The State filed a petition asserting that R.A.S. was a delinquent child based on his possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia. R.A.S. moved to suppress the incriminating evidence, but the court denied the motion. He then pleaded no contest to the charges, reserving his right to appeal the court’s ruling on the dispositive suppression issue. We reverse and remand for entry of a judgment of dismissal.
The delinquency allegation stemmed from R.A.S.’s encounter with a Hillsbor-ough County sheriffs deputy who was driving around R.A.S.’s neighborhood looking for him because he had been reported absent from school. The deputy located R.A.S. and asked him to come over to talk to him. R.A.S. told the deputy that he was on his way to school. The deputy offered to give him a ride, and R.A.S. accepted. The deputy then stepped out of his car and told R.A.S. to empty his pockets. R.A.S. emptied all except one back pocket. The deputy then asked if he could “do a weapons patdown” and R.A.S. agreed. The deputy patted the pocket that R.A.S. had failed to empty, and he felt a small “squishy bulge.” He asked what the pocket contained, and R.A.S. pulled out a plastic baggy containing a green, leafy substance.
The circuit court denied the motion to suppress on the theory that R.A.S. voluntarily produced the contraband after the deputy merely asked him what was in the pocket. However, R.A.S.’s disclosure of the contents of his pocket was tainted by an illegal search and seizure that occurred earlier in his encounter with the deputy.
Law enforcement may take a child into custody if the officer has reasonable grounds to believe the child is a truant. § 984.13(l)(b), Fla. Stat. (2012). But truancy is not a crime, and a custodial detention for this purpose is not an arrest. A.B.S. v. State,
It is also the case that an officer may conduct a pat-down for weapons before placing a truant in his vehicle, but he is not authorized to conduct a full search. See id.; L.C.,
By directing R.A.S. to empty his pockets, the deputy essentially conducted an unauthorized full search. Cf. E.B. v. State,
When R.A.S. did not remove the contents of his back pocket, the deputy asked for and obtained the youth’s consent to conduct a pat-down search of that pocket. But the illegal search had already
We recognize that, at the outset, the deputy properly could have conducted a pat-down for weapons instead of the illegal search. But he did not feel an object that remotely resembled a weapon in R.A.S.’s back pocket. As the L.C. court explained, when law enforcement is arresting a criminal suspect, the officer may conduct a warrantless search incident to that arrest in order to disarm a suspect before taking him into custody “and to preserve evidence for trial.”
We reverse the denial of the motion to suppress and remand for the court to enter a judgment of dismissal.
