Defendant pleaded nolo contendere to a charge of attempting to fit out a ship with intent to destroy it and defraud an insurer, MCL
At 11:50 p.m. on May 27, 1989, the United States Coast Guard Station in Manistee received a telephone call from the owner of the Voyager’s Cove Marina concerning the vessel Kismet, which had left the marina earlier that day but had not yet returned. Later, at approximately 12:07 a.m. on May 28, Coast Guard Petty Officer Solomon made two unsuccessful attempts to contact the Kismet by radio using Channel 16, the international hailing frequency for marine traffic. However, at 12:10 a.m., Solomon monitored a Mayday call on Channel 16 that relayed information that the pleasure vessel Kismet had struck an underwater object and was sinking approximately two miles offshore in Lake Michigan near Cedar Creek. The Coast Guard responded to the call, and approximately one-half mile south of Manistee, a radar contact indicated something they assumed was the vessel requesting assistance located about 3 Vi miles south of Manistee. Approximately lVi miles south of Manistee, the Coast Guard crew observed a strobe light in the water and, at 12:36 a.m., defendant, who identified himself as the owner and operator of the Kismet, was rescued from Lake Michigan.
On May 29, the Coast Guard and the Department of Natural Resources contacted the Manistee County Sheriff’s Department and requested assis
On the port or left side of the vessel’s bow, they observed a hole the size of a man’s hand that was located a few inches below the water line. Kowalkowski also noted that, although the Kismet was a charter boat, none of the usual on-board equipment, such as a loran, graphs, fishing equipment, down riggers, fire extinguishers, and life jackets, was present on the vessel. Nothing was seen on the boat except one radio, which was sitting on the pilot’s seat rather than being mounted on the dash or in some other fashion that would be normal for a boat of the Kismet’s type. The radio microphone was mounted in the cradle. The engine-hatch covers were missing and the deputies were unable to locate them. Inside the boat, the deputies observed that the panel over the fuse box and wiring was open. Additionally, the anchor line was out of the bow and was set with the anchor buried in the sand at the bottom of the lake.
On the morning of June 1, apparently at the direction of defendant’s insurer, the Kismet was raised from Lake Michigan by Abrahamson’s Marine, a marine salvage company, towed to the Manistee harbor, and taken to the salvage company in Ludington. At this time, Deputy Kowalkowski again inspected the hole in the bow and photographed it from inside and outside the boat. At Kowalkowski’s direction, the portion of the fiberglass containing the hole was cut from the hull of the Kismet. Kowalkowski seized this piece of fiberglass, as well as another, similar piece of
Defendant moved to suppress all evidence seized from the Kismet, contending that there was no legal basis for the search of the boat without a warrant. The trial court disagreed and denied defendant’s motion. On appeal, defendant contends that the trial court erred in denying the motion to suppress because it incorrectly determined that the Kismet was an abandoned vessel and that defendant had no reasonable expectation of privacy in his sunken boat. We disagree.
This Court will not reverse a trial court’s denial of a motion to suppress unless that decision is clearly erroneous.
People v Burrell,
The Fourth Amendment is not a guarantee against all searches and seizures, but only against those that are unreasonable.
People v Shabaz,
424
Generally, a search conducted without a warrant is unreasonable unless both probable cause and some exception to the warrant requirement exist.
People v Jordan,
In
United States v Edwards,
644 F2d 1 (CA 5, 1981), the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals considered a case involving an allegedly abandoned ship.
In the meantime, the Florida Marine Patrol also had received the distress call and had dispatched a vessel that was unable to reach the Lady Barbara because of rough seas. However, several hours later, a Marine Patrol vessel reached and boarded the Lady Barbara. The officers had received a tip from a citizen informant of unknown reliability that marijuana was on board the Lady Barbara. They boarded the ship with the dual purpose of determining whether anyone remained on board and ascertaining whether the ship contained contraband. The patrol officers discovered a large number of bales of marijuana on the Lady Barbara. Id., 1-2. Later, after discovering that the Lady Barbara was on its list of suspect vessels, the Coast Guard also boarded the ship and confirmed the presence of approximately 30,000 pounds of marijuana in burlap bags stored in the hold of the Lady Barbara. Id., 2. Because of rough weather, the seizure and removal of the marijuana from the ship took about three days to complete. The Coast Guard did not attempt to get a warrant to search the ship. Id.
The Court of Appeals ruled that the defendant had no standing to challenge the search of the Lady Barbara and the subsequent seizure of the marijuana. The Court stated that the test of
Similarly, in the present case, defendant sent out a distress call stating that his boat was sinking and requesting assistance, the Coast Guard responded, and defendant accepted their aid. We are not persuaded that the fact that defendant had already "abandoned ship” because his vessel sank before the Coast Guard vessel arrived renders his abandonment of the vessel any less voluntary than that which occurred in Edwards. There is no evidence that defendant made any effort to reestablish control over the Kismet. The vessel was raised by a salvage company, apparently at the direction of defendant’s insurer in response to his claim of loss, and was stored at the salvage company’s place of business, as opposed to at a place owned or controlled by defendant. Therefore, we conclude that, because defendant had abandoned the Kismet, law enforcement officials were free to examine the vessel and its contents, and the seizure of evidence as a result of that examination was proper. The trial court correctly denied defendant’s motion to suppress.
Affirmed.
