Office of the Attorney General
SLIP OPINION
| AG number: 1009 | Style: Shadler vs. State of Florida |
| Jurisdiction: Florida Supreme Court | Date issued: January 6, 2000 |
State driver's license division status as law enforcement agency The state Division of Driver Licenses is an essential component of Florida's law enforcement efforts, and therefore evidence found as a result of erroneous information provided by the division cannot be used in a criminal prosecution, the Florida Supreme Court held. The sharply divided court ruled 4-3 that the exclusionary rule applies to errors committed by the division. A sheriff's deputy found contraband when he searched Stanley Shadler after a computerized check of division records showed that Shadler's license had been suspended. A trial judge correctly ruled that the contraband could not be used as evidence because the error was made by a "law enforcement" agency - the division. The case hinged on whether the agency is to be considered a part of law enforcement or simply an administrative agency. The dissent concluded that the division "is quite unmistakably an administrative agency," and so the exclusionary rule should not apply. The majority, however, said the rule does apply and should prompt the division to be more accurate with its records. "(W)e conclude that the exclusion of evidence in cases such as the one at bar will surely serve to encourage accurate record-keeping of driver's license information. The exclusionary rule is perhaps the only means by which the judiciary can help to ensure the accuracy of records and information compiled by the Department of Highway Safety and its divisions that routinely provide records to Florida's police and sheriff's departments. Because the Department of Highway Safety is responsible for the related law enforcement functions of agency record-keeping and monitoring traffic offenses and crime on the state's highways, there is an institutional obligation as well as a direct mechanism for feedback from fellow employees to communicate the effect of the exclusionary rule. Surely, the Department of Highway Safety, above all others, will consistently strive to see that no mistakes are made and that no citizen is wrongfully subjected to an arrest or search predicated upon a mistake. That is, after all, the net effect of our ruling, to recognize that the government had no right, because of a mistake by the Department of Highway Safety, to seize and search one of its citizens. In the end, the government is discouraged from making such mistakes, and is only deprived of what it had no right to in the first instance," Justice Anstead wrote for the court. |