Stacey Hayes (appellant) appeals from his bench trial conviction for possession of cocaine and forged United States currency. On appeal, he contends the trial court erroneously (1) denied his motion to suppress the cocaine, altered U.S. banknote, and his statements, (2) admitted the certificate of analysis into evidence in the absence of a sufficient showing of chain of custody and (3), held the evidence, in the absence of the certificate of analysis, was sufficient to support appellant’s conviction for possession of cocaine. For the reasons that follow, we hold the trial court erred in denying the motion to suppress, and we reverse appellant’s convictions. 1
*649 I.
FACTS
On October 31, 1996, at about 3:45 p.m., Officer R.D. Lowery of the Petersburg Police Department participated in the execution of a search warrant for a residence at 125 McKeever Street in Petersburg, which was described as the right half of a duplex. The warrant described the items to be seized as “cocaine, books, money, records, scales, any other paraphernalia used and/or distribution of cocaine in the support and sale of cocaine.” Lowery confirmed that the target of the search was “[c]ocaine inside the residence.” The warrant did not “identify the name of any [specific] person to be searched” and did not “mention ... that any persons [in general] [were] to be searched.”
The accompanying affidavit indicated that an informant made a controlled purchase of cocaine “from the subjects at [the] residence” and that cocaine was “still present” when the informant left the residence. The affidavit did not indicate when the purchase was made, and it did not describe any of the people present except to say that “one [was] the resident.” 2 Lowery did not know who owned the residence.
When Lowery arrived at the residence with the entry team, appellant was sitting on the porch of the duplex on a couch located directly beside the entrance to number 125 and beneath its front window. Lowery described the porch as running the length of the front of the duplex with a set of steps on either end. Lowery did not know appellant and did not know, other than by appellant’s presence, whether appellant had any connection to the residence to be searched.
Lowery “ordered appellant to the ground at gunpoint ... [and] handcuffed him for safety reasons” until the rest of the entry team could secure the inside of the residence. Lowery had observed appellant as Lowery exited the police van and *650 approached the porch and had not seen appellant engage in any suspicious behavior. Lowery testified, “It’s pretty much standard policy when we go into a residence here in the City everybody goes down, everybody gets cuffed and patted down just for weapons for safety reasons.” Lowery further explained that “when you’re dealing with a search warrant ..., especially with narcotics, you always have the possibility of guns.”
After Lowery handcuffed appellant, he watched the window as the entry team went in and began to secure the inside of the residence. The entry team consisted of “approximately 10 or 11” police officers, with Officer Lowery stationed at the front door, “somebody on the back door,” and the rest of the officers inside to secure the premises and conduct the search. The officers found three people inside the residence. Lowery testified that he did not know for sure when the residence was “secure,” but that with “[t]hat many [officers] on the inside,” he was “pretty sure it was secure” and did not wait for confirmation before he stood appellant up and advised that “[he] was going to pat [appellant] down for weapons.”
Regarding the pat-down, Lowery first testified, “I hit an item, once. I squeezed it once and I come off of it, it was in my mind to be cocaine. I asked [appellant] what it was, he made no statement.” In clarifying the circumstances surrounding his discovery, Lowery testified that while patting appellant’s shirt pocket with an open palm, he felt “a lump” and “suspected [appellant] had something in his pocket.” Lowery explained further, “I felt something in his pocket, [and] to verify what it was, to make sure I wasn’t missing anything, I squeezed it once and I came right off of it.” Lowery then said, “I came off of it because I knew what it was. It was pretty obvious [that it was cocaine].” Lowery then retrieved the item, which he described as “nine zips of crack cocaine.” Lowery did not testify that he believed the lump could have been a weapon before he squeezed it, and he never clearly testified that he believed the lump to be cocaine before he squeezed it.
*651 Upon finding the suspected cocaine, Lowery advised appellant he was under arrest and Mirandized him. Appellant said, “it was for personal use, it was for himself, he wasn’t selling it.” In a search incident to arrest, Lowery found a pager and $11, including a dollar bill which someone had altered to look like a five-dollar bill by taping photocopied corners of a five dollar bill onto the four comers of the dollar bill.
Appellant moved to suppress on the ground that the frisk violated the Fourth Amendment. Appellant contended that the warrant, which was silent regarding the right to search people on the premises, did not authorize Lowery to frisk him and that Lowery had no reasonable, articulable suspicion that he was armed and dangerous in order to justify a frisk. Appellant also contended that even if the frisk for weapons was appropriate, Lowery had no basis for believing he had found a weapon when he felt the lump in appellant’s pocket and, therefore, was not permitted to manipulate the item to determine what it was.
The trial court said it did not “have any problem” with the “plain feel” seizure of the cocaine, stating that “[t]he officer is trained in this sort of thing, when he feels it and he’s pretty sure what it is, and he squeezed it to confirm it, he had sufficient cause to make that.” However, it stated expressly, “I’m not making a finding at this point” and gave the parties an opportunity to file memoranda on those issues.
At the time scheduled for sentencing, the court stated:
I’m going to overrule the motion [to suppress because] although the [appellant] was not in the house that was scheduled to be searched, he was on the couch on the front porch. He could easily have been a lookout for the people inside. And therefore there’s a threat of a danger that did exist and is sufficient to establish probable cause for a search____ Further[,] danger existed and the probable cause existed because the magistrate had issued the search warrant.
*652 II.
ANALYSIS
At a hearing on a defendant’s motion to suppress, the Commonwealth has the burden of proving that a warrantless search or seizure did not violate the defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights.
See Simmons v. Commonwealth,
Appellant contends Officer Lowery’s detention and search of his person pursuant to the authority of the search warrant for the duplex was unreasonable under the United States and Virginia Constitutions. The Commonwealth argues that the detention was justified as a frisk for safety reasons and that appellant’s presence on the porch of the residence for which other officers were executing a search warrant for narcotics provided reasonable suspicion that appellant was engaged in criminal activity. The trial court ruled that the probable cause which provided the basis ,for issuance of the warrant to search the premises for narcotics and the associated “threat of ... danger” provided “probable cause for *653 a search” of appellant. For the reasons that follow, we hold that the search was unlawful under the facts of this case.
' A.
PROBABLE CAUSE TO SEARCH APPELLANT’S PERSON
We hold first that neither the issuance of the search warrant nor the risk of danger to the officers during its execution provided Officer Lowery with probable cause to conduct a full search of appellant under the facts of this case. 3 We are unaware of any controlling precedent which provides that a warrant to search only a specified private residence, and not the people found therein, for narcotics automatically carries with it the blanket authority to conduct full searches of those people present either for narcotics or weapons. 4 Further *654 more, we conclude that such a holding would be contrary to existing constitutional precedent. 5
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides as follows:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and 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.
See also
Va. Const, art. 1, § 10. Based on these provisions, the United States Supreme Court stated in
Ybarra v. Illinois,
Although
Ybarra
involved a search warrant for a public bar rather than a private residence, we nevertheless find the Court’s holding in
Ybarra
instructive. The Court further observed in
Ybarra
that “a person’s mere propinquity to others independently suspected of criminal activity does not, without more, give rise to probable cause to search that person.”
Ybarra,
Where the standard is probable cause, a search or seizure of a person must be supported by probable cause particularized with respect to that person. This requirement cannot be undercut or avoided by simply pointing to the fact that coincidentally there exists probable cause to search or seize another or to search the premises where the person may happen to be.
Id.
at 91,
“As a general rule, ‘subject only to a few specifically established and well-delineated exceptions,’ warrantless searches
*656
are presumptively unreasonable” under the Fourth Amendment.
Farmer v. Commonwealth,
In determining whether Officer Lowery had
probable cause
to believe that one of these exceptions existed, thereby justifying a full search of appellant, we are guided by the holding of this Court in
Helms,
When police arrived to execute the search warrant and encountered Helms a few feet inside the front door, “[h]e did not act suspicious and was cooperative when confronted, ordered to he down and submit to a personal search.”
Id.
at 369,
Helms conceded on appeal that safety reasons justified a frisk of his person and even the removal of the items from his pocket, but contended that the officer, who admitted he knew the canister did not contain a weapon, lacked probable cause to arrest Helms or to examine the canister’s contents without a search warrant.
See id.; see also id.
at 373,
We agreed and reversed Helms’ conviction.
8
We held that none of the exceptions to the warrant requirement — “danger
*658
to the officer, search incident to a lawful arrest, or the risk of loss or destruction of evidence” — was present in Helms’ case.
See
In appellant’s case, as in Helms, the search warrant was for a private residence in which narcotics were being sold, but neither the warrant nor the accompanying affidavit named or described a person or people to be searched during the search of the premises. Further, here as in Helms, Officer Lowery did not know who appellant was, and no evidence other than appellant’s mere presence on the porch linked him to the premises. Finally, here as in Helms, appellant was cooperative and engaged in no suspicious or furtive behavior giving rise to the belief that he might be attempting to conceal contraband sought in the warrant or reaching for a weapon with which to challenge the officers. Therefore, here as in Helms, the officers lacked the probable cause necessary to conduct a full search of appellant. See generally 2 LaFave, supra, § 4.9(c) (discussing factors involved in determining whether person not arrested or described in a premises search warrant may be searched for items described in warrant and *659 noting that “the requisite probable cause is most likely to be deemed present if the person lives at the place searched, was implicated by the search warrant affidavit in the crimes under investigation, had engaged in suspicious or incriminating conduct, or was found in immediate proximity to contraband in open view” (footnotes omitted)).
B.
DETENTION AND FRISK FOR WEAPONS
In the absence of probable cause to search appellant incident to execution of the search warrant for the premises, the Commonwealth argues that Officer Lowery’s actions constituted a justifiable detention and frisk for weapons. “[A] warrant for contraband founded on probable cause implicitly carries with it the limited authority to detain the occupants of the premises while a proper search is conducted.”
Michigan v. Summers,
The United States Supreme Court has recognized that principles which permit an officer to seize contraband found in plain view under certain circumstances also may permit an officer to seize contraband detected by the sense of touch during a weapons frisk:
If a police officer lawfully pats down a suspect’s outer clothing and feels an object whose contour or mass makes its identity immediately apparent, there has been no invasion of the suspect’s privacy beyond that already authorized by the officer’s search for weapons; if the object is contraband, its warrantless seizure would be justified by the same *660 practical considerations that inhere in the plain view context.
Minnesota v. Dickerson,
Here, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the prevailing party below, Officer Lowery testified that while patting appellant’s shirt pocket with an open palm, he felt “a lump” and “suspected [appellant] had something in his pocket.” (Emphasis added). Lowery did not testify that he believed the item to be a weapon nor did he testify that the character of the lump was immediately apparent to him after patting it with an open hand. Rather, he testified that he “squeezed” the lump and “came off of it because [he] knew what it was” after squeezing it. Because the evidence does not support a finding that the character of the item was immediately apparent to Lowery during the permissible scope of the frisk, he was not permitted to investigate further. 9 Therefore, even viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, we are unable to *661 conclude that the Commonwealth carried its burden of proving the frisk and resulting seizure of the cocaine under the plain feel doctrine did not violate appellant’s rights. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court erred in failing to exclude the cocaine.
Because Officer Lowery’s discovery of the cocaine led to his arrest of appellant and the incident search revealing the altered one-dollar bill which provided the basis for appellant’s conviction for possession of forged United States currency, both of appellant’s convictions must be reversed.
Reversed.
Notes
. Because we hold that the cocaine was improperly seized, we do not reach the issues of the admissibility of the certificate of analysis or the sufficiency of the evidence.
. On appeal, appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the warrant or affidavit to support the search of the residence itself.
. Had the evidence proven that the search of the residence yielded cocaine and that the police fully searched appellant only afterward, the discovery may have been proper as a search incident to arrest for possession of the contraband found on the premises, regardless of whether the presence of the contraband found on the premises would have been sufficient to support a conviction for its possession.
See Michigan v. Summers,
. The United States Supreme Court has expressly avoided such a question.
See Summers,
. In a slightly different context, the United States Supreme Court recently has reaffirmed the "unique, significantly heightened protection afforded against searches of one's person.”
See Wyoming v. Houghton,
- U.S. -■, -,
. We refer here only to danger sufficient to provide probable cause for a full search and not to the lower standard of reasonable suspicion for a weapons frisk under
Terry v. Ohio,
. A “search within small containers, such as wallets, cigarette boxes and the like, which are found in or about [an individual’s] clothing” is "deemed to be [a search] ‘of a person.’ ” 2 LaFave, supra, § 5.5, at 170.
. In so doing, we distinguished
Harris v. Commonwealth,
. Although the trial court denied that it was making any findings on this issue during the hearing on the motion to suppress, it observed that ‘‘[t]he officer is trained in this sort of thing, when he feels it and he’s *661 pretty sure what it is, and he squeezes it to confirm it, he had sufficient cause to make that.” Assuming without deciding that these statements constituted findings of fact by the trial court, they are both unsupported by the evidence and insufficient under the plain feel doctrine to permit the seizure. First, on a factual level, Officer Lowery never testified that he was "pretty sure” what the item was before he squeezed it. When the prosecutor tried to clarify this point, asking, "When you felt- the lump, Officer, did you suspect anything at that point?” Lowery responded merely, "I suspected he had something in his pocket.” (Emphasis added). Second, even assuming Lowery was “pretty sure” the lump was cocaine when he first felt it, he had to squeeze the lump to confirm its identity, which does not translate into the legal conclusion that its "identity [was] immediately apparent” before the squeeze.
