OPINION
Dominick James Calabrese was convicted following a jury trial of unlawful possession of a narcotic drug, a class 4 felony, and the court suspended the imposition of sentence and placed Calabrese on fo,ur years’ probation. Calabrese argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence obtained during a search following his arrest. We affirm.
Police officers responded to a call about an unruly patient at St. Mary’s Hospital, and they arrived to find Calabrese being forcibly held on the ground by a hospital security guard who was detaining him because of his refusal to leave the grounds. After he was allowed to stand, the officers handcuffed him because of his agitated state and his conduct. One officer performed an initial patdown and found no weapons. After speaking to hospital security personnel, the officers determined that they had probable cause and did arrest Calabrese for criminal trespass. The officers then searched the pockets of his clothing and found in his left front pant pocket a paper sack and a syringe. The paper sack contained a small folded white paper which held approximately 31.2 milligrams of cocainе.
Calabrese moved to suppress as evidence the items which were obtained during the search following his arrest, arguing solely the violation of the fourth and fourteenth amendments to the United States Constitution. The trial court denied his motion to suppress, for the following reasons:
1. That the defendant was under arrest.
2. That the item in dispute was found in a paper bag found on the defendant’s person after that arrest.
3. That the officers had a right to a full search of the person of the defendant after the arrest.
4. At the very least, upon his booking at the Pima County Jail, his property would have had to have been inventoried to determine what it was.
5. That the cases cited by the defendant are not dispositive of the issue as this Court finds a distinct difference between a suitcase, a briefcase, etc. in a car and a paper sack on the person оf the defendant at the time of his arrest. (Emphasis added.)
We hold that the trial court correctly denied appellant’s motion to supрress; however, for the reasons stated below, we find that the court’s justification of the accelerated booking procedurе is erroneous.
In
United States v. Robinson,
The state argues that Calabrese’s failure to raise the Arizona constitutional question in the trial court waives that issuе on appeal. In
State v. Tison,
Assuming arguendo that the issue was properly raised, we decline to extend articlе 2, section 8 of our constitution to limit searches as Calabrese suggests. We note that Arizona courts have applied the standards set forth in
Robinson
to determine the admissibility of evidence seized from a defendant at the time of his arrest.
State v. Myers,
Calabrese argues, and we agree, that the trial court’s justification that, because the evidence would have been discovered when Calabrese was booked at the Pima County Jail it was an accelerated booking search and therefore admissible, is erroneous. He was arrested for criminal trespass, which is a misdemeanor, and therefore he could have been released without booking.
See
A.R.S. § 13-3903. The state argues that Calabrese was actuаlly charged with felony endangerment and, therefore, that at the time of his booking at the jail an inventory of everything in his possession would havе included the paper sack containing the cocaine.
See State v. Stukes,
We have reviewed the record for fundamental error and we find none. The judgment of conviction and the term of probation are affirmed.
