Lead Opinion
Unless police have reasonable suspicion that a subject is armed and dangerous, they may generally conduct a pat-down for officer safety only with the subject’s voluntary consent. Here, Defendant asked to step out of his truck during a traffic stop, and police made their permission conditional on a pat-down. Defendant argues that choice was inherently coercive and rendered his consent involuntary, but we disagree. Police could simply have required Defendant to remain in the truck, with no option of getting out, as part of
Facts and Procedural History
At about midnight on May 17, 2013, police pulled over Defendant Michael Cunningham for a traffic stop. One of his taillights was broken, “emitting a glaring or blinding light” because the red lens was completely gone. The officer described the broken taillight to Defendant, who said that “he knew the ... lens had been cracked, but he didn’t realize ... it was missing,” and he “asked if he could exit the vehicle to look at it.” The officer told Defendant “that was fíne but I would pat him down for any weapons just for officer safety issue [sic],” and Defendant “said ..that was fíne” and exited the vehicle.
At that point, Defendant submitted to a pat-down. He had no weapons, but the officer recognized by feel that there was a pill bottle in Defendant’s right front pocket. The officer asked what was in the bottle, and Defendant admitted that it contained marijuana and took the bottle out of his pocket. The officer then asked Defendant about “anything else on his person,” and Defendant admitted he had a pipe in his truck and offered to go get it. After giving Defendant his Miranda warnings, the officer asked him to retrieve the pipe. But in response to further questions about the source of the marijuana, Defendant’s “reply was if he was going to jail tonight, he wasn’t going to answer any further questions.” Nevertheless, Defendant was “very much” cooperative during the traffic stop.
Defendant was arrested and charged with possession of marijuana and possession of paraphernalia as Class A misdemeanors, as well as Class D felony enhancements of each offense based on his prior convictions. He then moved to suppress both the pill bottle and the pipe on two grounds: first, the traffic stop was invalid because even with the missing lens, both taillights had working bulbs and thus served their purpose of signaling when the truck was slowing down; and second, even if the stop was valid, the pat-down was not because Defendant consented only to a search for weapons, and the officer knew by feel that the object in Defendant’s pocket was merely a pill bottle. The trial court granted suppression, reading Indiana Code section 9-19-6-4 to require only one red taillight, finding no requirement that “only red light” be visible—thus holding the traffic stop invalid without considering whether consent was valid. The State appealed.
A divided panel of the Court of Appeals affirmed on different grounds in a published decision. State v. Cunningham,
But Judge Brown dissented on this point, reasoning that since police may order occupants to stay in a vehicle during a traffic stop, they could properly give conditional permission to get out. And because there was no need to exit the truck in that moment—Defendant could have inspected the taillight after the stop was complete— his statement that a pat-down was “fine,” and his choice to get out knowing that a pat-down would result, were voluntary and not coerced. Id. at 807.
The State sought transfer, arguing that a choice between being' patted down as a condition of exiting one’s vehicle, or else remaining in the vehicle unsearched, is not coercive. We agree.
Standard of Review
Whether consent to a search was given voluntarily “is a question of fact to be determined from the totality of all the circumstances.” Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
Discussion
“Many search and seizure issues are resolved in the same manner under both the Indiana and Federal Constitutions,” Campos,
The essence of Defendant’s argument on transfer, is that his consent was not given voluntarily—reasoning that it is inherently coercive to make a pat-down a condition of getting out of a stopped vehicle when police have no reasonable suspicion to independently justify a pat-down. The tacit premise of Defendant’s view, though, is that he had a right to exit the car while the traffic stop was in progress, which is inconsistent with law enforcement’s well-established authority to require stopped motorists to stay in the car until the stop
I. It Is Not Inherently Coercive to Choose Whether to Get Out of a Car and Be Frisked, or to Stay Inside Unsearched.
A routine traffic stop presents enough “concern for officer safety” that it “may justify the ‘minimal’ additional intrusion of ordering a driver and passengers out of the car”—even though a stop does not automatically justify a non-consensual pat-down without reasonable suspicion that the subject may be armed and dangerous. Knowles v. Iowa,
The logical conclusion of Defendant’s argument, then, is that if a motorist asks to get out of the car during a traffic stop, police have no choice but to either forbid it entirely or permit it unconditionally. We cannot agree. The practical result of such a rule would almost certainly be that police would err on the side of caution and never allow drivers out of the car during a stop, thus increasing the adversarial nature of traffic stops and restricting drivers’ liberty more than would otherwise be the case. Giving police a measure of discretion in their interactions with motorists will give motorists greater freedom as well. That discretion is surely not limitless—for example, we might find it inherently coercive to ask permission to search the inside of a car as a condition of letting the driver get out, since that condition would not be the “least intrusive means” of accommodating the motorist’s request. See Wilson v. State,
Nor does Jett v. State, on which Defendant relies, suggest otherwise.
II. Defendant’s Right to Refuse Consent to Search Was Implicit in His Choice to Get Out of the Vehicle or Stay In.
Defendant also claims that police implied he “had no choice but to submit to the pat-down when he exited the vehicle, despite the absence of reasonable suspicion that he was armed and dangerous.”
Consent to search is invalid when police imply that the subject has no option for refusing the search. For example, in Campos, a driver who had been asked for consent to search asked police, “Is it really necessary?” and the officer answered, “Yes.”
By contrast here, the very fact that Defendant asked permission to get out of his truck implies that he knew he was expected to stay in the truck unless he had specific permission to do otherwise. As Judge Brown’s dissent recognized, “the police were neither acting nor directing but rather responding to [Defendants request to get out of his vehicle.”
Defendant having a truly free choice also defeats his related argument that his consent was not valid because police never told him he could refuse consent. “[V]oluntariness is a question of fact to be determined from all the circumstances.” Bustamonte,
III. Defendant Was Not Coerced Into Broadening the Scope of His Consent to Search.
Finally, Defendant argues that he consented, at most, to a weapons search, and because police knew the object
We have recognized that repeated requests and accusatory questions can contribute to a coercive environment that negates consent. In Sellmer v. State, police essentially badgered the owner of a car into giving consent to search.
But the police conduct here was far less confrontational than in Sellmer. Upon identifying the pill bottle by feel, the officer did not engage in aggressive or badgering questions, but asked only a single, open-ended question about its contents— “expecting [Defendant] to say it was his medication,” not to volunteer an incriminating answer. Instead, Defendant volunteered that the bottle contained marijuana, then without prompting took the bottle out of his own pocket and showed it to the officer. Then and only then, the officer asked a followup question, which was still consistent with a pat-down—whether “there was anything else on his person that ... I needed to be aware of’ (emphasis added)—to which Defendant volunteered, “I’ve got a pipe in the truck” and offered “to go get it.” At that point, the officer advised Defendant of his rights before the investigation went any further.
Thus, even though the scope of Defendant’s encounter with law enforcement broadened from his initial consent to a simple pat-down for weapons, that expansion resulted from information he volunteered, without coercion from (or even leading by) the investigating officer. Just as Defendant could consent to the initial patdown, he could—and did—consent to its expansion. We find no violation of his constitutional rights.
Conclusion
Police always have the right to require a driver to remain inside the vehicle during a traffic stop, even without particularized officer-safety concerns. Accordingly, it is not inherently coercive for police to give conditional permission to step out of the vehicle, subject to the motorist’s consent to a pat-down. Such a situation offers the
Notes
. On this point, we summarily affirm the Court of Appeals. See Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A)(2).
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
In my view the State has failed to establish Cunningham’s purported consent to the pat-down was constitutionally valid. Therefore I respectfully dissent.
The Fourth Amendment requires officers to have more than an “inchoate and unparticularized suspicion or ‘hunch’ ” that the person stopped is armed and dangerous in order to justify a pat-down search. Terry v. Ohio,
Law enforcement officers do face significant risks in performing traffic stops and it is for this reason the Fourth Amendment allows an individual’s privacy interests to be balanced against officer safety interests.
However, to subject the stopped motorist to a frisk for weapons is permissible only if a reasonably prudent man in the circumstances would be warranted in the belief that his safety or that of others was in danger. Police may not frisk for weapons on less than reasonable belief or suspicion directed at the person to be frisked. An officer’s authority to conduct a pat-down search is dependent upon the nature and extent of his particularized concern for his safety and that of others.
Wilson v. State,
The State has the burden of proving consent to a search was freely and voluntary given. Campos v. State,
The majority relies on Schneckloth v. Bustamante for the proposition that
I would have thought that the capacity to choose necessarily depends upon knowledge that there is a choice to be made. But today the Court reaches the curious result that one can choose to relinquish a constitutional right—the right to be free of unreasonable searches—without knowing that he has the alternative of refusing to accede to a police request to search.
Schneckloth,
It is of course the case that police officers have the authority to maintain control of a traffic stop, including ordering someone to either stay in or exit a vehicle. However, it goes too far to permit a police officer to be able to barter an individual’s constitutional right to be free from war-rantless, unreasonable searches in exchange for the individual to verify he in fact was committing a minor traffic infraction as the officer alleged. Up to the point when Cunningham asked to step out of the vehicle, the officer had no safety concerns. The officer also had not instructed Cunningham to remain in the vehicle. If instead of asking permission Cunningham simply had gotten out of the vehicle, inspected the light in the same calm demeanor, then immediately got back in his vehicle—whether or not Officer Hammock in the meantime had ordered him back in—Cunningham would not have done anything to warrant a search. See Jett v. State,
I agree with my colleagues on the Court of Appeals that the “pat-down search of Cunningham violated the Fourth Amendment and the resulting fruits of that search must be suppressed.” State v. Cunningham,
