OPINION
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Joseph A. Barfield brings this interlocutory appeal of the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress.
We reverse.
ISSUE '
Whether the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress.
FACTS
Shortly before 2:00 a.m. on March 30, 2001, Sheriffs Deputy Jason Vandiver was on duty in a rural area of Warrick County when he observed Joseph Barfield drive past at a high rate of speed and without a functioning taillight. Vandiver pulled him over, with emergency lights activated on his marked car. When Vandiver exited his car and approached Barfield, he found
Vandiver considered Barfield to be unusually nervous: he kept looking at Vandi-ver in his rear view mirror, smoking cigarettes, and tapping his fingers on the door panel. Vandiver went back to Barfield’s vehicle, with Schuble at his side. Based on concern for his personal safety, Vandi-ver asked Barfield’s consent to search his car, “to make sure he didn’t have any weapons” inside; Barfield agreed. (Tr. 11). Vandiver then asked Barfield “to step out of the vehicle” and “told him” that he would “do ... a pat down search just to make sure he didn’t have any weapons on him while we searched the vehicle.” (Tr. 12).
Vandiver felt a bulge in Barfield’s back jeans pocket and “pulled [it] out to make sure what it was.” (Tr. 13). Seeing that the item was a wallet, Vandiver “set [it] on top of the car.” Id. Vandiver next felt “a bulge” on one side of Barfield’s jacket and “pulled it out and it was a soft pack of cigarettes that was partially full;” he placed “that on top of the car with the wallet.” (Tr. 14). When he felt “something like a box” on the other side of the jacket, Vandiver “reached in there and pulled it out and it was a Marlboro 100’s box.” (Tr. 14-15). Vandiver thought the “weight distribution of the pack” was strange, in that “the weight seemed to be at the bottom of the cigarette pack,” and he shook it at which point he heard “something moving around the box.” (Tr. 15). Vandiver “then opened the box” and “looked inside.” Id. He “saw a clear plastic bag that had a light colored substance in it with a twist tie sealing it.” Id.
Barfield was read his Miranda rights. The continued search of Barfield’s person revealed no weapons; nor did the search of his car. A field test on the substance in the box tested positive for methamphetamine, and Barfield was arrested. On May 10, 2001, the State charged Barfield with possession of a controlled substance, and possession with intent to distribute.
Barfield filed a motion to suppress, asserting that during “an improperly conducted protective ‘frisk’ of the Defendant for weapons during an administrative stop for traffic infractions,” the contents of the Marlboro box had been obtained in violation of his rights under the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and under Article 1, Sec. 11 of the Indiana Constitution. (App.47). At a December 6, 2001, hearing on the motion, the foregoing evidence was heard. The trial court denied Barfield’s motion.
DECISION
Barfield claims that Vandiver violated his constitutional rights in conducting a search of Barfield that exceeded the bounds of a Terry patdown for weapons and the Dickerson plain feel doctrine. We agree.
Both the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 1, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution protect the privacy and possessory interests of individuals by prohibiting unreasonable searches and seizures.
Johnson v. State,
The seizure of contraband detected during the lawful execution of a
Terry
search is permissible under the “plain feel doctrine.”
Johnson,
As Barfield correctly asserts, no testimony by Vandiver indicated that he perceived any item felt by the patdown of Barfield’s outer clothing to be a weapon. Nevertheless, he proceeded item-by-item to remove the contents within Barfield’s clothing. The State does not address the removal of Barfield’s wallet and first cigarette pack. It does argue that the “unusual weighting and movement of the contents of the Marlboro” box justified its removal from Barfield’s “pocket because it could legitimately have contained a weapon,” specifically “a razor blade or a small knife” that “could have been used against the officers as they searched [Barfield’s] vehicle.” State’s Br. at 8. However, Vandiver never testified that he thought that the Marlboro box contained a weapon.
See e.g., Granados v. State,
Vandiver did not testify to any fear that the box itself was a weapon. There were two armed officers, and a man who had agreed to the search of his car. The man’s pockets were being systematically emptied and the contents placed on the top of his car. Further, according to Vandiver’s testimony, when he felt the Marlboro box, there was no immediate perception on his part that
it was contraband.
In other words, the testimony does not support a finding that “at the time of the protective patdown,” the identity of what Vandiver felt in Barfield’s pocket “was immediately apparent to him” as being contraband.
See Johnson,
The State failed to bear its burden of proving that the seizure of the Marlboro box fell within an exception to the constitutional warrant requirement. Hence, the trial court abused its discretion in denying Barfield’s motion to suppress. Id.
We reverse.
