*361 Opinion
Are juveniles protected by the same rule of law protecting similarly situated adults: that an otherwise unlawful search may not be justified by the circumstance that the suspect was subject to a search condition of which the searching officers were totally unaware?
Joshua J., the appellant, contends the juvenile court erred in denying his suppression motion because recent California Supreme Court opinions espousing the above stated rule undermine
In re Tyrell J.
(1994)
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Fresno Police Department Sergeant Danny Edwards was patrolling the area of Calaveras and McKenzie Streets at 6:00 p.m., on July 5, 2004. The area is a high-crime neighborhood. Edwards saw Joshua and a companion walking down Calaveras Street. Edwards thought Joshua might be a person wanted on a felony warrant. Edwards had been in contact with that person, an adult, two weeks earlier. 1 Edwards initially saw Joshua from 60 to 70 feet away and believed he was the wanted person based on his height, weight, and complexion.
Edwards made a U-turn in his patrol car and drove back to Joshua’s location. Joshua and his companion walked off Calaveras Street into an apartment complex. Edwards drove into the alley behind the complex, anticipating Joshua would walk through the complex to that location. Edwards called for backup from other officers. Joshua turned around in the complex and continued walking on Calaveras Street. Up to that time and throughout the ensuing police contact, Edwards was never able to verify that Joshua was the person wanted on the outstanding arrest warrant. Edwards could not find the arrest warrant information he had written down in his notebook two weeks earlier and could not recall the name of the wanted person.
Responding to Edwards’s call for backup, Fresno Police Officers Verduzco and Reyes arrived on Calaveras Street and detained Joshua and his companion. Because Joshua matched the description given by Sergeant Edwards as the person Edwards was pursuing, Verduzco ordered Joshua and his companion to sit on the curb. Verduzco asked them their names, which they gave. He *362 then questioned whether they were on probation or parole. Joshua responded no. Next, Joshua denied Verduzco’s request to search him. Verduzco proceeded to ask Joshua to stand so he could conduct a patdown search for weapons. Verduzco performed a patdown search of Joshua based on the information received from Edwards that Joshua matched the description of a wanted felon and based on the prevalence of persons with weapons in this high-crime area.
While conducting the patdown, Officer Verduzco felt a bulge in Joshua’s right front pocket. Upon squeezing it, Verduzco thought it could be a bag of marijuana. When asked about the bulge, Joshua said it was marijuana. Verduzco retrieved the bag and arrested Joshua. After his arrest, Joshua admitted he was on juvenile probation. 2
On July 7, 2004, a petition was filed pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 602 against Joshua, alleging that he possessed marijuana for sale (Health & Saf. Code, § 11359). On September 13, 2004, the juvenile court denied Joshua’s suppression motion and Joshua admitted the allegation. At the conclusion of the disposition hearing on December 1, 2004, the juvenile court continued Joshua on probation. 3
DISCUSSION
Joshua contends the juvenile court should have granted the suppression motion because the officers had no reasonable suspicion to detain him or to perform a patdown search. Joshua argues the juvenile court erred in relying on
In re Tyrell J., supra,
In
People
v.
Sanders, supra,
The court emphasized that the validity of the search depends on the officer’s purpose.
(People
v.
Sanders, supra,
Respondent contends the above rule does not apply when the person searched is a juvenile, that we are presently bound by
In re Tyrell J., supra,
Because the high court itself dismantled the foundation and cornerstones of
Tyrell J.,
we reject respondent’s argument that we are bound to follow
Tyrell J.
under the rule of
Auto Equity Sales, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1962)
A succinct answer to this question was offered by Justice Kennard: “I would draw no distinction between the warrantless search of an adult parolee and the warrantless search of a juvenile probationer. As to each, I would apply the same analysis: Neither search can later be justified by information such as the search condition in this case that was unknown to the searching officer.” (People v. Sanders, supra, 31 Cal.4th at pp. 337-338 (conc. opn. of Kennard, J.).)
Recently, the majority of a different panel of this court confronted a similar question. In
People v. Hester
(2004)
While the
Hester
majority felt “compelled by
Sanders
to limit
Tyrell J.
to its facts”
(People v. Hester, supra,
As a corollary, we observe that in the
Tyrell J.
opinion itself the Supreme Court’s primary analysis was that a juvenile probationer’s right to be protected from a search by an officer not knowing the juvenile was on search-
*365
conditioned probation was based on the same “reduced expectation of privacy” analysis that applied to adult probationers.
(In re Tyrell J., supra,
Reduced to its most basic elements,
Sanders
requires that “whether a search is reasonable must be determined based upon the circumstances known to the officer when the search is conducted.”
(People v. Sanders, supra,
Here, Joshua and his friend had only been walking down the street. Officer Verduzco, the searching officer, ordered Joshua to sit on a curb and subjected him to a patdown because he resembled an adult person wanted on a felony warrant, a suspicion no officer was able to substantiate. No one disputes that this suspicion, even when combined with Joshua’s momentary detour into the apartment complex in this high-crime area, fails to justify the officers’ progressive conduct culminating in the seizure of the marijuana from Joshua’s pocket.
The fact that Joshua later advised he was on probation cannot justify the admission of the fruits of the officers’ illegal conduct committed against Joshua, the juvenile, any more than such admission of evidence would be allowed against an adult. The juvenile court erroneously admitted evidence of the unlawfully seized marijuana.
*366 DISPOSITION
The judgment of the juvenile court is reversed.
Dibiaso, Acting P. J., and Harris, J., concurred.
On May 18, 2005, the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied August 17, 2005. Werdegar, J., did not participate therein. Baxter, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
At the hearing on the motion to suppress, Sergeant Edwards’s description of the wanted suspect he encountered two weeks prior to Joshua’s arrest was vague. He testified that he believed the wanted person “was 19-20.”
Joshua was on probation with a search condition when he was stopped by officers.
Both case Nos. F046430 and F046858 are appeals from the same juvenile court action. Case No. F046430 was a premature appeal from the adjudication order. On January 27, 2005, we ordered both cases consolidated for all purposes.
In Tyrell J., a police officer searched the person of a juvenile probationer without knowing the minor was on juvenile probation and subject to a search condition, and found a bag of marijuana in one of the minor’s pockets.
