Rocco v. State
This text of 601 S.E.2d 189 (Rocco v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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This appeal from convictions for drug offenses challenges the trial court’s denial of a motion to suppress evidence. We find that the motion was properly denied and thus affirm the convictions.
“Where the evidence on a motion to suppress is uncontroverted and credibility is not an issue, we review the evidence and the application of the law thereto de novo, construing all evidence in favor [901]*901of the trial court’s judgment.”1 In this case, a sheriffs investigator was the only witness at the motion to suppress hearing. His testimony has not been controverted and his credibility has not been challenged, nor has any of the pertinent documentary evidence in the record been contested. We therefore must construe the evidence in favor of the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress.
So construed, the evidence shows that in March 2001, William Rocco was arrested for distributing methamphetamine and possessing marijuana.2 On March 16, 2001, a magistrate court judge issued a bond order which allowed Rocco to be released from custody by posting bond of $26,000. The bond order contained various conditions, including Rocco’s waiver of his Fourth Amendment rights. The order provided: “Defendant waives his/her 4th Amendment right as to search and seizure under U. S. and GA Constitutions.” Rocco signed the order below the judge’s signature and was subsequently released from jail.
In early August 2001, while Rocco was free on bond, a sheriffs investigator received information that Rocco was involved in the drug trade. Based on that tip, the investigator, who apparently was not familiar with Rocco, searched the sheriffs criminal justice information system for data on local arrests. From that search the investigator learned about Rocco’s March 2001 arrest for drug offenses. The investigator then called the district attorney’s office, which informed him that Rocco had been released on bond and, as a condition of his release, had waived his Fourth Amendment rights.
On August 10, 2001, the investigator and five other officers went to Rocco’s home. The investigator knocked on the back door, which was open. He announced that he was a police officer and went into the home. About a minute later a woman came in through the back door. He told her he was a police officer and asked where Rocco was. She said Rocco was right behind her. Just then the investigator heard officers outside the home command someone to stop for the police, followed by the sound of running.
The investigator then went outside. He discovered that Rocco had fled on foot, and one of the officers had seen him throw a container holding ten grams of methamphetamine to the ground. Rocco was quickly apprehended and placed under arrest. The officers then [902]*902searched his residence, finding, among other things, a marijuana cigarette. Rocco admitted to the investigator that everything in the house belonged to him.
Rocco was once again charged with drug offenses, this time for possession of both methamphetamine and marijuana. The charges arising from the August 2001 incident proceeded separately from the previous similar charges of March 2001.3 In this ease, Rocco filed a motion to suppress evidence of the drugs found on August 10, but the trial court denied the motion. Rocco then waived his right to a jury trial and was tried by the court sitting without a jury. The trial court found Rocco guilty of both charged offenses and imposed a five-year sentence for the methamphetamine possession and a twelve-month sentence for the marijuana possession. Rocco appeals, challenging the denial of his motion to suppress evidence.
1. Rocco argues that the trial court erred in failing to find that the Fourth Amendment waiver in the bond order was unconstitutional. The argument is without merit.
Although the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits excessive bail, it does not grant an unqualified right to bail in any particular case. Consequently, the Supreme Court has sustained the constitutionality of a federal statute prohibiting the granting of bail to persons charged with certain serious felonies if it could be shown by clear and convincing evidence that no conditions of their release would assure the safety of the public.4
Similarly, in Georgia we have held that bonds in both felony and misdemeanor cases may contain conditions so long as the conditions are reasonable under the facts and circumstances of the case.5 This holding is consistent with the principle that where a person charged with a crime is released on bail prior to trial, he remains in the constructive custody of the law.6
In the instant case, Rocco was originally arrested in March 2001 after officers executing a search warrant at his home allegedly found illegal drugs.7 Under those circumstances, we believe that the imposition of a Fourth Amendment waiver as a condition of Rocco’s release on bond is reasonable. Such a condition is not arbitrary or capricious, but is a reasonable exercise of the court’s function of balancing the [903]*903rights of the accused with public safety interests.8 The trial court therefore did not err in upholding the Fourth Amendment waiver as a reasonable condition in the bond order.
2. Rocco contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress because the officers lacked a good faith basis for conducting the search pursuant to the Fourth Amendment waiver. As noted by Rocco and the state, there does not appear to be any case law on the precise issue of a search conducted pursuant to such a waiver in a bond order, but there is case law arising from the analogous situation of a search conducted pursuant to a Fourth Amendment waiver contained in a probationary sentence. We agree with the parties that those probation cases provide guidance for the instant case, and we hereby find that a search conducted pursuant to a waiver of Fourth Amendment rights in a bond order should be subject to the same requirements as a search made pursuant to such a waiver in a probationary sentence.
A search conducted pursuant to a special condition of probation need not be made as a routine incident of the probation supervision process. The rule is that there must be some conduct reasonably suggestive of criminal activity to trigger the search. It can be prompted by a good-faith suspicion, arising from routine police investigative work. Accordingly as a general rule, the police can search a probationer, who is subject to such a special condition of probation, at any time, day or night, and with or without a warrant, provided there exists a reasonable or good-faith suspicion for search, that is, the police must not merely be acting in bad faith or in an arbitrary and capricious manner (such as searching to harass probationer).9
In the instant case, there is no evidence that the investigator or the other officers acted in bad faith or in an arbitrary and capricious manner or solely to harass Rocco. On the contrary, the evidence establishes that the officers acted reasonably in investigating information that Rocco, who was on bail for drug offenses, was still involved in drug activity. Under such circumstances, the investigator and other officers were fully authorized to go to Rocco’s house to investigate the matter.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
601 S.E.2d 189, 267 Ga. App. 900, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 2089, 2004 Ga. App. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rocco-v-state-gactapp-2004.