Court Opinion

ID: 9642274
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-22 17:53:29.729229+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:10:45.442596
License: Public Domain

GREENE, Chief Judge,
concurring.
I concur in all respects with the principal opinion, but wish to add the following comment.
In my opinion, police conduct in connection with the Brandhorst break-in was illegal, outrageous, and in violation of the doctrine of fundamental fairness mandated by the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
What we have here is a police officer committing a crime (burglary, or at least criminal trespass), as was admitted by the assistant attorney general who argued the case before us, on behalf of the state, aided and abetted by two habitual criminals whom the police were paying to help commit the crime, in hopes of getting evidence to show that the defendant, by acting as a supposed lookout, was also guilty of the crime. If such conduct was approved by the courts, it is difficult to imagine under what circumstances they would ever say to the police, “You have gone too far.”
Police action, as was taken here, breeds disrespect for law enforcement officers, erodes public confidence in our system of justice, and, if condoned, could lead to police excesses that cannot be tolerated in a democracy. Most excesses in police conduct are, no doubt, motivated by frustration over the inability of the police to completely satisfy the demands of the public to “get the criminals off the streets”, but that inability, when it occurs, does not justify breaking the law by those who are sworn to uphold it.
Hopefully, our decision in this case will result in guidelines being formulated by the police department in question, limiting police conduct to such activities as are approved by law.