We granted certiorari in this case to determine whether, in the circumstances, a warrantless police search of a piece of luggage, conducted essentially contemporaneously with a valid arrest of the owner of the luggage, violated Fourth Amendment precepts.
I.
Gilbert Ricks was charged in the Circuit Court for Wicomico County with a number of drug offenses. Prior to trial, *186 he moved to suppress a quantity of cocaine, marijuana and related paraphernalia which the police had seized following a search of his luggage. Ricks claimed, inter alia, that absent a search warrant, the search was illegal. The court (Simpson, J.) found that Ricks’s arrest was lawful and that the evidence taken from his luggage was properly seized incident to his arrest.
At the trial, Ricks was convicted on all counts and sentenced to imprisonment for fifteen years. On appeal, he contended that even if the arrest was lawful, the search of his luggage was unlawful without a search warrant; and that in any event it exceeded the permissible scope of a search incident to an arrest as articulated in
Chimel v. California,
II.
The evidence at the suppression hearing disclosed that police authorities received an anonymous tip by telephone that Ricks would arrive in Salisbury by Trailway bus from Baltimore on Friday, October 14, 1988, at approximately 6 p.m.; that he would be carrying a brownish to maroon fold-over soft luggage bag with a lock on it; and that Ricks would be carrying cocaine for sale in the Salisbury area. The anonymous caller gave an extremely detailed description of Ricks. Upon investigation, the police ascertained that Ricks had a prior CDS violation as well as a conviction for robbery.
Acting on this information, Ricks was accosted by Sergeant Bacon of the Maryland State Police as he emerged from the 6:05 P.M. Trailways bus in Salisbury. Ricks matched the description given by the tipster and was carry *187 ing the described fold-over luggage bag. After “patting down” Ricks’s outer clothing for a weapon, and finding none, Bacon asked Ricks to accompany him to his police car and to place his bag on the trunk of Bacon’s vehicle. Ricks complied. About a minute and a half later, Trooper Aaron arrived on the scene. At that time, Ricks was within arms reach of his bag, standing behind the vehicle with Sergeant Bacon. Aaron testified that there were then three other officers on the scene, one of whom asked Ricks for consent to search his bag. Ricks refused. According to Ricks’s testimony:
“After that, we kept standing out there. I am standing— they are surrounding me. I am standing next to the back of Sergeant Bacon’s car, and so, then Trooper Aaron was telling me that either I consent to searching the bags or they was going to call the dogs. Either way, we weren’t going to leave until we went into the bags.”
Aaron testified that approximately fifteen minutes later the police narcotics canine, Dusty, arrived accompanied by Deputy Wilkinson. One of the officers took Ricks’s bag off of the trunk of the car and placed it on the sidewalk. The dog scratched the bag, an indication that it contained narcotics. 1 At that point, Ricks was again asked to open the bag, and whether there were any narcotics in the bag. Ricks said that there were no narcotics in the bag and he again declined to open it. The officers then advised Ricks that the dog’s actions indicated that there were narcotics in the bag “and that there was probable cause to open the bag and look inside at which point he said, you have to do what you have to do.” The bag was opened and searched; it contained a quantity of suspected cocaine, marijuana and distribution paraphernalia.
*188 III.
Ricks does not contest the intermediate appellate court’s determination, which affirmed the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress, that his arrest was supported by the requisite probable cause. Indeed, at oral argument before us, Ricks conceded that he was lawfully arrested, at least at the point when the dog scratched his bag, indicating that it contained narcotics. Nevertheless, Ricks argues that because he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in his luggage, the police had no right to search it without a search warrant, absent exigent circumstances. There were no such circumstances, he contends, because the luggage was securely in police possession and beyond his control. In these circumstances, he maintains that the Fourth Amendment requires that a search warrant be obtained, there being no danger that he could obtain a weapon or destroy incriminating evidence which would justify a warrantless search incident to the arrest. Ricks relies primarily upon
United States v. Chadwick,
(1 — 3] The Fourth Amendment protects individuals from unreasonable searches and seizures. A warrantless search or seizure is
per se
unreasonable, unless the police can show that it falls within one of a carefully defined set of exceptions.
Gamble v. State,
“When an arrest is made, it is reasonable for the arresting officer to search the person arrested in order to remove any weapons that the latter might seek to use in order to resist arrest or effect his escape. Otherwise, the officer’s safety might well be endangered, and the arrest itself frustrated. In addition, it is entirely reasonable for the arresting officer to search for and seize any evidence on the arrestee’s person in order to prevent its concealment or destruction. And the area into which an arrestee might reach in order to grab a weapon or evidentiary items must, of course, be governed by a like rule. A gun on a table or in a drawer in front of one who is arrested can be as dangerous to the arresting officer as one concealed in the clothing of the person arrested. There is ample justification, therefore, for a search of the arrestee’s person and the area ‘within his immediate control’— construing that phrase to mean the area from within which he might gain possession of a weapon or destructible evidence.”
Id.,
To justify a warrantless seizure of evidence under
Chimel,
the State must demonstrate on the record that the evidence “was found either on the person of the arrestee or in a place so perilously close to him at the time of the arrest that had the discovered item been a weapon it might reasonably be employed by the person in custody to the detriment of the officer or had it been concealable or destructible evidence it would be readily susceptible to being demolished
*190
by the arrestee.”
Howell, supra,
We applied these principles in
Foster v. State,
We again considered the scope of the search incident to an arrest in
Lee v. State,
The validity of a search of an area in an arrestee’s “immediate control,” as explicated in Chimel, and in Foster and Lee, is controlling. The arresting officers were aware that Ricks had a prior robbery conviction and a controlled dangerous substance violation. At the time of the search of the bag, Ricks was not physically restrained. The bag remained on the sidewalk. It was possible for Ricks to grab the bag, intending either to destroy evidence or to gain access to a weapon. 2
Ricks claims that reliance on
Chimel
and
Lee
is misplaced because those cases involved situations where the safety of officers was in question and the search was, therefore, conducted for safety reasons. But the grounds for a search incident to an arrest set forth in
Chimel
are explicitly not limited to officer safety. The Court there stated: “[I]t is entirely reasonable for the arresting officer to search for and seize any evidence on the arrestee’s person in order to prevent its concealment or destruction.”
Id.,
Ricks’s argument that
United States v. Chadwick,
Neither Chadwick nor Sanders mandates a result different than we have reached under the Chimel analysis. In Chadwick, railroad officials in San Diego observed two individuals loading a heavy footlocker onto a train bound for Boston. One of the men matched a profile used to spot drug traffickers. After noticing that the footlocker was leaking talcum powder, a substance used to mask the odor of marijuana or hashish, the officials reported their suspicions to federal agents. When the train arrived in Boston, federal narcotics agents observed the suspects lift the footlocker from the baggage cart and place it on the floor of the station. The agents then released a dog trained in narcotics detection; the dog signaled the presence of controlled dangerous substances in the footlocker. Thereafter, the men moved the footlocker into the trunk of their car. Before they closed the lid of the trunk, federal agents arrested the two men and Chadwick; they also seized the footlocker. *193 An hour and a half later, after the footlocker was separated from the arrestees and transported to the Federal Building, the agents opened it without a search warrant and seized a large quantity of marijuana.
The Court held that the warrantless search of the footlocker violated the Fourth Amendment. It said that “[Wjarrantless searches of luggage cannot be justified as incident to that arrest either if the ‘search is remote in time or place from the arrest,’ ... or no exigency exists.”
Id.,
The impact of
Chadwick
on the scope of a search under
Chimel
was clarified in
New York v. Belton,
“As the Court pointed out in the Chadwick case: ‘Here the search was conducted more than an hour after federal agents had gained exclusive control of the footlocker and long after respondents were securely in custody; the search therefore cannot be viewed as incidental to the *194 arrest or as justified by any other exigency.’433 U.S., at 15 [97 S.Ct. at 2485-86 ]. And in the Sanders case, the Court explicitly stated that it did not ‘consider the constitutionality of searches of luggage incident to the arrest of its possessor. See, e.g., United States v. Robinson,414 U.S. 218 [94 S.Ct. 467 ,38 L.Ed.2d 427 ] (1973). The State has not argued that respondent’s suitcase was searched incident to his arrest, and it appears that the bag was not within his “immediate control” at the time of the search.’442 U.S., at 764, n. 11 [99 S.Ct. at 2593, n. 11 ].” Id.
In
Lee v. State, supra,
While Ricks’s argument is somewhat vague, he appears to rely on one factual similarity between
Chadwick, Sanders
and the instant case: all involve a warrantless search of luggage. The Court noted in
Chadwick,
*195
Other jurisdictions are in accord with this holding.
See United States v. Tavolacci,
We conclude, therefore, that the warrantless search incident to Ricks’s arrest was valid and that the seized evidence was properly admitted into evidence at the trial.
JUDGMENTS AFFIRMED, WITH COSTS.
Notes
. Deputy Wilkinson testified that he and the dog had received training in the identification and retrieval of marijuana, cocaine, crack cocaine and heroin. The dog was trained to alert the officer to the presence of CDS by a scratching motion. According to Wilkinson, the dog had never falsely indicated the presence of CDS.
. The search in this case would not have been invalid, even if Ricks was arrested after the search of the bag. As long as the search and the arrest are essentially contemporaneous, a search may be analyzed under the principles governing searches incident to arrest.
Lee, supra,
. In Sanders, the police, acting on information received from an informant that the defendant was carrying marijuana in a green suitcase, and having later observed the green suitcase placed in the trunk of a taxi in which the defendant was riding, stopped the vehicle, searched the suitcase and found the incriminating evidence. The Supreme Court held that the search of the suitcase without a warrant was unlawful. It declined to extend the exception to the warrant requirement applicable to searches of automobiles, stating that in the circumstances the warrantless search of the luggage, to be valid, required justification under one of the other exceptions to the warrant requirement.
