OPINION
Thomas R. Gibson was convicted after jury trial of misconduct involving a controlled substance (cocaine) in the fourth degree, a class C felony. AS 11.71.-040(a)(3)(A). He appeals, contending that the trial court erred in failing to suppress the cocaine, which he alleges was seized pursuant to an illegally obtained search warrant. We affirm.
FACTS
In July 1983, Sgt. Bowman, an Alaska State Trooper, was assigned to the Anchorage International Airport Drug Enforcement Detail. At about 9:50 a.m. on July 18th, a Wien Airlines employee called the troopers’ Airport Detail office to report that she had received a package that she thought should be checked by a scent-detection canine. The suspected package, which had been received at 9:40 a.m., was relatively small and was wrapped in brown paper with fiber tape over two ends and across the bottom. The shipper was listed as Sally Gibson, at an address in Anchorage; the addressee was Tom Gibson at a post office box in Barrow. The commodity description of the package was “tea.” The Wien employee had become suspicious of the package because of its size and weight,
Sgt. Bowman took the package from the Wien counter to the troopers’ Airport Detail office, about a two minute walk. He checked in the Anchorage area phone directory and found no Sally Gibson listed. He also found that the Anchorage address given as the return address on the package did not exist as such, and that the phone number listed on the air bill belonged to someone other than Sally Gibson. At 10:13 a.m. the package was put before scent-detection canine “Meik” and he “alerted” to it.
Sgt. Bowman prepared an affidavit and drove to the Anchorage court building to apply for a search warrant, which was granted at about noon that day. Sgt. Bowman then opened the package at the trooper office and found one-half ounce of white powder which field tested positively for cocaine.
Sgt. Bowman rewrapped a small amount of the cocaine in the package and returned it to Wien for a “controlled delivery” at Barrow. He notified North Slope Borough Public Safety of its arrival. Thomas Gibson picked up the package the next morning and officers followed him to his apartment.
DISCUSSION
Gibson concedes for purposes of argument that the magistrate had probable cause to issue a warrant to open the package once the trained dog “alerted” to it. Gibson does not contend that the dog sniff constituted a search in this case.
See United States v. Place,
I.
In
State v. Moran,
By contrast [to probable cause], as is suggested by the reference in Terry [Terry v. Ohio,392 U.S. 1 ,88 S.Ct. 1868 ,20 L.Ed.2d 889 (1968)] to a reasonable belief “that criminal activity may be afoot,” it would seem clear that the more-probable-than-not standard is never applicable to a brief stopping for investigation. Rather, it will suffice that there exists a substantial possibility that criminal conduct has occurred, is occurring, or is about to occur. [Emphasis in original.]
Moran,
In
Moran,
and in an earlier case,
Howard v. State,
Applying these standards to the instant case, we are satisfied that Sgt. Bowman had a reasonable suspicion sufficient to justify a temporary detention of the package for purposes of a canine sniff. When Sgt. Bowman took the package for further investigation he knew the following: the package was relatively small — seven and one-half inches long, two and three-quarters inches deep, and four inches high. It was wrapped in brown paper with fiber tape over two ends and across the bottom. It was being shipped to a post office box in Barrow by expedited delivery at a cost of $21 and the contents were listed as tea. Immediately after seizing the package Sgt. Bowman was able to determine that Sally Gibson was not listed in the area directory, that the alleged return address did not exist, and that the phone number listed in the air bill was not Sally Gibson’s. The intrusion was relatively slight and for the limited purpose of subjecting the package to a dog sniff. Under these circumstances we find adequate reasonable suspicion to justify the investigatory steps taken.
II.
Gibson’s stronger argument is that reasonable suspicion is an inappropriate basis for interfering with a shipper’s expectation of privacy in his or her shipment. Gibson recognizes that the United States Supreme Court would permit the temporary seizure of Gibson’s package that took place here.
United States v. Place,
Gibson has misunderstood
Coleman
and
Ebona.
Properly understood the restrictions they place on investigatory stops are aimed at preventing unreasonable interference with the “person” of a suspect. Where a police officer encounters a suspect on the city streets and stops him for investigation, two potential violations of the constitution are present. First is the stop itself, which may constitute a seizure of his person, and second is the frisk for weapons, which constitutes a search. In his dissent to
Adams v. Williams,
Justice Brennan expressed his fear that allowing frisks of suspects on reasonable suspicion that they might possess a weapon created a risk of “pretext searches” in which officers would offer a feigned fear of violence in order to justify shaking down potential drug possessors,
The Alaska Supreme Court has never specifically addressed the issue presented in this case: the temporary detention of packages on less than probable cause where the package is not in the immediate possession of its owner. We are satisfied that that issue was correctly decided in
United States v. Van Leeuwen,
Considering the totality of the circumstances, the brief duration of the temporary detention while Sgt. Bowman verified the inaccurate return address and telephone number and subjected the package to the dog sniff, we find no violation of the state or federal constitutions.
The judgment of the superior court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Article I, Section 14 of the Alaska Constitution provides:
Section 14. Searches and Seizures. The right of the prople to be secure in their persons, houses and other property, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated. No warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
