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100 N.C. L. Rev. F. 1 (2021-2022)

handle is hein.journals/addendum100 and id is 1 raw text is: 100 N.C. L. REV. F. 1

STATE v. CARTER AND THE NORTH CAROLINA
EXCLUSIONARY RULE*
MOLLY S. PETREY & CHRISTOPHER A. BROOK
The North Carolina Supreme Court's decision in State v. Carter stands apart
from modern federal jurisprudence in holding that Article 1, Section 20 of the
North Carolina Constitution-North Carolina's analog to the Fourth
Amendment-does not permit a good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule.
In other words, evidence collected in violation of North Carolina's constitutional
search and seizure protections is excluded from criminal proceedings, regardless
of the good faith of the judicial officials and law enforcement officers involved in
the case. In so holding, Carter exemplifies North Carolina's general approach
when interpreting state constitutional provisions with federal analogs-the
persuasive lockstep. The persuasive lockstep approach considers federal
jurisprudence highly persuasive but does not mechanically follow it, on occasion
affording more robust constitutional protections pursuant to the state
constitution. Controversial since its publication in 1988, Carter has been
increasingly criticized over the past decade, from legislative calls for its reversal
to recent North Carolina Court of Appeals opinions unpersuasively contending
that it has been superseded by statute. Though its constitutional force remains
plain for the moment, these recent developments call into question the fate of
Carter as well as the means of constitutional interpretation it represents.
INTRODUCTION      ...............................................................................  2
I. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF THE EXCLUSIONARY RULE ............ 3
II. INTERPRETING THE NORTH CAROLINA CONSTITUTION VIS-A-VIS
ANALOGOUS CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS IN GENERAL AND
INSTATE V. CARTER .................................................................. 8
A. Modes of Interpretation and North Carolina's Persuasive Lockstep
A pproach..........................................................................  9
B. The Persuasive Lockstep Exemplar: State v. Carter and Its
P rogeny  ............................................................................  12
III. THE POST-CARTER LANDSCAPE..................................................15
* © 2021 Molly S. Petrey & Christopher A. Brook.
** Molly Petrey is a staff attorney at North Carolina Prisoner Legal Services, Inc. Christopher
Brook is a partner at Patterson Harkavy LLP, having served on the North Carolina Court of Appeals
in 2019 and 2020. The authors thank Emily Coward, Andrew DeSimone, and Jonathan Holbrook for
their sage editorial feedback, which vastly improved early drafts of this Article.

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