{"id":51859,"date":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","date_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/content.findlaw-admin.com\/ability-legal\/supreme\/legal-commentary\/excluding-illegally-obtained-evidence-and-the-doctrine-of-double-effect.html"},"modified":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","modified_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","slug":"excluding-illegally-obtained-evidence-and-the-doctrine-of-double-effect","status":"publish","type":"supreme","link":"https:\/\/supreme.findlaw.com\/legal-commentary\/excluding-illegally-obtained-evidence-and-the-doctrine-of-double-effect.html","title":{"rendered":"Excluding Illegally-Obtained Evidence and the Doctrine of Double Effect"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<div class=\"wp-container-core-columns-is-layout-8f761849  fl-block-columns fl-sectionWithSidebar fl-container fl-flex fl-flex-wrap fl-gap30\">\n    \n    <div class=\"fl-page-articles   fl-block-column fl-section-main fl-section-main-full-width\">\n        <div class=\"yui-g\" id=\"leftcol-module\">\n      <!-- Right Line of Links Section -->\n      <!-- BEGIN PICTURE INSERTION -->\n      <!-- BEGIN TITLE AND AUTHOR INSERTION -->\n      <table>\n        <tr>\n\n          <td width=\"100\" rowspan=\"3\" class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/sherry-colb-archive\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https://supreme.findlaw.com/static/f/images\/writ\/sherry.colb.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Sherry F. Colb\"><\/a><\/td>\n\n          <td class=\"wititle\"><h1>Excluding Illegally-Obtained Evidence and the Doctrine of Double Effect<\/h1><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/sherry-colb-archive\" class=\"graybold\"><h2>By SHERRY F. COLB <\/h2><br><\/a><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"widate\">Wednesday, November 25, 2009<\/td>\n\n        <\/tr>\n      <\/table>\n\n<p>Every time I teach my course in criminal procedure, I am  struck by the diametrically opposed perspectives of those Justices on the  Supreme Court who have favored the suppression of evidence obtained in  violation of the Fourth Amendment, and those who have opposed it. This opposition extends beyond the Court to  the scholars and attorneys who debate about the Fourth Amendment as well. Core supporters find suppression absolutely  essential to justice, while opponents find it offensive and believe in limiting  its application as much as possible or eliminating it altogether. <\/p>\n<p>It is unusual \u2013 outside the context of religiously-tinged  subjects like abortion \u2013 to find such &#8220;pure&#8221; and unadulterated ideological  disagreement, where each side believes that the other&#8217;s position is not only  wrong but disgusting. I will suggest  here that a doctrine with religious origins \u2013 the Double Effect Doctrine, originally  promulgated by the Catholic Church and then widely applied within moral  philosophy \u2013 may help illuminate the division between the opposing camps on the  question of Fourth Amendment suppression.<\/p>\n<!-- 300x250 AD -->\n    \n  <p><strong>What is the Double  Effect Doctrine?<\/strong><\/p>\n  <p>The Doctrine of Double Effect (DDE) holds that intentionally  and directly causing harm as a means of accomplishing a positive outcome is  morally distinct from intentionally and directly bringing about the positive  outcome while knowingly causing the same harm as an undesired side effect. Whether one may permissibly bring about such  undesired effects depends upon whether they are outweighed by other, desired  effects. Such weighing or balancing of  effects, however, occurs only after we ascertain that no harm is actually intended. <\/p>\n  <p>Consider the following example. Oceania is at war with Eurasia. To help win the war, Oceania decides to bomb  a critical munitions plant in Eurasia. The Oceania  official who makes this decision knows that there are always three civilians  inside the munitions plant. He wishes  the civilians were not there, but there is no way to warn them or otherwise  evacuate the plant without alerting the enemy to activate its air defenses. The Oceania official  bombs the plant, and three civilians die.  Assume that the harm in bloodshed averted by bombing the plant is  greater than the harm inflicted by the bombing.  Many would view the official&#8217;s action as justified.<\/p>\n  <p>Now, assume that, instead, Oceania simply decides to kill  three civilians who live in an apartment located inside the plant \u2013 because the  loss of these people will demoralize the officials in charge of the Eurasia war effort and lead to a quicker end to the war  (and a corresponding substantial reduction in bloodshed). Learning that the three people are currently  inside the plant, the relevant Oceania official  decides to carry out the assassinations by bombing the building. The effort succeeds. All three civilians die.<\/p>\n  <p>The ultimate goal in both examples is the same: to disable Eurasia&#8217;s  war effort. The known outcome in loss of  life is also the same: three civilians  will die. And the method of carrying out  the project in question is the same:  bombing the munitions plant. Yet  the DDE treats these scenarios as distinct.  In the first case, the loss of life is an unintended and tragic  side-effect of the intentional destruction of property. If it were possible to destroy the plant  without killing anyone, the Oceania official  would have done so, but the loss of life, given the particular contingencies,  was unavoidably tied to the destruction of the property in question. The three civilians, then, were &#8220;collateral&#8221;  victims, rather than intended victims. <\/p>\n  <p>In the second case, by contrast, the very purpose of the  bombing was to kill the three civilians.  If there had been a known time during which the building was empty, then  the Oceania official would have <u>avoided<\/u>,  rather than <u>selected<\/u>, that time for bombing.<\/p>\n  <p>Under the DDE, the second action is morally impermissible,  while the first action is permissible (or might be, if the harm avoided by  bombing the plant truly outweighs the civilian deaths incidentally  inflicted). It is, on this theory,  simply wrong to kill three civilians deliberately, even if the killing would  accomplish a greater good \u2013 the sparing of many more innocent lives. One cannot use an innocent person \u2013 by  intentionally killing him or her \u2013 to help others survive. This is why, for example, it is morally wrong  to take a healthy person and remove his vital organs in order to distribute  them to five people who need various organs to survive.<\/p>\n  <p>According to the DDE, however, one may embark on justifiable  activities that have, as incidental effects, the infliction of harm, provided  that the harm avoided outweighs the harm inflicted. (Some theorists argue about whether this  further requirement of proportionality is properly characterized as part of the  DDE itself or a stand-alone moral requirement, but that question need not  concern us here.) Once we are no longer  acting with the intention to bring about a result, in other words, it becomes  acceptable for us to compare the consequences of acting with the consequences  of <u>not<\/u> acting (or of acting in a different manner), and to choose the  path that maximizes the beneficial consequences.<\/p>\n  <p><strong>The Fourth Amendment  Exclusionary Rule<\/strong><\/p>\n  <p>Now that I have given you a flavor of the DDE&#8217;s approach to moral  philosophy, I will describe the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule. The Fourth Amendment itself bars the  government from performing unreasonable searches and seizures. As the Supreme Court has interpreted this  prohibition, it serves to protect people&#8217;s privacy from inappropriate police  surveillance and investigation, along with protecting their liberty (from  improper arrest) and property (from unwarranted removal). When people complain of police having entered  their home without probable cause to look for evidence, they are complaining of  an &#8220;unreasonable search.&#8221;<\/p>\n  <p>If police disregard the Fourth Amendment and carry out  unreasonable searches and seizures, the victims of such actions may, in theory,  sue the police for violating their constitutional rights. But except in cases of excessive force  leading to serious injury, successful Fourth Amendment lawsuits are rare. Guilty people who have suffered Fourth  Amendment violations make unsympathetic plaintiffs, while innocent people who  have been unfairly targeted for searches and seizures typically have not  suffered sufficient damages to justify the hassle and expense of going to  court. Thus, in reality, the most common  enforcement mechanism against Fourth Amendment violations is the exclusionary  rule. <\/p>\n  <p>Under the exclusionary rule, when police violate the Fourth  Amendment and obtain evidence as a result, the victim of the violation can  suppress the evidence at his or her criminal trial. This means that prosecutors may not introduce  the illegally-obtained evidence to help prove that the defendant \u2013 whose rights  police violated to get that evidence \u2013 is guilty of the charged offense or  offenses.<\/p>\n  <p>The exclusionary rule has long been an extremely  controversial approach to motivating Fourth Amendment compliance by  police. One skeptical perspective, to  paraphrase Justice Cardozo&#8217;s language, complains that under the exclusionary  rule, the criminal goes free just because the constable has blundered. It seems outrageous, on this view, that a  police violation of the Fourth Amendment \u2013 an injustice, to be sure \u2013 should be  compounded with another injustice: the  release, without conviction and punishment, of a person who violated the  criminal law. If the suppression of  illegally-obtained evidence is enough to make the conviction of a guilty  defendant impossible, as it sometimes is, then the suppression remedy brings  about a miscarriage of justice.<\/p>\n  <p>Strong defenders of the exclusionary rule, both on and off  the Supreme Court, have taken a very different approach. Justice William J. Brennan, for example, said  the following:<\/p>\n  <p>[S]ome criminals will go free  not, in Justice (then Judge) Cardozo&#8217;s misleading epigram, &#8220;because the  constable has blundered,&#8221; but rather because official compliance with Fourth  Amendment requirements makes it more difficult to catch criminals. Understood in this way, the Amendment  directly contemplates that some reliable and incriminating evidence will be  lost to the government; therefore, it is not the exclusionary rule, but the  Amendment itself, that has imposed this cost.<a name=\"468_US_897fn2\/8ref\" id=\"468_US_897fn2\/8ref\"><\/a><\/p>\n  <p> This position holds that, in  choosing to have a Fourth Amendment, our constitutional system necessarily  accepts that limiting police investigative latitude, as a restraint on searches  and seizures does, will reduce the number of guilty people we can successfully  apprehend and punish. Stated differently,  the Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable searches and seizures carries  an understood cost: Some people who have  committed crimes will remain undiscovered and thus get away with their  offenses, because police may not do &#8220;everything it takes&#8221; to find all of the  criminals.<\/p>\n  <p>If we acknowledge that an unreasonable search or seizure  should never have taken place, as a matter of Fourth Amendment law, then \u2013 say  some defenders of exclusion \u2013 the suppression of any resulting evidence simply  restores the status quo ante that the Fourth Amendment itself  contemplated: We do not have access to  evidence that surfaced only because of police disregard for the Fourth  Amendment. Had the police acted as they  should have, we still would not have access to the evidence. In this narrative,  the exclusionary rule is not the source of the cost; rather, the constitutional  prohibition against the search or seizure is the source of the cost.<\/p>\n  <p><strong>The DDE and the  Exclusion of Evidence<\/strong><\/p>\n  <p>The DDE offers a new way of looking at the question whether  the release of guilty criminals is a cost of the exclusionary rule, or whether  it is a cost of the Fourth Amendment itself.  Most people on either side of the debate can likely agree that if police  always obeyed the dictates of the Fourth Amendment, then at least some of the  criminals we currently &#8220;catch&#8221; due to unreasonable searches and seizures would  never have been caught. That is, the  Fourth Amendment is not a cost-free privacy protection; we understand that  restraining police has the undesirable consequence of preventing some criminals  from being caught and removed from free society. Under the DDE, this does not make the Fourth  Amendment wrong, because we may legitimately decide that some level of  undetected (and unstopped) crime is worth the corresponding gain in security  and liberty that accompanies a society in which the government abides by the  Fourth Amendment. <\/p>\n  <p>When we as a society choose to restrain the police with a  Fourth Amendment, we do so with the intention of enhancing our privacy and  liberty from government incursion. We do  not <u>aim<\/u> thereby to cloak the guilt of criminals and prevent their  apprehension, but we understand that this is an incidental \u2013 undesired \u2013 effect  of the security that we seek. If we  assume that privacy and liberty for the large collective of innocent people is  worth the cost in freedom retained by some undeserving and dangerous people,  then the choice to bar unreasonable searches and seizures is a morally  defensible or justifiable choice, notwithstanding the collateral damage that it  inflicts \u2013 in the form of the failure to capture and punish guilty people. <\/p>\n  <p>One can thus think of the failure to catch and punish guilty  people as comparable to the three people who die in the first bombing of the  munitions plant: No one wants those  people to escape justice\/die, but their escape\/death is a virtually certain  (though contingent) consequence of a cost-justified decision to protect  people&#8217;s privacy\/destroy the plant.<\/p>\n  <p>Now consider the exclusionary rule. Though its application results in the same  harm contemplated by the Fourth Amendment, the harm is now direct, rather than  incidental. We are no longer prohibiting  the police from performing unreasonable searches and seizures with the <u>knowledge<\/u> that guilty people will remain free as a result; we are directly subverting the  truth-finding process in a criminal case by taking evidence that we already  have, and refusing to allow the prosecution to present that evidence to the  jury. If the defendant cannot be  prosecuted successfully as a result, then this undeserved windfall is no longer  an incidental side effect of Fourth Amendment compliance; it is the direct  effect of the exclusionary rule. Had the  violation never taken place, of course, the freedom of the undiscovered  offender would have been a side-effect of the Fourth Amendment. But it did take place, and now suppression is  a deliberate choice.<\/p>\n  <p>One important point to make here is that any serious Fourth  Amendment regime must include some enforcement mechanism. <u>Having<\/u> a Fourth Amendment does not  itself change police behavior or protect security from unreasonable searches  and seizures, unless there are consequences for violations. One kind of consequence is civil liability,  and people do sometimes successfully sue for monetary damages for Fourth  Amendment violations. If such lawsuits  had their intended effect and deterred Fourth Amendment violations, then they  too would be responsible for cloaking the misdeeds of some serious offenders  and thereby impeding the criminal prosecution and incarceration of some very  bad people. Again, however, the purpose  of deterrence would <u>not<\/u> be to shield the guilty from apprehension; the  goal would be to enhance privacy and security, and the incidental and undesired  collateral effect would be to shield the guilty. Compensating a victim of a Fourth Amendment  violation accordingly does not directly undermine justice in a criminal case;  if it impedes justice, it does so only as a side-effect of deterring future  violations.<\/p>\n  <p>The exclusionary rule is thus, from the DDE perspective,  quite different from a civil suit alternative, just as it is quite different  from the Fourth Amendment itself. It  intentionally impedes a criminal prosecution by keeping probative evidence from  a jury and does so as a <u>means<\/u> of deterring future violations. <\/p>\n  <p>If it is unjust to free a guilty person, in other words,  then the exclusionary rule directly perpetrates an injustice as a way of  maximizing privacy and liberty, just as the killing of the three civilians in  our earlier second example directly perpetrates homicide as a way of preventing  future deaths.<\/p>\n  <p><strong>A Fanciful Example to  Illustrate the Point<\/strong><\/p>\n  <p>Beyond the failure to catch and punish offenders, the Fourth  Amendment carries another foreseeable cost:  Police will sometimes fail to detect an ongoing act of violence that  would otherwise have come to light. As a  result, some people who would otherwise have been rescued from ongoing  substantial bodily harm and death will now suffer and die instead. <\/p>\n  <p>We know that this is a cost of limiting police surveillance,  and we choose to live with that cost. If  police had cameras installed in every home, they could intervene much more  effectively in ongoing domestic violence, child sexual abuse, and myriad other  criminal enterprises. Indeed, such  totalitarian surveillance might deter aspiring perpetrators from engaging in  their abhorrent criminal conduct in the first place. Notwithstanding this collateral,  unintentional, and deeply regrettable cost in foregone security from  miscreants, we still regulate and restrain police invasions of privacy.<\/p>\n  <p>Assume, however, that a police officer breaks into a home  without probable cause, on the basis of a mere &#8220;hunch&#8221; \u2013 the sort of intuition  that will ordinarily lead to inappropriate invasions of privacy and that fails  to meet the legal standards of the Fourth Amendment. After breaking in, the officer finds inside  the home a two-year-old boy who is tied to a bed and dying of dehydration and  starvation. What should the officer do,  given what she has learned?<\/p>\n  <p>It is difficult to imagine anyone arguing that the officer  should leave the house and forget what she has seen, thus allowing the toddler  to die. The right thing to do is  clear: the officer should untie the  child and bring him to a hospital for intravenous fluids and other necessary  medical intervention. The officer should  save the boy&#8217;s life. <\/p>\n  <p>Obeying the Fourth Amendment&#8217;s dictates would have been  morally justified despite the fact that it would have (incidentally and, from  the particular police officer&#8217;s perspective, unknowingly) led to the child&#8217;s  death, but that does not mean that the officer would be justified, after seeing  the child, in leaving the house and permitting him to die. Complying with the Fourth Amendment in every  case has the incidental effect of failing to rescue the child; ignoring the  child because he was found only as a result of an illegal search directly  disregards the child&#8217;s need to be rescued.  Such disregard, of course, would represent the logical conclusion of an  exclusionary rule that demanded forgoing any benefits that accrue as a result  of a Fourth Amendment violation.<\/p>\n  <p>When an adherent of the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule  argues that there is simply no difference between avoiding violations, on the  one hand, and excluding evidence obtained through violations, on the other, he  or she ignores this important insight of the DDE and suggests that leaving the  child to die would be no different from effectively deterring Fourth Amendment  violations that would have saved his life.  Such a suggestion is counter-intuitive, to say the least.<\/p>\n  <p><strong>Exclusion of Evidence  Might Still be Warranted<\/strong><\/p>\n  <p>I have argued here that the DDE can be used to make a case  for distinguishing between the Fourth Amendment and the exclusionary rule. Importantly, I want to make clear that I am <u>not<\/u> arguing that the exclusionary rule is an unjustifiable way of enforcing the  Fourth Amendment&#8217;s prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures. <\/p>\n  <p>Unlike intentionally killing three people, intentionally  releasing a guilty person could conceivably be justifiable as a means of  serving a greater good. In other words,  it may be worse to release a guilty person on purpose, through exclusion of  evidence, than it is to do so as an incidental effect of the Fourth Amendment,  but it may nonetheless be morally and legally justifiable to do so. Indeed, using the release of guilty people as  a means of motivating police to respect privacy in the future might be just  what the doctor ordered, if other remedies have not shown much promise over the  years.<\/p>\n  <p>Significantly, even the more conservative wing of the  current Supreme Court has not (yet) said that we should abolish the  exclusionary rule altogether. Therefore,  even some who find the impact of exclusion extremely costly (and who \u2013  consistent with the DDE \u2013 understand those costs to be properly placed at the  feet of the exclusionary rule, rather than the Fourth Amendment) feel it is  sometimes cost-justified. By contrast,  there is likely no one on the current (or any past) Supreme Court who would  advocate for a rule that prohibited police from saving a child after having  illegally entered a home without probable cause and a warrant. <\/p>\n  <p>The DDE thus helps us better understand the opposing  perspectives on the exclusion of evidence and the costs of that exclusion. It does not, however, dictate an answer to  the bottom-line questions of (1) whether it is appropriate to have an  exclusionary rule at all and (2) whether, if we do have an exclusionary rule,  it should be as broad as possible or \u2013 as a majority of the current Supreme  Court favors \u2013 it should be a &#8220;last resort&#8221; that we apply sparingly to only the  most flagrant and deliberate abuses.<\/p>\n  <p class=\"authorfoot\">\n<a name=\"bio\"><\/a>Sherry F. Colb, a FindLaw columnist, is Professor  of Law and Charles Evans Hughes Scholar at Cornell Law   School. Her book, <i>When Sex Counts:  Making Babies and Making Law<\/i>, is available on Amazon.<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n <\/div>\n<div class=\"was-this-helpful\">\n    <div\n            class=\"was-this-helpful__question-container\"\n            aria-labelledby=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n            role=\"group\"\n    >\n        <span\n                id=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__question fl-text-lg-bold\"\n        >Was this helpful?<\/span>\n        <button\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__button fl-text-sm\"\n                aria-label=\"Yes\"\n                value=\"yes\"\n        >\n            <span class=\"was-this-helpful__button-text fl-text-bold\">Yes<\/span>\n            <i class=\"was-this-helpful__button-icon\">\n                <svg width=\"22\" height=\"22\" viewBox=\"0 0 22 22\" fill=\"none\" xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\">\n                    <g id=\"thumbs-up\" clip-path=\"url(#clip0_604_3418)\">\n           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class=\"was-this-helpful__feedback-form-title\" tabindex=\"0\">Why was this not helpful?<\/legend>\n                    <div class=\"was-this-helpful__choose-option-message\" role=\"status\">\n                        <p class=\"was-this-helpful__choose-option-message-text\"><\/p>\n                    <\/div>\n                    <div class=\"fl-radio-button-field fl-flex was-this-helpful__feedback-form-title\">\n                        <input\n                                id=\"was-this-helpful__radio-button--missing-info\"\n                                class=\"fl-radio-button-field-input\"\n                                type=\"radio\"\n                                name=\"negative-feedback\"\n                                value=\"Missing Information\"\n                        >\n                        <label\n                                class=\"fl-radio-button-field-label fl-text-sm was-this-helpful__radio-label\"\n                                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class=\"fl-radio-button-field fl-flex was-this-helpful__feedback-form-title\">\n                        <input\n                                id=\"was-this-helpful__radio-button--dated\"\n                                class=\"fl-radio-button-field-input\"\n                                type=\"radio\"\n                                name=\"negative-feedback\"\n                                value=\"Out of date\"\n                        >\n                        <label\n                                class=\"fl-radio-button-field-label fl-text-sm was-this-helpful__radio-label\"\n                                for=\"was-this-helpful__radio-button--dated\"\n                        >Out of date<\/label>\n                    <\/div>\n                    <div class=\"fl-radio-button-field fl-flex was-this-helpful__feedback-form-title\">\n                        <input\n                                id=\"was-this-helpful__radio-button--negative-other\"\n                                class=\"fl-radio-button-field-input\"\n                                type=\"radio\"\n                                name=\"negative-feedback\"\n                                value=\"Other\"\n                        >\n                        <label\n                                class=\"fl-radio-button-field-label fl-text-sm was-this-helpful__radio-label\"\n                                for=\"was-this-helpful__radio-button--negative-other\"\n                        >Other<\/label>\n                    <\/div>\n                <\/fieldset>\n            <\/div>\n            <div class=\"was-this-helpful__form-buttons-container\">\n                <button\n                    class=\"was-this-helpful__feedback-button was-this-helpful__feedback-button--positive at-feedback-submit fl-button secondary\"\n                    type=\"submit\"\n                >\n                    <span class=\"fl-button-content\">Submit<\/span>\n                    <i\n                        class=\"fa fa-angle-right medium\"\n                        aria-hidden=\"true\"\n                    ><\/i>\n                <\/button>\n                <button\n                    class=\"was-this-helpful__feedback-button was-this-helpful__feedback-button--cancel fl-button primary disabled\"\n                    type=\"reset\"\n                >\n                    <span class=\"fl-button-content\">Cancel<\/span>\n                    <i\n                        class=\"fa fa-times-circle medium\"\n                        aria-hidden=\"true\"\n                    ><\/i>\n                <\/button>\n            <\/div>\n        <\/form>\n    <\/div>\n    <div class=\"was-this-helpful__thank-you-message\" role=\"status\">\n        <i class=\"was-this-helpful__thank-you-message-icon fa fa-check\"><\/i>\n        <p class=\"was-this-helpful__thank-you-message-text\" aria-live=\"polite\"><\/p>\n    <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n\n    <\/div>\n    \n    <div class=\"fl-block-column fl-section-sidebar\">\n        \n    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