MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
WOODLOCK, District Judge.
Robert Goodrich moves to suppress physical evidence seized as a result of searches he argues were in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. He contends that the warrantless “inventory search” of the car he had been driving, conducted by the Swampscott Police Department after arresting him, was an investigative effort prohibited by the Fourth Amendment. He contends further that the subsequent search — to which he formally consented— of a bag found in the trunk of the car during the inventory search, is invalid as the fruit of the earlier search.
Following an evidentiary hearing, I will grant the motion to suppress on grounds that the inventory search was impermissible and that the search of the bag was tainted by it.
I. Findings of Fact
On September 7, 1999, Robert Goodrich was arrested at the VFW Hall in Swamp-scott, Massachusetts, by officers from the Swampscott Police Department acting pursuant to outstanding warrants for armed robbery. Officer Tim Cassidy
had surv-eilled the VFW Hall because Goodrich’s wife worked there. After seeing Goodrich drive up, park in the VFW lot,
and enter the Hall, Officer Cassidy called for other officers to assist in Goodrich’s arrest. At that time, he was informed that the car Goodrich was driving belonged to Goodrich’s sister. Shortly thereafter, Sergeant Cassidy and Officers Delano and Waters arrived at the VFW hall. Waters and Delano entered the VFW Hall and arrested Goodrich, while Officer Cassidy and Sergeant Cassidy attempted to enter by the side doorway, discovered that it was locked, and initially remained outside at the side doorway.
After Goodrich was apprehended, Officer Cassidy entered the VFW Hall and searched the bathroom, where he found Goodrich’s jacket. Officer Cassidy searched elsewhere in the VFW Hall hoping to find the gun with which Goodrich had allegedly committed the armed robbery.
Officer Waters transported Goodrich back to the Police Station, where he was given his Miranda rights and booked. Meanwhile, Officer Cassidy and Sergeant Cassidy remained behind, obtained keys to the car, and began a search of it.
The evidence is muddled about how the officers obtained the keys to the car to gain entrance to the trunk. Sergeant Cas-sidy testified that he thought Goodrich’s wife came outside into the parking lot and gave him the keys, perhaps on the request of the police. Officer Cassidy had no memory of how the keys were acquired.
According to Goodrich’s wife, after Goodrich was handcuffed but while he was still in the YFW Hall, she asked him for his keys, and he attempted to pass them to her, but they dropped to the floor. She testified that Sergeant Cassidy then picked them up and, upon her request, removed her house keys and gave them to her. Sergeant Cassidy testified that he believed he never entered the VFW Hall.
Given Sergeant Cassidy’s memory that Mrs. Goodrich provided him with the keys, and Mrs. Goodrich’s memory that Sergeant Cassidy retrieved the keys off the floor when her husband attempted to pass them to her, I find at a minimum that the police took the car keys from Mrs. Goodrich, the person to whom they knew the keys had been or were being entrusted, in order to conduct a search of the vehicle.
During the car search, Sergeant Cassidy discovered a duffel bag in the trunk. He called the station on the radio to discuss with Lieutenant Chadwell whether or not a warrant would be required to search the trunk and open the duffel bag found there.
Sergeant Cassidy told Chadwell that “[t]he trunk is open, there’s a bag in there that’s zippered closed and I do not want to jeopardize what’s in it. If you get my meaning.” During that conversation, Chadwell suggested to Sergeant Cassidy that he believed that Cassidy could continue the search without a warrant pursuant to the Department’s Inventory/Towing policy. Officer Waters then communicated that Goodrich, who was within hearing range of their conversation, had stated that there was a gun in the duffel bag in the trunk.
Lieutenant Chadwell offered some alternative theories to justify opening the bag, but concluded that Sergeant Cassidy ought to bring the bag in to be opened in the station. Sergeant Cassidy removed the duffel bag from the trunk of the ear and waited for the tow truck to arrive.
During the search of the car, Sergeant Cassidy had ordered Mrs. Goodrich to stay in the VFW Hall. At some point, she was permitted to come out and was told that the car was going to be towed. She did not ask if she could take custody of the car because Sergeant Cassidy told her it was going to be towed and because she didn’t know she had the right to do so while the police investigation was underway. But she did complain that she would have trouble affording the tow charge. She also asked for permission to retrieve her sister-in-law’s baby-seat from the car, which was allowed. The police entrusted to her the task of informing her sister-in-law, the car’s registered owner, that the vehicle had been impounded.
After the car had been towed, Sergeant and Officer Cassidy returned with the duffel bag to the station, where Goodrich gave written consent to search his property. They opened the bag and found a handgun.
II. The Validity of the Impoundment and Subsequent Inventory Search
As a general proposition, and subject to a number of exceptions, police may
conduct searches only pursuant to a valid warrant. The Supreme Court has held that one such exception allows police to conduct an “inventory” of the contents of a car when they validly impound the vehicle.
Colorado v. Bertine,
479 U.S. 367, 371, 107 S.Ct. 738, 93 L.Ed.2d 739 (1987);
South Dakota v. Opperman,
428 U.S. 364, 367-68, 96 S.Ct. 3092, 49 L.Ed.2d 1000 (1976). So long as the inventory is not a pretext to disguise an impermissible evidentiary search and is conducted pursuant to reasonable standard procedures designed to serve some interest other than collecting evidence of criminal wrongdoing, it is permitted.
See Bertine,
479 U.S. at 375, 107 S.Ct. 738;
United States v. Ramos-Morales,
981 F.2d 625, 626 (1st Cir.1992).
In this case, the precise question is not whether an inventory search may be conducted when the police have a car towed, but the antecedent question under what circumstances the police may seize and tow the car in the first place.
See United States v. Duguay,
93 F.3d 346, 351 (7th Cir.1996)(“the decision to impound (the ‘seizure’) is properly analyzed as distinct from the decision to inventory (the ‘search’)”).
Pursuant to their “community care-taking” function, the police have the authority to impound or tow a car that is endangering the public or is itself endangered.
See United States v. Rodriguez-Morales,
929 F.2d 780, 785 (1st Cir.1991);
see also, South Dakota v. Opperman,
428 U.S. 364, 368, 96 S.Ct. 3092, 49 L.Ed.2d 1000 (1976). The Fourth Amendment provides no direct prohibition of such a seizure, so long as the “procedure employed (and its implementation) is reasonable” and there is a “strong noninvestigatory justification” for the seizure.
Id.
The need for a noninvestigatory purpose and reasonable procedures to justify a warrantless seizure and inventory search was reemphasized by the Supreme Court in
Bertine,
479 U.S. at 375, 107 S.Ct. 738.
Goodrich argues that the police had no legitimate noninvestigatory purpose for removing his car because it was legally parked in a private lot and his wife could have driven it away or arranged to have it removed. A review of the caselaw supports the view that what distinguishes a permissible from an impermissible seizure of a legally parked car is whether the police had reason to believe that someone was available who could be entrusted with the car.
In
United States v. Pappas,
735 F.2d 1232, 1234 (10th Cir.1984), the Tenth Circuit held that it was proper to suppress the fruits of the inventory search of a car towed when it was legally parked and when there was present “a young lady friend ... who, if asked, might well have been able to take the car .... ”
Id.
The court acknowledged
United States v. Staller,
616 F.2d 1284 (5th Cir.1980), which held that “[t]he fact that a car is legally parked ... does not necessarily negate the need to take the vehicle into protective custody.”
Id.
at 1289-90. However,
Pap-pas
distinguished
Staller
on grounds that in
Staller
“the automobile’s owner, who was from out of state ... had no friend or relative available to take care of his car as his only traveling companion had also been arrested.”
Id.
The court further noted that
“Opperman
cannot be used to justify the automatic inventory of every car upon the arrest of its owner. The justifications for the rule are too carefully crafted for this to be the intent.”
Pappas,
735 F.2d at 1234.
In
United States v. Zapata,
18 F.3d 971 (1st Cir.1994), the First Circuit held that a seizure of a car parked legally in a rest area was proper. The court made note of the fact that “all the relevant criteria are satisfied” when the car would have to be impounded because it was unregistered and uninsured and so could not be lawfully driven by anyone.
Id.
at 978.
In
United States v. Duguay,
93 F.3d 346 (7th Cir.1996), the Seventh Circuit, through a majority opinion written by Judge Skinner of this court sitting by designation, held that a policy of routinely towing cars when the driver was arrested was constitutionally infirm. The
Duguay
court may have diverged from First Circuit law when it held that protecting the car from vandalism or theft is not a constitutionally valid reason for towing.
Id.
at 352-53.
However, it appears to have been on common ground when it noted that “impoundment based solely on an ar-restee’s status as a driver, owner, or passenger is irrational and inconsistent with ‘caretaking’ functions [because it ignores] whether another person could have removed the car and readily eliminated any traffic congestion, parking violation, or road hazard.”
Id.
at 353.
These cases suggest that as a general proposition a reasonable standard procedure for towing and impoundment may insulate an individual decision to seize a vehicle from successful constitutional challenge.
The cases recognize more particu
larly that whether an appropriate person is available to move the car is central to an evaluation of the reasonableness of any decision to seize a vehicle.
Accordingly, I conclude that a police decision to impound or tow a vehicle legally parked incident to the arrest of its driver may be permissible if made pursuant to a consistent and reasonable policy or practice that cabins the officer’s discretion in such a way that non-investigatory community caretaking functions are furthered. In addition, even in the absence of a consistent policy or practice, the particular decision of an officer to impound or tow may be permissible upon a demonstration that the seizure was a reasonable effort to fulfill non-investigatory community care-taking functions.
A. The Swampscott Police Department Tow Policy
Both
Bertine
and
Ramos-Morales
emphasized the usefulness of a “standard procedure” that is applied in a uniform fashion to prevent the threat to privacy caused by arresting officers using the seizure of a vehicle as a pretext for conducting an investigative search.
But see Rodriguez-Morales,
929 F.2d at 787 n. 3 (expressing “no opinion on whether
Bertine
requires that, where impoundment is used as a springboard, the decision to impound must be subject to set procedures”).
Such a standard procedure, however, could be quite expansive and open textured. In
Bertine,
for example, removal of the car was authorized when “[t]he driver of a vehicle is taken into custody.” 478 U.S. at 369 n. 1, 106 S.Ct. 2988. And the First Circuit validated a policy almost as broad in
Ramos-Morales.
The “unknown location” provision of the DEA policy upheld in
Ramos-Morales,
however, was apparently considered to provide the link to the noninvestigatory interests in preventing vandalism and theft and therefore distinguished it from a wholly standardless policy, which presumably could not pass constitutional muster.
The evidence I received at the suppression hearing regarding what constitutes the Swampscott Police Department’s practice regarding towing suggests considerable variety in understanding.
This variety is not surprising because a textual analysis of the policy reveals that, while the policy provides instruction of what to do when undertaking to tow, it provides no direction on when to do it. As a consequence, the policy contains no provision to cabin an officer’s decision to tow a vehicle in a fashion related to whether it would serve the interests of protecting the property of the owner or the safety of the public. Rather, the testimony of all three officers suggested that practices under the policy permitted the towing of an automobile when its driver was arrested without any meaningful connection to legitimate community caretaking purposes. The policy as described by Chadwell and the brothers Cassidy provides no significant criteria to constrain an officer’s discretion in deciding whether to tow a car. Indeed, it is arguable that the decision to tow in this situation actually violated an express condition of the written policy.
I con-
elude the policy could encourage an evi-dentiary search masquerading as an inventory search and thus result in an invasion of the suspect’s constitutionally protected rights.
Cf. United States v. Donnelly,
885 F.Supp. 300, 306-07 (D.Mass.1995). The standardless Swampscott policy provides no safe harbor from a particularized inquiry whether the community caretaking function was served or the impoundment, with its consequent inventory search, was a subterfuge for an investigatory search. I now turn to that inquiry.
B. The Decision to Seize and Search the Car
A comparison with
Ramos-Morales
is sufficient to demonstrate that when the Swampscott Police chose to perform a search of the car the defendant drove to the VFW Hall, they did so without any reason animated by concern for the owner’s property interests or the public safety generally or even for insulating themselves from future controversy concerning the car’s contents. The car was seized and “inventoried” solely for investigative purposes.
In
Ramos-Morales,
the police arrested the suspect while he was in his car, leaving no one to whom they could entrust the vehicle. The location of the car was considered “unknown” because the officers did not know what Ramos-Morales’s connection to that place was. 981 F.2d at 626. These facts distinguish
Ramos-Morales
from this case. Goodrich was not arrested in his car, but in a building where the police knew his wife was present. His car was parked in a legal parking space in the lot owned by his wife’s employer. There was no non-investigatory need for the police to tow Goodrich’s car because they could simply have permitted his wife, who was entrusted with the keys by Goodrich— and by the police with delivering property of the car’s owner, her sister-in-law — to take immediate responsibility.
The Government contends that the police had no obligation to seek out an alternate means for having the car moved from the lot to an arguably safer location. It suggests, rather, that Mrs. Goodrich had an obligation to ask for permission to take the car. I disagree. Since the police obtained the keys from her, or at least intercepted the keys being passed to her, they knew she was authorized by Goodrich to drive the car. Their knowledge of her authority as a custodian for the car and its contents is demonstrated by the fact that they entrusted Goodrich’s sister’s baby-seat into her care on her request and that they entrusted her to notify her sister-in-law that the car was towed. The police officers consistently behaved in such a way as to communicate that they recognized Mrs. Goodrich’s authority over the car and its contents, but they chose not to give her the opportunity to exercise that authority in order that they could pursue their investigatory search.
The evidence established not only that the police officers failed to suggest to Mrs. Goodrich that she could take custody of the car, but that she reasonably believed that she was not free to do so, and reasonably believed that to ask to take possession of the car would be futile. The police officers had no reason to take the keys to the car except to enable them to conduct a search of it. It is apparent that they had decided to conduct the search when they first retrieved the keys.
The officers effectively seized the automobile when they left Mrs. Goodrich with only her house keys (or when they otherwise obtained the car keys from her). At that moment, it was reasonable for Mrs. Goodrich to believe that she was not free to exert dominion over the car, nor free to remove it from the premises. She can hardly be faulted for not complaining to police officers later about what was in her view (and plainly in theirs) a completed decision by them. To insist that, in the midst of an arrest, an interested bystander be required — at pains of being held to have abandoned constitutional rights — vigorously to assert her prerogatives, even after police appear to have made their decisions negating those prerogatives plain, can do nothing but invite mischief at the scene and make the inherently difficult job of a police officer more difficult still.
The police officers’ decision to have the car searched and towed rather than leave it in Mrs. Goodrich’s possession, or parked legally in the lot while its owner came to retrieve it, violated Goodrich’s right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure. I find that the police undertook the decision to search the car by an understandable but unconstitutionally satisfied desire to obtain evidence. There was no strong non-investigatory reason for impounding the vehicle; there was no coexistence of investigatory and caretaking function. The decision to search and tow was unm-oored from any justifications securing the community caretaking function of the police. The inventory search justification was a pretext for a warrantless investiga
tive initiative in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
III. The Validity of the Consent to Search the Bag
A second exception to the rule that police may not conduct a search without a warrant arises when they have obtained permission to search from the relevant person.
See Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
412 U.S. 218, 222, 93 S.Ct. 2041, 36 L.Ed.2d 854 (1973). Thus, even if the inventory search was improper, the gun may be admissible if Goodrich’s consent to search was validly obtained. Goodrich gave written consent to search his property after Sergeant and Officer Cassidy had brought the duffel bag retrieved from the trunk back to the station. The question presented is whether that consent was invalid because it was tainted by the illegal inventory search.
When consent is relied upon as justification for a search, the government bears the burden of showing that the consent was freely and voluntarily given.
See id.
The determination of voluntariness is based on the totality of the circumstances.
See id.
at 223, 93 S.Ct. 2041. Consent is not freely given, and therefore may be rendered invalid, if a reasonable person would have believed that his or her “consent” was required by police officers or coerced.
See Florida v. Bostick,
501 U.S. 429, 437, 111 S.Ct. 2382, 115 L.Ed.2d 389 (1991). And when a person is a prisoner, the risk of coercing consent is magnified.
See U.S. v. Navedo-Colon,
996 F.2d 1337, 1338 (1st Cir.1993);
U.S. v. Watson,
423 U.S. 411, 424, 96 S.Ct. 820, 46 L.Ed.2d 598 (1976).
When consent follows an illegal act by the police — whether seizure of a person or search of property — the requirement that consent be voluntary is supplemented by a second distinct requirement: that the consent be purged of the taint of the earlier illegal act.
See Navedo-Colon,
996 F.2d at 1338. Under the “attenuation” exception to the exclusionary rule, evidence that is in some way the product of illegal police conduct may be admitted if it has become so distanced from the underlying illegal police conduct as to dissipate the taint of the illegal search or seizure.
See Wong Sun v. United States,
371 U.S. 471, 488, 83 S.Ct. 407, 9 L.Ed.2d 441 (1963).
The exclusionary rule and its exceptions seek to balance the goal of deterring police misconduct and the cost of excluding probative evidence from consideration by a jury.
See Dunaway v. New York,
442 U.S. 200, 217-18, 99 S.Ct. 2248, 60 L.Ed.2d 824 (1979);
United States v. Liss,
103 F.3d 617, 621 (7th Cir.1997). The attenuation doctrine recognizes that a “but for” test which excludes all evidence that would not have been uncovered were it not for the initial police illegality risks suppressing evidence when the connection to the illegal search is distant and the deterrence of police misconduct slight.
Brown v. Illinois,
422 U.S. 590, 599-600, 95 S.Ct. 2254, 45 L.Ed.2d 416 (1975);
see also Dunaway,
442 U.S. at 217-18, 99 S.Ct. 2248. Accordingly, the attenuation doctrine allows introduction of evidence where the causal connection has been weakened by the passage of time or by the intervention of other factors.
The Supreme Court in
Brown v. Illinois
addressed the issue whether a voluntary confession following an illegal arrest was admissible if the defendant had been read his Miranda rights prior to confessing. The Court held that giving Miranda rights prior to a confession does not per se ensure that the confession is free of the taint of the illegal arrest.
Brown,
422 U.S. at 602, 95 S.Ct. 2254. Rather, courts must evaluate the particular facts surrounding
the confession to determine whether it “is the product of a free will” such that the causal link between the arrest and the confession is broken.
Id.
at 603, 95 S.Ct. 2254. This is necessary to ensure “that the Fourth Amendment violation has not been unduly exploited.”
Id.
In analyzing whether the taint has been sufficiently diminished, the
Brown
court pointed to three factors: “the temporal proximity of the arrest and the confession, the presence of intervening circumstances, and particularly, the purpose and flagrancy of the official misconduct are all relevant.”
Id.
at 603-04, 95 S.Ct. 2254. The burden is on the government to prove that the connection between the illegal arrest and the confession has been broken.
Id.
at 604, 95 S.Ct. 2254. As a prerequisite, of course, the confession itself must be voluntary, i.e. legally obtained.
Id.
Deployment of the
Brown
factors has not been limited to confessions but has become the test of whether legally obtained evidence gained as a result of prior illegal police conduct is sufficiently attenuated from the underlying illegality in all exclusionary rule contexts.
See United States v. Pimental,
645 F.2d 85, 86 (1st Cir.1981) (applying
Brown
factors to connection between photo of car and illegal detention);
United States v. Thompson,
35 F.3d 100, 105 (2d Cir.1994)(applying
Brown
to statements made a month after illegal detention);
United States v. Seidman,
156 F.3d 542, 548-49 (4th Cir.1998)(involving consent to tape record conversation following illegal entry);
United States v. Melendez-Garcia,
28 F.3d 1046 (10th Cir.1994) (applying
Brown
factors to determine whether consent to search was tainted by illegal arrest);
U.S. v. Pena,
924 F.Supp. 1239, 1251 (D.Mass.1996)(consensual search tainted by earlier unconstitutional sweep);
State v. Hight,
781 A.2d 11 (N.H.2001)(applying
Brown
factors to consent to search following illegal motor vehicle stop).
In cases involving consensual searches, the
Brown
factors are particularly relevant because the consent to search, like the confession, is provided directly by the defendant to the police. In such cases, the taint analysis is applied as an additional assurance of the voluntariness of consent beyond the requirements of
Sehneckloth. United States v. McSwain,
29 F.3d 558, 562 (10th Cir.1994)(“The government bears the burden of proving the voluntariness of consent, and that burden is heavier when consent is given after an illegal detention”) (citation omitted);
United States v. Chavez-Villarreal,
3 F.3d 124, 127-28 (5th Cir.1993) (taint analysis turns on whether consent was “an independent act of free will”).
External conditions resulting from the illegal police conduct that make the defendant more likely to consent, such as belief that the search is inevitable, are indicative of taint. In
Chavez-Villarreal
the Fifth Circuit found that the consent to search was tainted by an illegal detention immediately preceding it because it caused the consenting party to believe “that discovery of the incriminating evidence was inevitable.”
Id.
at 128 (defendant told he could refuse to consent “but by then refusal seemed pointless”);
see United States v. Maez,
872 F.2d 1444, 1456 (10th Cir.1989) (consent tainted because police threatened to get a warrant making search inevitable).
I turn now to the three
Brown
factors for consideration in light of the evidence presented to me at the suppression hearing: the temporal proximity between the Fourth Amendment violation and the consent, the presence of intervening circumstances, and the purpose and flagrancy of the official misconduct.
Brown,
422 U.S. at 604, 95 S.Ct. 2254.
The temporal proximity of the underlying illegality and the consent is relevant to the strength of the connection between the two.
See Pena,
924 F.Supp. at 1253. The illegal search and seizure of Goodrich sister’s vehicle and the defendant’s written consent were in close temporal proximity. Though the time of the vehicle search is not recorded, only 48 minutes passed between Goodrich’s arrest and his consent, and the search occurred immediately following the arrest. Goodrich was in police custody throughout this period of time. Moreover, during this time the police made Goodrich aware of the fact that they had the bag with the gun in it.
See id.
(police “exploited” the illegality by pointing defendant to the cocaine wrapper found during the unlawful search). The close proximity of the illegality and the consent weighs heavily in favor of exclusion.
See Pena,
924 F.Supp. at 1253 (gathering cases).
Intervening circumstances that suggest the presence of an independent act of “free will” or otherwise break the chain of causation are particularly relevant to attenuation analysis. Courts “have previously relied on a subsequent release from custody, an appearance before a magistrate, discussions with a lawyer, and subsequent convictions on unrelated charges as examples of intervening circumstances that are sufficient to break the causal connection between the arrest and consent.”
United States v. Delgadillo-Velasquez,
856 F.2d 1292, 1300 (9th Cir.1988) (citations omitted). None of these intervening events exist here. And unlike
Navedo-Colon,
for example, no investigative steps independent of the improper “inventory search” are available here to provide grounds for “seeking [Goodrich’s] consent.” 996 F.2d at 1339.
The government, however, contends that advising Goodrich of his right to refuse consent and obtaining his written consent to search were intervening circumstances sufficient to purge the taint of the illegal search. Goodrich’s consent may be relevant to the legality of the subsequent search standing alone but it is not sufficient in and of itself to break the chain of causality set in motion by the improper “inventory” search.
McSwain,
29 F.3d at 562.
Moreover, I find that the circum
stances under which the consent was given suggest that it was not fully a product of independent “free will” and counsel against finding attenuation.
Prior to defendant’s giving written consent to search his car, he overheard the discussion between Officer Waters and Sergeant Cassidy. As a result, the defendant was aware that Cassidy had already searched the car and removed the bag with the gun. I find that Goodrich, knowing that the police had already seized the bag containing the gun, reasonably believed that withholding consent was pointless and as a result yielded to signing the consent. Goodrich would not have offered the information that a gun was in the bag in his trunk or given consent absent his knowledge that the police had found the bag through their impermissible search.
Finally, consideration of the purpose and flagrancy of the official conduct is relevant to the goal of preventing the police from exploiting the illegal conduct. Although the illegal search of the trunk was not flamboyantly flagrant as a Fourth Amendment violation, I do find that the decision to search the car following the arrest was clearly motivated by an unrestrained desire to find evidence despite the lack of a search warrant or probable cause. The discussions between the officers captured on the police tape indicate that the decisions made in connection with the illegal search were knowingly calculated to try to avoid the burdens and uncertainty of seeking a warrant and retroactively cleanse the evidence of its prior taint. The consent to search was requested only after Sergeant Cassidy had already discovered in the trunk a bag that he suspected contained a gun or other evidence and had removed the bag from the car. The police consistently and purposefully acted to circumvent restrictions imposed by the Fourth Amendment.
To permit the police to avoid application of the exclusionary rule by obtaining consent after the preliminaries of the search have essentially been completed and the most suspicious item identified does severe damage to the goal of deterring unconstitutional searches and seizures. “Allowing police to cleanse past illegalities through consent significantly enhances their ability to exploit these illegalities.” Note, Joseph Casaccio,
Illegally Acquired Information, Consent Searches, and Tainted Fruit,
87 Colum. L.Rev. 842, 850 (1987).
I find that all three of the
Brown
factors weigh against a finding of attenuation. I therefore hold that the written consent to search the car was not sufficiently purged of the taint of the Fourth Amendment violation and that the gun must be suppressed.
IV. Conclusion
-For the reasons stated above, I hereby GRANT the motion to suppress the physi
cal evidence obtained during the search of Goodrich’s car.