In
Quinn v. State,
A Douglas County deputy sheriff on patrol during the Christmas holiday season was instructed to “check people walking, [and] check people sitting in parking lots,” because there had been an unusual amount of crime reported in the area. The officer came upon two vehicles parked side by side in a shopping center parking lot after dark. A Trans Am, later identified as belonging to Quinn, was parked next to a Jaguar. A man who oсcupied the driver’s seat of the Jaguar was leaning over toward the passenger side. The front passenger door was open and Quinn was seen kneeling down on the ground and leaning into the Jaguar. The deputy parked behind both cars, and he exited his vehicle. As he аpproached the men, the deputy observed *71 Quinn “putting something up under the seat” of the Jaguar, and then standing up. The driver sat upright in the Jaguar. When the officer asked the two men what they were doing, Quinn responded that he was interested in buying the Jaguar. Both men were asked fоr identification and both produced driver’s licenses, which appeared to be in order. (It was later learned that Quinn’s license had been issued in a false name.) The officer noticed a bag on the front passenger seat and, thinking that it might be the item which Quinn had attempted to conceal, he asked what it contained. Both men replied that they did not know what was in the bag, but both gave the officer рermission to inspect its contents. The bag contained $11,500 in cash. The officer testified at trial that upon discovering the contents оf the bag, he called for backup. And, based on the information known to the officer, Quinn was no longer free to leave.
Quinn was then аsked if he had a weapon. He responded that he had a pistol on the driver’s seat of the Trans Am, and he gave his permission for the officer to retrieve it. Another officer arrived two minutes later. That officer opened the driver’s door of the Jaguar and asked the driver to turn off the engine, whereupon he observed another paper bag, partially beneath the passenger sеat. The officer picked it up and asked the driver what was in the bag; he responded that he did not know. However, the officer suspеcted that the bag contained contraband because the contents felt “powdery and crunchy.” The officer requested but was denied permission to search the vehicle. He then replaced the paper bag in its original location.
Both men were secured in the back seat of the patrol car and Miranda warnings were administered while a narcotics detecting dog alerted on the passenger side of the Jaguar. A search warrant was obtained and quantities of cocaine and methamphetamine wеre from the Jaguar. Quinn denied that the money and drugs belonged to him. The driver testified as a state’s witness at trial that the meeting in the parking lot had been prearranged to “exchange money for dope.”
We hold, and the State concedes, that discovery of a lаrge, unexplained sum of money, standing alone, does not constitute articulable suspicion of criminal activity which would justify seizure of an individual. The Court of Appeals erred to the extent that its opinion may suggest such a result. Accord
Polke v. State,
Not all encоunters between police officers and citizens involve seizures which implicate Fourth Amendment protections.
Devier v. State,
The discovery of the large sum of currency (pursuant to a consent sеarch), combined with the totality of the other circumstances then known to the officers, authorized Quinn’s brief detention at the scene. The events which followed, i.e., the presence of the pistol on the seat of his vehicle, the hidden bag which appeared to contain contraband, and the alerting by the narcotics dog, provided the probable cause necessary to obtain a search warrant. Accordingly, we agree with the conclusion of the Court of Appeals that the suppression motion would not have been meritorious and Quinn was not рrejudiced under the second prong of Strickland v. Washington, supra.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
We assume for purposes of this appeal that Quinn had standing to contest the seizure of the contraband.
