This is a case of first impression regarding the validity of the search of checked airline luggage. Appellant pled nolo con-tendré to 194 counts of possession of child pornography, reserving his right to appeal the trial court’s denial of two motions to suppress. We affirm without comment the denial of Aрpellant’s motion to compel discovery, which was not preserved for appellate review. We also affirm the denial of Appellant’s motion to suppress evidence found during an administrative search, and write to explain why the denial was not an abuse of discretion. Because we affirm the denial of the motion to suppress the evidence found during the search, we also affirm the denial of the motion to suppress statements made by Appellant during custodial interrogation.
Facts
Appellant arrived at the Pensacola Regional Airport for a flight to Colоrado, checked in at the airline ticket kiosk, and registered one suitcase. He received a luggage tag and receipt and proceeded to a Transportation Security Administration (TSA) checkpoint for checked baggage. Appellant’s checked suitcase was swabbed by a TSA officer. Appellant testified the officer also opened an accordion-type folder found in the suitcase and swabbed it. The swab was then tested for trace amounts of explosives using an Explosive Detection System (EDS). Appellant’s bag was cleared, the officer handed him his boarding pass, and Appellant proceeded to the personal security checkpoint. Appellant did not set off the magnetometer, and
Unbeknоwnst to Appellant, his checked suitcase was opened and physically searched by a TSA officer. The officer testified that TSA protocol required her to physically examine the inner contents of a preselected and random number of checked baggage. During the search, the TSA officer took out the accordion folder and opened it, removed the papers and flipped through them. The officer testified that TSA protocol required her to “thumb through” any thick stack of papers she found to search for potentially dangerous materials. She then discovered approximately 10 photographs, prompting her to contact a supervisor. An airport police officer arrived and was informed that the file contained child pornography.
Airport police contacted local law enforcement, and Appellant was detained. A detective applied for and received a warrant to search Appellant’s computer, camera, picture card, burned compact discs, flash drives, external hard drive, and briefcases, all of which were found in Appellant’s checkеd suitcase. Additional flash drives were later found when the detective separated Appellant’s personal property from the evidence, and an additional warrant was obtained to search those drives. Based on the evidence discovered during the searches, Appellant was charged with 196 counts of possessing child pornography.
Appellant moved to suppress all evidence seized from his suitcase, alleging the physical search of his checked baggage outside his presence violated the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution. Speсifically, Appellant alleged the search was not minimally intrusive because available technology in use at the airport provided TSA a means to search his unopened baggage for dangerous contraband without searching the bag’s contents. The trial court denied the motion tо compel, but granted an in camera review to determine whether TSA’s standard operating procedures were relevant. Pursuant to its review, the court denied the motion to suppress, finding TSA’s procedures and administrative search did not violate Appellant’s Fourth Amendment rights. Appellant was adjudicated guilty after pleading nolo contendré and sentenced to 30 months in prison.
Analysis
The standard of review on a motion to suppress is a mixed question of fact and law. Butler v. State,
This is an issue of first impression; our independent research has not revealed any case directly deciding whether a purely administrative, physical search of checked luggage violates the Fourth Amendment. See United States v. Fofana,
In general, a warrantless search is per se unreasonable unless the search or seizure falls into one of the well established exceptions to the warrant requirement. Jones v. State,
Administrative searches in airports are an established exception. See United States v. Aukai,
Consent is not required to conduct an airport screen search, if the search is otherwise reasonable and conducted pursuant to statutory authority. McCarty,
We first address whether the search in this case was unnecessarily extensive or intrusive, in light of the available technology. All cargo transported on a passenger aircraft must be screened. 49 U.S.C.A. § 44901(g)(1). Screening is further defined to include physical searches when combined with manifest verifiсation. U.S.C.A. § 44901(g)(5). All checked baggage must be screened by an EDS machine. U.S.C.A. § 44901(d)(1)(A). Until an airport possesses an EDS machine, TSA officers are permitted to use other alternative screening methods, including manual searches. U.S.C.A. § 44901(e)(2). The statute does not foreclose the possibility using an EDS machine in conjunction with physical searches to meet the mandate that all bags must be screened. See id.
The trial court’s order denying Appellant’s motion to suppress reveals that the airport possessed not only an EDS, but
TSA’s protocol required officers tо physically open a certain number of randomly selected bags, swab the inner contents, and test the swabs in one of the explosive detection machines. The TSA officer’s testimony was that she discovered several photographs while thumbing through a large file. TSA’s protocol reveаls that the TSA officer had the discretion to flip through the papers found in Appellant’s bag while conducting the open bag search in lieu of swabbing every piece of paper. See also McCarty,
Recently, two federal district courts determined similar administrative airport sеarches were unreasonable because they were not confined, in good faith, to searching for weapons or explosives. See Fofana,
In Fofana, an airline passenger was “flagged” at check-in for enhanced screening at the personal security checkpoint.
Similarly, the court in McCarty held that a TSA officer’s search of photographs in an envelope in a carry-on bag exceeded the scope of the officer’s authority when the officer stopped looking for weapons or explosives and began looking for evidence of child pornography.
Unlike the officers in McCarty and Fofana, the TSA officer’s testimony in this case demonstrates her search remained confined, in good faith, to the purpose of searching for explosives or weapons. The TSA officer’s testimony was simple and unwavering: She was required to open a certаin number of bags; Appellant’s bag was the next randomly selected bag; she was required to thumb through the contents of the accordion-type file folder found in Appellant’s bag, under TSA protocol; and she saw the photographs as soon as she opened the folder. She immediately stoрped the search and contacted a supervisor. “The mere fact that a screening procedure ultimately reveals contraband other than weapons or explosives does not render it unreasonable, post fac-to.” United States v. Marquez,
Assuming arguendo that the search in this case ran afoul of the Fourth Amendment, we would uphold the trial court’s decision to not suppress the evidence in this case under the good faith exception to the warrant requirement, and because the extreme sanction of exclusion is not always justified. Illegally seized evidence is not automatically suppressed. Herring v. United States,
Accordingly, we hold that the trial court’s denial of Appellant’s motion to suppress was not an abuse of discretion.
AFFIRMED.
