OPINION ANNOUNCING JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
This is an appeal from an Order of the Superior Court affirming Appellant’s sentence for Possession and Possession With Intent to Deliver narcotics. The issue in this appeal is whether evidence seized from Appellant should be suppressed. Because we find it should, we reverse.
The facts of this case as found by the trial court established that on July 18, 1994, at approximately 1:45 a.m., K-9 Officer Terry Dawley of the Erie Police Department was alone, on routine patrol in the area of 23rd and German Streets with his dog “Cujo.” N.T. 6/26/95. This area was known to Officer *475 Dawley as a high crime, high drug-trafficking area. Officer Dawley noticed three black males on the porch of the Gateway Day Care Center. Recognizing those individuals, he recalled that there was an outstanding arrest warrant for one of the three, a Mr. Ronnie Beason. He recognized the other two as Appellant and Mr. Terry Jones. As he watched the three men, they began walking in an easterly direction on East 23rd Street. Officer Dawley then yelled for them to stop in order to apprehend Mr. Beason. When they complied, the Officer told Mr. Beason that he had a warrant for him and directed him to lie down. Officer Dawley then looked at Appellant, standing approximately three feet from him, and noticed a bulge in his front left pocket. In order to allay his concerns for safety, Officer Dawley patted Appellant’s front and felt what he believed, and Appellant confirmed, to be money in his front pocket. Officer Dawley then patted Appellant’s back pockets and felt what he believed was a Lifesavers Holes container. He shined a flashlight down into the pocket and noticed a Lifesavers Holes container which appeared, and was later determined to contain, 3.37 grams of crack cocaine.
Following arrest, Appellant filed a Motion to Suppress which was denied by the trial court.
On August 8, 1995, following a non-jury trial, Appellant was convicted of Possession and Possession With Intent to Deliver 3.37 grams of crack cocaine. The Superior Court affirmed. Appellant then filed a Petition for Allowance of Appeal with this Court claiming the seizure of crack cocaine from his back pocket exceeded the scope of the search permitted under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and Article I, Section 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution. We granted allocatur to determine whether the Superior Court properly affirmed the trial court’s denial of Appellant’s Motion to Suppress.
The standard of review for the denial of a motion to suppress evidence is firmly established. When deciding a motion to suppress, the trial court must make findings of fact and conclusions of law determining whether evidence was
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obtained in violation of a defendant’s rights.
Commonwealth v. Hubble,
The first step in our analysis is to determine whether Officer Dawley was justified in conducting a Terry frisk of the Appellant.
In
Commonwealth v. Hicks,
[e]ven if probable cause to arrest is absent, the police officer may still legitimately seize a person ... and conduct a limited search of the individual’s outer clothing in an attempt to discover the presence of weapons which might be used to endanger the safety of the police officer and others, if the police officer observes unusual and suspicious conduct on the part or the individual seized which leads him to reasonably conclude that criminal activity may be afoot and that the person with whom he is dealing may be armed and dangerous.
Hicks,
... on the ground that it protects a police officer’s safety. The United States Supreme Court was careful to point out, *477 however, in both Terry and the companion case of Sibron v. New York,392 U.S. 40 ,88 S.Ct. 1889 ,20 L.Ed.2d 917 (1968), that in the case of a self-protective search for weapons, a police officer must be able to point to particular facts from which he could reasonably infer that the individual was armed and dangerous.
Pinney,
Applying the stop and frisk concept outlined by Terry, and adopted by this Court in Hicks, to the instant case, we note that Officer Dawley was alone, late at night, with three individuals. Further, in order to effectuate the arrest of Ronnie Beason, Officer Dawley had to turn his back on Appellant. At that point, the officer, noticing a bulge in Appellant’s front pants pocket, feared for his safety. On these facts, we find Officer Dawley reasonably concluded that Appellant was armed, and criminal activity was afoot, and therefore conducted a lawful pat-down search for weapons. 1
Having determined Officer Dawley was justified in performing a pat-down search of Appellant for his own safety, we next examine Appellant’s contention that Officer Dawley exceeded the scope of a permissive pat-down. Under Pennsylvania caselaw, the police may conduct “a limited search of an individual’s outer clothing in an attempt to discover the presence of weapons which may be used to endanger the safety of police or others.”
Commonwealth v. Hicks,
In Pinney, police officers approached three individuals who matched the description for suspects in a recent homicide. After the three men produced identification inconsistent with the names of the murder suspects, one of the officers conducted a pat-down search and felt a bulge in defendant’s pocket which the officer testified might have been a small automatic weapon. After the officer ordered the defendant to empty his pocket, the bulge was revealed to be a plastic bag containing marijuana and six foil packets containing diamphetamine tablets. The Commonwealth argued that the search of the defendant fell under the ambit of Terry. Concluding that the police officer’s search of appellant was unjustified from its inception, the Court in Pinney stated:
[w]e need not address the second issue which Terry v. Ohio would otherwise present whether the police officer’s further examination of the plastic bag and foil wrappers, after it had become obvious that this “bulge” in appellant’s coat was not a weapon, was unconstitutional in that the search was not reasonably related in scope to the circumstances which justified the governmental intrusion in the first place. See Commonwealth v. Freeman,222 Pa.Super. 178 ,293 A.2d 84 , 86 (1972).
Pinney,
We have long accepted the principles of
Terry
and its companion case
Sibron,
that if the protective search goes beyond that which is necessary to determine whether the suspect is armed, it is no longer valid, and its fruits will be suppressed.
Terry,
In the case at bar, Officer Dawley’s pat-down of Appellant immediately relieved his fear that Appellant was not carrying a weapon. At the suppression hearing, Officer Dawley described his reaction to seeing a bulge in Appellant’s pocket:
A. I patted the bulge, and it felt like money. I asked Durrell [the Appellant] if it was money, and he said it was.
Q. All right. After that what did you do?
A. I continued to pat Durell. [sic] I went around to the rear of him and patted his back pockets. In his right rear pocket I felt what I believed to be a Lifesavers Holes bottle.
N.T. June 26,1995 at 8.
This testimony reveals that while patting down Appellant’s outer garments, before shining his flashlight into Appellant’s back pocket, Officer Dawley ascertained that Appellant was not armed and dangerous. Therefore, once Officer Dawley’s pat-down revealed Appellant was not carrying a weapon, any continued search exceeded the scope authorized under Terry. Thus, Officer Dawley’s extended search, and subsequent seizure of the contraband from Appellant’s back pocket cannot be justified under Te'rry.
Our inquiry does not end here however, because the Commonwealth also argues that the contraband was visible to Officer Dawley from a lawful vantage point, and was thus lawfully seized under the “plain view” exception. We disagree. Under the “plain view” doctrine “it has long been settled that objects falling in the plain view of an officer who has a right to be in the position to have that view are subject
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to seizure and may be introduced as evidence.”
Commonwealth v. Davenport,
In
Texas v. Brown,
... “plain view” provides grounds for seizure of an item when an officer’s access to an object has some prior justification under the Fourth Amendment. “Plain view” is perhaps better understood, therefore, not as an independent “exception” to the warrant clause, but simply as an exten *481 sion of whatever the prior justification for an officer’s “access to an object” may be.
Therefore, under the Fourth Amendment, an officer may not seize contraband in plain view unless a prior justification provided the officer a lawful “right of access to the item.”
Id.
at 738,
The New York Court of Appeals also provided useful insight for the case at bar when it articulated that the plain view doctrine “establishes an exception to the requirement of a warrant not to search for an item, but to seize it.”
People v. Diaz,
In the present case, the facts do not justify use of the plain view exception to validate Officer Dawley’s seizure of the contraband. Officer Dawley admitted during the suppression hearing that his flashlight-aided search of Appellant’s back pocket occurred after his pat-down of Appellant revealed no evidence of weapons. Therefore, shining a flashlight into Appellant’s back pocket extended the search beyond that authorized by Terry. The Commonwealth impermissibly relies on the plain view exception to justify a search, when it was the search that was the predicate in putting the object into plain view. Thus, there was no independent justification to extend the search, i.e. shine the flashlight, once the officer determined that Appellant was unarmed.
However, the Commonwealth argues that Officer Dawley’s use of his flashlight to illuminate the contraband does not prevent it from being in plain view. They cite
Commonwealth v. Burton,
*483
In the present case, Officer Dawley completed the search for weapons authorized under
Terry
before using his flashlight. The subsequent act of shining the flashlight was part and parcel of the search that put the contraband into plain view. Thus, the Commonwealth seeks to use the plain view doctrine, not to validate seizing an already exposed object, but to justify an extended search and subsequent seizure of contraband discovered in the course of a
Terry
stop. Since the plain view doctrine cannot justify extending a warrantless search,
Brown,
The Commonwealth also argues that the contraband was lawfully obtained under the “plain feel” exception recognized in
Minnesota v. Dickerson,
In
Dickerson,
the U.S. Supreme Court legitimized the seizure of contraband discovered during the scope of a
Terry
frisk where the officer feels an object whose contour or mass makes its criminal character immediately apparent.
Id.
at 375-76,
... the officer’s continued exploration of respondent’s pocket after having concluded that it contained no weapon was unrelated to “[t]he sole justification of the search [under Terry:] ... the protection of the police officer and others nearby.”392 U.S., at 29 ,88 S.Ct., at 1884 . It therefore amounted to the sort of evidentiary search that Terry expressly refused to authorize ...
Id.
at 378,
Therefore, the
Dickerson
court illustrated that a search which in any way manipulates the contents of a defendant’s pocket is
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not authorized under
Terry. Dickerson,
The
Dickerson
Court also noted that analogy to the plain view doctrine was appropriate, citing
Arizona v. Hicks,
[although the police were lawfully on the premises, they obtained probable cause to believe that the stereo equipment was contraband only after moving the equipment to permit officers to read its serial numbers. The subsequent seizure of the equipment could not be justified by the plain-view doctrine, this Court explained, because the incriminating character of the stereo equipment was not immediately apparent; rather, probable cause to believe that the equipment was stolen arose only as a result of a further search— the moving of the equipment — that was not authorized by a search warrant____ The facts of this case are very similar. Although the officer was lawfully in a position to feel the lump in respondent’s pocket, because Terry entitled him to place his hands upon respondent’s jacket ... the officer determined that the item was contraband only after conducting a further search, one not authorized by Terry or any other exception to the warrant requirement.
Id.
at 378-79,
The Superior Court recently adopted the “plain feel” doctrine in
In the Interest of B.C.,
This court now recognizes the seizure of non-threatening contraband detected by an officer’s “plain feel” during a pat-down for weapons if the officer is lawfully in a position to *485 detect the presence of contraband, the incriminating nature of the contraband is immediately apparent and the officer has a lawful right of access to the object. Interest of B.C., supra at 305,683 A.2d at 925 (citing Minnesota v. Dickerson).
Fink,
We agree with the Superior Court’s adoption of the plain feel doctrine originally articulated in
Minnesota v. Dickerson,
Here, the record indicates that after Officer Dawley felt Appellant’s back pocket, he shined his flashlight into the *486 pocket to illuminate its contents. Clearly, the criminal nature of its contents was not immediately apparent. Therefore, since the officer needed to conduct some further search to determine the incriminating character of the contraband, the search and subsequent seizure was not justified under the plain feel doctrine, and was thus unlawful. Since the evidence was seized as a result of an illegal search, it must be suppressed. Accordingly, the Judgment of Sentence is reversed, and a new trial is granted.
Notes
. Officer Dawley recognized Appellant from a recent drug arrest. The Commonwealth asks this Court to follow the Superior Court’s lead in
Commonwealth v. Patterson,
