delivered the Opinion of the Court.
T 1 In this interlocutory appeal, the prosecution challenges an order of the El Paso County District Court granting defendant Suzanne Guthrie's motion to suppress evidence of an illegal narcotic discovered during a routine inventory search of her personal effects after a judge of the El Paso County Court, in a prior proceeding, ordered a deputy sheriff to jail her for direct contempt of court.
T2 In the present prosecution for Guthrie's possession of illegal drugs, the district court suppressed evidence discovered during the inventory search as an ad hoe remedy for the due process violation it deemed the county court judge to have committed when conducting the contempt proceeding pursuant to C.R.C.P. 407. We hold that no violation of the Fourth Amendment occurred here. The inventory search the police carried out resulted directly from the county court's order to the deputy sheriff, based on a finding of criminal contempt of court, to jail Guthrie. Appeal of the summary contempt conviction, which might or might not result in reversal, would be the proper recourse for the county court's alleged due process violation. Suppressing evidence of the illegal narcotic discovered as a result of the valid inventory search here would not be an appropriate remedy even if the county court erred in convicting Guthrie of direct contempt of court.
I.
T3 In the prior proceeding in which the county court issued the contempt order, Guthrie came to the courthouse on a summons for Driving Under the Influence, seetion 42-4-1801, C.R.S. (2011). In the hallway outside the courtroom, the prosecution and defense worked out a plea agreement to that charge. Guthrie signed the plea agreement paperwork, and counsel obtained a sentencing date from the court clerk. Defense counsel then escorted Guthrie to the probation department to arrange an aleohol evaluation and left the courthouse.
T4 A clerk smelled aleohol on Guthrie's breath while she was filling out paperwork in the probation department waiting area. Guthrie consented to a preliminary breath test that revealed her blood alcohol concentration to be .099. The probation office informed the county court of her elevated blood alcohol, and, in response, the judge directed a deputy sheriff to escort Guthrie into the courtroom. This was Guthrie's first appearance before the court that day.
15 Without defense counsel present, the county court judge summarily held Guthrie in contempt of court due to her intoxication and sentenced her to two days in jail. The judge ordered the deputy sheriff to arrest Guthrie. The deputy handcuffed her and
T 6 Following the suppression hearing, the district court determined that "[the Deputy who escorted the Defendant to the Courtroom and who subsequently did an inventory search following the contempt hearing acted in good faith and his actions were not viola-tive of due process." Nonetheless, the district court suppressed evidence of the illegal narcotic gained from the inventory search.
T 7 The district court based its suppression order on the theory that suppression would remedy the due process violation it perceived the county court to have committed by summarily ordering Guthrie jailed for contempt of court. The district court reasoned that:
the Judge in this case violated Defendant's right to due process. The Judge found Defendant in direct contempt for what clearly was not direct contempt. This error was compounded by sentencing the Defendant without her lawyer being present. The Record is devoid of any effort by the Judge to contact Defendant's lawyer who had been in the Courtroom earlier in the same case. The Judge acted as police, prosecutor, and Judge. The result is an abandonment of the traditional role of neutral judicial officer.... The Court finds [this] is a significant violation and not a technical violation. The Court finds this wrong requires a remedy. The Court finds the drugs discovered in Defendant's purse or on her person were fruits of the poisonous tree. The Court GRANTS the Motion to Suppress.
[ 8 In this interlocutory appeal, the prosecution argues that the district court erred in suppressing the evidence derived from the inventory search. We agree.
II.
T9 We hold that no violation of the Fourth Amendment occurred here. The inventory search the police carried out resulted directly from the county court's order to the deputy sheriff, based on a finding of criminal contempt of court, to jail Guthrie. Appeal of the summary contempt conviction, which might or might not result in reversal, would be the proper recourse for the county court's alleged due process violation. Suppressing evidence of the illegal narcotic discovered as a result of the valid inventory search here would not be an appropriate remedy even if the county court erred in convicting Guthrie of direct contempt of court.
A. Standard of Review
110 We review a trial court's suppression order with deference to that court's findings of historical fact and will not overturn those findings if they are supported by competent evidence in the record. People v. Castaneda,
B. Inventory Search Subsequent to a Summary Contempt Conviction
{11 This case presents unusual cireum-stances. We have discovered only one analogous persuasive precedent regarding a summary court order of contempt followed by an inventory search. "[WJithout reaching the issue of the legality of the contempt order," the Supreme Court of Vermont determined that evidence of contraband (marijuana and a switchblade) derived from an inventory search of the defendant incident to his incarceration for summary eriminal contempt was
112 An inventory search made nee-essary by a summary contempt conviction presents a special cireumstance due to the "unique nature of summary contempt." Id. at 1007. A court brings its contempt power to bear with the specific objective of maintaining the dignity, authority, and functionality of the court. People v. Aleem,
113 The United States Constitution protects against unreasonable government searches and seizures. U.S. Const. amend. IV; accord Colo. Const. art. II, § 7. When police obtain evidence in violation of the Fourth Amendment, the exclusionary rule bars the prosecution from introducing that evidence against the aggrieved individual in either state or federal eriminal contexts. People v. Gutierrez,
114 An "inventory search is not an independent legal concept but rather an incidental administrative step following arrest and preceding incarceration." Illinois v. Lafayette,
T16 In Lafayette, the United States Supreme Court addressed the reasonableness of a police search of an arrestee's personal effects pursuant to "routine administrative procedure ... incident to booking and jailing" the arrestee. Id. at 643,
T 17 We came to the same conclusion five years later in People v. Inman, where police conducted an inventory search of the contents of Patricia Inman's purse as part of the routine booking procedure at the county jail.
C. Application to This Case
{18 In this case, the district court acknowledged that "[the exclusionary rule was adopted to deter unlawful searches by police, not to punish the errors of magistrates and judges" and unequivocally concluded that the deputy sheriff carried out his duties in good faith and without violating Guthrie's right to due process. Yet, the district court suppressed evidence derived from the valid inventory search as an ad hoe remedy for what it perceived to be a due process violation by the county court. We conclude that the district court applied the wrong legal standard to the facts of this case.
1 19 An inventory search carried out subsequent to a summary contempt order "is analogous to a post-conviction inventory search prior to incarceration." Robinson,
120 The county court's summary contempt conviction of Guthrie was reviewable for abuse of discretion by the district court on appeal.
IIH.
{21 Accordingly, we reverse the district court's suppression order and return this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The prosecution phrased the issue as follows: "Did the district court err in applying the exclusionary rule to suppress the results of the search, which was conducted in good-faith reliance on the county court's order?"
. Oxycodone Hydrochloride is a Schedule II narcotic, section 18-18-204(2)(a)(D)(N), CRS. (2012), requiring a prescription, section 18-18-308(3), C.R.S. (2011).
. See, e.g., Florence v. Bd. of Chosen Freeholders of Burlington, - U.S. -,
. Standard department procedures should regulate an officer's discretion in conducting inventory searches. People v. Hauseman,
. Lafayette emphasized that "[It is immaterial whether the police actually fear any particular package or container" since "the need to protect against such risks arises independent of a particular officer's subjective concerns."
. The county court, pursuant to CRCP. 407(a)(2) and (d), held Guthrie in criminal contempt of court. Criminal contempt proceedings are designed to preserve the power and vindicate the dignity of the court by imposing punishment on the contemnor. People v. Razatos,
