*879 OPINION
In this appeal from an adjudication of delinquency on one count of possession of a dangerous weapon, appellant T.L.S. contends that the district court erroneously denied her motion to suppress the knife that оfficers found when they searched her purse. T.L.S. maintains that because the arresting officers lacked probable cause to arrest her, and bécause the offenses for' which they might have had probable cause do not рermit a custodial arrest, the search violated her constitutional rights. We affirm.
FACTS
Two St. Paul police officers responded to a call from Area Learning Center (ALC) about a former student who was acting disorderly and refusing to leave the school building. That, former student, appellant T.L.S., went to ALC seeking readmission, and a school administrator told.her that she had been transferred to another school. T.L.S.. became upset and began yelling. A school administrator asked T.L.S. to leave, but she refused. The administrator warned T.L.S. that if she did not leave, he would call the police. T.L.S. still refused.
When uniformed police officers arrived, the school administrator directed them to T.L.S. They found her in the school administrаtive office. T.L.S. responded to the officers by declaring that she was not going to leave. An officer ordered T.L.S. to leave the building and wátaed that if she refused, she would be taken into custody and delivered to' the truancy center. T.L.S. sаid that she'wanted to call her mother. She ignored the instruction to leave and picked up a telephone. One Of the officers took the telephone 'from T.L.S., and T.L.S. began shouting profanities. As the district court would later find, T.L.S. “was shrieking аt the officer,” and the noise was “disruptive to the running of the school and purposes of the school.” T.L.S..continued to refuse to leave, so the officers seized her- and escorted her from the building.
T.L.S.’s “loud shrieking” continued, and she shouted profanities at the officers as they removed her. Outside, the officers tried unsuccessfully to calm her. T.L.S.’s hostility continued, and the officers handcuffed her. T.L.S. refused to identify herself upon the officers’ request, shouting, “Yop dumb mother f — ing b — h ass cоp you figure it out since you. know every f— ing thing!” The officers placed T.L.S. in a patrol car, searched her purse, and found a seven-inch steak knife.
The' state filed a juvenile-delinquency petition charging T.L.S. with possession of a dangerous weapon on school property, in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.66, subd. ld(a) (2004), and disorderly conduct, in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.72, subd. 1(3) (2004). T.L.S. moved to suppress admission of the knife, but the district court denied the motion. The state and T.L.S. agreed to submit the case tо the court for a decision on the merits based on the testimony presented at the suppression hearing and on the documentary record. The district court found T.L.S. delinquent for possession of a dangerous weapon on schоol property, acquitted her of the disorderly conduct charge, and placed her on supervised probation. This appeal follows.
ISSUE
Did the district court err by denying T.L.S.’s motion to suppress evidence seized during a search incident to arrest for disorderly conduct, when probable cause- for the misdemeanor violation is based on the manner of delivering constitutionally protected speech, and on an uncharged trespassing violation?
*880 ANALYSIS
T.L.S. arguеs that the search of her purse was constitutionally infirm and, therefore, that the district court erred by denying her motion to suppress.
See Wong Sun v. United States,
The federal and state constitutions prohibit unreasonable searches and seizures. U.S. Const. Amend. IV; Minn. Const, art I, § 10. Under both constitutions, a warrantless searсh is unreasonable unless it fits within one of the narrow exceptions to the warrant requirement.
State v. Dickerson,
T.L.S. argues that the officers did not have probable cause to arrest her for disorderly conduct because swearing at police officers cannot alone constitute disorderly conduct, relying оn
In re S.L.J.,
More precisely, by its explanation of
City of St. Paul v. Mulnix,
The district court found that T.L.S. was disrupting the school by “shrieking” profanities inside the school administration office. While her language does not constitute fighting words and therefore would not support probable cause for content-based disorderly conduct, thе objective facts would lead a person of ordinary care to an honest and strong suspicion that T.L.S. was engaging in boisterous and noisy conduct in violation of the statute. We therefore conclude that the officers had рrobable cause to arrest T.L.S. for disorderly conduct.
The district court noted that the officers were also aware that T.L.S. had continued to refuse to leave the school despite having been told to leave by individuals with authority to evict her. Under these circumstances, a person of ordinary care and prudence also would strongly suspect that T.L.S. was trespassing on school property. See Minn.Stat. § 609.605, subd. 4(a) — (d) (2004) (defining trespass on school property). We agree with, the district court that the -police had probable cause to arrest T.L.S. for trespassing.
That T.L.S. was not- charged with trespass and was found not guilty-on the disor-' derly conduct charge does not vary our assessment.
See City of St. Paul v. Johnson,
T.L.S. аlso argues that even if the police had probable cause to arrest, the custodial arrest and subsequent search are invalid because the possible offenses for which they might have had probable cause were misdemeanors.
See Varnado,
The record suggests no basis for the officers to believe a citation would have led T.L.S. to yield. T.L.S. received no fewer than four demands to leave the school— each escalating in authoritative forсe — yet she refused. School administrators asked her to leave. Then they ordered her to leave, threatening that they would summon the police. Police officers arrived in full uniform and ordered T.L.S. to leave. Finally, officers warned that unless T.L.S. would voluntarily leave the school, they would take her into custody. None of this moved her. Witnessing firsthand T.L.S.’s obstinate defiance to lawful demands in the face of credible warnings of serious consequences, the officers had no reason to expect that a written citation would precipitate her compliance. We conclude that the officers’ custodial arrest was appropriate.
DECISION
Because the officers observed T.L.S. engage in conduct that violated the statutory prohibition against disorderly conduct and trespassing, the officers had probable cause to arrest her. The content-based constitutional protection of speech does not render the district court’s probable-cause determination erroneous because the conduct supported an alternative basis for a disorderly conduct violation. Because the officers could not rеasonably expect T.L.S. to respond to a citation, the officers’ decision to arrest T.L.S. was valid. The district court did not err by denying T.L.S.’s motion to suppress evidence that the officers recovered in a search incident to that valid arrest.
Affirmed.
