On February 21, 2001, Arlington County Sheriffs Deputy Randy Hill stopped Antonio Frederick King, the appellant, for a traffic violation. After determining that King was driving on a suspended Virginia license, Hill impounded his vehicle and conducted an inventory search. The trial court denied King’s motion to suppress evidence found as a result of that search. It is from this ruling that King appeals. For the reasons that follow, we reverse.
Background
In reviewing the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the party prevailing below, and grant to it all reasonable inferences fairly deducible therefrom.
See Dickerson v. Commonwealth,
After King acknowledged he had received notice of his Virginia license’s suspension, Hill impounded King’s vehicle for “safekeeping,” pursuant to the sheriffs department policies. Departmental policy describes the decision to impound a vehicle as a “judgment call” to be made by the deputy who makes the stop. Impoundment is “highly recommended” under the policy, and Hill’s common practice was to have the vehicle towed if the driver did not have someone available to drive it from the site, even if the vehicle was legally parked.
King’s vehicle was stopped on a two-lane “very heavily congested” street. An elementary school and other public buildings, including a library, were located nearby. Hill testified that he “wouldn’t put a vehicle there and just leave it *308 there” because the street was congested, and it was “not a rural street [where one would] leave a vehicle.” However, the vehicle was not impeding traffic and there was no evidence it was in a no-parking or otherwise restricted zone.
The inventory search Hill performed before the vehicle was towed yielded a bag of money “halfway hidden” behind a spare tire on the left rear side of the vehicle and another bag of money inside a blue “lunch zip tight bag.” King explained that the money had been in his possession for two days, as an employee of a vending company. Ultimately, the money, totaling $2,289.95, was determined to have been stolen from a -vending company in Fairfax, Virginia. Hill also found two crowbars, four screwdrivers, miscellaneous Allen wrenches, keys, and two pairs of gloves in the vehicle.
The trial court denied King’s pretrial motion to suppress the evidence, accepting the Commonwealth’s argument that Hill had properly impounded and searched the vehicle under the community caretaker function. The court found Hill’s decision to impound the vehicle “eminently sensible,” given that the area where the stop occurred was congested. 1
Analysis
In reviewing the trial court’s denial of a motion to suppress on appeal, we will review the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the party prevailing below, together with all reasonable inferences that may be drawn.
See Dickerson,
In the context of the Fourth Amendment, “ ‘[ultimate questions of reasonable suspicion and probable cause ... involve questions of both law and fact and are reviewed
de novo
on appeal.’ ”
McGee v. Commonwealth,
In the case at bar, the Commonwealth justifies the search of King’s car under the “community caretaking doctrine.”
See generally South Dakota v. Opperman,
In
Cady,
a police officer, who was required to carry his service revolver at all times, had a one-car accident near a small town.
See Cady,
The Virginia Supreme Court, in
Reese v. Commonwealth,
The validity of the impoundment is a question separate from the validity of-the subsequent inventory search and must be determined first.
See generally, Opperman; Cabbler v. Commonwealth,
In affirming the trial court’s denial of Servís’ motion to suppress, we held that “[a] routine inventory search of a
lawfully impounded
vehicle conducted pursuant to standard police procedure is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment unless it is ‘a pretext concealing an investigatory motive.’ ”
Id.
at 521,
Here, Hill’s subjective view that he “wouldn’t put a vehicle there and just leave it there” does not substitute for objective
*312
facts establishing that the public’s safety was at risk or that a need to safeguard the vehicle existed. Objective reasonableness remains the linchpin of determining the validity of action taken under the community caretaker doctrine.
See Terry v. Commonwealth,
The Commonwealth premises its arguments on Hill’s “common practice” to have vehicles towed if the driver did not have someone available to drive it from the scene and that Hill had the discretion to conduct such inventory searches under departmental policy. However, the Fourth Amendment compels an analysis that is grounded in the facts of the specific case under investigation which, when properly conducted, discloses to the officer a legally-recognized basis for conducting a warrantless inventory search. In conducting the requisite analysis, the individual citizen’s right to be free from unwarranted searches of one’s person or property is to be balanced against the public interest in the safety and welfare of all those involved. Thus, a law enforcement department’s general grant of authority to its officers to exercise discretion in impounding vehicles, of necessity, incorporates Fourth *313 Amendment principles and the limitations they impose on the exercise of discretion in conducting such searches.
We farther note that the Commonwealth’s reliance on
Cabbler
and
Butler v. Commonwealth,
In
Butler,
the police followed the defendant into the parking garage of an apartment complex and arrested him for speeding and driving with a suspended license. The defendant did not live in the complex, which required a parking permit for all parked cars, and he did not have permission as a guest to park in the garage. The police impounded the car after a police officer-resident said the vehicle had to be moved.
See Butler,
Finally, we disagree with the Commonwealth’s position that the impoundment and search were justified because, hypothetically, someone could have tampered with or stolen the car had it been left on the street. To permit impoundment and inventory predicated solely on possible theft or vandalism would altogether vitiate Fourth Amendment protections. Taken to its logical extreme, such a doctrine would authorize an officer to impound any car, in any location, including those *314 legally parked, at any time, because cars are always, hypothetically, subject to theft and vandalism. We decline to adopt such a posture.
Accordingly, we reverse King’s convictions and remand for a new trial if the Commonwealth is so disposed.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The Commonwealth conceded before the trial court that the search was not conducted incident to arrest since King was not placed under arrest.
See
Code 46.2-301. It further conceded that Hill did not have probable cause to search the vehicle.
See Hollis v. Commonwealth,
. After 11:00 a.m., the defendant’s car would have been parked illegally-
