Whеn the police arrest a hospital patient, may they seize and search the personal effects he relinquished to the hospital for safekeeping in order to receive emergency treatment? Or dоes the patient retain an interest in his property sufficient to require the police to obtain a warrant before taking it? The question posed by this case is a recurring and unresolved one as perpetratоrs as well as victims seek hospital care in the aftermath of the City’s violence. (See, e.g., People v Watt,
facts. Armed with probable cause based upon an accomplice’s confession implicating defendant Hayes in the murder of a drug dealer, detectives went to arrest him at a New Jersey hospital; Hayes had gone there for treatment for injuries incurred during his flight from the crime. After advising him he was under arrest and posting an officer in his room, a detective located the clothing defendant had been wearing when he checked into the hospital; it was being held for him at the reception desk and was about to be stored with other patients’ belongings. Although the deteсtive had no specific belief that the clothing had any evidentiary value, he wished to secure it for further investigation. He signed a release form and the attendant gave him a bag containing the clothing which was later оpened and its contents inventoried. Several weeks later, bloodstains on the clothing were tested and compared with that of the deceased. It is the results of that testing as well as the clothes themselves which Hayes seeks to suppress at his trial.
discussion. Until fairly recently Fourth Amendment violations were analyzed as a single event: Was the accused subjected to an unreasonable search and seizure? (See, e.g., Chambers v Maroney,
The distinction is evident in this case. Defendant Hayes’
As for defendant’s privacy claim, a Fourth Amendment search has occurred if Hayes had a reasonable expectation of privacy in either the area seаrched or in the materials seized, that is, in either the place of or object of the search. (People v Reynolds,
If the proffered evidence were solely a description of the clothing’s outward appearance, Hayes would have no Fourth Amendment grievance. The People, however, seek to introduce the results of the blood analysis of stains found on the clothes, as well as the clothes themselves. Even though defendant relinquished his privacy interest in their outward appearance, did he retain a privacy interest in that which could not be seen by the naked eye? And did he also retain a property interest which required the police to obtain a warrant before removing the clothing from the hospital and subjecting it to the more penetrating search by scientific analysis?
In People v Natal (
Here, the evidentiary value of the clothing is not only in its outward appearance. Rather, it is the results of a search by scientific testing — an analysis of blood on the clothing — which the People also seek to introduce. As to this hidden aspect of the clothing, characteristics not revealed to the public at large, Hayes never forfeited his privacy claim. He retained a privacy interest to those hidden propеrties just as he did, for example, to the contents of his pockets or the contents of a briefcase he may have had with him upon entering the hospital. Accordingly, for its yield, i.e., the test results, to be admissible at trial the search as well as the seizure must fall within one of the exceptions to the warrant requirement.
The search by scientific testing, as well as the seizure of the clothing which allowed for that testing, were not incident to defendant’s arrest. (Stoner v California,
In those cases sustaining seizures and/or searches of property which were not сontemporaneous with arrest, the subject had the property in his possession when he was first taken into custody. That is, even though the subject was not relieved of his belongings upon his arrest, they were in his possession at that timе. (United States v Edwards,
The seizure and scientific testing of defendant’s clothing cannot, moreover, be justified as an "exigent circumstance” exception to the warrant requirement. (Schmerber v California,
The foregoing analysis compels the conclusion that the clothing as well as the test results are inadmissible. Hayes’ property rights to his belongings were violated when they were removed from the hospital without a warrant. His privacy interests were infringed by the blood analysis performed on the clothes. The seizure and consequent scientific search
Even though the items themselves and the test results are inadmissible, the People are nonetheless permitted to introduce testimоny at trial regarding the clothing’s outward appearance. To that aspect of it Hayes, as already noted, abandoned any privacy claim. The result (i.e., permitting testimony but not the clothing itself) is anomalous sinсe in the more typical search and seizure case if an item is unlawfully seized neither it nor a description of it is admissible at trial. That is because the subject’s privacy and property interests usually coincide. For еxample, when an object is recovered from a subject’s pocket after an unlawful arrest, neither the object nor a description of it will be admissible; the police had neither the right to seize it nor to subjeсt it to a visual examination. In a case such as this one, however, where property and privacy rights are discretely affected, the remedy must be tailored accordingly.
Notes
The result might be different in a case where the police take an arrestee to the hospital for treatment and are unaware at the time that his clothing has evidentiary value. In such a case they might well have the authority subsequently to retrieve the clothes from the hospital since they were entitled to take it initially, when they arrested him.
