OPINION
In this interlocutory appeal, Appellant-Defendant Eric Conwell requests reversal of the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress. Conwell raises two issues for our review which we rephrase as: 1) did probable cause and exigent circumstances exist which justified the warrantless search of Conwell’s body, and 2) during their search of Conwell, did the police officers use-excessive force in violation of his rights under the Due Process Clause? We reverse and remand.
On September 16, 1998, Conwell was driving his car in the 2100 block of North Caroll-ton when Indianapolis Police Officer Brad Harvey stopped Conwell for traveling at a high rate of speed and for failing to use his turn signal. Officer Harvey asked Conwell to get out of his vehicle. Conwell complied with the request, and Officer Harvey proceeded to handcuff Conwell and his passenger. Prior to exiting the car, Conwell gave Officer Harvey his wallet which contained identification. Upon searching the wallet, *766 Officer Harvey discovered a probation card and asked Conwell why he was on probation. Conwell responded that he was on probation for possession of narcotics. Officer Harvey testified at the suppression hearing that the 2100 block of North Carollton was known to be a “high narcotics area and individuals ... hide their narcotics either in their mouth or in between the crack of their buttock.” R. at 55.
Based on this experience, Officer Harvey then requested Conwell to open his mouth and lift his tongue. Conwell did not reply to Officer Harvey’s request. However, Officer Harvey observed Conwell begin to make a “chewing motion.” R. at 55. Officer Harvey testified that he neither saw Conwell place anything into his mouth nor did he see Con-well chewing on an object. When Conwell did not respond, Officer Harvey began to choke him so that Conwell could not swallow whatever he was chewing. The pair struggled until Officer Harvey maced Conwell with CS spray. The contents of Conwell’s mouth were not expunged after this initial macing. During this time, Officer Smiley arrived and assisted Officer Harvey in spraying a second dose of CS spray on Conwell. After the second dose of CS spray, Conwell expelled a plastic baggy from his mouth.
The baggy and its contents were seized. Testing of the baggy’s contents, revealed the items seized to be rock cocaine. Conwell was arrested and taken to the hospital to be treated for the effects of the CS spray. He was later charged with possession of cocaine as a Class D felony. 1 Conwell filed a motion to suppress the introduction of the cocaine as evidence. The motion was denied after a hearing. Afterwards, Conwell was granted permission to proceed with this interlocutory appeal.
Conwell argues that the trial court improperly denied his motion to suppress the drugs seized from the warrantless search of his body. According to Conwell, Officer Harvey did not have probable cause nor did exigent circumstances exist which would justify choking him. We agree.
The trial court has broad discretion in ruling on the admissibility of evidence.
Drake v. State,
The Fourth Amendment guarantees “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” This guarantee provides that searches and seizures which take place without prior judicial authorization are
per se
unreasonable pursuant to the Fourth Amendment, subject only to a few, narrow exceptions.
Shinault v. State,
However, continued detention without a formal arrest and a warrantless search of one’s person must be supported by probable cause and authorized by one of the recognized exceptions to the warrant requirement.
See Minnesota v. Dickerson,
Officer Harvey did not briefly detain Conwell for further questioning. Rather, he ordered Conwell out of the car and immediately handcuffed him and his passenger.
2
Officer Harvey placed a choke hold on Con-well in order to prevent him from swallowing “whatever contents” were in his mouth. R. at 57. An assertion that probable cause existed at the time of Officer Harvey’s search hinges on Conwell’s presence in a high crime area and his being a probationer. These two facts alone did not give Officer Harvey probable cause to search Conwell.
See Jackson v. State,
Although we have made the determination that Officer Harvey lacked probable cause to initiate a body search of Conwell and reverse the denial of Conwell’s motion to suppress on that ground, we elect to address a second issue which Conwell raises. In his argument, Conwell asserts that his “right to due process of law was violated when the police officer used excessive force and a ‘choke hold’ to search the inside of [his] mouth.” Brief of Appellant at 6-7. The State counter argues that the majority of state and federal jurisdictions permit the police to use considerable force in order to prevent a suspect from swallowing the evidence. We find the State’s argument unavailing.
The principal case which discusses due process rights when police force is used to extract physical evidence from the body of a noneonsenting individual is
Rochin v. California,
When Conwell refused to open his mouth after being requested to do so, Officer Harvey testified that he placed a choke hold on Conwell. When Conwell did not expel the contents of his mouth, Officer Harvey continued to “apply pressure on him so that he would not sallow[sie].” R. at 57. During the time he was being choked, Conwell was twice maced with CS spray before Officer Harvey and Officer Smiley wrestled him to the ground after a ten to fifteen-minute struggle. “The application of force to a person’s throat is a dangerous and sensitive activity. It is the type of force that, more than any other, is likely to result in violent resistance by the arrestee.”
State v. Hodson,
The risk to health and safety and the degree of bodily intrusion are then weighed against the third factor, the need to determine ConwelPs guilt or innocence. In this case this factor translates to an officer’s need to preserve the evidence and to protect the defendant from harm. As noted earlier, Conwell could have been taken into custody, and the drugs would have been allowed to pass through his system or they would have been absorbed into his bloodstream.
Hodson,
The only case in Indiana which discusses the excessive use of force is
Foxall v. State,
There are two important factors which distinguish this case from that of Foxall. As discussed earlier, we find that Officer Harvey did not have probable cause with which to initiate a noneonsensual search. Second, and more importantly, there was no evidence presented that the police officers choked Foxall. A shoehorn had been placed in Foxall’s mouth to help release the contents, and air flow was not restricted. In the present case, Officer Harvey admitted to choking Conwell and spraying him with mace during a struggle which lasted between 10-15 minutes.
While the majority of jurisdictions have upheld the use of choke holds in some form or another, 3 we disagree with this practice for the aforementioned reasons. Therefore, we reverse the decision of the trial court denying Conwell’s motion to suppress and remand for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Ind.Code § 35-48-4-6.
. Although not raised as an issue by Conwell, we note that he was probably entitled to have Officer Harvey inform him of his
Miranda
rights.
See Berkemer v. McCarty,
.
See State v. Thompson,
