. first, § 7 of the Connecticut
Constitution); Clayton v. State, 252 So.3d 827, 829–30 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2018) (recognizing but
limiting application under art. I, § 12 of the Florida Constitution); State v. Phillips, 382 P.3d 133,
157 (Haw. 2016) (recognizing under art. I, § 7 of the Hawaii Constitution); State v. Ubben, 938
N.W.2d 722, 2019 WL 3317866, at *2 (Iowa Ct. App. July 24, 2019) (TABLE) (recognizing under
art. I, § 8 of the Iowa Constitution); State v. Thompson, 155 P.3d 724, 731 (Kan. Ct. App. 2007)
(finding that evidence seized in a search “in violation of the Fourth Amendment . . . and § 15 of
the Kansas Constitution Bill of Rights” was admissible under the inevitable discovery doctrine);
State v. Rabon, 930 A.2d 268, 276 (Me. 2007) (recognizing under art. I, § 5 of the Maine
Constitution); Com. v. O’Connor, 546 N.E.2d 336, 339–41 (Mass. 1989) (recognizing but limiting
application under pt. 1, art. 14 of the Massachusetts Constitution); State v. Little, 604 S.W.3d 708,
720 (Mo. Ct. App. 2020) (recognizing under art. I, § 15 of the Missouri Constitution); State v.
Ellis, 210 P.3d 144, 148 (Mont. 2009) (discussing but limiting application of the inevitable
discovery in resolving a claim under art. II, §§ 10, 11 of the Montana Constitution), see also State
v. Dickinson, 184 P.3d 305, 310–11 (Mont. 2008) (reviewing denial of motion to suppress under
the Fourth Amendment and Article II, § 11 of the Montana Constitution, noting that “most state
and federal jurisdictions recognize the inevitable discovery doctrine . . . [m]oreover we have
applied the inevitable discovery doctrine in numerous cases”); State v. Robinson, 164 A.3d 1002,
1007, 1010 (N.H. 2017) (recognizing under part 1, art. 19 of the New Hampshire Constitution);
State v. Cawley, 2015 WL 1540683, at *5 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. Apr. 7, 2015) (recognizing
evidence as admissible “under our State Constitution” but limiting application through a three-part
analysis), see also Tartaglia v. Paine Webber, Inc., 794 A.2d 816, 820 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div.
2002) (“even when evidence illegally obtained by the police violates the Fourth Amendment or
State Constitution, see N.J. Const. art. I, ¶ 7, it is nevertheless admissible if ‘inevitably
discoverable’”) (citation omitted); State v. Wagoner, 24 P.3d 306, 311 (N.M. 2001) (recognizing
the exception as “ha[ving] a place in New Mexico law under art. II, § 10 of the New Mexico
Constitution but not reaching the question of what “safeguards” are required for application);
People v. Saldana, 906 N.Y.S.2d 775 (N.Y. City Ct. 2009) (citing People v. Stith, 506 N.E.2d 911,
913 (N.Y. 1987) (recognizing the exception under art. I, § 12 of the New York Constitution); State
v. Garner, 417 S.E.2d 502, 507, 510–11 (N.C. 1992) (recognizing under art. I, § 20 of the North
Carolina Constitution)); State v. Holly, 833 N.W.2d 15, 31–32, 35 (N.D. 2013) (recognizing under
art. I, § 8 of the North Dakota Constitution but requiring the state to prove the absence of bad
faith); State v. Barnes, 96 N.E.3d 969, 974–75 (Ohio Ct. App. 2017) (recognizing the exception
when analyzing a claim under both the Fourth Amendment and art. I, § 14 of the Ohio
Constitution); State v. Steele, 414 P.3d 458, 462–63 (Or. Ct. App. 2018) (recognizing under art. I,
                                                 41
application must consider the character of the police misconduct leading to the

unlawful discovery and seizure of the challenged evidence. We share the concern

of the exception’s critics, including that of our dissenting colleagues, that applying

the exception incautiously could encourage law enforcement to intentionally bypass

the warrant requirement.107 Therefore, our holding that the inevitable-discovery

§ 9 of the Oregon Constitution); Com. v. Berkheimer, 57 A.3d 171, 182 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2012)
(recognizing but limiting application under art. I, § 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution); State v.
Sinapi, 295 A.3d 787, 805–06, 809 n.14 (R.I. 2023) (recognizing the inevitable discovery doctrine
as a grounds to affirm denial of motion to suppress in a claim under art. I, § 6 of the Rhode Island
Constitution and noting that “we accord the federal interpretation [deference] when construing
article 1, section 6”); State v. Stewart, 867 S.E.2d 33, 37–38 (S.C. Ct. App. 2021) (recognizing
under art. I, § 10 of the South Carolina Constitution); State v. Barefield, 814 S.E.2d 250, 262 (W.
Va. 2018) (recognizing under art. III, § 6 of the West Virginia Constitution); State v. Jackson, 882
N.W.2d 422, 439–41 (Wis. 2016) (recognizing under the Wisconsin Constitution). We have
identified only three states that have flatly rejected the exception on state constitutional grounds.
See Ammons v. State, 770 N.E.2d 927, 935 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002) (“the inevitable discovery
exception has not been adopted as a matter of Indiana constitutional law.”); Hitchcock v. State,
118 S.W.3d 844, 849 (Tex. App. 2003) (“the inevitable discovery doctrine violates Article 38.23
of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure (also known as the Texas exclusionary rule)” which
states, in part, that evidence obtained in violation of the Texas Constitution shall not be admitted
into evidence); State v. Winterstein, 220 P.3d 1226, 1233 (Wash. 2009) (“there is no established
inevitable discovery exception under article I, [§] 7 [of our state constitution]”).
107
    In many of the cases cited by the dissent in which courts either rejected or refused to apply the
inevitable-discovery exception on state constitutional grounds, law enforcement’s conduct was
strikingly dissimilar from the unlawful entry in this case, which was not a search to uncover
evidence. For instance in both Com. v. Mason, 637 A.2d 251 (Pa. 1993) and State v. Lashley, 803
A.2d 139 (N.J. Super. Ct. 2002), the police used battering rams to illegally enter defendants’ homes
in search of evidence related to drug crimes. In State v. Ault, 724 P.2d 45 (Ariz. 1986) and State v.
Sugar, 417 A.2d 474 (N.J. 1980), the police entered the homes of individuals suspected of crimes
without warrants—in the first case to take the defendant to the station for questioning, and in the
second, they entered the property with shovels and dug for a body. Similarly in Com. v. Perel, 107
A.3d 185 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2014) the police entered the defendant’s girlfriend’s home (with consent),
but they were explicitly searching for evidence of a crime committed by the defendant and
searched his personal items. By contrast, Garnett’s case involves a benevolent entry into a
residence to locate a parent or guardian, in the absence of whom three young children would
remain in the care of strangers.
                                                42
exception is compatible with Article I, § 6 assumes that it will be applied only when

it is clear that “the police have not acted in bad faith to accelerate the discovery of

the evidence in question.”108 Here, the officers did not act in bad faith. Rather, as

found by the Superior Court, the officers were attempting to locate the mother of

young children who were in police care because of Garnett’s arrest.

       Our colleagues in dissent disagree with our state constitutional analysis. They

view our adoption of the requirement that a reviewing court must consider whether

the officers’ unlawful conduct was the product of bad faith as a disavowal of our

holding in Dorsey v. State109 and the adoption of a good-faith exception to the

exclusionary rule. Not so. The good-faith exception recognized in United States v.

Leon110 allows the admission of unlawfully seized evidence based on the seizing

officers’ good faith reliance on a warrant. The inevitable-discovery exception, by

contrast, allows the admission of the evidence not because of the officers’ good faith

but because the evidence would inevitably have been discovered.

108
    State v. Phelps, 297 N.W. 2d 769, 775 (N.D. 1990); see also Com. v. O’Connor, 546 N.E. 2d
336, 340 (Mass. 1989) (“Bad faith of the police, shown by such activities as conducting an
unlawful search in order to accelerate discovery of the evidence, will be relevant in assessing the
severity of any constitutional violation.”). The Massachusetts court noted, however, that it had
“declined to apply an inevitable discovery rule to justify admission of evidence seized in violation
of the requirement that a search warrant be obtained, even if it was inevitable that, if sought, a
search warrant would have been issued and the evidence would have been found.” Id. The
Supreme Court rejected this limitation, i.e., in the absence of bad faith, in Nix. 467 U.S. at 445.
Thus, we are puzzled by the dissent’s characterization that we are recognizing “a completely
unlimited Inevitable Discovery Exception. . . .” Dissent at 60 n. 199.
109
    761 A.2d at 818.
110
    468 U.S. 897 (1984).
                                                43
       Dorsey itself serves to illustrate this distinction. In that case, the police

searched Dorsey’s motor vehicles under a search warrant that was unsupported by

probable cause. More specifically, the search warrant application in Dorsey failed

to establish a logical nexus between the items sought (bloody clothing and firearms)

and the place to be searched (Dorsey’s motor vehicles). There was no suggestion

that, absent the vehicle searches conducted under the deficient warrant, the police

would have discovered the seized evidence lawfully. This distinction, in our view,

makes a difference. The evidence in Dorsey would never have been found. Here,

as the trial court found, the lawful discovery of Naquita Hill’s body was certain to

occur. The fact that triggers the exception to the exclusionary rule under these

circumstances is not the officers’ good faith; rather, it is the inevitable lawful

discovery of evidence. In short, that we condition its application on the absence of

bad faith does not convert the inevitable-discovery exception into a good-faith

exception á la Leon.111

111
    The dissent further criticizes the majority for “rest[ing] [our] decision solely on the federal
rationale of deterrence and ignor[ing] our state’s separate constitutional interests.” Dissent at 2.
Deterrence, of course, along with the “safeguar[ing] [of] constitutional rights” is the “primary
purpose of the federal exclusionary rule. . . .” Lopez-Vasquez, 956 A.2d at 1291. True, that this
court recognized that the exclusionary rule under our state constitution serves interests beyond
deterrence—specifically, remedial interests. But that does not mean that deterrence is no longer a
relevant consideration when we are defining the appropriate reach of the rule. And here, where
we conclude that suppression of a readily discoverable dead body as evidence is a remedy that
outruns the remedial interests to be served, we are not inclined to ignore the remaining deterrence
interest. The dissent also chides us for ignoring that a crime scene investigator took photographs
of the scene before the search warrant was issued and “dismissively refer[ring] to the [police]
conduct as ‘benevolent entry.’ Dissent at 44 n. 150. As to the latter complaint, we stand by our
                                                44
                                                C

       We turn next to Garnett’s contention that the trial court abused its discretion

by finding that, had the police not entered the residence at 32 Willis Road illegally,

they would have done so legally and discovered Naquita Hill’s body under a valid

search warrant or while addressing an emergency.

                                                1

       The principal thrust of Garnett’s argument is that “[i]nevitability is only a

reasonable conclusion when (absent the illegality) the evidence would have been

discovered by separate and pre-existing investigation [] or [] routine procedures

would have guided the investigation to the evidence.”112 For Garnett, the court’s

finding that “the officers would have re-attempted contact with the guardian and

[legally] discovered the body pursuant to routine police procedures,”113 is not

supported by the record. We disagree.

       Garnett argues that, because the police entry into the residence occurred at a

time when their investigative activity had not yet ripened into a formal investigation

characterization of the officers’ search for the children’s custodian and their entry into the home
after seeing an immobile human body covered in a blanket at the foot of a staircase. The police
did not enter the residence to search for evidence; instead, they were motivated by their concern,
in the first instance, for the children, and then Ms. Hill. In that sense, their entry was truly
“benevolent.” And as to the former concern, no one has contended that the crime scene at the time
the photographs were taken was materially different than what it was a few hours later when the
police would inevitably have entered the residence lawfully.
112
    Opening Br. at 10.
113
    Id. at 10–11 (quoting Garnett I, at *5).
                                               45
of a crime whose victim was Naquita Hill, the court must ignore the inevitable

discovery of her dead body through lawful means. This position is, in a word,

untenable. The fact that the inevitable-discovery exception is typically invoked in

cases where a criminal investigation is in progress does not mean that it may only

be invoked in that context. To be sure, the prosecution can more easily prove

inevitable discovery when it can point to well-defined, step-by-step practices it

routinely employs to investigate suspected crimes. But it is not the case—and

Garnett has not cited any authority for the proposition—that the inevitable-discovery

exception is strictly limited to that context.

                                                  2

          Having rejected Garnett’s bid to graft a pre-existing investigation/routine

procedure restriction onto the inevitable-discovery exception, we look to the

suppression-hearing record to determine whether the trial court’s factual finding that

the challenged evidence would inevitably have been discovered lawfully was clearly

erroneous. As mentioned, whether evidence would have been inevitably discovered

is a question of fact. “We must adopt [the trial court’s] factual findings . . . as long

as there is sufficient evidence in the record to support them and the finding are not

clearly erroneous.”114

114
      State v. Abel, 68 A.3d 1228, 1232 (Del. 2012).
                                                 46
          As we review the record, we cannot ignore the bizarre circumstances

surrounding the police officer’s initial encounter with Garnett at 5:30 a.m. Garnett

and three children—one an infant and all inadequately dressed—had just walked

three miles on that cold and rainy morning. Garnett, who had reportedly manhandled

one of the children, misidentified himself and gave a facially incredible explanation

of what he and the children were up to. Soon after that, the police discovered that

Garnett had given Naquita Hill’s Social Security card and driver’s license to the 10-

year old M.S. and asked him to hide those items. And around the same time, the

police found what appeared to be blood on one of Garnett’s socks, for which he had

no explanation. All these things the police knew within the first hour and a half of

Garnett’s detention. They fully support the trial judge’s finding that “Dover PD was

on a mission to find the children’s guardian. . . .”115

          The question remains, however, whether and how the police would discover

Naquita Hill’s body. Little imagination is required to envision whether and how that

would happen. Better yet, though, was the testimony of Detective Mullaney, which

outlined the course that would have been taken had Patrol Officer Starke not pushed

open the unlocked door, exposing Naquita Hill’s lifeless body. That the need to

115
      Garnett I, at *6.
                                           47
identify the children’s guardian was urgent is obvious, and the avenues for

accomplishing that task were various.

        According to Detective Mullaney, the first investigative step would have been

to identify the children’s emergency contact information through a school resource

officer. Obtaining this information could be accomplished “within minutes” as it

was merely “a matter of making a phone call.”116 Detective Mullaney would have

hoped to identify a relative in a position to consent to police entry into 32 Willis

Road.    Failing that, the police, according to Detective Mullaney, would have

promptly applied for a search warrant.

        Under this hypothetical scenario, the search warrant application would have

recited the facts discussed above: the unusual encounter at Wawa store; Garnett’s

demeanor (described by the officers as “very strange,”117 “evasive,”118 and

“nervous.”119); the children’s confirmation that Naquita Hill was in the residence;

Naquita Hill’s failure to respond to the police banging on the house’s doors; the

unexplained blood on Garnett’s sock; the apparently purloined and hidden

identification cards; the injury on M.S.’s neck; and information provided by the

children during their CAC interviews.

116
    App. to Opening Br. at A244.
117
    Id. at A75.
118
    Id. at A138.
119
    Id.
                                          48
          For the Superior Court, these facts provided alternative courses of action, both

legal, that would have led to the discovery of Naquita Hill’s body. First, armed with

facts that were unknown when Patrol Officer Starke opened the unlocked door, the

police, the trial court found “would have had reasonable grounds to believe that there

was a life-threatening emergency at hand requiring their immediate assistance.”120

And because the motive for entering the residence would then be to assist Naquita

Hill and there would have been a reasonable basis to associate the emergency with

the residence, the police would have been justified in entering the residence without

a warrant under the emergency doctrine. Alternatively, the police would have sought

and obtained a search warrant as discussed above.

          We note here that the Superior Court invoked the emergency doctrine as one

potential source of the eventual inevitable discovery of Naquita Hill’s body in

Garnett I, before the “Rule 104 hearing” supplemented the suppression-hearing

record. During that hearing, Detective Mullaney did not suggest that the police

would have entered the house to address a perceived emergency. He was clear that,

instead, the police would have applied for a search warrant. Therefore, we limit our

analysis to the trial court’s finding that the police would have in fact applied for, and

the facts would have supported the issuance of, a search warrant for 32 Willis Road.

120
      Garnett I, at *6.
                                             49
       Garnett challenges this finding on three grounds. First, he argues that,

“[a]pplying for a warrant is not inevitable unless the process is initiated before the

illegal search.”121 Second, Garnett contends that Detective Mullaney’s testimony

about the steps the police would have taken absent the earlier unlawful entry were

insufficiently certain. And third, he argues that, had the police applied for a warrant,

one would not have been issued.122

       In support of his argument that the police’s hypothetical warrant application

was not inevitable because it was initiated after the illegal search, Garnett cites three

Delaware Superior Court decisions, none of which stands for that proposition. In

State v. Harris,123 the trial judge was not persuaded by the detective’s “self-serving”

testimony that, in the absence of the consent to search a locked toolbox, he would

have applied for a warrant. And State v. Lambert124 and State v. Preston,125 though

both involved unlawful searches while search warrant applications were pending, do

121
    Opening Br. at 15.
122
     Despite this limitation, our colleagues’ dissent puts the “highly questionable ‘inevitable
emergency’ rationale” front and center in its analysis. Dissent at 1. We assume that this is because,
having decided that a lawfully obtained search warrant would not have been sufficient to disarm
the exclusionary rule, the dissent was compelled to address the trial court’s alternative finding.
The majority holds firm to the view that we need not address the “inevitable emergency” rationale.
In a similar vein, the dissent points out that “there is a distinction between the Independent Source
Doctrine and the Inevitable Discovery Doctrine . . . [,] and [t]he Independent Source Doctrine also
does not apply here.” Dissent at 25. We note that neither the State nor the trial court sought to
justify the admission of the challenged evidence under the independent-source doctrine and, for
that reason, have not addressed it.
123
    642 A.2d 1242, 1251 (Del. Super. Ct. 1993).
124
    2015 WL 3897810 (Del. Super. Ct. June 22, 2015), aff’d, 149 A.3d 227 (Del. 2016).
125
    2016 WL 5903002 (Del. Super. Ct. Sept. 27, 2016).
                                                50
not recognize or establish a rule that a pending warrant application is a sine qua non

of the inevitable-discovery exception. To be clear, we agree with the court’s

statement in Preston that “[i]nvocation of the exception is particularly appropriate

when routine police investigatory procedures are in progress and the challenged

behavior merely accelerates discovery of the evidence.”126 But we find no support

for the notion that invocation of the exception is only appropriate under those

circumstances.

          Turning to Garnett’s concern about the certainty of Detective Mullaney’s

testimony that, if the police were unable to locate a relative who could consent to the

entry into the residence, they would have applied for a warrant, we see this as a

quibble with the trial court’s fact-finding and, in particular, its determination that

Detective Mullaney was a credible witness. As we recently observed,

          [w]hen a trial court acts as fact-finder, its findings will not be disturbed
          on appeal if they are supported by the record and are the product of an
          orderly and logical deductive process. When the determination of facts
          turns on the credibility of the witnesses who testified under oath before
          the trial judge, this Court will not substitute its opinion for that of the
          trial judge.127

Adhering to these principles, we reject Garnett’s challenge to this factual finding.

          And finally, we also disagree with Garnett’s assertion—largely conclusory—

that “regardless of what was in the [search warrant] application, it simply would not

126
      Id. at *4 (emphasis added.)
127
      Wheeler v. State, 296 A.3d 363, 373 (Del. 2023) (quotation marks and footnotes omitted).
                                                 51
satisfy the probable cause and nexus requirements to search a home.”128 On this

point, the Superior Court’s finding that the State had proved by a preponderance of

the evidence that the police would have applied for and obtained a warrant to enter

32 Willis Road was amply supported by Detective Mullaney’s recitation of the

myriad troubling facts we have previously discussed.

                                          D

       Garnett mounts a two-pronged attack on the Superior Court’s ruling in

Garnett II that his statements to the police during the afternoon following his arrest

were admissible under the inevitable-discovery doctrine or, alternatively, under the

attenuation doctrine. First, he contends that the court-engaged in “pure speculation”

when it concluded that “Garnett would inevitably have confessed in an interview

under a different set of circumstances.”129 Relatedly, he claims that “[b]ut for the

illegal entry, Garnett would not have, inevitably, still been at the station . . . when

[the] police decided to interrogate him.”130 Second, Garnett argues that, without the

illegal entry, the interview questions would have been different. For these reasons,

Garnett contends that the statements are the unattenuated fruit of the poisonous tree

subject to suppression.

                                          1

128
    Opening Br. at 17.
129
    Id. at 22.
130
    Id. at 23.
                                          52
          Both arguments crumble under the weight of the Superior Court’s factual

findings, as set forth in the following passage from Garnett II:

          In Garnett I, this Court found that Ms. Hill’s body and the other
          physical evidence found in the home would inevitably have been
          discovered through lawful police investigative procedures shortly after
          their actual discovery. In addition, the State has proven by a
          preponderance of the evidence that Garnett would not have been
          released from custody prior to the discovery of the body because 1) the
          bloody sock and the information regarding Garnett’s instructing M.S.
          to “hide” Ms. Hill’s identification cards was discovered almost
          simultaneously with the illegal entry; 2) Garnett was being investigated,
          but not yet charged, for a domestic incident involving M.S. that had
          been substantiated on multiple levels; and 3) there was a high likelihood
          that CAC interviews of the children would have been undertaken given
          the totality of the circumstances.

          Finally, the timing of Garnett’s statement would have changed at most
          minimally, if at all, and not in a way that would have affected the
          circumstances surrounding the questioning or Garnett’s state of mind.
          . . . Here, Garnett would have been questioned in nearly the exact same
          circumstances as actually occurred and would have made materially the
          same statements to the officers.131

          These factual findings—all supported by the suppression-hearing record—

fatally undermine Garnett’s contention that, but for the illegal entry, his interview

by the police would have occurred under a different set of circumstances. The court

found as a factual matter that it would not have been so.

          Garnett also contests the court’s finding that there was a “‘high likelihood’ he

would still be in custody”132 in the afternoon hours when he made the incriminatory

131
      Garnett II, at *6.
132
      Opening Br. at 23.
                                             53
statements, had the unlawful search not occurred. But this argument misstates the

court’s findings—the reference to a “high likelihood” in Garnett II related only to

the timing of the children’s CAC interviews. In any event, the State was not required

to prove the elements of the inevitable-discovery exception to an absolute certainty.

Rather, the State was required to prove the elements of the exception by a

preponderance of the evidence.133 The suppression-hearing record supports the

Superior Court’s determination that the State carried its burden.

       The Superior Court’s factual findings also undercut the principal authority

Garnett cited in support of his argument that the inevitable-discovery exception

should not be applied to confessions, as opposed to physical evidence obtained in

the wake of an unlawful search or seizure. Garnett points out that in United States

v. Vasquez De Reyes,134 the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third

Circuit upheld the suppression of the incriminating statement De Reyes made while

detained following an unlawful stop. The Third Circuit recognized that unlike

physical evidence, which “absent its removal will remain where left until discovered

. . . a statement not yet made is, by its very nature, evanescent and ephemeral. Should

the conditions under which it was made change, even but a little, there could be no

assurance the statement would be the same.”135 But this observation, with which we

133
    DeShields, 534 A.2d at 638.
134
    149 F.3d 192 (3d Cir. 1998).
135
    Id. at 196.
                                          54
have no quarrel, is of marginal utility here given the trial court’s factual findings that

(i) Naquita Hill’s body would inevitably been discovered well before Garnett would

have been released even had the police not opened the unlocked door earlier that

morning, and (ii) in the wake of that inevitable discovery, Garnett would have been

questioned at the same time and under the same circumstances as he was in the actual

event. These findings stand in contrast to the facts in Vasquez De Reyes, which,

according to the Third Circuit, “just as plausibly” pointed to a conclusion that the

challenged evidence would not have been discovered.136 Here, Garnett has not

posited a plausible scenario under which Naquita Hill’s body would not have been

discovered while Garnett was still in custody and subject to interrogation.137

       For these reasons, we conclude that the Superior Court did not err when it

denied Garnett’s motion to suppress his incriminating statements.

                                                  2

       Because we have concluded that Garnett’s statements were admissible under

the Superior Court’s formulation and application of the inevitable-discovery

136
    Id.
137
    This is not to say that Garnett bore the burden of proof on the issue of inevitable discovery; the
trial court correctly allocated that burden to the State in this case. But the majority cannot ignore
the obvious question for which neither Garnett nor our dissenting colleagues have any answer:
under what scenario would the police not have lawfully discovered Hill’s body?
                                                 55
exception, we need not address the court’s alternative finding that the statements

were admissible under the attenuation doctrine.

                                             IV

       In upholding the Superior Court’s application of the inevitable-discovery

exception in this case, we are mindful of the risk that an unduly expansive

application of the exception could encourage law enforcement to bypass important

constitutional constraints. As a leading Fourth Amendment scholar has observed,

“[i]f the doctrine were applied when such a shortcut was intentionally taken, the

effect would be to read out of the Fourth Amendment the requirement that other,

more elaborate and protective procedures be followed.”138 But this is not such a

case. The police here were not engaged in an aggressive or reckless search for

evidence when the patrol officer pushed open the unlocked door; to the contrary,

they were engaged in a well-intended search in the interest of three small and

undoubtedly frightened children. The Superior Court recognized the relevance of

this context, engaged in careful fact-finding, and applied the relevant legal principles

in a thoughtful manner; we therefore affirm its judgment.

138
   Wayne R. LaFave et al., Search & Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment § 11.4 at 343
(5th ed. 2012).
                                             56
VALIHURA, J. dissenting, joined by GRIFFITHS, J.:

                                   I.   Summary of Conclusions

          The application of the Inevitable Discovery Exception to the warrantless entry of

the home in this case is questionable as a matter of Fourth Amendment law because it

hinges on either a highly questionable “inevitable emergency” rationale, or on the

“hypothetical warrant” theory. Even if the Majority’s result passes muster under the Fourth

Amendment, Delaware law is decidedly different when it comes to our core constitutional

protections relating to the Exclusionary Rule and the purposes it serves. Delaware’s

Constitution is more protective, especially in the core area of searches of our citizens’

homes.

          Garnett’s argument under Article I, § 6 is as follows: Historically, Delaware

constitutional law has developed differently and in a more protective fashion than the

United States constitutional law in several areas. Search and seizure law is one of them.1

Delaware, for example, declined to follow the federal path by holding that there is no Good

Faith Exception to the Exclusionary Rule.            The Exclusionary Rule provides for the

exclusion at trial of any evidence recovered or derived from an illegal search or seizure.

The reason for that departure is that Delaware law recognizes certain state constitutional

dimensions beyond the federal purpose of deterring police misconduct. A citizen’s right

to privacy in her own home is one such paramount state constitutional dimension. Further,

our Delaware Constitution provides that there is no constitutional wrong without a remedy.

1
    Our analogue to the Second Amendment, (Article I, § 20 of the Delaware Constitution) is another.
       In this case, no one disagrees that the police violated both the U.S. and Delaware

Constitutions when they entered the house without a warrant. No one disputes that the

police had plenty of time to obtain a warrant, assuming that they could have established

probable cause (which is not clear as of the time of entry). Not only did they enter the

house without a warrant, their evidence detection team walked around and took dozens of

photographs in the house even before beginning a warrant application. The police then

relied on that illegally obtained evidence when they eventually applied for a warrant. Then,

the State used that illegally obtained evidence at trial.

       The Majority rests its decision solely on the federal rationale of deterrence and

ignores our state’s separate constitutional interests. The Majority’s holding also runs afoul

of our Delaware Constitution’s requirement that there must be a remedy for a violation of

this conceded constitutional violation. I part company with the Majority, because the

Inevitable Discovery Exception cannot be applied consistently with Article I, § 6 in the

circumstances here which involve a warrantless entry by police into one’s home. Such

warrantless entries into a home are presumptively unreasonable. The Majority’s decision

now declares that as long as the police can establish that they eventually would have found

the disputed evidence, even via a non-routine unspecified route, they need not apply for a

warrant before a neutral magistrate, and can instead, enter the home, and while they are

there, can gather evidence to eventually use against the citizen at trial.

       I explain that under Article I, § 6, the evidence of Ms. Hill’s body should have been

suppressed, as well as the photographic evidence that was taken in the house at a time when

there was no warrant. And because the warrant ultimately obtained for the search of the

                                               2
home made extensive use of the illegally obtained evidence, that search cannot be

considered an “independent source” of that evidence.

       Finally, I explain that the detailed confession by Garnett and other evidence

obtained beyond the search of the home was properly admitted. I believe that Garnett could

be retried on the basis of his confession and the other evidence that is untainted by the

illegal conduct.

                      II. Key Facts Regarding Entry Into the Home

       A. Entry Without a Warrant

       Officers Starke, Krumm, and Lynch arrived at 32 Willis Road at 6:26 a.m. searching

for the guardian of the children.2 Officers Starke and Krumm initially attempted to make

contact by loudly announcing themselves and knocking on the front door, which they did

with no answer for two to three minutes.3 Officer Lynch waited in the front yard while

Officers Starke and Krumm used their flashlights to peer in through the windows. Officer

Starke then went to the back of the residence and initiated the same procedure, except this

time he checked to see if the rear door was open. Before opening the door, Officer Starke

radioed the other officers and announced that there was an unsecured door at the back of

the house.

2
 App. to Opening Br. at A237 (Detective Timothy Mullaney Testimony on Jan. 14, 2022 at 12:11–
13) [hereinafter “Mullaney Test. II at [_]”]. Citations in the form of “[Last Name] Test. at [_]”
refer to witness testimony from the evidentiary hearing transcripts.
3
 Id. at A146–47 (Officer Dale Starke Testimony on Dec. 3, 2021 at 97:1–98:3) [hereinafter “Starke
Test. at [_]”]; Id. at A90–91 (Officer Jennifer Lynch Testimony on Dec. 3, 2021 at 42:13–42:14)
[hereinafter “Lynch Test. at [_]”].

                                               3
       Officer Krumm joined Officer Starke at the back of the residence at which point the

officers opened the door, bringing into view a body covered by a blanket. After calling

Officer Lynch, they announced their identities and presence, entering the residence after

receiving no response.4 Officer Lynch attempted to render medical services to the victim

but this effort failed, and at this point, the officers could tell that the victim, later identified

to be Ms. Hill, was deceased. At no point did Officer Starke hear or see any disturbances

from outside of the residence. He never asked for permission to enter the residence or open

the door. Officer Starke testified that if it had been locked he would have asked for

permission from Officer Lynch. Officer Starke stated that his impression of the situation,

an unsecured door, and lack of response to announcements led to heightened concern.

       Detective Timothy Mullaney Jr. was the on-call detective on March 15, 2020.5

Detective Mullaney testified in the evidentiary hearing that if the officers had left the

residence after knocking on the front door to no avail, he would have eventually obtained

4
  Id. at A150–51 (Starke Test. at 101:10–102:3). The officers entered the home with their service
weapons drawn. A149 (Starke Test. at 100:16–23). The Trial Court found that “[w]ith or without
stepping into the home, Patrolman Starke and PFC Krumm shined flashlights into the home and
saw what appeared to be a body covered by a blanket, with blood nearby.” Garnett I, 2021 WL
6109797, at *2 (Del. Super. Dec. 23, 2021) [hereinafter “Garnett I”]. The trial court acknowledged
that the testimony regarding whether the officers stepped into the home before seeing Ms. Hill’s
body was unclear. Id. at *2 n.5. The finding that the evidence is unclear is entitled to deference
as it was based upon live testimony and credibility assessments. Nonetheless, opening the door to
32 Willis Road and entering the home, unlocked or locked, constituted an unlawful warrantless
entry. Obtaining evidence and taking photos was an unlawful search. The State has never asserted
that Ms. Hill’s body was in plain view nor did the State cross-appeal the holding that the
Emergency Exception did not apply. Indeed, the Majority acknowledges that neither party found
the distinction regarding the extent of the physical intrusion before seeing the body as relevant.
5
 Id. at A172 (Detective Timothy Mullaney Testimony on Dec. 3, 2021 at 123:14–19) [hereinafter
“Mullaney Test. I at [_]”].

                                                 4
a search warrant for the residence through his personal routine process of contacting the

school resource officers.          This, Detective Mullaney testified, could have been

accomplished in a matter of minutes and could have led to a relative opening the home for

police as an alternative to the police obtaining a search warrant. Officer Lynch testified

that if the rear door to the residence had been locked, she would have tried knocking again

later.

         B. Collection of Evidence Without a Warrant

         Thereafter, Detective Nolan Matthews, a certified crime scene investigator, went to

the residence to take pictures of the body and document the crime scene.6 He agreed that

he walked “all through the house” and took around 40 to 50 photographs.7 Detective

Matthews was aware that a warrant had not been issued as of that time. He stated that

given the changes a recently deceased body undergoes, it was necessary to preserve the

evidence.8 He testified that a search warrant could take hours before being granted. The

record before us is silent as to when the application for the warrant was made,9 but we

6
  Id. at A160–61 (Detective Nolan Matthews Testimony on Dec. 3, 2021 at 111:23–112:22)
[hereinafter “Matthews Test. at [_]”]. He testified that he “was there to document, collect, preserve
evidence as the crime scene investigation.” Id. at A160:20–22.
7
    Id. at A165 (Matthews Test. at 116:5–6, 14–16).
8
  Id. at A162 (Matthews Test. at 113:11–23) (“So blood settles in a body. It can cause — just the
coloration of someone’s skin tone will change just because blood begins to settle more and more
towards the lowest setting portion of the body, which could cause changes in the, you know, how
an injury is visualized, how you see it. So, obviously things change.”).
9
   Delaware Supreme Court, Oral Argument Video, Vimeo, at 3:35–4:01 (July 26, 2023)
https://livestream.com/delawaresupremecourt/events/10877231/videos/237022476.
         The Court: At what time was the warrant actually applied for? We know it was
         obtained sometime around 10:40 in the morning.

                                                 5
know that a search warrant for the premises was obtained at 10:40 a.m. At that point, the

officers reentered the residence to confirm the evidence obtained by Detective Matthews,

and gather more physical evidence, including swabs of blood, a broken stool and lamp, and

certain blood-stained items.

 III. The Trial Court’s Ruling on the Motion to Suppress Evidence Found in the Home

          The suppression hearing was held on December 3, 2021.10 The Superior Court

denied the motion as to the evidence collected from the property on December 23, 2021,

but ordered an additional hearing on the statement, which was held on January 14, 2022.11

The motion to suppress was denied as to the oral evidence on March 1, 2022. 12 The trial

court considered both the Emergency Exception and the Inevitable Discovery Exception

as possible exceptions to the exclusion of the physical evidence obtained from 32 Willis

Road. It found the Emergency Exception to be inapplicable but that the Inevitable

Discovery Exception did apply.

          In determining whether the Emergency Exception applied, the Superior Court

applied this Court’s three-pronged test in Guererri v. State.13 The trial court determined

that the first prong, which requires an immediate need to protect life or property, was not

          Garnett’s Counsel: Right. The record, I don’t believe, is explicit on that. There’s
          record evidence about when the warrant return happened, but there was questioning
          during the second hearing, and I believe the officer did not have the necessary
          documentation, as best as I recall.
10
     Id. at A52–218 (Suppression Hearing Transcript on Dec. 3, 2021).
11
  State v. Garnett, 2021 WL 6109797, at *7. See A226–306 (Transcript of 104(a) Evidentiary
Hearing on Jan. 14, 2022).
12
     State v. Garnett, 2022 WL 610200, at *9 (Del. Super. Mar. 1, 2022) [hereinafter “Garnett II”].
13
     Id. at 4 (citing Guererri v. State, 922 A.2d 403, 406 (Del. 2007)).

                                                    6
satisfied because the reason the officers went to the residence was to look for the guardian

of the children. There was no emergent situation or concern that anyone was in danger.

Accordingly, the trial court did not consider the remaining prongs of the test.

           The trial court then turned to the Inevitable Discovery Exception. Applying the U.S.

Supreme Court’s decision in Nix v. Williams,14 and this Court’s decision in Cook v. State,15

the trial court posited two ways the Dover police would have discovered the evidence

absent the entrance of the residence on their first visit, under the Inevitable Discovery

Exception:16 (1) The children would have increasingly required their mother, and the

search for her inevitably would have led them to 32 Willis Road, or there would have been

increasing evidence that something had happened to Ms. Hill to require an entry into the

home; and (2) there was enough evidence at the time given the stained sock, the incident

at the Wawa, and the fact that M.S. was keeping Ms. Hill’s identification hidden on request

of Garnett, that a magistrate would have granted a search warrant of the home that was

indicated to be the residence of the children through school records.

     IV.   The Law Construing Delaware’s Constitution Follows the Federal Constitution’s
           Fourth Amendment in a Few Respects But Differs in Key Respects Relevant to
           this Appeal

           A. General Overview of the Separate Constitutional Provisions

           There are relevant, key differences between our Delaware Constitution and the U.S.

14
     467 U.S. 431 (1984).
15
     374 A.2d 264 (Del. 1977).
16
  Garnett I, 2021 WL 6109797, at *5 (citing Nix, 467 U.S. at 449–50; Cook, 374 A.2d at 267–68
(Del. 1977)).

                                                7
Constitution. When we take the oath of office as judicial officers, we swear to always

uphold and defend the Constitution of both “my Country and my State.”17 Our Delaware

Supreme Court has observed that “Delaware judges cannot faithfully discharge the

responsibilities of their office by simply holding that the Declaration of Rights in Article I

of the Delaware Constitution is necessarily in ‘lock step’ with the United States Supreme

Court’s construction of the federal Bill of Rights.”18

          As one federal appellate judge has observed, “virtually all of the foundational

liberties that protect Americans originated in the state constitutions and to this day remain

independently protected by them.”19 Our federal system gives state courts the final say

over the meaning of our own state constitutions. So as long as a state court’s interpretation

of its own constitution does not violate a federal requirement, it will stand.20

          Delaware’s original Constitution and Declaration of Rights “were adopted in

September 1776 — approximately two months after the Declaration of Independence and

fifteen years before the federal Bill of Rights.”21 Our constitutions of 1792, 1831, and 1897

followed the 1776 Delaware Constitution. Delaware’s Declaration of Rights, enacted in

1776, preserved all of the freedoms that had been guaranteed by English common law. The

17
     Dorsey v. State, 761 A.2d 807, 814 (Del. 2000).
18
     Doe v. Wilmington Hous. Auth., 88 A.3d 654, 662 (Del. 2014).
19
   Jeffery Sutton, 51 Imperfect Solutions, States and the Making of American Constitutional Law
1 (2018).
20
     Id. at 16.
21
  Dorsey, 761 A.2d at 815 (emphasis in original). See Commonwealth v. Edmunds, 586 A.2d 887,
896 (Pa. 1991) (“Thus, contrary to the popular misconception that state constitutions are somehow
patterned after the United States Constitution, the reverse is true.”).

                                                 8
first nineteen sections of Delaware’s Bill of Rights have remained almost unchanged since

1792.22 The drafters who wrote it were many of the same people who wrote the U.S.

Constitution and Bill of Rights. As a result, it is no surprise that the documents have many

overlapping provisions with similar or identical wording.23

       However, regarding our rights and liberties as citizens, there are several areas of law

where Delaware has granted more expansive rights than the U.S. Constitution. For

22
 Article I, § 20, the Delaware right to bear arms, and Article I, § 21, the Delaware Equal Rights
Amendment, are the later additions. Del. Const., art. 1, § 20; Del. Const., art. 1, § 21.
23
   Of the original Thirteen Colonies, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut share nearly
identical language, albeit differences in punctuation and adverbs. Del. Const. art. I, § 6; Conn.
Const. art. I, § 7 (uses “nearly” instead of “particularly,” and “nor without” instead of “nor then,
unless”); Pa. Const. art. I, § 8 (same). In Jones, we observed that “these [search and seizure]
provisions in the Constitutions of Delaware and Connecticut, as well as Pennsylvania, New Jersey
and other states tracing their roots to the thirteen original colonies, share venerable origins that
precede the adoption of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution.” Jones v. State,
745 A.2d 856, 867 (Del. 1999). New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Georgia mirror the
federal language, with minor differences. N.J. Const. art. I, ¶ 7; N.Y. Const. art. I, § 12; R.I. Const.
art. I, § 6; Ga. Const. art. I, § 1, ¶ XIII. After the Civil War, South Carolina adopted the federal
language but added an additional protection from unreasonable invasions of privacy. S.C. Const.
art. I, § 10. The New Hampshire and Massachusetts language is unique but still largely similar to
Delaware and the federal Constitution. Mass. Const. Pt. 1, art. XIV; N.H. Const. Pt. 1, art. 19.
Differing the most from Delaware’s is the language of Maryland, North Carolina, and Virginia,
which centers around a prohibition of general warrants. Va. Const. art. I, § 10. The language of
this group mirrors Delaware’s provision pre-1792, under the original Delaware Declaration of
Rights and Fundamental Rules of the Delaware State. Declaration of Rights and Fundamental
Rules of the Delaware State § 17 (1776); Dorsey, 761 A.2d at 816.
Additionally, Garnett cites to the constitutions of Arizona, Indiana, Washington, and West
Virginia, asserting that the state courts of those states rejected or limited the Inevitable Discovery
Exception. Although the historical development of their provisions may be different, they are,
nonetheless, persuasive in that they emphasize privacy of the home for the purposes of search and
seizure requirements. Of those states, West Virginia and Indiana mirror the federal language in
their state constitutions. W. Va. Const. art. III, § 6; Ind. Const. art. I, § 11. Arizona and
Washington have identical language to each other and uniquely protect “private affairs” and the
home from invasion “without authority of law.” Ariz. Const. art. II, § 8 (“No person shall be
disturbed in his private affairs, or his home invaded, without authority of law.”); Wash. Const. art.
I, § 7 (same).

                                                   9
example, as we recognized in Jones v. State, “we have held that the Delaware Constitution

provides greater rights than the United States Constitution in the preservation of evidence

used against a defendant, the right of confrontation, the right to counsel, and the right to

trial by jury.”24 More recently, we have expressly held that our right to bear arms under

Article I, § 20 of the Delaware Constitution is more expansive than the Second

Amendment.25 Here, I focus on search and seizure law, the Exclusionary Rule, and its

exceptions — a key area where Delaware’s Constitution is unquestionably more protective

of citizens’ rights than the Fourth Amendment.26

         B.     Garnett’s Separate Claim Under the Delaware Constitution

         The federal Fourth Amendment, sent to the states in 1789 and ratified by Delaware

in January 1790 and adopted by the U.S. as a whole in 1792, specifies that:

         The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and
         effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and
         no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or
         affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the
         persons or things to be seized.27

24
  745 A.2d at 863 (citing Hammond v. State, 569 A.2d 81, 87 (Del. 1989), Van Arsdall v. State,
524 A.2d 3, 6–7 (Del. 1987), Bryan v. State, 571 A.2d 170, 176 (Del. 1990), Claudio v. State, 585
A.2d 1278, 1298 (Del. 1991)).
25
  See Bridgeville Rifle & Pistol Club, Ltd. V. Small, 176 A.3d 632, 642 (Del. 2017) (observing
that on its face, Article I § 20 is “intentionally broader than the Second Amendment,” and that “our
Delaware Constitution may provide ‘broader or additional rights’ than the federal constitution,
which provides a ‘floor’ or baseline rights.”).
26
   See, e.g., Juliano v. State, 254 A.3d 369, 377 (Del. 2020) (“Nowhere has this stance, which
rejects a ‘lock step’ interpretation of our state constitutional protections in conformity with the
United State Supreme Court’s interpretation of the federal Bill of Rights, been more evident than
in the area of search-and-seizure law.”).
27
     U.S. Const. Amend. IV.

                                                10
          Article I, § 6 of the Delaware Constitution (“Article I, § 6”), written and ratified in

1792 states:

          The people shall be secure in their persons, houses, papers and possessions,
          from unreasonable searches and seizures; and no warrant to search any place,
          or to seize any person or thing, shall issue without describing them as
          particularly as may be; nor then, unless there be probable cause supported by
          oath or affirmation.28

          Despite the similarity in language, our Court has held that Article I, § 6 grants

broader protection than the Fourth Amendment in several areas.29 Garnett bases his

arguments on both constitutions.

          Garnett argues that the record does not support that either emergency or warrant-

based entry were inevitable. He argues that the trial court erred in failing to recognize that

the Delaware Constitution “applies more protection in this scenario than does the Federal

Constitution.”30 He reasons that as applied in the federal system, the Inevitable Discovery

Exception is based upon the U.S. Supreme Court’s determination that the purpose of the

Exclusionary Rule is deterrence, and that deterrence is outweighed by the societal benefits

of admitting the tainted evidence. But he argues that Delaware’s Exclusionary Rule is

based upon an entirely different purpose, thereby rendering the federally-based cases

28
     Del. Const. art. I, § 6.
29
  See Juliano, 254 A.2d at 378 (“[I]t is well established that this Court will, where appropriate,
extend our state constitutional prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures beyond the
protections recognized in the United States Supreme Court’s Fourth Amendment jurisprudence.”);
Jones, 745 A.2d at 863–64; Edmunds, 586 A.2d at 895–896 (“Although the wording of the
Pennsylvania Constitution is similar in language to the Fourth Amendment of the United States
Constitution, we are not bound to interpret the two provisions as if they were mirror images, even
where the text is similar or identical.”).
30
     Opening Br. at 3.

                                                11
inapposite. He also contends that the Delaware Constitution requires that a remedy be

provided for such violations regardless of the cost.31 Because the issue has never been

squarely addressed by this Court, the issue is one of first impression.

          I first discuss the similarities between the two constitutions in this area of the law.

I then point out the significant differences upon which I base my conclusion that the

evidence obtained illegally in the home should have been suppressed.

          C. Both Constitutions Recognize that Homes Are Different and Lie at the Core of
             the Constitutional Protection

          The alleged violation here involves a warrantless entry by police into a home.

Sanctity of a citizen’s home lies at the heart of both the Fourth Amendment and Article I,

§ 6 of the Delaware Constitution. Both constitutions recognize the importance of one’s

home in the search and seizure context. In Cady v. Dombrowski,32 the U.S. Supreme Court

held that police officers did not violate the Fourth Amendment when they searched the

trunk of a car that had been towed after an accident. The Court stated that, “except in

certain carefully defined classes of cases,” police cannot search private property without

consent or a warrant.33 It stressed that “there is a constitutional difference between houses

and cars.”34 Thus, Cady created a clear demarcation in the cases “treating automobiles

31
  The trial court’s separate discussion of the Delaware Constitution is confined to the last sentence
in the last footnote of its December 2021 Opinion. Garnett I, 2021 WL 6109797, at *7, n.40
(“There is no case law cited by the defense to support a proposition that the Delaware Constitution
expands the rights of its citizens in a way that would forbid the application of the inevitable
discovery exception in circumstances akin to this matter.”).
32
     413 U.S. 433 (1973).
33
     Id. at 439.
34
     Id. (quoting Chambers v. Maroney, 399 U.S. 42, 52 (1970)).

                                                 12
differently from houses” for Fourth Amendment purposes.35 Cady’s holding does not apply

to houses.36 This is so because the Fourth Amendment’s “very core” is the right of a person

to retreat into her home and be free from governmental intrusion.37 As the Supreme Court

has held, “physical entry of the home is the chief evil against which the wording of the

Fourth Amendment is directed.”38 It has also observed that the Fourth Amendment marks

“a firm line at the entrance to a house,”39 and that “[a]bsent exigent circumstances, that

threshold may not reasonably be crossed without a warrant.” 40 This makes sense because

the privacy interests in one’s home are greater than in one’s car.41

          The sanctity of the home is deeply embedded in our common law tradition. As the

Supreme Court observed in Payton v. New York, “[t]he zealous and frequent repetitions of

the adage that a ‘man’s house is his castle,’ made it abundantly clear that both in England

and the Colonies, ‘the freedom of one’s house’ was one of the most vital elements of

35
     Id. at 441.
36
  The Supreme Court in Cady held that a caretaking search conducted of a vehicle that was neither
in the custody nor on the premises of the owner was not unreasonable solely because a warrant
had not been obtained. Id. at 447–48.
37
     Collins v. Virginia, 138 S. Ct. 1663, 1670 (2018).
38
     United States v. U.S. Dist. Ct., 407 U.S. 297, 313 (1972).
39
   Payton v. New York, 445 U.S. 573, 590 (1980); see also South Dakota v. Opperman, 428 U.S.
364, 367 (1976) (holding that a warrantless search of an automobile did not violate the Fourth
Amendment but also noted that “warrantless examinations of automobiles have been upheld in
circumstances in which a search of a home or office would not.”).
40
     Payton, 445 U.S. at 590.
41
   See, e.g., Cardwell v. Lewis, 417 U.S. 583, 590 (1974) (plurality opinion) (observing that “[a]
car has little capacity for escaping public scrutiny. It travels public thoroughfares where its
occupants and its contents are in plain view.”); Opperman, 428 U.S. at 368 (“[o]ne has a lesser
expectation of privacy in a motor vehicle because its function is transportation and seldom serves
as one’s residence or as the repository of personal effects.”) (citation omitted).

                                                  13
English liberty.”42 Consistent with this tradition, the U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly

stated that “searches and seizures inside a home without a warrant are presumptively

unreasonable.”43

          In Mason v. State,44 Justice Holland, writing for this Court in 1987, detailed the

“current state of the law” surrounding the search warrant requirement. His in-depth

historical analysis began with the recognition by the Framers of the U.S. Constitution that

“[t]he concept of the home as a privileged place, the privacy of which may not be disturbed

by unreasonable governmental intrusion, is basic in a free society.”45

          Citing Payton, this Court in Mason stated that “the history of the constitutional

provisions limiting searches and seizures leaves little doubt that searches and seizures are

presumptively ‘unreasonable’ unless they are authorized by warrants, issued upon probable

cause, and supported by oath or affirmation before a neutral judicial officer, subject to a

few exceptions justified by absolute necessity.”46 We observed that “Delaware law is

42
   Payton, 445 U.S. at 596–97; see also Welsh v. Wisconsin, 466 U.S. 740, 750 (1984) (“[B]efore
agents of the government may invade the sanctity of the home, the burden is on the government to
demonstrate exigent circumstances that overcome the presumption of unreasonableness that
attaches to all warrantless home entries.”).
43
     Kentucky v. King, 563 U.S. 452, 459 (2011).
44
     534 A.2d 242 (Del. 1987).
45
  Id. at 246. Even before the U.S. Constitution, “[f]undamental limitations on the power of public
officials to search, which remain viable today, had been established in the American colonies as
early as 1765.” Id. (citing Entick v. Carrington, 19 Howell’s State Trials 1029 (1756)). And that
limitation was “an extension of a principle of English liberty that ‘the house of every one is to him
as his castle and fortress, as well as for his defense against injury and violence, as for his repose.”
Id. at 246, n.6 (citing Semayne’s Case, 5 Coke’s Rep. 91a, 91b (1603)).
46
  Mason, 534 A.2d at 248 (emphasis added). We then observed that “[o]ne of the recognized
exceptions to the search warrant requirement is the doctrine of exigent circumstances.” Id. (citing
Patrick v. State, 227 A.2d 486, 489 (Del. 1967)). See also State v. Lashley, 803 A.2d 139, 142
                                                   14
consistent with Payton v. New York,” and that “[i]n Delaware, absent exigent

circumstances, the police must obtain a search warrant before entering a home at anytime

— day or night.”47

       D. Both Constitutions Recognize the Emergency Exception to the Warrant
          Requirement But It Does Not Apply Here

       Our Delaware courts have recognized several carefully tailored exceptions to the

warrant requirement including, for example, searches and seizures incident to a lawful

arrest,48 during a “stop-and-frisk,”49 and while in hot pursuit of a suspect.50 Another

exception recognized under both constitutions is the Exigent Circumstances Exception.51

This applies when, considering the totality of the circumstances, an officer reasonably finds

(N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 2002) (“If we were to uphold the denial of the motion to suppress in
this case, the police could decide to enter a home without a warrant, and without both probable
cause and exigent circumstances, in order to ‘secure’ the evidence, whenever they believe they
have probable cause to obtain a search warrant.”).
47
  Mason, 534 A.2d at 248, n.14 (citing Del. Const. art. I, § 6; 11 Del. C. §§ 2301, 2308; Patrick,
227 A.2d at 489; Freeman v. State, 317 A.2d 540, 541–42 (Del. 1974)).
48
  See Jones, 745 A.2d at 872 (“A peace officer has the right to seize and search any person whom
the officer observes breaking the law. The search is justified as incident to a lawful arrest.”).
49
   See 11 Del. C. § 1902; Woody v. State, 765 A.2d 1257, 1262 (Del. 2001) (“Upon careful
consideration of the protections afforded Woody under the Fourth Amendment and Article I, § 6
of the Delaware Constitution, and in light of the totality of the circumstances as they appeared to
the officers on the evening in question, we conclude that the unique facts of this case justified
Woody’s detention. In addition, we find the officers had probable cause to arrest Woody after a
loaded weapon was discovered on his person pursuant to a properly performed protective pat
down.”).
50
  11 Del. C. § 2302 (“A search of a person, house, building, conveyance, place or other thing may
be made without a warrant if the search is made for a person hotly pursued provided the pursuer
has probable cause to believe that such person has committed a felony or a misdemeanor.”).
51
   Mason, 534 A.2d at 248 (“One of the recognized exceptions to the search warrant requirement
is the doctrine of exigent circumstances.” (citing Patrick, 227 A.2d at 489)).

                                                15
that swift action is required to prevent imminent danger to life.52

          In this appeal, no party contends that at the time the officers entered the home, there

was an emergency that would excuse compliance with the warrant requirement. The trial

court, after considering evidence presented at the December 3, 2021 suppression hearing,

found that there was no emergency.53 The court found that “Sergeant Lynch admitted in

her testimony that had Patrolman Starke not opened the unsecured back door, she would

have left and returned to the home at a later time to try to find the guardian of the

children.”54 As the trial court explained:

          [T]he testimony of the officers who conducted the warrantless search was
          devoid of any indication that the Wawa incident . . . created a sense that the
          guardian of the children was in danger. Had the officers waited and returned
          to the home at a later time, as Sergeant Lynch had suggested would have
          occurred but for Patrolman Starke’s action, they would have been armed with
          additional pertinent information. That information, likely could have turned
          the situation into a welfare check . . . in addition to the original primary
          purpose of locating the guardian. Nevertheless, at the time Patrolman Starke
          breached the ‘sanctity’ of the home, it was not a welfare check, as the State
          contended. It was an action by Dover PD to locate the guardian of the three
          children, not for the guardian’s welfare but for the children’s welfare.55

52
  Patrick, 227 A.2d at 489 (“It follows that a search warrant is not required to legalize an entry by
police for the purpose of bringing emergency aid to an injured person.”).
53
     Garnett I, 2021 WL 6109797, at *5.
54
     Id. at *3.
55
   Id. at *4–5; see also State v. Lashley, 803 A.2d at 142 (“In light of the judge’s undisputed fact-
finding about the lack of exigency, we do not believe that the ‘inevitable discovery’ and
‘independent source’ doctrines can be utilized to permit admission of evidence found in the
apartment.”).

                                                 16
           The court further observed that the children’s situation likewise did not constitute

an “emergency” as the children were safely in the custody of law enforcement for the time

being.

           E. Both Constitutions Recognize the Community Care Exception But Neither
              Recognizes it in the Context of a Warrantless Entry Into the Home, Absent
              Exigent Circumstances

           Police can undertake certain actions to check on citizens in distress but entering a

home without a warrant, absent an emergency, is not one of them. In Caniglia v. Strom,

the U.S. Supreme Court held that police officers’ community caretaking duties do not

justify warrantless searches and seizures in the home. 56 In his opinion, Justice Thomas

observed that decades earlier, the U.S. Supreme Court had held in Cady v. Dombrowksi

that a warrantless search of an impounded vehicle for an unsecured firearm did not violate

the Fourth Amendment.57 Commenting on Cady, Justice Thomas observed that “police

officers who patrol the ‘public highways’ are often called to discharge noncriminal

‘community caretaking functions,’ such as responding to disabled vehicles or investigating

accidents.”58 In responding to the question of whether Cady’s acknowledgement of these

“caretaking duties” created a “standalone doctrine that justifies warrantless searches and

seizures in the home,” the Supreme Court, in Caniglia, answered emphatically, “[i]t does

not.”59

56
     141 S. Ct. 1596 (2021).
57
     Id. at 1598 (citing Cady v. Dombrowski, 413 U.S. 433 (1973)).
58
     Caniglia, 141 S. Ct. at 1598.
59
     Id.

                                                17
          The Court acknowledged, however, that “the Fourth Amendment does not prohibit

all unwelcome intrusions ‘on private property,’ only ‘unreasonable’ ones.”60 The Supreme

Court then listed the Emergency Exception as one such exception: “law enforcement

officers may enter private property without a warrant when certain exigent circumstances

exist, including the need to ‘render emergency assistance to an injured occupant or to

protect an occupant from imminent injury.’”61 It also acknowledged that officers may

generally take actions that any private citizen may take without fear of liability such as

approaching a home and knocking on the front door.62

          However, in declining to extend the Community Caretaking Exception to

warrantless entry of homes, the Supreme Court held:

          [T]his recognition that police officers perform many civic tasks in modern
          society was just that — a recognition that these tasks exist, and not an open-
          ended license to perform them anywhere. What is reasonable for vehicles is
          different from what is reasonable for homes. Cady acknowledged as much,
          and this Court has repeatedly “declined to expand the scope of . . . exceptions
          to the warrant requirement to permit warrantless entry into the home.”63

          In Caniglia, petitioner Edward Caniglia retrieved a handgun from his bedroom

during an argument with this wife at their Rhode Island home. He put it on the dining room

table and asked his wife to “shoot [him] now and get it over with.” 64 She declined, left,

60
     Id. at 1599.
61
     Id. (citing Kentucky v. King, 563 U.S. 452 (2011)).
62
     Id. (citing Florida v. Jardines, 569 U.S. 1, 8 (2013)).
63
     Id. at 1600 (citing Collins, 138 S.Ct. at 1672).
64
     Id. at 1598.

                                                    18
and spent the night in a hotel. The next morning when she could not reach him by

telephone, she called the police to request a welfare check.

           The respondents (who included representatives of the City of Cranston Police

Department) accompanied Caniglia’s wife to the home where they found him on the front

porch. Caniglia confirmed his wife’s account of the previous night’s events but denied that

he was suicidal. Respondents, however, concluded that he posed a risk to himself and

others. They called an ambulance and he agreed to go to the hospital for a psychiatric

evaluation, but only on the condition that they would not confiscate his firearms. Once the

ambulance took Caniglia away, however, the police seized his firearms. Guided by his

wife — whom they allegedly misinformed about his wishes — respondents entered the

home and seized his firearms.

           Caniglia sued, alleging that respondents violated the Fourth Amendment when they

entered his home and seized his guns without a warrant. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the

First Circuit affirmed the District Court’s decision that the officers’ decisions to remove

Caniglia and his firearms from the premises fell within a “community caretaking

exception” to the warrant requirement. In other words, “the First Circuit extrapolated a

freestanding community-caretaking exception that applies to both cars and homes.”65 The

Supreme Court reversed.

           As the U.S. Supreme Court put it, “the First Circuit saw no need to consider whether

anyone had consented to respondents’ actions; whether these actions were justified by

65
     Id.

                                                19
‘exigent circumstances’; or whether any state law permitted this kind of mental health

intervention.”66 In rejecting the First Circuit’s reasoning and reversing, the U.S. Supreme

Court held that “[t]he First Circuit’s ‘community caretaking’ rule, however, goes beyond

anything this Court has recognized.”67 It referred to the “unmistakable distinction between

vehicles and homes” and held that “[w]hat is reasonable for vehicles is different from what

is reasonable for homes.”68

          Justice Alito, in his separate concurring opinion, described a situation which the

Court did not intend to address in Caniglia.              That situation concerns warrantless,

nonconsensual searches of a home for the purpose of ascertaining whether a resident is in

urgent need of medical attention and cannot summon help. He observed that this is an

important concern today given the number of elderly people living alone. He posited the

following scenario which was the basis for a question posed by Chief Justice Roberts

during oral argument in Caniglia:

          [N]eighbors of an elderly woman call the police and express concern because
          the woman had agreed to come over for dinner at 6 p.m., but by 8 p.m., had
          not appeared or called even though she was never late for anything. The
          woman had not been seen leaving her home, and she was not answering the

66
     Id. at 1599.
67
   Id. The First Circuit declined to consider whether any exigent circumstances were present
because respondents had forfeited that argument. Justice Alito pointed out in his concurring
opinion that their decision was not intended to call into question features of various state laws that
allow for emergency seizures for psychiatric treatment, observation or stabilization, including the
categories of persons who may request emergency action, the reasons that could justify the action,
the necessity of a judicial proceeding, and the nature of the proceeding. Id. at 1601. He also noted
that the decision was not intended to address so-called “red flag” laws that enable police to seize
guns pursuant to a court order to prevent their use for suicide or the infliction of harm on innocent
persons. Id.
68
     Id. at 1600.

                                                 20
           phone. Nor could the neighbors reach her relatives by phone. If the police
           entered the home without a warrant to see if she needed help, would that
           violate the Fourth Amendment?69

           Justice Alito observed that “[o]ur current precedents do not address situations like

this.”70 He observed that “[t]his imaginary woman may have regarded her house as her

castle, but it is doubtful that she would have wanted it to be the place where she died alone

in agony.”71 But he went on to observe that:

           We have held that the police may enter a home without a warrant when there
           are ‘exigent circumstances.’ But the circumstances are exigent only when
           there is not enough time to get a warrant, and warrants are not typically
           granted for the purpose of checking on a person’s medical condition. Perhaps
           States should institute procedures for the issuance of such warrants, but in
           the meantime, courts may be required to grapple with the basic Fourth
           Amendment question of reasonableness.72

           Justice Kavanaugh, in a separate concurring opinion, emphasized that “the Court’s

decision does not prevent police officers from taking reasonable steps to assist those who

are inside a home and in need of aid.”73 He listed as illustrations: “to prevent a potential

suicide or to help an elderly person who has been out of contact and may have fallen and

suffered a serious injury.”74 He listed as examples of exigent circumstances that would

allow for warrantless entry into a home:

           To fight a fire and investigate its cause; to prevent the imminent destruction
           of evidence; to engage in hot pursuit of a fleeing felon or prevent the

69
     Id. at 1601 (Alito, J., concurring).
70
     Id. at 1602.
71
     Id.
72
     Id. (citations omitted).
73
     Id. at 1602.
74
     Id. at 1603.

                                                21
           suspect’s escape; to address a threat to the safety of law enforcement officers
           or the general public; to render emergency assistance to an injured occupant;
           or to protect an occupant who is threatened with serious injury.75

           But in our case, no one argues that exigent circumstances or even a medical situation

existed when the police entered the home.76 And the record suggests that there was time

to get a warrant. The Exigent Circumstances Exception is “strictly circumscribed,”77 and

it must be “supported by a genuine exigency.”78 It unquestionably does not apply here as

the trial court correctly held.

           The State relies on our decision in Williams v. State,79 where this Court adopted the

Community Caretaker Exception. However, we did not suggest in Williams that the

doctrine would sanction warrantless entry into a home, absent exigent circumstances. The

75
     Id.
76
   In its second opinion addressing Garnett’s statement, the trial court reiterated its holding that the
officers’ entry into the home was illegal, and reiterated its findings that “[a]ll officers questioned
at the original suppression hearing who were part of the entry indicated that the sole purpose of
the home visit was to locate the children’s mother, with some additional concern that she was not
answering the door after approximately five minutes. Garnett II, at *1. It concluded that “the
State did not meet its burden to show that the emergency doctrine was applicable.” Id.
77
  Georgia v. Randolph, 547 U.S. 103, 113 n.3 (2006) (citing Mincey v. Arizona, 437 U.S. 385,
393 (1978)).
78
  King, 563 U.S. at 470. Accordingly, the destruction of evidence must be “imminent” King, 563
U.S. at 460, and a “hot pursuit” actually requires “some sort of a chase.” United States v. Santana,
427 U.S. 38, 42–43 (1976).
79
   962 A.2d 210, 218 (Del. 2008). Williams involved a police encounter with a citizen walking
along a road at night in inclement weather. In Williams, we adopted a three-part test for application
of the Community Caretaker Exception. In doing so, we observed that although we continue to
“acknowledge[] the parameters of the Fourth Amendment as set forth by the Supreme Court, we
have declined to follow Hodari when enforcing the protection from illegal searches and seizures
afforded by the Delaware Constitution.” Id. at 215.

                                                  22
Delaware Superior Court has expressly held that the doctrine does not apply to a

warrantless search of a home.80

          The U.S. Supreme Court has also held that there is no “murder scene” exception to

the Fourth Amendment. In Mincey v. Arizona,81 the U.S. Supreme Court rejected Arizona’s

“murder scene exception” allowing warrantless searches conducted in the investigation of

a homicide, even after the suspects had been apprehended. The Supreme Court observed

that:

          [A] warrantless search must be strictly circumscribed by the exigencies
          which justify its initiation, and it simply cannot be contended that this search
          was justified by any emergency threatening life or limb. All the persons in
          Mincey’s apartment had been located before the investigating homicide
          officers arrived there and began the search. And a four-day search that
          included opening dresser drawers and ripping up carpets can hardly be
          rationalized in terms of the legitimate concerns that justify an emergency
          search.

          Third, the State points to the vital public interest in the prompt investigation
          of the extremely serious crime of murder. No one can doubt the importance
          of this goal. But the public interest in the investigation of other serious
          crimes is comparable. If the warrantless search of a homicide scene is
          reasonable, why not the warrantless search of the scene of a rape, a robbery,
          or a burglary? No consideration relevant to the Fourth Amendment suggests
          any point of rational limitation of such a doctrine.82

          Accordingly, the Supreme Court held in Mincey that “the ‘murder scene exception’

created by the Arizona Supreme Court is inconsistent with the Fourth and Fourteenth

80
   See, e.g., State v. Hamilton, 2017 WL 4570818, at *9 (Del. Super. 2017) (holding that “[t]he
[community caretaker] doctrine has never been applied to a warrantless search of a home. Rather,
it has been exclusively applied to the seizure of an individual outside the home.”).
81
     437 U.S. 385, 394 (1978).
82
     Id. at 393 (citations omitted).

                                                23
Amendments — that the warrantless search of Mincey’s apartment was not constitutionally

permissible simply because a homicide had recently occurred there.”83

           Here, when they entered the home, the officers were not investigating a homicide.

Rather, they were simply looking for the guardian of the children. At that point, they had

no reason to believe that Ms. Hill was injured or that she was in danger. As the Supreme

Court observed in Brigham City, Utah v. Stuart,84 the exigency of “emergency aid”

required officers to have an objectively reasonable basis for believing that an occupant is

seriously injured or imminently threatened with such injury.85 Under Mincey, upon

discovering the homicide, they were required to obtain a warrant to gather evidence.

           Even if one accepted the trial court’s observation that “this case is an example of a

single officer’s negligence and error of judgment regarding the emergency doctrine,”86

sanctioning the warrantless entry into the home here undercuts a firm and solid line of

Delaware precedent construing our Delaware Constitution. The State’s argument — that

an emergency situation was inevitable — is really tantamount to asking for an expansion

of the Emergency and Community Caretaker Exceptions far beyond what has been

permitted thus far even under the more permissive Fourth Amendment. Eliminating the

“exigency” requirement and undertaking a broad search of the premises without a warrant

83
     Id. at 395.
84
     547 U.S. 398, 400 (2006).
85
     Id.
86
     Garnett II, at *9.

                                                24
upon discovering the murder scene exceeds the bounds of both the Emergency and

Caretaking Exceptions.

       The touchstone is reasonableness under the circumstances. Although I have no

doubt the officers were sincere in their concern for the children and in trying to locate their

guardian, there was no emergency.87 So the Superior Court found, and the State does not

contend otherwise on appeal.88 We should not allow a circumvention of that law here. To

do so would permit a highly questionable assertion of the Inevitable Discovery Exception

to puncture a huge hole into the heart of a vital constitutional protection.

       F. Nor Does the Independent Source Doctrine Apply Here

       Further narrowing the field of potential avenues for admission of the challenged

evidence found at the home, I note that there is a distinction between the Independent

Source Doctrine and the Inevitable Discovery Doctrine. The Independent Source Doctrine

also does not apply here. Although some courts have used the terms interchangeably, a

recent scholarly article explains the distinction:

       Inevitable discovery is a corollary to the independent source exception to the
       exclusionary rule. Whereas the latter governs evidence that was in fact
       lawfully discovered independent of a constitutional violation, the former
       governs evidence that would have been lawfully discovered if the violation
       has never occurred. The independent source doctrine requires less

87
  See Commonwealth v. Alexander, 243 A.3d 177, 190 (Pa. 2020) (the Pennsylvania Supreme
Court, observing that “a finding in a case that an officer’s warrantless search was not justified by
an exigency does not reflect hostility to his or her actions,” rather, “[i]t means only that our
constitution places greater emphasis on the violations of privacy occasioned by an unreasonable
search.”).
88
  Garnett I, at *4, n.31 (citing State v. Hamilton, 2017 WL 4570818, at *9 (Del. Super. 2017)
(“The [community caretaker] doctrine has never been applied to a warrantless search of a home.
Rather, it has been exclusively applied to the seizure of an individual outside the home.”);
Caniglia, 141 S.Ct. at 1600 (2021).

                                                25
          speculation to implement, as no counterfactual analysis is required. Likely
          because of its more straightforward application, independent source arose as
          one of the earliest exceptions to the exclusionary rule, posited by Justice
          Holmes in Silverthorne Lumber Co. v. United States in 1920. Over the
          following decades, courts adopted and developed the independent source
          doctrine, paving the way for counterfactual application inherent in inevitable
          discovery.89

          The State has cited Bradley v. State,90 where this Court stated that “evidence seized

before the police obtain a warrant will not be suppressed if the evidence would have been

discovered independently of an initial unlawful search or inevitably would have been

discovered through lawful means.”91 However, the order in Bradley indicates that we

applied a plain error review since a motion to suppress was not filed below. And although

we affirmed the Superior Court’s admission into evidence items obtained from a

warrantless search of a garage, there is no indication that we relied on authorities other than

federal authorities such as Murray v. United States92 and Nix, or state cases relying solely

on the Fourth Amendment.

89
   Tonja Jacobi & Elliot Louthen, The Corrosive Effect of Inevitable Discovery on the Fourth
Amendment, 171 U. of Pa. L. Rev. 1, 6-7 (Dec. 2022) (emphasis in original) (citing Silverthorne
Lumber Co. v. United States, 251 U.S. 385, 392 (1920) (“If knowledge of [facts illegally obtained]
is gained from an independent source they may be proved like any others, but the knowledge
gained by the Government’s own wrong cannot be used by it in the way proposed.”)); see also
Segura v. United States, 468 U.S. 796, 805 (1984) (citations omitted) (stating that “it is clear from
our prior holdings that ‘the exclusionary rule has no application [where] the Government learned
of the evidence ‘from an independent source.’’”); Norman v. State, 976 A.2d 843, 859 (Del. 2009)
(discussing the federal inevitable discovery exception and independent source doctrine); State v.
Wagoner, 24 P.3d 306, 308 (N. M. Ct. App. 2001) (clarifying and distinguishing the inevitable
discovery exception and independent source doctrine).
90
     204 A.3d 112, 2019 WL 446548, at *4 (Del. Feb. 4, 2019) (TABLE).
91
     Id. at *4.
92
  487 U.S. 533, 537–39 (1988). The Court in Bradley cites Murray v. United States, where the
Supreme Court stated, “[t]he inevitable discovery doctrine, with its distinct requirements, is in
reality an extrapolation from the independent source doctrine: Since the tainted evidence would
                                                 26
       In Murray, federal agents illegally forced their entry into a warehouse and saw

burlap bags in plain view. They left and obtained a search warrant for that warehouse, but

without mentioning their prior entry or their observations made during the entry. The

agents entered the warehouse pursuant to the warrant and seized the contraband in the

burlap bags. A plurality of the U.S. Supreme Court held that the independent source rule

is not satisfied “if the agents’ decision to seek the warrant was prompted by what they had

seen during the initial entry, or if information obtained during that entry was presented to

the Magistrate and affected his decision to issue the warrant.”93

       In the present case, a review of the affidavit submitted with the warrant that was

eventually obtained reveals that the illegal entry into 32 Willis Road was the centerpoint

of the police’s attempt to establish probable cause. Eight of the twenty paragraphs listed

in the probable cause section revolve around the officers’ illegal entry into the residence.94

be admissible if in fact discovered through an independent source, it should be admissible if it
inevitably would have been discovered.” 487 U.S. 533, 539 (1988) (emphasis in original).
93
   487 U.S. at 542. The Supreme Court vacated the judgment and remanded the case to the Court
of Appeals with instructions that it remand to the District Court “for determination whether the
warrant authorized search of the warehouse was an independent source of the challenged evidence
in the sense we have described.” Id. at 544.
94
  See App. to Opening Br. at A17–18 (Affidavit and Application). The Majority seems to allude
the Independent Source Doctrine as well stating:
       [A] search warrant “sought and obtained” independently from information learned
       during the earlier misbegotten entry. This hypothetical search warrant would have
       been based on the same facts, as would have justified the emergency entry, all of
       which were unknown to the officers who entered the Willis Road residence, but
       gathered by other officers around the time of or shortly after the entry. And
       importantly, none of those facts would have drawn upon the knowledge gained by
       the police when they entered the residence earlier that morning.”
Maj. Op. at 19 (emphases added). However, the State has never argued that the Independent
Source Doctrine applies and the trial court never considered whether it did. Further, the
Independent Source Doctrine does not apply because that doctrine requires no counterfactual
                                              27
         Consequently, the warrant cannot serve as an “independent source” due to its use of

the tainted evidence obtained from the unconstitutional search of 32 Willis Road to supply

the probable cause. As this Court stated in Jones v. State:

         [T]he police could not use the illegally seized evidence in the affidavit to
         support their application for a search warrant. Delaware has not adopted the
         “good faith” exception to the exclusionary rule and continues to require
         exclusion of evidence obtained in violation of the Delaware Constitution’s
         protection against illegal searches and seizures.95

         G. The Key Question of the Inevitable Discovery Exception

         With these important precedents in mind, I turn to the main focus — the Inevitable

Discovery Exception. The U.S. Supreme Court has offered very little guidance on the

application of this exception since its seminal case, Nix v. Williams,96 decided nearly half

assumptions as it governs evidence that was in fact lawfully discovered independent of a
constitutional violation. That did not happen here. As noted above and in Jones, the mention of
evidence discovered at the house in the warrant negates its independence. Even without
mentioning what was discovered at the house, the investigative teams were too intertwined to be
considered truly independent. See, e.g., App. to Opening Br. at A123 (Officer Alicia Corrado
Testimony on Dec. 3, 2021 at 74:8) [hereinafter “Corrado Test. at [_]”]. (“Once we got back, I
was assisting the children inside when Master Corporal Toto left. Because the officers on Willis
Road called in that they had an unsecured door to the residence.”); Id. at A124 (Corrado Test. at
75:3–7 “Q: And how did you get the notification that there was an unsecured door? A: It was the
officers on scene sent it over the portable radios which we all carry at which time it came over.”);
Id. at A125–126 (Corrado Test. at 76:23–77:11) (“I intended to use my portable radio to let the
officers on scene know what I had found, but was unable to due to them already making a transition
on the radio    . . . They were already talking on the radio. Q. And what did they say? That they
had found an unconscious female on scene.”).
95
   28 A.3d 1046, 1057–58 (Del. 2011) (internal citations omitted); see also Wagoner, 24 P.3d at
315 (holding that “Article II, Section 10 of the New Mexico Constitution prohibits us from
retroactively and hypothetically correcting the errors of the police at the expense of a defendant’s
right to be free from an unreasonable search and seizure.”); id. (“We are persuaded by the
reasoning of other state courts which have held that inclusion of illegal information in an
application for a search warrant automatically precludes application of the independent source
doctrine.”).
96
     467 U.S. 431 (1984).

                                                28
a century ago. In Nix, officers were conducting a large-scale search for the body of a

murder victim. Meanwhile, the suspect, Robert Williams, agreed to lead two other

detectives to the deceased victim. Based on Williams’ statement, the officers called off the

search. Williams then led the officers to the body. Williams later moved to suppress the

body and related evidence. Notwithstanding that it found a Fifth Amendment violation,

the Court asked whether the body — the same evidence discovered using Williams’

illegally obtained statements — inevitably would have been found regardless of the

violation.

          The Supreme Court answered the question by looking at the factual situation before

Williams’ illegal interrogation. Specifically, it focused on the intentions of the officers

coordinating the search, the direction the search was moving, its proximity to the body, and

the instructions given to the searchers. Based upon this evidence, the Court concluded that

“the volunteer search teams would have resumed the search had Williams not earlier led

police to the body and the body inevitably would have been found.”97

          Although, as discussed below, some Delaware cases applying federal law follow

Nix, they do not answer the question of whether Inevitable Discovery Exception is

compatible with the Delaware Constitution. Clearly, whether the evidence is admissible

could depend on which constitutional provision is being applied.

          Although the Majority considers whether the Inevitable Discovery Exception is

incompatible with Article I, § 6 altogether, it is sufficient to focus on the specific question

97
     Id. at 449–50.

                                              29
presented here, i.e., whether its application to a warrantless entry of a home is consistent

with Article I, § 6. I base my conclusion that it is not on four grounds.

         First, the development of our law in the search and seizure area, detailed below,

including, most tellingly, our rejection of the Good Faith Exception to the Exclusionary

Rule, suggests that application of the Inevitable Discovery Exception here is incompatible

with Article I, § 6.

         Second, in all cases where this Court has applied the Inevitable Discovery

Exception, the Court has focused on the U.S. Constitution, as opposed to the Delaware

Constitution. This Court has never expressly considered the specific question of whether

the Inevitable Discovery Exception can be applied consistently with Article I, § 6.

         Third, and relatedly, the parties have sparred over whether this Court’s 1977

decision in Cook v. State,98 recognizing the Inevitable Discovery Exception to the

Exclusionary Rule, was based on the Fourth Amendment, or Article 1, § 6 or both. I

explain why our decision in Cook was clearly based on the Fourth Amendment only and,

as a result, cannot serve either as a controlling precedent or as a basis for concluding that

the Inevitable Discovery Exception is consistent with Article I, § 6.

         Fourth, a review of other states’ cases interpreting similar state constitutional

provisions (from both a textual and historical perspective), supports my conclusion that the

exception would not be applied to evidence obtained from a warrantless entry into a home

by police.

98
     374 A.2d 264 (Del. 1977).

                                             30
          I address each of these reasons for my conclusion in the sections below.

      V. The Inevitable Discovery Exception’s Incompatibility with Article I, § 6

          In Juliano, we recently reinforced that “[o]ur analysis accepts as settled

— under Jones, Dorsey, and Mason — that Article I, § 6 of the Delaware

Constitution provides different and broader protections than the Fourth Amendment.”99 I

next explain this important trilogy of cases which underpins my analysis.

          A. The Delaware Constitution’s Greater Protection than the Fourth Amendment
             Suggests a Rejection of the Inevitable Discovery Exception Here

                1.   The Delaware Constitution Has a Different Test for Determining
                     Whether a Seizure Has Occurred

          The first relevant area of our elevated Delaware Constitution-based protection

concerns the question of when a “seizure” has occurred. As we said in Jones v. State, “[a]n

individual’s right to be free of unlawful searches and seizures in Delaware is secured by

two independent, though corelative sources.”100 In Jones, we held that the Delaware

Constitution adopted a different test regarding when a “seizure” has occurred thereby

triggering a person’s rights. The issue was at what point during an interaction with police

has a person been “seized” and whether the State needed to demonstrate probable cause.

Notably, Jones, decided in 1999, was the first case in which our Supreme Court considered

“whether, and in what situations, Article I, § 6 of the Delaware Constitution should be

99
     Juliano, 254 A.3d at 380.
100
      Jones, 745 A.2d at 860.

                                               31
interpreted to provide protections that are greater than the rights accorded citizens by the

Fourteenth Amendment as it has been interpreted by the United States Supreme Court.”101

          The Supreme Courts of both Delaware and the U.S. agree that a person is “seized”

“when the officer, by means of physical force or show of authority, has in some way

restrained the liberty of an individual.”102 For seizures by force, it does not matter if the

person is actually stopped — force applied with an intent to restrain completes the

seizure.103 However, the U.S. Supreme Court in California v. Hodari D. reasoned that

under the Fourth Amendment, when a police officer attempts to restrain by a show of

authority — “stop in the name of the law” — the seizure further requires something more

— either physical force or, where that is absent, the subject’s “submission to the assertion

of authority.”104

          When the Delaware Supreme Court addressed the same question in Jones v. State a

few months after Hodari D., it reached a different conclusion. Our Delaware Supreme

Court held that a seizure could occur by an order by an officer to stop and remove your

hands from your pockets.105 Specifically, we held that “Hodari D. is not consistent with

101
      Id. at 861.
102
      Moore v. State, 997 A.2d 656, 663 (Del. 2010) (citing Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, n.16 (1968)).
103
    Torres v. Madrid, 141 S. Ct. 989, 998 (2021). Even a “mere touch” can be a seizure, though
“the amount of force remains pertinent in assessing the objective intent to restrain,” since the test
is an objective one which does not involve “prob[ing] the subjective motivations of police
officers.” Id.
104
      California v. Hodari D., 499 U.S. 621, 626 (1999) (emphasis in original).
105
   As we observed in Jones, “Hodari D. is binding precedent for this Court insofar as it interprets
the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution because the almost two hundred year old
doctrine of judicial review established the United States Supreme Court as the final arbiter of the
United States Constitution.” 745 A.2d at 863.

                                                  32
our view of when a person is ‘seized’ within the meaning of Article I, § 6 of the Delaware

Constitution in that Hodari D. would allow a police officer lacking reasonable suspicion

to create that suspicion through an unjustified attempted detention.” 106 The Jones Court,

therefore, concluded that a seizure occurs when the police officer’s actions manifest that

“a reasonable person would have believed he or she was not free to ignore the police

presence.”107 Because of that, as soon as the officer ordered Jones to stop and to take his

hands out of his pockets, he was seized. To stop and detain an individual pursuant to the

Delaware detention statute and Delaware Constitution, an officer must have reasonable and

articulable suspicion of criminal activity. The information possessed by the officer at the

time of the seizure did not rise to that level. Therefore, the Delaware Supreme Court

reversed the judgment and sentence of the Superior Court because the evidence (cocaine)

had been invalidly seized from Jones.

          Why the two different results (in Hodari D. and Jones) — particularly if the

language of the Fourth Amendment and Article I, § 6 is similar? In answering that

question, we observed that the Delaware Constitution was amended in 1792 after the

Fourth Amendment had already been adopted. In fact, the original search and seizure

provision in the Delaware Constitution preceded the adoption of the Fourth Amendment

by fifteen years and was originally similar to a provision in the Pennsylvania Constitution.

Delaware continued to follow the search and seizure language from the 1791 Pennsylvania

106
      745 A.2d at 863–64.
107
      Id. at 869.

                                            33
Constitution rather than the language in the Fourth Amendment. The Pennsylvania

Supreme Court had determined that the Pennsylvania provision was more expansive than

the Fourth Amendment.

          In Jones, we observed that “the search and seizure provision in the 1792 Delaware

Constitution exemplifies that familiarity [with the Constitution of Pennsylvania] because

it tracks a similar provision in the 1791 Pennsylvania Constitution.”108 In declining to

follow Hodari D., and in deciding to follow Pennsylvania’s lead instead, we stated that

“the history of search and seizure in Delaware reflects the same commitment to protecting

the privacy of its citizens.”109

          Accordingly, we reached the same conclusion as the Pennsylvania Supreme Court

with regard to Article I, § 6 “based upon [Article I, § 6’s] historical convergence for more

than two hundred years with the same provision in the Pennsylvania Constitution.”110 We

also noted that the Connecticut Supreme Court had determined that its state constitutional

protections exceeded those provided by the Fourth Amendment as interpreted in Hodari

108
      Jones, 745 A.2d at 866.
109
   Id. (citing Commonwealth v. Edmunds, 586 A.2d 887 (Pa. 1991), and Commonwealth v. Matos,
672 A.2d 769, 776 (Pa. 1996)). In Edmunds, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court undertook a
comprehensive historical review of the search and seizure provision in the Pennsylvania
Constitution. As we observed in Jones, “[t]he Edmunds Court concluded that the history of that
provision reflected different and broader protections than those guaranteed by the Fourth
Amendment.” Jones, 745 A.2d at 866 (emphasis in original). In 1996, the Pennsylvania Supreme
Court in Matos concluded that Hodari D. was inconsistent with Pennsylvania’s Article I, § 8. It
reasoned that “the survival of the language now employed in Article I, § 8 through over 200 years
of profound change in other areas demonstrates that the paramount concern for privacy first
adopted as part of our organic law in 1776 continues to enjoy the mandate of the people of the
Commonwealth.” Jones, 745 A.2d at 866 (citing Matos, 672 A.2d at 773 (quoting Edmunds, 856
A.2d at 897)).
110
      Jones, 745 A.2d at 866.

                                               34
D.111 Further, we recognized that “these provisions in the Constitutions of Delaware and

Connecticut, as well as Pennsylvania, New Jersey and other states tracing their roots to the

thirteen original colonies, share venerable origins that precede the adoption of the Fourth

Amendment to the United States Constitution.”112

          Importantly, in Jones, we distinguished one of our prior opinions (in Quarles v.

State)113 that had cited Hodari D. with approval. We pointed out that Quarles was

consistent with our decision in Jones “because in Quarles the Court used the Fourth

Amendment standard . . . to find that the police had not seized the defendant before the

defendant’s flight.”114 Thus, we said in Jones quite clearly that a case could be resolved

differently depending on which constitution is being construed.

                    2.   The Delaware Constitution Affords Citizens Greater Protections
                         Regarding Nighttime Search Warrants

          Delaware’s more protective stance in the search and seizure area is also

demonstrated by its stricter requirements for probable cause for nighttime search warrants.

In order to obtain a nighttime search warrant, in addition to probable cause, the Delaware

statute requires the judge to be satisfied that it is necessary in order to prevent the escape

or removal of the person or thing that is the subject of the search.

111
      Id. at 867 (citing State v. Oquendo, 613 A.2d 1300, 1310 (Conn. 1992)).
112
      Id. at 867.
113
      696 A.2d 1334 (Del. 1997).
114
      Jones, 745 A.2d at 868 (emphasis added).

                                                  35
          In Mason v. State,115 we explained why even though the Delaware Constitution’s

requirement of probable cause did exist in that case, there could be no Good Faith

Exception to the enhanced statutory requirements for the issuance of a nighttime search

warrant. We explained how the history of search and seizure in Delaware differed from

the Fourth Amendment. For almost 150 years, a Delaware statute had required more than

probable cause for the issuance of a nighttime search warrant.116

          In rejecting the State’s argument that the fact that the police acted in good faith

should not result in exclusion of the evidence, we held that:

          If this Court were to find a ‘good faith exception,’ under the circumstances
          of this case, it would be doing so in a situation where the police did not have
          exigent circumstances justifying a warrantless entry, failed to allege
          sufficient facts to satisfy the statutory requirements for a nighttime search of
          a residence and then failed to receive a search warrant that concluded its
          nighttime execution was necessary. To render such a decision would not
          only be an unprecedented break with more than two hundred years of history
          in this area of the law, but also would be tantamount to a judicial repeal of a
          specific Delaware statute that for more than one hundred years has set the
          standards by which applications for nighttime searches of a residence are to
          be judged by impartial magistrates.117

We concluded that there is no good faith exception to the enhanced statutory requirements

for the issuance of nighttime search warrants.

115
      534 A.2d 242 (Del. 1987).
116
   In addition to probable cause, a nighttime search warrant requires the affiant to allege that it is
“necessary in order to prevent the escape or removal of the person or thing to be searched for.” 11
Del. C. § 2308.
117
    Mason, 534 A.2d at 255. In State v. White, the Delaware Superior Court held that an “exigent
circumstance” must also exist for the judge to be satisfied that the nighttime search warrant is
necessary. 2010 WL 369354 (Del. Super. Feb. 2, 2010).

                                                 36
                    3.   There is No Good Faith Exception to the Exclusionary Rule under the
                         Delaware Constitution

          Perhaps the most relevant heightened Delaware constitutional protection is our

Court’s explicit rejection of the Good Faith Exception to the Exclusionary Rule. The

Exclusionary Rule in Delaware was recognized more than a decade before the federal

Exclusionary Rule was extended to state prosecutions, just as the enactment of the search

and seizure provisions in the Delaware Declaration of Rights preceded the adoption of the

corresponding provisions in the federal Bill of Rights.118

          In 1984, the U.S. Supreme Court created an exception to the Exclusionary Rule for

federal and state police officers who rely on good faith on the existence of a warrant. But

over twenty states since then (including Delaware) have refused to embrace the Good Faith

Exception under their own state constitutions. That seminal case in 1984 was United States

v. Leon, where the U.S. Supreme Court created the Good Faith Exception to the warrant

requirement.119 Under the Good Faith Exception, courts may admit evidence obtained by

an invalid warrant if the court finds that the officers possessed the reasonable good faith

belief that the warrant was valid at the time of its execution.120

          In Leon, the U.S. Supreme Court has characterized its recognition of the federal

Exclusionary Rule as a judicially created remedy designed to safeguard Fourth Amendment

rights through its deterrent effect, rather than a personal constitutional right of the

118
   Randy J. Holland, The Delaware State Constitution 54 (2017); see also Rickards v. State, 77
A.2d 199 (Del. 1950).
119
      United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897 (1984).
120
      Id. at 922.

                                                    37
aggrieved party.121 The “prime purpose” of the federal Exclusionary Rule is “to deter

future unlawful police conduct.”122 Thus, in Leon, the U.S. Supreme Court created the

Good Faith Exception to the Exclusionary Rule where police rely on a search warrant

which is later held to be invalid for lack of probable cause.123

            However, many states declined to follow Leon on the grounds that it was

inconsistent with state constitutional dimensions regarding the enforcement of the

Exclusionary Rule.124 For example, in declining to follow Leon, the Pennsylvania Supreme

Court observed that its analogous provision, Article I, § 8, was meant to embody a “strong

notion of privacy” carefully safeguarded by that State for the past two centuries.125 It

reasoned that “the history of Article I, § 8, thus indicates that the purpose underlying the

exclusionary rule in this Commonwealth is quite distinct from the purpose underlying the

exclusionary rule under the Fourth Amendment, as articulated by the majority in Leon.”126

Ultimately, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court concluded that “given the strong right of

privacy which inheres in Article I, § 8, as well as the clear prohibition against the issuance

121
      Id. at 906.
122
      United States v. Calandra, 414 U.S. 338, 347 (1974).
123
      Id., 414 U.S. at 922.
124
    See, e.g., Edmunds, 586 A.2d at 888 (“We conclude that a ‘good faith’ exception to the
exclusionary rule would frustrate the guarantees embodied in Article I, Section 8 of the
Pennsylvania Constitution.”). Our Court noted in Dorsey v. State that Iowa had joined this list of
states which included Alaska, Connecticut, Idaho, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New
Mexico, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Vermont. State v. Dorsey, 761 A.2d 807, 820
(Del. 2000).
125
      Id. at 897.
126
      Id.

                                                 38
of warrants without probable cause, or based upon defective warrants, the good faith

exception to the exclusionary rule would directly clash with those rights of citizens as

developed in our Commonwealth over the past 200 years.”127

          In rejecting the Fourth Amendment’s Good Faith Exception to the Exclusionary

Rule, the Delaware Supreme Court, in Dorsey v. State, recognized that the Delaware

Constitution embodies the common law principle “that every right, when withheld, must

have a remedy, and every injury its proper redress.”128 We announced that “[w]ithout a

constitutional remedy, a Delaware ‘constitutional right’ is an oxymoron that could unravel

the entire fabric of protections in Delaware’s two hundred and twenty-five year old

Declaration of Rights.”129

          In Dorsey, we determined that the warrant to search Dorsey’s automobile was issued

without probable cause. We reversed his conviction for Possession of a Firearm by a

Person Prohibited. Since the warrant lacked probable cause, we held that Dorsey’s rights

under Article I, § 6 of the Delaware Constitution were violated.130 We then addressed the

remedy. We started with the premise that “[t]his Court has consistently held that exclusion

of evidence is the required remedy for a violation of the Delaware Constitution’s protection

against searches and seizures without probable cause.”131 We also observed that it was

127
      Id. at 901.
128
      Dorsey, 761 A.2d at 816–17 (Del. 2000).
129
      Id. at 821.
130
   I contrast the situation in Dorsey where the police had obtained a warrant prior to the search
with the situation here where the police conducted the search knowing that there was no warrant.
131
      Id. at 814.

                                                39
“untenable for the State to argue that the Delaware Constitution must mean exactly the

same thing as the United States Constitution.”132

            We observed that Article 25 of Delaware’s 1776 Constitution requires that the

common law of England “shall remain in force, unless they shall be altered by a future law

of the Legislature . . . .”133 As for the common law of England, we cited Blackstone’s

authoritative Commentaries on the Laws of England: “‘it is a settled and invariable

principle in the laws of England, that every right, when withheld, must have a remedy, and

every injury its proper redress.’”134 We reasoned that it was “logical to infer that by

specifically adopting the existing common law of England, the framers of Delaware’s first

Constitution and Declaration of Rights contemplated that there would be a remedy for the

violation of the right to be free from illegal searches and seizures.”135

            Importantly, we stated that “the framers of Delaware’s first Declaration of Rights

and Constitution did not contemplate excusing violations of the search and seizure right if

the police acted in ‘good faith.’”136 We noted that Article 30 of our 1776 Constitution

expressly provided that “[n]o article of the declaration of rights and fundamental rules of

this state. . . ought ever to be violated on any pretence whatever . . . .”137 “Excusing ‘good

faith’ violations of the constitutional right to be free from illegal searches and seizures is

132
      Id. (citing Sanders v. State, 585 A.2d 117, 144 (Del. 1990)).
133
      Id. at 816.
134
      Id.
135
      Id. at 816–17.
136
      Id. at 817.
137
      Id. (emphasis in original).

                                                   40
exactly the type of ‘pretence’ that Article 30 in Delaware’s 1776 Constitution expressly

prohibited.”138 We emphasized our conclusion, reached in Jones, that “the history of the

search and seizure provisions in the Delaware Constitution reflected different and broader

protections than those guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment.”139

          In Dorsey, we continued to drive home the point that “in construing the Delaware

Constitution, this Court held that there are state constitutional dimensions to the

enforcement of the exclusionary rule.”140 For that point, we relied on our decision from a

half a century earlier, in Rickards v. State141 where we rejected the State’s argument that

the guarantees in Delaware’s Constitution against unreasonable searches and seizures did

not require illegally obtained evidence to be excluded. We held in Dorsey that:

          We conceive it the duty of the courts to protect constitutional guarantees.
          The most effective way to protect the guarantees against unreasonable search
          and seizure and compulsory self-incrimination is to exclude from evidence
          any matter obtained by a violation of them. We believe that as long as the
          [Delaware] Constitution contains the [search and seizure] guarantees to the
          citizen referred to, we have no choice but to use every means at our disposal
          to preserve those guarantees. Since it is obvious that the exclusion of such
          matters from evidence is the most practical protection, we adopt that means.
          It is no answer to say that the rule hampers the task of the prosecuting officer.
          If forced to choose between convenience to the prosecutor and a deprivation
          of constitutional guarantees to the citizen, we have in fact no choice.142

138
    Id. We observed that Chief Justice Marshall, relying on Blackstone’s Commentaries in his
opinion in Marbury v. Madison, stated that “[t]he government of the United States has been
emphatically [been] termed a government of laws, and not men,” and that it will “certainly cease
to deserve this high appellation, if the laws furnish no remedy for the violation of a vested legal
right.” Id. at 821 (citing Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137 (1 Cranch), 163 (1803)).
139
      Id. (emphasis in original).
140
      Id. at 818.
141
      77 A.2d 199 (Del. 1950).
142
  Justice Terry and Vice Chancellor Seitz, sitting by designation in Rickards, concurred in the
Majority opinion. However, Justice Harrington stated in a dissenting opinion that “[w]hen
                                                 41
          In Dorsey we reaffirmed Rickards noting that it correctly had “applied that

venerable construction [that the violation required exclusion of the illegally seized items]

of the Delaware Constitution.”143 Accordingly, in Dorsey we held:

          Both before and after Leon, in construing the Delaware Constitution, this
          Court held that there are state constitutional dimensions to the enforcement
          of the exclusionary rule. We remain convinced that there are constitutional
          dimensions to the remedy for a violation of the Delaware Constitution’s
          Declaration of Rights. Accordingly, we adhere to our prior holdings in
          Rickards and its progeny, including our most recent holding in Jones:
          exclusion is the constitutional remedy for a violation of the search and
          seizure protections set forth in Article I, Section 6 of the Delaware
          Constitution.144

          Based on that reaffirmation, the evidence from the search of Dorsey’s vehicles,

performed without probable cause, was suppressed. The same result must obtain here

regarding the evidence seized from the illegal, warrantless entry into the home. The

Majority’s holding violates our time-honored constitutional principle, adhered to through

the centuries, that the violation of Article I, § 6 requires a remedy. The Majority ignores

Dorsey and Rickards, and sets a new precedent by providing no remedy for a conceded

constitutional violation.

pertinent evidence, tending to prove guilt, is before the court, it should not be excluded on the
theory that individual rights to constitutional guarantees are superior to the rights of the people of
the State to protect from violations of the law.” Rickards, 77 A.2d at 206; Dorsey, 761 A.2d at
818 (citing Rickards, 77 A.2d at 205) (internal citations and quotations omitted).
143
      Dorsey, 761 A.2d at 820.
144
      Id. at 821.

                                                 42
          In Juliano, we reaffirmed the differing rationales between the federal exclusionary

rule and Delaware’s exclusionary rule. Focusing on our own “constitutional dimensions”

in enforcing the rule, we said:

          To answer this secondary question, the Dorsey majority surveyed the history
          of the exclusionary rule in Delaware, noting that our recognition of the rule
          in Rickards v. State came a decade before the federal exclusionary rule was
          extended to state prosecutions. The majority also observed that this Court’s
          rationale for applying the exclusionary rule in Rickards — that it is
          incumbent on our courts “to use every means at our disposal to preserve [state
          constitutional] guarantees,” the exclusion of evidence providing “the most
          practical protection” — differed from the basis for the United States Supreme
          Court’s holding in Mapp v. Ohio, which focused on the exclusionary rule’s
          deterrent effect. The majority then pointed to our holding in Mason v. State
          that there is no “good faith” exception to the enhanced statutory requirements
          for the issuance of nighttime search warrants. This history sufficed to
          persuade the Dorsey majority that “there are constitutional dimensions to the
          enforcement of the exclusionary rule,” which has remained the constitutional
          remedy — unencumbered by a “good faith” exception — for violation of
          Article I, § 6’s search-and-seizure protections.145

This recent statement leaves little doubt in my mind that the evidence from the illegal

search of the house must be suppressed under Article I, § 6.

          The Majority’s assertion — that the Inevitable Discovery Exception is not

inconsistent with Article I, § 6’s prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures —

is hard to square with our statement in Juliano that nowhere is our different constitutional

approach (vis-à-vis the U.S. Constitution) more pronounced than in the area of search and

seizure law.146         Nor does Juliano support the Majority’s adoption of the Inevitable

Discovery Exception in this context. First, Juliano did not involve a warrantless search of

145
      254 A.3d at 380 (internal citations omitted).
146
      See infra n.26.

                                                      43
a home or the exclusionary rule. Rather, as we said in Juliano, “the step that is in play

here, is whether that broader protection [of Article I, § 6] is properly applied to the police

conduct — here, pretextual motor vehicle stops . . ..”147 Second, unlike here, where Garnett

has focused on the very different rationales for the exclusionary rule under the federal and

Delaware Constitutions, we noted in Juliano that Juliano has “not offered any reasons why

pretextual stops should be treated differently under Article I, § 6 than under the Fourth

Amendment.”148 Third, as a result, in Juliano we joined the vast majority of states that

followed the Fourth Amendment law set forth in Whren v. United States,149 whereas in

Dorsey we declined to do so noting that at least twenty other states had declined to adopt a

“good faith” exception to the exclusionary rule.150 And fourth, in Juliano, we reiterated

that the “constitutional dimensions” we had recognized in Dorsey require a constitutional

remedy.

          Instead of providing a remedy, the Majority unwinds this precedent by now simply

declaring that the remedy of exclusion is an overly “generous redress.” Applying a new

cost-benefit analysis (of the type that this Court rejected in Rickards, Dorsey, and Mason),

147
      Juliano, 254 A.3d at 379.
148
      Id. at 386.
149
      517 U.S. 806 (1996).
150
    The Majority appears to completely disavow Dorsey by stating that there can now be a “good
faith” exception to the Exclusionary Rule since the officers here were not acting in bad faith when
they entered the home. They ignore that a crime scene investigator then walked all through the
house taking 40 to 50 photographs knowing that there was no warrant. Instead, they dismissively
refer to the conduct as a “benevolent entry.”

                                                44
the Majority now holds that it is perfectly fine to have no remedy for a violation of a core

constitutional right — a right that is in the center of the bullseye of Article I, § 6.

          B. The Cook Case Does Not Answer the Question

          As noted above, in Jones, this Court recognized that we could have different results

depending on which Constitution we were construing.151 It is clear that Cook considered

only federal law and did not construe Article I, § 6.

          For starters, Cook is factually distinct from this case. In Cook, police responded to

a robbery of a supermarket. Employees of the supermarket reported seeing the suspects

flee into a wooded area. The police saw three defendants and detained them because they

matched the radio descriptions. The police frisked them for weapons. During the frisk,

the police recovered money. Cook sought to suppress the evidence from the search by

challenging the basis for the frisk and arguing that it exceeded the permitted scope under

Terry v. Ohio.152

          In the case presently before this Court, the police were not investigating a particular

crime that led them to enter the house. Rather, the police were searching for the guardian

151
      See Jones, 745 A.2d at 868. There we observed, for example, that:
          Although our opinion in Quarles cites Hodari D., the Quarles case is consistent
          with our decision today because in Quarles the Court used the Fourth Amendment
          standard articulated by the United States Supreme Court in Chesternut to find that
          the police had not seized the defendant before the defendant’s flight. The Quarles
          decision was based solely on defendant’s contention that his Fourth Amendment
          rights had been violated. In Quarles the defendant did not assert a violation of
          either the statute or the Delaware Constitution both of which were relied upon by
          Jones in the Superior Court and on this appeal.
Id.
152
      392 U.S. 1 (1968).

                                                 45
of the children. The location the police searched in Garnett is a private residence, whereas

in Cook the police officer located the suspects emerging from the woods onto a street. The

search in question in Cook concerned the scope of a frisk, whereas the search in Garnett

was a warrantless search inside a private residence.

          In Cook, we held that the money would have been inevitably discovered and was

admissible.153 This was because an inventory search at the police station was the routine

procedure. Notably, the court also found that this was a reasonable frisk in the first place.

The critical point is that nowhere in this Court’s opinion in Cook did we cite Article I,

§ 6, and we referenced only cases based upon federal law. Nor did the briefs from Cook’s

1977 appeal filed in our Court cite Article I, § 6. Rather, they relied on the Fourth

Amendment. Thus, neither the parties, nor this Court, considered a separate argument

under the Delaware Constitution in Cook.

          It is clear that we did not rely on Article I, § 6 in Cook because in Jones v. State,

twenty-two years later, Chief Justice Veasey wrote: “This Court has never decided

whether, and in what situations, Article I, § 6 of the Delaware Constitution should be

interpreted to provide protections that are greater than the rights accorded citizens by the

Fourteenth Amendment as it has been interpreted by the United States Supreme Court.”154

Thus, Cook could not have decided the issue in 1977, if in Jones the scope of Article I, § 6

was an issue of first impression in 1999.155

153
      Cook, 374 A.2d at 268.
154
      Jones, 745 A.2d at 860–61 (emphasis added).
155
      See also Dorsey, 761 A.2d at 815–817.

                                               46
            Moreover, the brief reference to Cook in Jones suggests that the Inevitable

Discovery Exception would not be consistent with Article I, § 6. In a separate section

considering whether Jones’ conduct in resisting an illegal arrest could justify admission of

the evidence seized, we addressed the State’s argument that the crime of resisting even an

illegal arrest “caused the application of either the independent source or inevitable

discovery exception to the exclusionary rule.”156 We rejected that argument noting the

“significant potential for official abuse.”157 We stated that “we must consider the situation

in a manner that does not nullify important constitutional rights.”158

            Citing to U.S. Supreme Court cases in Segura159 and Nix,160 we observed in Jones

that the U.S. Supreme Court had found exceptions to the Exclusionary Rule “where the

police had an independent source for the evidence untainted by their misconduct and in

situations where the police inevitably would have discovered the evidence.”161 In this brief

discussion, which focused solely on Fourth Amendment case law, and citing to our decision

in Cook, we stated that “[w]e have held that official misconduct should not fatally taint

156
   Jones, 745 A.2d at 872. We agreed with the premise that a peace officer has the right to seize
and search any person whom the officer observes breaking the law. The search is justified as
incident to a lawful arrest.
157
      Id.
158
      Id.
159
      468 U.S. 796 (1984).
160
      467 U.S. 431 (1984).
161
      Id.

                                               47
evidence that would have been discovered absent that official misconduct,” and that “[t]he

case before us is different, however.”162

            We then emphasized that the purpose of the federal Exclusionary Rule “is to deter

future unlawful police conduct.”163 Importantly, we stated that we, however, “join the

many other state supreme courts that have concluded there are state constitutional

dimensions to the enforcement of the exclusionary rule, and specifically find here that those

dimensions are correlative to fundamental Delaware state constitutional rights and to

preserving the integrity of the judicial system in Delaware.”164 In recognition of those

“state constitutional dimensions,” we rejected the State’s inevitable discovery theory since

to accept it would be “to allow an officer, lacking reasonable suspicion to effect a stop or

search that leads to an illegal arrest,” and then, in bootstrap fashion, “contend that evidence

seized incident to that illegal arrest is admissible.”165 Accordingly, we held that “in these

circumstances the State may not use as evidence the fruits of a search incident to an illegal

arrest.”166

162
      Id. at 873.
163
      Id. (citations omitted).
164
    Id. (emphasis added) (citations omitted) (listing other states that had adopted an independent
state constitutional rule barring use of illegally seized evidence).
165
      Id.
166
      Id.

                                                48
          C.     The Other Delaware Inevitable Discovery Cases Apply Federal Law, Not
                 Article I, § 6, and None Apply it to a Warrantless Entry of a Home

          Although the State argues that “this Court has followed Cook’s adoption of the

inevitable discovery doctrine for over 40 years,” the seven cases it cites all rely on Cook or

other Fourth Amendment cases. For example, Roy v. State,167 a key Delaware case

applying the Inevitable Discovery Exception, we neither considered nor applied Article I,

§ 6. Instead, we relied on Cook v. State as authority168 in stating that the Inevitable

Discovery Exception applies to a Terry violation or an illegal arrest.169 In fact, in a footnote

in Roy, we stated that “[s]ince we have concluded that Roy’s detention violated the United

States Constitution, it is unnecessary to address his argument under the Delaware

Constitution.”170 As none of the cases that followed Cook expressly consider a separate

argument under Article I, § 6, they should be understood as cases applying only the Fourth

Amendment.171

167
      62 A.3d 1183 (Del. 2012).
168
   Id. at 1189. We also relied on Thomas v. State, 8 A.3d 1195, 1198–99 (Del. 2010) (citing to
Hardin v. State, 844 A.2d 982 (Del. 2004) and holding the drugs would have been discovered in a
search incident to arrest absent consent or compliance with II Del. C. § 1902(a)). Like Roy,
Thomas involves a Terry stop. Neither Thomas nor Hardin separately consider Article 1, § 6.
169
      Roy, 62 A.3d at 1189.
170
   Id. at 1187, n.1 (emphasis added). We concluded that the defendant would have been inevitably
discovered during proper police investigation. Roy was the only person near the scene of a
reported assault. Had the police not stopped him earlier, they would have continued to monitor
him for the few minutes until the murder victim’s body was discovered, at which point they would
have been justified to detain him and pat him down for weapons.
171
   See, e.g., Martin v. State, 433 A.2d 1025, 1031 (Del. 1981) (“This Court approved the inevitable
discovery exception in Cook v. State.”); DeShields v. State, 534 A.2d 630, 638 (Del. 1987) (citing
to Martin, Cook, and Nix); Rew v. State, 622 A.2d 1097, 1993 WL 61705 (Del. Feb. 25, 1993)
(TABLE) (citing to Nix and stating “This Court adopted the inevitable discovery exception to the
exclusionary rule in Cook v. State.”); Metelus v. State, 200 A.3d 227, 2018 WL 6523215 (Del.
                                                49
       D.      Authorities from Other States, Including Pennsylvania and New Jersey,
               Either Reject or Narrow Application of the Inevitable Discovery Exception

       As the preceding discussion illustrates, we have looked to other states, including

Pennsylvania and New Jersey, in analyzing state constitutional issues. Cases in several of

the states with analogous constitutional provisions have rejected a “lock-step” approach

with federal Fourth Amendment cases, often emphasizing the state’s constitutionally

protected privacy interests in the home. Some states have rejected the Inevitable Discovery

Exception altogether.172      Other states have limited its application or have applied

heightened burdens of proof in recognition of state-protected interests.173                 Further,

Dec. 10, 2018) (TABLE) (citing to Cook, Hardin, and Reed v. State, 89 A.3d 477, 2014 WL
1494098 (Del. Apr. 14, 2014) (TABLE) (No authority cited on Inevitable Discovery Exception));
Ways v. State, 199 A.3d 101, 106 (Del. 2018) (citing to Cook, Hardin, and Reed); Bradley v. State,
204 A.3d 112 (no discussion of broader Article I, § 6 protections); Norman v. State, 976 A.2d at
859 (same). Harris v. State, while unpublished, is one of the only cases in Delaware, that discusses
the Inevitable Discovery Exception in the context of the home. Harris v. State, 947 A.2d 1121,
2008 WL 1809097 (Del. Apr. 22, 2008) (TABLE). Harris, along with the cases it cites, makes no
mention of Article I, § 6. Further, Harris was on probation when probation officers searched his
residence with his landlord’s consent. We have recognized that the special nature of probationary
supervision justifies a departure from the usual warrant and probable cause requirements for
searches. Id. at *1. The other case is Lambert v. State, 149 A.3d 227 (Del. 2016). There is no
citation or mention of Article I, § 6 in the briefs or opinion in Lambert.
172
   See, e.g., Chest v. State, 922 N.E.2d 621, 625 n.6 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009) (noting that “[u]nder a
Fourth Amendment analysis, the likelihood the evidence would have been discovered during the
inventory search might support the admission of the evidence under the doctrine of inevitable
discovery,” but noting, however, that “inevitability has not been adopted as an exception to the
exclusionary rule under the Article I, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution.”); State v.
Winterstein, 220 P.3d 1226, 1232 (Wash. 2009). In Winterstein, the Supreme Court of Washington
observed that “the federal analysis is at odds with the plain language of article I, section 7, which
we have emphasized guarantees privacy rights with no express limitations.” Id. at 1232. It further
held that the “inevitable discovery doctrine is incompatible with article I, section 7 of the
Washington State Constitution.” Id. at 1227.
173
   For example, New York restricts the doctrine’s use to secondary evidence. See People v. Stith,
506 N.E.2d 911, 913–14 (N.Y. 1987) (observing that “[a]lthough the inevitable discovery rule has
for several years been established law in this State, our court has never applied the rule where, as
here, the evidence sought to be suppressed is the very evidence obtained in the illegal search.”);
                                                 50
intermediate appellate courts in Pennsylvania and New Jersey (discussed below) have

recognized that the Inevitable Discovery Exception is inconsistent with state constitutional

protections for privacy in the context of warrantless searches in the home.174

                 1.    Pennsylvania’s Constitution Is More Protective of the Home Than the
                       Federal Constitution

          As noted above, in Jones, we followed Pennsylvania’s lead in Commonwealth v.

Edmunds175 where the Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that Article I, § 8 of the

Pennsylvania Constitution provides broader privacy protections than the Fourth

Amendment, and that the purpose of the Exclusionary Rule is not only to deter police

misconduct, but to safeguard privacy and only issue warrants upon probable cause.

Accordingly, it rejected the Good Faith Exception to the Exclusionary Rule as being

incompatible with Article I, § 8.

          The seminal case on the Inevitable Discovery Exception in Pennsylvania is

Commonwealth v. Mason.176 In Mason, decided in 1993, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court

see also State v. Robinson, 159 A.3d 373, 386–87 (N.J. 2019) (prosecution must “prove inevitable
discovery by clear and convincing evidence, a higher standard than that imposed by federal law.”).
174
    See also State v. Ault, 724 P.2d 545, 552 (Ariz. 1986). In Ault, the Supreme Court of Arizona,
in construing the Arizona Constitution held:
          Our decision not to extend the inevitable discovery doctrine into a defendant’s
          home in this case is based on a violation of art. 2 § 8 of the Arizona Constitution
          regardless of the position of the United States Supreme Court would take on this
          issue. While our constitutional protections were generally intended to incorporate
          federal protections, they are specific in preserving the sanctity of homes and in
          creating a right of privacy.
Id. at 552; see also id. at 549 (“As a matter of Arizona law, officers may not make a warrantless
entry into a home in the absence of exigent circumstances or other necessity.”).
175
      586 A.2d 887, 897–99 (Pa. 1991).
176
      637 A.2d 251 (Pa. 1993).

                                                  51
refused to apply the Inevitable Discovery Exception (and Independent Source Doctrine)177

because Article I, § 8 of its constitution provides broader protections within the home than

the Fourth Amendment. During an undercover sting operation, officers forcefully entered

an apartment and secured drug evidence while another officer sought a search warrant. The

defendant argued that the entry of her apartment was unconstitutional absent a warrant or

exigent circumstances. The state argued that because the warrant application was in

process, the Independent Source Doctrine and Inevitable Discovery Exception applied.

       The Pennsylvania Supreme Court held the trial court erred in denying Mason’s

motion to suppress evidence seized in violation of Article I, § 8 of the Pennsylvania

Constitution. It recognized that under the Fourth Amendment, it “would be constrained”

to agree with the Commonwealth that the evidence should not be suppressed.178 However,

it held that when the police forcibly entered “a dwelling place” without a warrant or exigent

circumstances, the state violated Article I, § 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, and items

177
    The court in Mason largely focused on the Independent Source Doctrine, but later cases have
cited it favorably in the context of the Inevitable Discovery Exception. Commonwealth v. Glass,
754 A.2d 655, 660 n.6 (Pa. 2000) (“See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Mason, 535 Pa. 560, 637 A.2d
251 (1993) (“rejecting Fourth Amendment view of independent source and inevitable discovery
doctrines in cases involving warrantless entries of private dwellings”)); Commonwealth v.
Melendez, 676 A.2d 226, 230 (Pa. 1996) (Regarding Mason, “we discussed both the inevitable
discovery rule and its relation to the Pennsylvania Constitution.”). The two doctrines appear to be
referenced interchangeably in some Pennsylvania cases. See e.g., Commonwealth v. Melendez,
676 A.2d at 230 (“The inevitable discovery rule, sometimes referred to as the “independent source
rule,” is that if the prosecution can demonstrate that the evidence in question was procured from
an independent origin, such evidence is admissible.”).
178
    Mason, 637 A.2d at 254 (“Were the present case to be decided on the basis of Fourth
Amendment law, we would be constrained to agree with the Commonwealth that the evidence in
the case at bar, like the evidence in Segura, should not be suppressed.”).

                                                52
seized pursuant that violation could not be used as evidence.179 The court recognized not

only the objective of deterring police misconduct, but additionally of safeguarding a right

to privacy. It stated that “[t]he requirement that warrants shall issue only upon probable

cause means nothing if police are free to batter down the doors of persons who imagine

themselves to be secure in their own houses.”180 Accordingly, the court held that “where

police seize evidence in the absence of a warrant or exigent circumstances by forcibly

entering a dwelling place, their act constitutes a violation of Article I, Section 8 of the

Pennsylvania Constitution and items seized pursuant to their illegal conduct may not be

introduced into evidence in a subsequent criminal prosecution.”181

          In cases following Mason, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has continued to

develop and clarify the law as articulated in Mason.182 For example in Commonwealth v.

Melendez, decided three years later, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court “acknowledged that

the independent source rule had been applied in Pennsylvania,” but stated that “we

179
      Id. at 257.
180
      Id. at 256.
181
      Id. at 257.
182
   See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Melendez, 676 A.2d 226 (Pa. 1996) (clarifying Mason and holding
that warrantless entry of the home was illegal and application of Independent Source Doctrine is
proper only in the very limited circumstances where the independent source is truly independent
from both the tainted evidence and the police or investigative team that engaged in the misconduct
by which the tainted evidence was discovered). In Melendez, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, in
applying the rule as clarified, reiterated that “[g]overnment agents may not enter private dwellings
through the use of battering rams as in Mason, or by effecting illegal stops and seizures as in this
case, and secure the premises by detaining those who occupy the premises while police wait to
learn whether their application of a warrant has been approved.” Id. at 335. The court concluded
that there was no source of the evidence in question that was truly independent of either the tainted
evidence or the police who engaged in the misconduct.

                                                 53
emphasized that its application has been limited.”183 It further observed that its “past cases

have made it clear that we place a greater importance on privacy under the Pennsylvania

Constitution than have recent federal cases under the United States Constitution,” and [it]

noted that “the facts in Mason were importantly different from the facts in previous

independent sources cases in that they involved the invasion of a dwelling place.”184

            Then in 2012, the Pennsylvania Superior Court, sitting en banc, applied Mason in

the context of a dwelling in Commonwealth v. Berkheimer.185 There, state troopers sought

to execute a probation detainer late at night. The troopers banged on the door, pushing it

open.        Smelling marijuana, the troopers entered and saw drug paraphernalia and

ammunition. The troopers then applied for a search warrant and found more evidence of

marijuana. The trial court denied the suppression motion, finding that the smell of

marijuana created probable cause for the issuance of a warrant to search the house, and the

evidence inevitably would have been discovered.

            However, the en banc Superior Court reversed, holding that the troopers’ conduct

was an invasion of the defendants’ privacy interest under Article I, § 8. The Superior Court

discussed the “fundamental sanctity of the home as a sanctuary” under both the state and

federal constitutional provisions. Citing Edmunds, the Superior Court emphasized the

purpose of protecting privacy and the strict warrant requirement.

183
      676 A.2d at 333.
184
      Id.
185
      57 A.3d 171 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2012).

                                               54
          The en banc court in Berkheimer rejected the Commonwealth’s assertion of the

Inevitable Discovery Exception stating that “[w]e find this use of inevitable discovery

inconsistent with our Supreme Court’s jurisprudence and violative of the right to privacy

espoused in Article I, Section 8 of Pennsylvania’s Constitution.”186 It emphasized that the

purpose underlying the exclusionary rule in Pennsylvania “is quite distinct from the

purpose underlying the exclusionary rule under the Fourth Amendment.”187 The court then

observed that these guarantees and the role of the exclusionary rule in effecting them

“delimits the inevitable discovery exception as a remedy for violation of the warrant

requirement under Article I, Section 8,” and that “[t]he resulting limitation is significantly

more restrictive than its counterpart under federal law.”188 In Berkheimer, the court held

that the Commonwealth could avoid suppression only by demonstrating a source truly

independent from both the tainted evidence and the police who engaged in the misconduct.

But the court found that there was no independent source untainted by the illegal search

and, therefore, found that the inevitable discovery exception was not satisfied.

186
      57 A.3d at 181.
187
   Id. The court referred to Article I, § 8’s “twin aims” as “the safeguarding of privacy and the
fundamental requirement that warrants shall be issued upon probable cause.” Id.
188
   Id. at 182. The court in Berkheimer distinguished Commonwealth v. Henderson, 47 A.3d 797
(Pa. 2012), a case which modified Melendez and somewhat relaxed the independent source
requirement in a non-dwelling context. But importantly, it stated that Mason and Melendez
continue to “serve as guideposts” exemplifying that “entry of a private home in the absence of a
warrant, on the pretext of circumstances that are not demonstrably exigent, poses a substantial
invasion of privacy and may constitute police misconduct.” Berkheimer, 57 A.3d. at 188.

                                               55
          Following Berkheimer, in Commonwealth v. Perel,189 the Pennsylvania Superior

Court considered whether a warrantless search of the defendant’s private belongings in

closed containers in the bedroom of his girlfriend’s apartment fell within the narrow

confines of the Inevitable Discovery Exception. The police had probable cause and an

opportunity to acquire a warrant. The search was unconstitutional because the police

unreasonably relied on the consent of the defendant’s girlfriend, when she could not validly

consent to a search of the bags because the defendant had a reasonable expectation of

privacy in his belongings.

          The Pennsylvania Superior Court reiterated that Pennsylvania’s “inevitable

discovery jurisprudence does not mirror its federal counterpart.”190 It further elaborated

that the “inevitable discovery doctrine is not a substitute for the warrant requirement,”

stating:

          To hold that courts simply may make a post-hoc determination that sufficient
          probable cause existed at the time of an otherwise illegal search would be to
          eliminate the key safeguard that delineat[es] the dignity of the individual
          living in a free society. Such an approach patently is at odds with the strong
          notions of privacy that are carefully safeguarded by Article I, Section 8 of
          the Pennsylvania Constitution.191

Rather, the State must demonstrate that evidence “would” have been lawfully discovered

absent police misconduct, as opposed to arguing that they “could” have lawfully discovered

it.192 Because the state failed to do so, the Superior Court held that the search did not fall

189
      107 A.3d 185 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2014).
190
      Id. at 194 (citing Mason, 637 A.2d at 256).
191
      Id. at 196 (citation omitted); see also Edmunds, 586 A.2d at 899.
192
      Perel, 107 A.3d at 196.

                                                    56
“within the narrow confines of the inevitable discovery doctrine,” and remanded for a new

trial without that evidence.

               2.    New Jersey Heightens the Test for the Inevitable Discovery Exception
                     and Narrowly Applies It

       The New Jersey Supreme Court has not explicitly addressed the Inevitable

Discovery Exception in the context of Article I, ¶ 7 of its constitution. However, the New

Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division has held that the exception as applied to

warrantless searches of the home is inconsistent with state constitutional protections.

       The New Jersey Supreme Court first articulated a narrow version of the inevitable

discovery test in State v. Sugar, without clarifying whether it did so under Fourth

Amendment or Article I, ¶ 7 jurisprudence.193 Although, there is no direct citation to the

state constitutional provision, the New Jersey Supreme Court, nonetheless, imposed a

higher standard of proof and a more stringent “clear and convincing” burden on the State.

Under this higher burden, the State would have to show that “had the illegality not

occurred, it would have pursued established investigatory procedures that would have

193
    The seminal cases on the Inevitable Discovery Exception in New Jersey are part of a three-case
series on the Exclusionary Rule: State v. Sugar, 417 A.2d 474 (N.J. 1980) (breach of attorney
client privilege); State v. Sugar, 495 A.2d 90, 103 (N.J. 1985) (creating the New Jersey inevitable
discovery rules: “(1) [P]roper, normal and specific investigatory procedures would have been
pursued in order to complete the investigation of the case; (2) under all of the surrounding relevant
circumstances the pursuit of those procedures would have inevitably resulted in the discovery of
the evidence; and (3) the discovery of the evidence through the use of such procedures would have
occurred wholly independently of the discovery of such evidence by unlawful means”) [hereinafter
“Sugar II”]; and State v. Sugar, 527 A.2d 1377 (N.J. 1987) (holding the state met its burden under
a clear and convincing standard of proof and discovery of a body in a shallow grave was inevitably
discoverable because of proximity, obviousness, odor, continued surveillance, and sale of the
property).

                                                 57
inevitably resulted in the discovery of the controverted evidence, wholly apart from its

unlawful acquisition.”194

          In State v. Lashley, a panel of the New Jersey Superior Court considered whether

evidence seized from a warrantless entry of a home could be admitted under the Inevitable

Discovery Exception under Article I, ¶ 7.195 After a controlled buy, officers used a steel

ram to enter the defendant’s apartment to secure it and seized items in plain view before

obtaining a search warrant. The warrant application contained descriptions of what the

police saw during the warrantless entry. The State cited to the Fourth Amendment

Inevitable Discovery Exception and argued that the warrant provided an “independent

source” for the search which would have “inevitably” resulted in the seizure.196 The

Superior Court rejected that argument and stated:

          If we were to uphold the denial of the motion to suppress in this case, the
          police could decide to enter a home without a warrant, and without both
          probable cause and exigent circumstances, in order to “secure” the evidence,
          whenever they believe they have probable cause to obtain a search warrant.
          This rationale is inconsistent with basic principles which flow from our
          Supreme Court's interpretation of N.J. Const. art. I, par. 7, if not the Fourth
          Amendment, in a State that does not recognize the “good faith” exception to
          the warrant requirement, and requires both probable cause and exigent
          circumstances for a warrantless search of an automobile.197

194
      Sugar II, 495 A.2d at 104.
195
      State v. Lashley, 803 A.2d 139 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 2002).
196
      Id. at 142.
197
   Id. (citations omitted) Although Lashley refers to automobile cases which appear to have been
abrogated, there is no indication that the holding as to warrantless searches of a home has been
called into question.

                                                 58
The New Jersey Superior Court found the warrant invalid under the New Jersey

Constitution, because of the warrantless forced entry into a dwelling absent exigent

circumstances.198 In sum, even though the law continues to develop in Pennsylvania and

New Jersey, Mason, along with the intermediate appellate courts’ decisions in those states,

suggests that application of the Inevitable Discovery Exception would not be consistent

with state constitutional protections in the context of an illegal entry into a home.199

198
      Lashley, 803 A.2d at 143.
199
    I disagree with the Majority’s analysis of the cases. Maj. Op. at 40–42 n.105. The Majority
cites thirty-one cases (representing twenty-nine states). Twenty-eight of the cases, according to
the Majority, recognize the Inevitable Discovery Exception as a matter of state constitutional law.
Three reject the exception altogether. A more nuanced analysis of the Majority’s lengthy list of
citations (beyond “acceptance” or “rejection” of the exception) shows that there are but a few
relevant cases that align with their position.
First, courts in Arizona, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania cases have held that the Inevitable
Discovery Exception would not be compatible with the relevant state constitutional provisions in
situations involving a warrantless search of a home. See State v. Ault, 724 P.2d 545, 552 (Ariz.
1986); Commonwealth v. Mason, 637 A.2d 251, 254–257 (Pa. 1993). See also State v. Winterstein,
220 P.3d 1226, 1233 (Wash. 2009). Commonwealth v. Berkheimer, 57 A.3d 171 (Pa. Super. 2012);
Commonwealth v. Perel, 107 A.3d 185 (Pa. Super. 2014); State v. Lashley, 803 A.2d 139 (N.J.
Super. Ct. App. Div. 2002); see also State v. Ellis, 210 P.3d 144, 155–56 (Mont. 2009) (affirming
suppression of evidence observing that “not only was there no attempt to apply for a search
warrant, there was no intent to do so[,]”; that “the fundamental purpose — the raison d’etre — for
the constitutional guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures is to protect the privacy
and security of individuals and to safeguard the sanctity of the home against arbitrary invasions by
government officials”; that the police had time to obtain a warrant; that it “bears emphasizing that
in Montana ‘warrantless searches conducted inside a home are per se unreasonable, subject only
to a few specifically established and well-delineated exceptions[,]’”; and that “if this Court refuses
to scrupulously uphold and enforce the guarantees of the Fourth Amendment and Article II,
Sections 10 and 11, then, we can be assured that no other branch of government will.”); State v.
Rabon, 930 A.2d 268, 273–74 (Me. 2007) (where evidence was obtained from an initial
warrantless entry of a home, vacating convictions and holding that because probable cause did not
exist without information from the initial search, the inevitable discovery exception would not
apply and emphasizing that a person’s home has “a special place in our jurisprudence.”).
Second, rather than focusing on cases involving warrantless searches of homes, the Majority
frames the issue in the broadest way, e.g., whether a state has indicated support under its
constitution for the exception in any context. Eleven of the cited cases do not involve the
application of the Inevitable Discovery Exception in the context of a warrantless search of a home.
                                                 59
People v. Diaz, 53 P.3d 1171, 1175–76 (Colo. 2002); Commonwealth v. O’Connor, 546 N.E.2d
336, 340 (Mass. 1989); McDonald v. State, 119 S.W.3d 41, 45, 47 (Ark. 2003); State v. Ubben, 938
N.W.2d 722, 2019 WL 3317866 at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. 2019) (TABLE); State v. Cawley, 2015 WL
1540683, at *5 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. Apr. 7, 2015) (TABLE); Tartaglia v. Paine Webber, Inc.,
794 A.2d 816, 820 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 2002) (a civil case); State v. Steele, 414 P.3d 458,
462 (Or. Ct. App. 2018); State v. Sinapi, 295 A.3d 787, 807 n.14 (R.I. 2023); State v. Stewart, 867
S.E.2d 33, 37 (S.C. Ct. App. 2021). See also Hitchcock v. State, 118 S.W.3d 844, 849 (Tex. App.
2003); Ammons v. State, 770 N.E.2d 927, 935 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002). As explained above, these
cases are irrelevant because privacy in the home, as a recognized and paramount state
constitutional interest, is a factor that distinguishes cases involving homes from other cases.
Others announce that both the Federal and State constitutions protect against warrantless searches
of a home, but contain no further distinction or specific indication that the holding as to inevitable
discovery is based upon state constitutional grounds. See, e.g., State v. Thompson, 155 P.3d 724,
731 (Kan. Ct. App. 2007).
Fourth, at least ten states apply the Inevitable Discovery Exception but do so with a more stringent
test. These cases suggest that the Majority’s acceptation of a completely unlimited Inevitable
Discovery Exception deviates from them. See Smith v. State, 948 P.2d 473, 480–81 (Alaska 1997);
State v. Correa, 264 A.3d 894, 935–36 (Conn. 2021); Clayton v. State, 252 So. 3d 827, 830–31
(Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2018); State v. Phillips, 382 P.3d 133, 157 (Haw. 2016); State v. Wagoner, 24
P.3d 306, 311 (N.M. Ct. App. 2001); People v. Saldana, 906 N.Y.S.2d 775, 2009 WL 4667446, *4
(Watertown City Ct. Dec. 7, 2009) (TABLE); State v. Holly, 833 N.W.2d 15, 32 (N.D. 2013); State
v. Barnes, 96 N.E.3d 969, 975 (Ohio Ct. App. 2017); State v. Barefield, 814 S.E.2d 250, 262 (W.
Va. 2018). The Majority cites State v. Little, 604 S.W.3d 708, 720 (Mo. Ct. App. 2020) (evidence
from warrantless entry into the home was admissible where routine police procedure was shown
through seeking consent). However, the Missouri Supreme Court applies a more stringent test
under the Inevitable Discovery Exception that considers whether alternative investigations were
already in process and whether routine procedures were employed. See State v. Rutter, 93 S.W.3d
714, 726 (Mo. 2002) (evidence inadmissible under Inevitable Discovery Exception where state
presented no evidence of routine procedures while searching closet before warrant was issued).
See also Sugar II, 495 A.2d at 103.
Finally, only three states’ cases involving unconstitutional searches of homes seemingly accept the
Inevitable Discovery Exception with no limitations, consistent with the Majority’s formulation of
the exception. State v. Garner, 417 S.E.2d 502, 506, 510–11 (N.C. 1992); State v. Jackson, 882
N.W.2d 422, 440 (Wis. 2016); State v. Robinson, 164 A.3d 1002, 1007 (N.H. 2017). But Garner
is distinguishable because the North Carolina Supreme Court held “there is nothing to indicate
anywhere in the text of Article I, Section 20 any enlargement or expansion of rights beyond those
afforded in the Fourth Amendment as applied to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment.” Id. at
510. This is completely contrary to our Delaware Constitution’s historical departure from the
Fourth Amendment. Further, the Garner court did not apply the exception to “primary” evidence”
seized from the residence (pursuant to a warrant later found to be defective) and suppressed it
instead. It only applied the exception to secondary evidence found as a result of routine law
enforcement procedures. Robinson is also distinguishable as that case admitted evidence pursuant
to the Independent Source Doctrine. There, police briefly entered the defendant’s apartment
without a warrant and observed certain items. They later applied for a warrant. The evidence was
                                                 60
  VI. The Warrantless Entry Into the Home Violated Article I, § 6

       Based upon the analysis set forth above, applying the Inevitable Discovery

Exception to allow for the admission of evidence obtained from the warrantless entry of

the home violates Article I, § 6. The Majority opinion now opens the door to an erosion

of one of our most cherished constitutional rights.

 VII. Application of the Inevitable Discovery Exception Raises Serious Questions Even
      Under the Federal Constitution

       A. Reasoning that an Emergency Would Have Later Arisen Eviscerates the
          Emergency Exception

       Admission of evidence from the home is questionable even under the Fourth

Amendment. Relying on cases construing the Fourth Amendment, the State argues that a

warrant was not required because the officers eventually would have discovered the body.

The trial court reasoned that (i) either the situation would have ripened into an emergency

justifying entry under the Emergency Exception or (ii) the mounting evidence would have

led to the likelihood of a warrant being applied for and approval.

       However, as to the first reason, admitting evidence under the theory that an

emergency eventually would have been “inevitable,” would eviscerate the Emergency

Exception. This is essentially an end-run around the Emergency Exception.

found to have been properly admitted only after a determination that the warrant established
probable cause even with references to the tainted evidence excised.
In sum, although the Majority looks far and wide across the nation for support of its position, only
one or two cases line up with their position. This diversion is unnecessary in any event as one
need not look beyond our Delaware cases (Jones, Dorsey, Mason, and Rickards) which control
here and support the Dissent’s view.

                                                61
          B. The Problems with Hypothetical Search Warrants Even Under the Fourth
             Amendment

          The second avenue — that the hypothetical warrant would have been obtained — is

an end-run around the warrant requirement and the Exigent Circumstances and Community

Caretaking Exceptions.

          First, both constitutions require a finding of probable cause.      The Inevitable

Discovery Exception is not a substitute for getting a warrant based upon probable cause.

Here, the police had time to comply with the warrant requirement, but chose to proceed

without a warrant.

          Second, the notion that police may ignore the search warrant requirement based

upon their own determination that probable cause exists flies in the face of both the Fourth

Amendment and Article I, § 6 and eliminates the vitally important role of the neutral and

detached magistrate. As the U.S. Supreme Court stated in Johnson v. United States:

          The point of the Fourth Amendment, which often is not grasped by zealous
          officers, is not that it denies law enforcement the support of the usual
          inferences which reasonable men draw from evidence. Its protection consists
          in requiring that those inferences be drawn by a neutral and detached
          magistrate instead of being judged by the officer engaged in the often
          competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime. Any assumption that evidence
          sufficient to support a magistrate’s disinterested determination to issue a
          search warrant will justify the officers in making a search without a warrant
          would reduce the Amendment to a nullity and leave the people’s homes
          secure only in the discretion of police officers.200

200
      333 U.S. 10, 13–14 (1948).

                                               62
            Courts have taken various approaches in addressing the “hypothetical warrant”

theory under the Fourth Amendment. For example, in United States v. Tejada,201 Judge

Posner, writing for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, identified two

extreme approaches and landed on a “middle ground” in dealing with the hypothetical

warrant theory of inevitable discovery. The first approach of always applying inevitable

discovery “in any case in which the police have probable cause to obtain a warrant” is

objectionable. He noted that no court has embraced it because “[t]he obvious objection is

that if it were adopted the police might never bother to apply for a warrant, in order to avoid

the risk that the application would be denied.”202 The other extreme of only applying

inevitable discovery to hypothetical search warrants where the police were in the process

of obtaining a warrant “would be equally untenable” as it would confer a windfall on

defendants by excluding evidence where there is little need to engage in speculation.203

            Judge Posner’s middle ground is to “require the government, if it wants to use the

doctrine of inevitable discovery to excuse its failure to have obtained a search warrant, to

prove that a warrant would certainly, and not merely probably, have been issued had it been

applied for.”204 He reasoned that “[a] requirement of sureness — of some approach to

certainty — preserves the incentive of police to seek warrants where warrants are required

201
      524 F.3d 809 (7th Cir. 2008).
202
      Id. at 813.
203
      Id.
204
      Tejada, 524 F.3d at 813.

                                                63
without punishing harmless mistakes excessively.”205

            In Tejada, the Seventh Circuit affirmed the denial of defendant’s motion to suppress

where exigent circumstances justified the arrest of the defendant in his home without a

warrant. The court ruled that the officers could open the cabinet to the entertainment center

as part of the search incident to arrest.206 They could also search a blue travel bag found in

the entertainment center under the Inevitable Discovery Exception. The officers knew the

blue bag contained cocaine. But the court held that the agents did not need to unzip a bag

found inside the blue bag in order to protect themselves or prevent the destruction of

evidence.

            Nevertheless, applying the middle ground approach, again, as a matter of Fourth

Amendment law, the court found that “inevitable discovery [had] been shown.”207 It

reasoned that the police unquestionably were lawfully in the apartment, and were

unquestionably entitled to open the cabinet in the entertainment center since the defendant

could have made a lunge for the entertainment center. And there in the plain view was the

blue bag which they knew contained cocaine as one of the agents had posed as a buyer for

the cocaine in a parking lot nearby. The court reasoned that there was not “even the shadow

of a doubt that had they applied for a warrant to search the bag, knowing what they knew,

the warrant would have been issued.”208

205
      Id.
206
   Id. The defendant was arrested lawfully even though the arrest took place in his home and the
police did not have a warrant due to the exigent circumstances. Tejada, 524 A.3d at 811.
207
      Id. at 813.
208
      Id.

                                                 64
          Significantly for our purposes, the Seventh Circuit distinguished those facts from

the following scenario where police barge into a home without a warrant:

          The case is remote from one in which the police, having probable cause to
          search a person’s house, barge in and search without benefit of a warrant and
          defend their conduct by invoking inevitable discovery. If that defense
          prevailed, the requirement of obtaining a warrant to search a person’s home
          would be out the window. The requirement of obtaining a warrant to search
          inside a container, when the container is known to contain contraband or
          other evidence of crime, is far from the core of the Fourth Amendment; as
          this case illustrates, there is a diminished risk of error or fabrication.209

          Here, that window, in my view, is now wide open. Although others may view this

case as a small encroachment which is justifiable given the facts, it is these “stealthy

encroachments” that open the door to a broader deterioration of our cherished rights and

fundamental liberties.210

          C.     Courts Applying the Inevitable Discovery Exception Have Required That
                 Some Steps Be Taken In Applying for the Warrant Before the Search or
                 Seizure or that the Police Were Following a Routine Procedure

          Many federal appellate courts that have decided to apply the Inevitable Discovery

Exception to a prospective warrant, require that at least some steps to have been taken to

obtain the warrant.211 Here, that was not the case. In U.S. v. Souza, the Tenth Circuit

stated,

          While the inevitable discovery exception does not apply in situations where
          the government’s only argument is that it had probable cause for the search,

209
      Id. at 813–14.
210
   See Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. at 443, 454 (1971) (“It is the duty of courts to be
watchful for the constitutional rights of the citizen, and against any stealthy encroachments
thereon.”).
211
      See, e.g., U.S. v. Souza, 223 F.3d 1197, 1205–06 (10th Cir. 2000).

                                                  65
          the doctrine may apply where, in addition to the existence of probable cause,
          the police had taken steps in an attempt to obtain a search warrant.212

In citing the test of the Second Circuit in U.S. v. Cabassa,213 the court in Souza utilized a

four factor test of: (1) how far along in the process of obtaining a warrant officers were;

(2) “the strength of the showing of probable cause at the time the search occurred;” (3)

“whether a warrant was ultimately obtained, albeit after the illegal entry;” and (4) evidence

that officers searched without a warrant because they were worried about whether the

warrant would be granted.214 The officers here did not take any steps to obtain a warrant

for the residence prior to the illegal entrance.

          The Delaware Superior Court has considered the Inevitable Discovery Exception’s

application to warrants and, like these federal courts, has distinguished between situations

where warrants were in the process of being applied for at the time of the illegal search,

and those where warrants were merely prospective.215 Generally, unless the warrant was

212
      Id. at 1203.
213
      62 F.3d 470 (2d Cir. 1995).
214
      Souza, 223 F.3d at 1204 (citing Cabassa, 62 F.3d at 473, & n.2, 473–74).
215
    See State v. Preston, 2016 WL 5903002, at *5 (Del. Super. Sept. 27, 2016) (finding inevitable
discovery applied where officers towed a vehicle while a search warrant was in the process of
being obtained); State v. Lambert, 2015 WL 3897810, at *7 (Del. Super. June 22, 2015), aff’d, 149
A.3d 227 (Del. 2016) (distinguishing prospective warrants from ones being applied for at the time
of the illegal search); State v. Harris, 642 A.2d 1242, 1251 (Del. Super. 1993) (holding testimony
from officer saying he “would have obtained search warrant” was not enough for application of
inevitable discovery where there was no evidence of a process of preparing a warrant). In Lambert,
the court discussed that the protection from unreasonable search and seizures stems from statutes,
Article I, § 6, and the Fourth Amendment, but did not discuss the broader protections under Article
I, § 6 beyond that. Lambert, 2015 WL 3897810, at *6. The court then relied on Cook, Martin,
Hardin, and Roy, which, as noted above, were decided under the Fourth Amendment and not
Article I, § 6. It found that “[a]ll the facts supporting the warrant application had already been
compiled and submitted to the Justice of the Peace.” Id. at *7. In fact, there were two pending
search warrants. The Superior Court observed that “[t]his case is markedly different than the cases
                                                 66
in the process of being applied for, the Inevitable Discovery Exception did not apply.216

          The concern is that the application of the doctrine would discourage officers from

applying for a warrant, particularly like the situation here where there was ample time to

obtain a warrant. The Supreme Court of North Dakota has ruled that the Inevitable

Discovery Exception did not apply when an officer testified that he would have applied for

a warrant later in the day after the police had earlier relied on a defective warrant.217 In so

ruling, the court stated that “[w]e decline to apply the inevitable–discovery rule in this case

because its application would render the warrant protections of the Fourth Amendment

meaningless.”218 The court added:

          We have said that the inevitable–discovery doctrine may not be applied to
          encourage shortcuts by law–enforcement officials which eliminate a neutral
          and detached magistrate’s probable cause determination. Application of the
          inevitable–discovery doctrine in this case would encourage law–enforcement
          shortcuts whenever evidence may be more readily obtained by unlawful
          means – a result at odds with the purpose of the exclusionary rule to deter
          police from obtaining evidence in an illegal manner.219

relied upon by the Defendant where police conducted a search without even attempting to obtain
a warrant, only to later (1) acquire an after-the-fact warrant as means to justify the earlier search;
or (2) argue that if they had in fact applied for a warrant before conducting the search, they would
have been granted one.” Id.
216
   Lambert, 2015 WL 3897810 at *7. Notwithstanding these lines of cases, the Majority now says
that application of the Inevitable Discovery Exception is not limited to situations where routine
police investigatory procedures are in progress.
217
      State v. Handtmann, 437 N.W.2d 830, 836, 838 (N.D. 1989).
218
      Id. at 838.
219
      Id. (citing State v. Johnson, 301 N.W.2d 625, 629 (N.D. 1981)).

                                                 67
Therefore, even if we accept the Fourth Amendment’s rationale, which is less protective

than Article I, § 6, allowing inevitable discovery in warrant cases cuts at the very heart of

the Fourth Amendment.220

            The Sixth Circuit in U.S. v. Griffin ruled that intent to apply for a warrant, even in

the case where probable cause existed and where a warrant was eventually granted, did not

justify application of the Inevitable Discovery Exception.221 Although Griffin was decided

before Nix, it provides instructive analysis on the policy rationale underlying the Fourth

Amendment. There, officers went to the defendant’s home while other officers went to

obtain a search warrant. The officers had probable cause, but when they got to the home,

the warrant had neither been applied for nor granted. They nonetheless searched the

residence. The search occurred at 5:00 p.m. and the warrant was granted at 9:00 p.m. In

justifying the warrantless search, the officers stated they were worried about disposal of

narcotics. The Court in Griffin rejected that excuse:

            We hold that absent any of the narrowly limited exceptions to the search
            warrant requirement, police who believe they have probable cause to search
            cannot enter a home without a warrant merely because they plan
            subsequently to get one. The assertion by police (after an illegal entry and
            after finding evidence of crime) that the discovery was ‘inevitable’ because
            they planned to get a search warrant and had sent an officer on such a
            mission, would as a practical matter be beyond judicial review. Any other
            view would tend in actual practice to emasculate the search warrant
            requirement of the Fourth Amendment.222

220
      Id.
221
   502 F.2d 959, 961 (6th Cir. 1974); See also U.S. v. Quinney, 583 F.3d 891, 894–95 (6th Cir.
2009).
222
      Id. at 961 (citing Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347, 357 (1967)).

                                                   68
          The Inevitable Discovery Exception is more often applied in non-home settings,

where saturation searches are going on, or where routine or standardized procedures are

involved.223 For example, in United States v. Bradley,224 the Third Circuit recognized that

inventory searches of an impounded vehicle “are now a well-defined exception to the

warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment.”225             There, the defendant moved to

suppress cocaine that was in a backpack that was in plain view when the trunk of the

impounded car was opened. Although the court stated that it “seem[ed] probable that the

police would have discovered the cocaine in an inventory search,” the Third Circuit,

nevertheless, remanded the case because “more information on police procedures —

including protocols for the conduct of an inventory search and the scope of an officer’s

discretion during such a search — is likely needed before making a final determination on

inevitable discovery.”226

          In Martin v. State, this Court determined that a combination of the possibility of a

warrant, a hotel manager saying he would have given permission to search the room, and

the fact that the police were conducting a “saturation investigation[,]”227 was enough for

223
      See Ways, 199 A.3d at 106 n.13.
224
      959 F.3d 551 (3d Cir. 2020).
225
   Id. at 557 (citation omitted). But see Commonwealth v. Alexander, 243 A.3d 177 (Pa. 2020)
(holding that warrantless vehicle searches require both probable cause and exigent circumstances
under the Pennsylvania Constitution); State v. Ingram, 914 N.W.2d 794 (Iowa 2018) (holding that
an unconsented-to warrantless search of a bag during an inventory search of a vehicle violated the
Iowa Constitution.).
226
      Id. at 558.
227
   433 A.2d 1025, 1032 (Del. 1981) (explaining a “saturation investigation” is where officers
“might be expected as a matter of course to make an unusually thorough investigation utilizing
more available avenues or techniques than they ordinarily might.”) (citing Stephen H. LaCount &
                                               69
the Inevitable Discovery Exception to apply.228 In Martin, as in Nix, there was specific

evidence of the nature of the investigation that police were conducting.229 Martin relies on

Cook, which as I have explained, relies on the Fourth Amendment and not on Article I,

§ 6. Notwithstanding these lines of cases, the Majority now says that no routine or

standardized procedure is required. Instead, the Inevitable Discovery Exception, according

to the Majority, is not so limited.

          Garnett argues that “[t]here is no record of any standard operating procedures which,

if followed, would have resulted in police entering the home under the emergency

doctrine.”230 The trial court does not explain exactly how the probable cause and nexus

requirements would have been met and what crime the police would have been

investigating. The basic point of a warrant is to obtain judicial approval by a neutral

magistrate before entry into the home. In sum, it is highly questionable as to whether the

evidence was properly admitted even under the less protective Fourth Amendment.

                          VIII. Garnett’s Confession Was Properly Admitted

          Finally, I would affirm the trial court’s denial of Garnett’s motion to suppress his

confession for three reasons. First, Garnett was lawfully arrested231 and was lawfully in

Anthony J. Girese, The “Inevitable Discovery” Rule: An Evolving Exception to the Constitutional
Exclusionary Rule, 40 Alb. L. Rev. 483, 495 (1976)).
228
      Martin, 433 A.2d at 1031–32.
229
      Id. at 1032.
230
      Opening Br. at 7.
231
    The lawfulness of Garnett’s arrest distinguishes the facts before this Court from the case he
relies upon, United States v. Vasquez De Reyes, 149 F.3d 192 (3d Cir. 1998). There, the Third
Circuit declined to apply the Inevitable Discovery Exception to a statement because the court
found that the statement was made as a result of an illegal stop. Id. at 196.

                                                70
custody when he gave the statement. Second, Garnett has not challenged the voluntariness

of his statement.232 Third, after an evidentiary hearing, the trial court determined that his

statement was not tainted by the illegal search. There is no clear error preventing us from

adopting the trial court’s factual findings following the evidentiary hearing.

          As to the first point, because the police had probable cause to arrest Garnett at the

Wawa, his arrest was lawful. When officers asked for his name, he gave a name that was

not his and admitted to doing so. As a result, the police lawfully arrested him for criminal

impersonation, and lawfully transported him back to the police station.233 In addition,

Garnett was under suspicion for grabbing the neck of the child.

          As to the second point, the trial judge found that “there was no coercion by the

officers and his statements came of his own free will.”234 The court also found that “Garnett

was advised of his constitutional rights and all Miranda procedural safeguards were

232
      See also Lashley, 803 A.2d at 145. In Lashley, the New Jersey Superior Court ruled as follows:
           We find no basis for disturbing the admission of defendant’s statements based on
          his assertion that it was part of a “deal” he made and involuntary. Defendant does
          not expressly assert that the illegal entry and seizure of evidence (and a reversal of
          the denial of the motion to suppress) itself affects the voluntariness or admissibility
          of his statement which was introduced into evidence. However, one of the
          statements admits prior distribution as well as his activities on October 20, 1998.
          We do not conclude that the statement is inadmissible, in whole or in part,
          particularly because there is no challenge to the legality of defendant’s arrest.
          However, we believe that the admissibility of the statements at the retrial and their
          impact on the convictions for events occurring before October 20, 1998 should be
          developed before the trial judge after hearing arguments from both parties.”
          (citations omitted)).
Id.
233
      Opening Br. at 5.
234
      Garnett II, at *3.

                                                    71
followed.”235 He “clearly waived such rights”236 and that finding has not been challenged

on appeal. The judge expressly found that no evidence from the search of the home was

used during the interview.

            As to the third point, there was no taint from the illegal entry of the home. Garnett

argues that the interview was delayed because of the search at the home, and that it was

tainted by the officers’ statement that they went “out to the house.” I disagree. The trial

court expressly found that the “timing of Garnett’s statement would have changed at most

minimally, if at all.”237 Although near the beginning of the interview the officers told

Garnett they had been out to the house, and that they wanted to know what led to Garnett

going to the Wawa with the children, that is all they said about the house. Without any

additional details, that statement does not taint the confession that followed.

            In fact, Garnett himself was the person who first brought up the body in the house,

when he initially denied any involvement in Ms. Hill’s injuries. Only when confronted

with some of Ms. Hill’s diary entries, did Garnett change his story. The officers had legally

235
      Id.
236
      Id. The trial court elaborated on this finding observing that:
            Near the beginning of the interrogation, Garnett quickly indicated to the officers
            that he wanted to tell them a story. The officers did not lie about any part of the
            case, and furthermore they did not mention any evidence found at 32 Willis Road,
            including Ms. Hill’s body. There were no threats by the officers during the
            questioning, and no evidence was presented to this Court that Garnett faced
            ‘extended periods of detention without food.’ In addition, there were no promises
            made by the detectives to Garnett, and no inducements of any kind. Thus, the Court
            deems the statement voluntary, and that Garnett waived his constitutional rights
            voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently.
Id.
237
      Garnett II, at *6.

                                                    72
obtained the diary which they found in his backpack. The relevant facts, as found by the

trial court included the following account:

            As mentioned supra, Garnett’s statement began at 2:00 p.m. on the same day
            he was arrested for criminal impersonation. The questioning was conducted
            by two detectives, Detective Mullaney and Detective Chris Bumgarner. At
            the beginning, the detectives asked Garnett general questions regarding his
            identity. Shortly after the beginning of the interrogation, Detective Mullaney
            stated that he wanted Garnett to tell them what led to his walking to the Wawa
            with the three children in the early morning hours, and he also told Garnett
            that officers had been to 32 Willis Road. Garnett responded that he wanted
            to tell the detectives a “story.” He stated that he had come home and had
            found Ms. Hill’s dead body, but that he had played no role in her death and
            had been shocked by it.

            Subsequently, the detectives told Garnett that a journal found on his person
            following his arrest, which belonged to Ms. Hill, indicated potential trouble
            with the relationship. Approximately an hour into the interview, Detective
            Bumgarner pleaded with Garnett “do the right thing.” Garnett then admitted
            that he “did do that shit . . . [that he] lost [his] temper for real . . . [and] [he]
            got mad and [he] choked her.”238

The trial court determined that “[n]o evidence from the illegal search was used by the

officers to confront Garnett,” but that “[t]here was evidence used, i.e., Ms. Hill’s journal,

that had been lawfully obtained from Garnett’s person prior to the illegal search, and in

that regard, attenuated from it.”239 Further, “it was Garnett who first disclosed that he was

aware of the evidence.”240 Accordingly, the trial court found that “[t]he officers’ use of the

journal, specifically, its illumination of the relationship issues between Garnett and Ms.

Hill, could be deemed a ‘precipitating cause’ of his admissions.”241

238
      Id. at *2.
239
      Id at *8.
240
      Id.
241
      Id.

                                                     73
          My review of the video of Garnett’s statement convinces me that the trial court’s

determination is correct, i.e., that it was the diary, which was lawfully obtained,242 which

prompted his confession, not the reference to the officers being “out to the house.” In other

words, it was an act of free will, unaffected by the initial illegality. If the confession was

the fruit of anything, it was the fruit of a lawful arrest and the lawfully obtained diary.

Therefore, I believe that the statement was admissible.

                                          IX. Conclusion

          In conclusion, I respectfully dissent. I would affirm the denial of the motion to

suppress as to Garnett’s confession, reverse as to the evidence found in the house, and

remand for retrial. As we stated in Wheeler v. State:

          [T]he principles laid down in this [O]pinion affect the very essence of
          constitutional liberty and security. They reach further than the concrete form
          of the case before the court . . . ; they apply to all invasions on the part of the
          government and its employe[e]s of the sanctity of a [person's] home and the
          privacies of life. There is always a temptation in criminal cases to let the end
          justify the means, but as guardians of the Constitution, we must resist that
          temptation.243

          The case before us today is a difficult one. But protection of our Delaware

Constitutional rights requires us to look beyond the hard facts of this case, in order that our

freedoms and liberties may be preserved for future generations. No matter how much the

Majority warns that it is “mindful of the risk” that its opinion could open the door to

242
   Jones, 745 A.2d at 872 (Del. 1999) (recognizing the search incident to arrest exception, “A
peace officer has the right to seize and search any person whom the officer observes breaking the
law. The search is justified as incident to a lawful arrest.”). The admissibility of the diary has not
been challenged.
243
      Wheeler v. State, 135 A.3d 282, 307 (Del. 2016) (citation omitted).

                                                  74
encouraging the bypass of important constitutional restraints, I take no comfort in its hope

that its opinion will always be read and understood so narrowly. Rather, the Majority

opinion should sound alarm bells. The Majority has now declared that evidence may be

admitted if obtained when: the police open a door to a home and peer inside (with a

flashlight if needed) and look around; they then see something they believe to be illegal

(drugs, or a firearm perhaps); and they go inside and gather evidence to use at a trial against

the home’s occupant. The evidence is then admissible so long as the State can convince

the trial court that there was some hypothetical basis upon which the evidence would have

eventually been found by the police. Further, the hypothetical basis upon which the

evidence eventually would be found need not be the product of a routine or standardized

procedure. Nor is it required that another police investigatory procedure be in progress at

the time of the illegal entry. Although the result the Majority achieves here may be

perceived as a just result given the facts of this case, the precedent it sets for future

generations, and its erosion of a fundamental core constitutional right, will outlast this case.

Our Court is the last avenue of resort for protection of our state constitutionally-based

freedoms and liberties. There is no higher reviewing tribunal that can address an asserted

violation of them — not even the United States Supreme Court. The buck stops at our

doorstep.

                                              75