Tashina Johnson was convicted of unlawful possession of a controlled substance, D.C.Code § 48-904.01(d) (2001), after police officers saw a handgun on the floor of a car in which she was riding and, during a search of the car’s interior, found marijuana in her purse. Appellant argues that the trial court erred in denying her motion to suppress. Because the search was permissible incident to the lawful arrest of another passenger, we affirm.
I. Background
While on routine patrol, two police officers focused their attention on a Volvo; a WALES cheek indicated it was stolen. 1 The .car contained two males, the driver and the front passenger, and appellant, who was seated behind the driver. After the driver parked the Volvo (apparently without prompting by the police), the officers pulled up, turned on their emergency lights, and approached the car on foot. The officer who approached from the passenger side saw a large semiautomatic handgun on the floor below the front passenger’s legs, and saw the front passenger move his legs in an attempt to conceal the weapon. The officers then ordered all three occupants to get out and placed them in handcuffs.
After confirming that the vehicle had been reported stolen and contained a handgun, the officers arrested all the oceu- *1032 pants. At that point, appellant spontaneously asked, “[W]hat’s going to happen to my purse?” and “Is it going to be at the station[?]” The officers then searched the car for weapons, ammunition, and contraband related to the handgun. They found a purse, large enough to hold a handgun, on the rear seat. 2 Another officer searched the purse and, within “just a few seconds,” found a plastic bag containing marijuana inside it.
Prior to trial, Ms. Johnson moved to suppress the marijuana, arguing that the police lacked reason to believe (either probable cause or reasonable, articulable suspicion) that she was involved in criminal activity and therefore had no right to search the purse. After a combined suppression hearing and trial, Judge Epstein, relying on the officers’ testimony about the likelihood of finding more guns or ammunition, found that the police “had reason to believe” that the passenger compartment contained evidence of the offense of carrying a pistol without a license, for which the front passenger had been arrested. Applying
Arizona v. Gant,
- U.S. -,
II. Analysis
Appellant argues that the officers lacked probable cause to arrest her either for possessing the handgun or for unauthorized use of a motor vehicle; that there was no “reasonable basis” to believe that the purse would contain evidence of a weapons offense; and that, even if there were, the search of the purse exceeded the permissible scope of a search for weapons. The import of her arguments is that the search of the purse did not fall within any exception to the warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment and that the marijuana should have been suppressed. As the trial judge correctly decided, however, the search was properly conducted incident to a lawful arrest. See Arizona v. Gant, supra.
“We view the evidence presented at the suppression hearing in the light most favorable to the party prevailing below, and we draw all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.”
Womack v. United States,
A. The Right to Search a Vehicle Incident to Arrest
Following the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Gant,
there are two separate rationales for permitting the search of an automobile incident to the arrest of a recent occupant. “Police may search a vehicle incident to a recent occupant’s ar
*1033
rest only if the arrestee is within reaching distance of the passenger compartment at the time of the search
or
it is reasonable to believe the vehicle contains evidence of the offense of arrest.”
Arizona v. Gant,
“Although it does not follow from
Chimel,
[the Supreme Court] also conclude^] [in
Gant
] that circumstances unique to the vehicle context justify a search incident to a lawful arrest when it is ‘reasonable to believe evidence relevant to the crime of arrest might be found in the vehicle.’”
B. Reason to Search the Vehicle
In this case, the front seat passenger was arrested after the officers found a handgun beneath his legs. After they removed the driver and his passengers from the car, the officers searched “for other objects, other contraband related to the weapon, other weapons, ammunition, items of that sort.” The officer who first saw the gun testified that, based on his training and experience, where there is one gun there may be more than one. Crediting the officers’ testimony, the trial judge found that “at the time of the search the police had reason to believe that there might be evidence of the offense of arrest [ — ] carrying a pistol without a license [ — ] in the passenger compartment of the car, including containers in the passenger compartment, and [he concluded that] they were therefore justified in searching [appellant’s] purse.”
We find no error in the trial judge’s factual findings or legal conclusion. The officer in this case observed the handgun in plain view on the floor of the car.
Texas v. Brown,
Indeed, cases addressing similar circumstances establish that the officers had probable cause to search the vehicle.
See Andrews v. United States,
C. Searching Appellant’s Purse
We reject appellant’s argument that the police exceeded the scope of a permissible search by inspecting her purse. The trial judge found that the “purse was large enough to contain a weapon and certainly ammunition,” so, we add, “there is no plausible argument that the object of the search could not have been concealed in the [purse].”
United States v. Johns,
Nor does it matter that the search of appellant’s purse was justified by the arrest of another passenger. If the search of a vehicle is authorized incident to an arrest, officers may search containers in the passenger compartment without regard to ownership.
Staten v. United States,
Staten
applied the original justifications for searches incident to arrest (concerns for officer safety and preventing destruction of evidence), which do not apply to the facts of this case, see
supra
note 3. However, the portion of
Staten
on which we now focus — addressing the permissible scope of a search incident to arrest — is equally applicable when the search is justified by the new rationale adopted in
Gant
—“reason[ ] to believe the vehicle contains evidence of the offense of arrest.”
Whether the warrantless search of an automobile is conducted incident to arrest, or is justified instead by probable cause,
see United States v. Ross,
As the Court reasoned in
Houghton,
“[i]f the rule of law that
Ross
announced were limited to contents belonging to the driver, or contents other than those belonging to passengers, one would have expected that substantial limitation to be expressed.”
Id.,
Common sense counsels against imposing any such limitation. It would be impractical to always require police to sort out who owns which containers on the scene of each and every vehicle search. Moreover, in many circumstances, ownership does not determine where evidence may be found. As the Court cautioned in Houghton,
once a “passenger’s property” exception to car searches became widely known, one would expect passenger-confederates to claim everything as their own. And one would anticipate a bog of litigation ... involving such questions as whether the officer should have believed a passenger’s claim of ownership, whether he should have inferred ownership from various objective factors, whether he had probable cause to believe that the passenger was a confederate, or to believe that the driver might have introduced the contraband into the package with or without the passenger’s knowledge.
Houghton,
III. Conclusion
Because the search of the purse was justified under Gant incident to the arrest of the front seat passenger, we need not reach appellant’s argument that the police lacked probable cause to arrest her for carrying a pistol without a license or unauthorized use of a vehicle. Nor do we consider the government’s argument that the marijuana should not be suppressed because the police acted in good-faith reliance upon the law as it was understood prior to Gant. 12
The judgment of the Superior Court is hereby
Affirmed.
Notes
. Although the owner told a detective two days before the stop "that she had seen the car parked in a different parking place on the street where it had been when she parked it[,]” she failed to come to the police station as requested, and the relevant database had not been updated at the time of the arrest. Appellant does not argue on appeal that the officers improperly relied on the information in the WALES system.
See Herring v. United States,
. Officer Catlett testified that “[d]efinitely a handgun could fit in there. It was pretty big. It was like a big old Gucci bag.” During his testimony, Officer Wade gestured to illustrate the size of the purse and described it as "maybe a little less than a foot.” He ”be-lievefd] the purse could contain ammunition, handguns, a large handgun or a small handgun, many different types of weapons...."
. "The government does not rely on Gant's safety rationale given that all of the occupants had been removed from the car, arrested, and handcuffed by the time the police searched the car.” Brief for Appellee at 25 n. 22.
. The handgun thus served double duty, creating probable cause not only to arrest the front passenger but also to believe that the Volvo contained other weapons or ammunition.
See Chambers v. Maroney,
. In Vinton, the court noted that both unlawful possession of a weapon and unlawful possession of narcotics tend to establish an evi-dentiary basis for searching a car:
[I]t is difficult to imagine a principled basis for distinguishing the possession of narcotics from the possession of an unlawful weapon, where an arrest for the former makes it reasonable to believe additional narcotics remain in the car, but an arrest for the latter does not make it reasonable to believe additional weapons are in the car. In both cases, the defendant has been caught with a type of contraband sufficiently small to be hidden throughout a car and frequently possessed in multiple quantities. Indeed, this fact was well-known to Officer Alton, who testified that "generally if one weapon is there ... there’s the chance that other weapons could be there.”
Vinton,
389 U.S.App. D.C. at 211,
.
But see Vinton,
389 U.S.App. D.C. at 210,
. "If there is probable cause to believe a vehicle contains evidence of criminal activity,
United States v. Ross,
. Unlike searches permitted under the "reasonable to believe” prong of
Gant, "Ross
allows searches for evidence relevant to offenses other than the offense of arrest, and the scope of the search authorized is broader.”
Gant,
. Citing its decision in
Rawlings v. Kentucky,
. Judge Epstein specifically cited both Staten and Houghton when explaining his decision to deny appellant’s motion to suppress.
. The search of the Volvo might also be justified under the automobile exception to the warrant requirement, which authorizes officers to search a vehicle if they have probable cause to believe it contains contraband or evidence of a crime.
Carroll v. United States,
.We neither perceive nor intend any inconsistency between our holding here and our recent decision in
United States v. Debruhl,
