Lead Opinion
Thе Commonwealth appeals from an order entered in the Superior Court suppressing drugs seized from between the defendant’s buttocks pursuant to a search incident to his arrest following a lawful automobile stop. During the
1. Background. In reviewing a decision on a motion to suppress, “we accept the judge’s subsidiary findings of fact absеnt clear error ‘but conduct an independent review of his ultimate findings and conclusions of law.’ ” Commonwealth v. Scott,
We summarize the judge’s findings of fact, supplemented by uncontested testimony adduced at the evidentiary hearing. See Commonwealth v. Garcia,
At various times during early November, Detective Desma-rais observed the tan Explorer parked in the common parking lot of the apartment building at 189 Walker Street, and on one occasion saw the defendant enter the vehicle and leave. Detective Desmarais checked the registration plate of the Explorer and learned that it was registered to an individual (not the defendant) who resided at 189 Walker Street. Additionally, Detective Desmarais confirmed that the defendant’s driver’s license indicated 189 Walker Street as his residential address.
At about 1:20 p.m., on November 12, 2009, Detective Desma-rais, who was in plain clothes and driving an unmarked vehicle, saw the defendant drive by in the Explorer. He followed the defendant and then passed surveillance off to a Detective Lavoie, who simultaneously was conducting a drug investigation connected to the Fetherston Avenue location. Detective Lavoie reported to Detective Desmarais that the defendant had pulled into the driveway at 22 Fetherston Avenue and appeared to make a cellular telephone call while inside the vehicle. Minutes later a woman came out of the residence and went over to the Explorer. After a brief conversation, the two went inside. About four to six minutes later, the defendant emerged from the residence and departed in the Explorer.
Detective Desmarais followed the defendant back to 189 Walker Street. Another police cruiser, driven by Lieutenant James Hodgdon, pulled into the lot. As the officers got out of their vehicles, the defendant looked at them and then drove
Officer Stephen Beland, who was patrolling nearby in a marked police cruiser, heard the dispatch with a description of the Explorer. He spotted the Explorer, activated his blue lights, and pulled the vehicle over in the vicinity of 189 Walker Street. As he did so, he observed that the defendant was leaning to his right.
As Officer Beland got out of his cruiser, he saw the defendant reach down toward the center console. The dеfendant was leaning to the right, placing his hands behind and underneath his torso, and sitting up and down, and seemed to be concealing something behind the right side of his torso.
Officer Beland approached the Explorer with his firearm drawn and ordered the defendant to show his hands. The defendant did not comply and kept his hands tucked underneath and behind him. Officer Beland ordered the defendant to place his hands on the steering wheel. Meanwhile, Detective Desmarais had arrived, and also directed thе defendant to show his hands. Eventually the defendant complied and the officers ordered him to get out of the vehicle.
Detective Desmarais led the defendant toward the rear of the vehicle. Officer Beland indicated that the defendant may have been hiding something in the vehicle and proceeded to search the area of the vehicle over which the defendant had had immediate control. He informed Detective Desmarais that he did not find any contraband.
During the subsеquent pat-down of the defendant, who was wearing shorts, the defendant moved away and clenched his buttocks when Detective Desmarais reached the area of the rear waistband of his shorts. This observation, coupled with the information shared by Officer Beland, raised the suspicion that the defendant was concealing drugs. Proceeding with the pat-down, Detective Desmarais did an exterior sweep outside of the defendant’s shorts and felt a lump between his buttocks that did not apрear to be a weapon.
Detective Desmarais walked the defendant to a more secluded
While in handcuffs and lying face down on the sidewalk, the defendant tried to reach down into his shorts. In response, Detective Desmarais grabbed the defendant’s hand and removed it. He then pulled back the waistband to the defendant’s shorts, exposing his buttocks to public view in so doing, and retrieved the bag from between the defendant’s buttocks. After the drugs were seized, the defendant’s father approached the scene and observed his son lying face down on the sidewalk with his buttocks exposed.
The defendant was indicted on charges of possession of a class A controlled substance (heroin) with intent to distribute, as a subsequent offense, G. L. c. 94C, § 32 (a) and (6); being a habitual offender, G. L. c. 279, § 25; assault and battery on a police officer (Detective Desmarais), G. L. c. 265, § 13D; and resisting arrest, G. L. c. 268, § 32B. He moved to suppress the drugs seized from him, claiming, as relevant here, that the drugs were obtained as the result of an unlawful search in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Unitеd States Constitution, arts. 12 and 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, and G. L. c. 276, § l.
2. Discussion. We assume, without deciding, that the officers had probаble cause to arrest the defendant for possession of drugs and that they therefore were justified, as a matter of constitutional and statutory law, in conducting a search of the defendant’s person for concealed drugs incident to that arrest. See Commonwealth v. Prophete,
Notwithstanding the judge’s conclusion that Detective Des-marais had “sufficient probable cause to believe that the defendant was concealing drugs in his buttocks to justify a strip or visual body cavity search,” the Commonwealth argues that Detective Desmarais’s separate actions of lifting back the defendant’s waistband visually to inspect the defendant’s buttocks and later to retrieve the drugs, contrary to the judge’s determinations, did not amount to strip searches. We have noted that “[a] visual body cavity search extends tо a visual inspection of the anal and genital areas.” Commonwealth v. Thomas, supra at 407 n.4, citing Cookish v. Powell,
Recently, the United States Supreme Court confronted the question “whether the Fourth Amendment requires correctional officials to exempt some detainees [who have committed minor offenses] who will be admitted to a jail’s general population” from “a close visual inspection while undressed.”
“[A strip search] may refer simply to the instruction to remove clothing while an officer observes from a distance of, say, five feet or more; it may mean a visual inspection from a closer, more uncomfortable distance; it may include directing detainees to shake their heads or to run their hands through their hair to dislodge what might be hidden there; or it may involve instructions to raise arms, to display foot insteps, to expose the back of the ears, to move or spread the buttocks or genital areas, or to cough in a squatting position. . . . [T]he term does not [necessarily] include any touching of unclothed area by the inspecting officer.”
Id.
Insofar as relevant here, Detective Desmarais’s action of lifting back the defendant’s waistband to retrieve the drugs from between his buttocks and publicly exposing the defendant’s buttocks while so dоing, constituted a strip search under both our State Constitution and the Federal Constitution.
The Commonwealth argues that our decision in Commonwealth
We next examine the manner in which this search of the defendant was conducted. For a visual body cavity search and a strip search to be constitutional under the Fourth Amendment and art. 14, such searches also must be reasonably conducted. See Commonwealth v. Thomas, supra at 407, citing Bell v. Wolfish,
Here, with regard to the strip search, at the time when Detective Desmarais removed the drugs from between the defendant’s buttocks area, the police did not, as we suggested in Commonwealth v. Thomas, supra аt 409 n.5, conduct the search in a private room or in any private location. The handcuffed defendant was face down on a public sidewalk and surrounded by four police officers. Detective Desmarais had determined that the lump in the rear of the defendant’s shorts was not a weapon. Thus, there was no concern that the defendant could have used
The manner in which the search proceeded, whereby the defendant’s buttocks were publicly exposed in the absence of exigent circumstances, was unreasonable. See Paulino v. State,
3. Conclusion. We affirm the order allowing the motion to suppress.
So ordered.
Notes
General Laws c. 276, § 1, provides in relevant part:
“A search conducted incident to an arrest may be made only for the*339 purposes of seizing fruits, instrumentalities, contraband and other evidence of the crime for which the arrest has been made, in ordеr to prevent its destruction or concealment; and removing any weapons that the arrestee might use to resist arrest or effect his escape. Property seized as a result of a search in violation of the provisions of this paragraph shall not be admissible in evidence in criminal proceedings.” (Emphasis added.)
The defendant does not challenge the judge’s conclusions that the stop and initial pat-down of the defendant were justified.
For “strip and visual body cavity searches” to be permissible under our State Constitution, we require a probable cause standard. See Commonwealth v. Thomas,
There is another type of intrusive search, a “manual body cavity search, which involves some degree of touching and probing of body cavities.” Commonwealth v. Thomas, supra, citing Rodrigues v. Furtado,
Specifically, the petitioner in Florence v. Chosen Freeholders of the County of Burlington,
As noted by Justice Alito in his concurring opinion, the Court did “not hold that it is always reasonable to conduct a full strip search of an arrestee whose detention has not been reviewed by a judicial officer and who could be held in available facilities apart from the general population.” Florence v. Chosen Freeholders of the County of Burlington, supra at 1524 (Alito, J., concurring).
We leave for another day whether Detective Desmarais’s initial action of lifting back the defendant’s waistband visually to inspect the defendant’s buttocks amounted to a strip search under our State and Federal Constitutions.
The justification for initiating a search is also a factor in determining reasonableness, see Bell v. Wolfish,
While developing a written policy concerning when and how to conduct a visual body cavity search and a strip search may be helpful to police officers and may serve to guard against unnecessary intrusions, compliance with such a policy is not determinative on the issue of reasonableness but, rather, serves only as one factor in the equation.
The Commonwealth contends that the location of the search was appropriate in view of the combative actions of the defendant, but those actions preceded his arrest and the retrieval of the drugs. This was not a situation whereby the defendant’s buttocks werе exposed because of his own actions.
In view of our conclusion, we need not address the defendant’s remaining arguments.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring, with whom Gants, J., joins). I concur in the judgment of the court that pulling down the defendant’s shorts and exposing his buttocks to public view while retrieving
In my view, however a court might label this intrusion into the defendant’s privacy, it was perfectly reasonable in scope and manner and did not result in either the public disclosure of the defendant’s buttocks or undue embarrassment or humiliation. Consequently, it was proper police conduct in the circumstances, and I would so hold.
