Opinion
Maurice Jauregui is charged with felony narcotic offenses. He seeks extraordinary writ relief from the denial of his motion to suppress evidence seized pursuant to warrant. Suspecting he had swallowed narcotics, police officers sought a warrant to retrieve them. After being told a telephonic warrant had been obtained for that purpose, Jauregui drank an emetic solution which caused him to regurgitate five balloons containing heroin. While conceding at least one defect in the warrant, real party nevertheless contends the officers acted reasonably and in good faith and urges we conclude
United States
v.
Leon
(1984)
On November 8, 1984, La Habra police officers obtained a search warrant for Jauregui’s person and his residence, a motel room. They waited for five days to execute the warrant, which they did after an informant called and said Jauregui had heroin in the motel room—the equivalent of ten balloons, though then unpackaged—only five minutes before. The informant’s call came in at approximately 4:10 p.m. A police surveillance of the room was set up at approximately 4:25 p.m. About 25 minutes later, Jauregui was lured out of his room and detained. From previous police contacts, Jauregui was known to carry balloons of heroin in his mouth. The detaining officer *1163 observed him swallow hard, and suspected he had swallowed balloons of heroin.
Police officers proceeded to search Jauregui’s person and room but found no heroin. They did discover narcotics paraphernalia and empty toy balloons in the room and placed Jauregui under arrest for unlawful possession of a syringe. The search lasted approximately 45 minutes, after which Jauregui was transported to the La Habra police station for booking. There, an officer called La Habra Community Hospital to solicit a doctor’s advice regarding any potential medical problems resulting from the presence of balloons of heroin in the stomach. A doctor suggested Jauregui be transported to the hospital for evaluation and treatment because the situation could be life-threatening.
Jauregui was taken to the hospital at approximately 6 p.m., where he refused to consent to treatment. At no time did he exhibit symptoms of being under the influence of any narcotic. The first treating physician recommended taking X-rays to determine whether there were any visible foreign bodies in Jauregui’s stomach. X-rays were taken without benefit of consent or warrant. A second treating physician opined the X-rays showed two balloons; a police officer examined the X-rays and agreed. The doctor recommended the administration of syrup of ipecac, an emetic solution which would induce vomiting.
Officers present at the hospital had at least two telephone conversations with a deputy district attorney regarding the situation. After results of the X-rays were discussed, a telephonic search warrant was sought and obtained. Confronted with that warrant and advised by the police officers that the court had authorized them to administer the emetic to him, Jauregui drank the syrup of ipecac about 8 p.m. He began regurgitating 15 or 20 minutes later and 5 balloons of heroin were recovered.
In this proceeding Jauregui challenges only the telephonic warrant, not the first search warrant issued for his person and motel room. Ironically, the two warrants are identical in purporting to authorize a search of Jauregui’s person. Each seeks heroin and associated paraphernalia and commands a search of “the person of: Maurice Arteaga Jauregui, also known as Weecho, Male, Mexican, age 44 years, approximately 5'-06", 130 pounds, brown hair and brown eyes; ...” The telephonic warrant was limited to his person, although it additionally commanded execution “[b]etween the hours of 7:00 Am.m [szc] as needed per medical advise [szc] . . . .” Nothing in the telephonic warrant directed the manner of execution.
*1164 I
In
People
v.
Bracamonte
(1975)
While the prosecution argues the magistrate intended to issue a warrant authorizing a body intrusion, it concedes the warrant is defective for failing to so specify. As in Bracamonte, we “are not confronted with, nor do we decide, the issue of when, if at all, a search warrant may issue authorizing an intrusion into a suspect’s body.” (Id., at p. 400, fn. 3.) The instant warrant simply failed to authorize the procedure performed, despite the officer’s representation to Jauregui it did.
n
The more difficult question is whether the “good faith exception” adopted by the Supreme Court in
United States
v.
Leon, supra,
In
Sheppard,
the warrant affidavit supported the police request to seize evidence of murder. The warrant itself authorized a search for controlled substances. Nevertheless, the court refused to suppress murder evidence seized because “there was an objectively reasonable basis for the officers’
*1165
mistaken belief” the warrant authorized it.
(Id.,
at p. 988 [
Here, the prosecution argues the same logic: The officers were acting in good faith as evidenced by their recognition the first warrant for Jauregui’s person did not authorize the administration of an emetic for an intrusive body search. We are urged to conclude the officers acted reasonably in seeking a warrant for that purpose and forced Jauregui to drink the emetic in good faith reliance on the fact the magistrate issuing the second warrant expressly authorized what the first did not. The record does support a conclusion the officers
subjectively
acted in good faith. But
Leon
and
Sheppard
also require the claim of good faith be
objectively
reasonable.
(United States
v.
Leon, supra,
What the prosecution ignores is the effect of the warrant itself, which expressly authorized a search by “Any Sheriff, Constable, Marshal, Policeman or Any Other Peace Officer in the County of Orange, State of California[.]” There was no assurance that the affiant officer who knew the details and spoke with the issuing magistrate would be present at the time of the search. We must determine what the warrant meant to any person lawfully authorized to execute it. From that perspective, it is obvious the warrant did not authorize the body intrusion search Jauregui was compelled to undergo. The rule in
Bracamonte, supra,
Moreover, the effect of failing to expressly authorize a body intrusion search, let alone limit its scope to a medically approved procedure (see
*1166
People
v.
Scott
(1978)
In yet another sense, a body intrusion search involves heightened Fourth Amendment considerations. (See
Rochin
v.
California
(1952)
The United States Supreme Court recently recognized the substantial interest involved in body intrusions in
Winston
v.
Lee
(1985)
The evidence here contradicts an “informed, detached and deliberate” consideration of whether Jauregui ought to be compelled to regurgitate the contents of his stomach. The magistrate was given very limited information on the alleged life-threatening nature of the situation. Indeed, the evidence presented to the trial court casts great doubt on that allegation. The experts disagree on which is more dangerous: allowing the balloons to remain in the stomach, and hopefully pass naturally, or forcing an emetic which may cause a balloon to break during regurgitation. Moreover, the magistrate *1167 made no inquiry as to the method of retrieval, hardly suggesting a detached and deliberate consideration of the issue.
The California Supreme Court has also recognized the sanctity of the human body and the need to balance competing interests before judicially authorizing an internal intrusion.
(People
v.
Scott, supra,
While we agree the information supplied probable cause to believe Jauregui had balloons of heroin in his stomach, the magistrate failed to balance the competing interests before issuing the warrant, as required by Winston and Scott.
The warrant here did not authorize the police to require Jauregui regurgitate the contents of his stomach. No objectively reasonable officer could assume it did. The facially defective warrant requires exclusion of the evidence obtained.
III
Perhaps anticipating our conclusion precluding the application of any good faith exception, the prosecution alternatively argues no warrant was required because of the exigencies of the situation. As in
Bracamonte,
the evidence falls far short of proving an emergency life-threatening situation, or imminent destruction of evidence, justifying a body intrusion search without a warrant.
(People
v.
Bracamonte, supra,
15 Cal.3d at pp. 401-402;
People
v.
Rodriguez
(1977)
Finally, the prosecution’s concession the warrant is facially defective, coupled with our conclusion that defect requires exclusion of the evidence seized, obviates the necessity of resolving other alleged defects.
*1168 The alternative writ is discharged. Let a peremptory writ of prohibition issue restraining the superior court from taking any further action in the case except to grant Jauregui’s motion to suppress evidence seized pursuant to the telephonic warrant. When this opinion becomes final the stay is dissolved.
Trotter, P. J., and Crosby, J., concurred.
