In this criminal case, a police officer directed defendant to “stop” and “come here” as defendant was leaving an apartment in La Grande. Defendant obeyed that direction but, before he reached the officer, put a clear plastic “baggie” containing a controlled substance underneath one of the cars in the apartment parking lot. Having concluded that the officer stopped defendant without reasonable suspicion, the Court of Appeals held that the trial court should have suppressed the baggie and its contents because the state had not proved that defendant had abandoned it.
State v. Crandall,
Three officers responded to a loud-noise complaint at an apartment complex in La Grande. They heard music through the door of the apartment identified in the complaint, knocked on the door, but got no answer. While he was waiting for a response, Officer Welberg saw two people leaving an apartment on the other side of the apartment complex. Welberg knew both persons, having encountered them in connection with an earlier investigation of drug-related offenses. Defendant walked out of the same apartment a few minutes later and, on seeing the officer, froze for a moment. As Welberg later testified, “I would describe it as him coming out of the apartment, seeing us and going, oh shit.” Defendant then closed the apartment door, turned, and quickly began walking away from the officers.
As noted, Welberg called to defendant to “stop” and “come here.” Defendant stopped, turned around, and walked back in Welberg’s direction through the parking lot. As he was walking toward Welberg and while he was out of Welberg’s line of sight, defendant ducked down between two cars and put something underneath one of them. The two other officers, who had a different vantage point, saw defendant’s actions and retrieved a clear plastic baggie that appeared to contain three bindles of methamphetamine. The officers arrested defendant and charged him with possessing a controlled substance.
*648 Contending that Welberg had stopped him without reasonable suspicion in violation of Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution, 1 defendant filed a motion to suppress the evidence derived from the stop. The trial court denied that motion, finding that no stop had occurred within the meaning of Article I, section 9. Having lost his motion to suppress, defendant entered a conditional guilty plea and, on appeal, challenged the trial court’s ruling denying his suppression motion. See ORS 135.335(3) (authorizing defendants to enter conditional guilty pleas reserving right, in writing, to appeal adverse pretrial rulings).
The Court of Appeals reversed.
Crandall,
On review, the state does not challenge the Court of Appeals’ holding that Welberg had stopped defendant without reasonable suspicion in violation of Article I, section 9. The state focuses its argument instead on the legal standard that the Court of Appeals used to determine whether the discovery of the baggie derived from or was the product of the unlawful stop. It contends that the Court of Appeals erred in using the concept of “abandonment” to make that determination. As noted, we allowed the state’s petition for review to decide that issue. 2
*649 The question whether the officers constitutionally could retrieve the baggie that defendant put underneath the car presents two separate issues. The first is whether the officers’ observation of the baggie constituted a search within the meaning of Article I, section 9. If it did not, the remaining issue is whether the court still should suppress the evidence because defendant’s act of placing the baggie under the car derived from or was the product of the unlawful stop.
Article I, section 9, provides, in part, that “[n]o law shall violate the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable search, or seizure.” The question whether the officers engaged in a “search” for the purposes of Article I, section 9, turns on whether they invaded defendant’s privacy interest.
See State v. Owens,
The remaining issue is whether defendant still may seek to suppress the baggie on the theory that its discovery derived from or was the product of an unlawful stop. Three cases bear on that issue:
State v. Hall,
*650
In
Kennedy,
the police approached the defendant as he was leaving the Portland Airport.
In deciding whether that evidence was the product of an unlawful stop, this court assumed that the officers had stopped the defendant and that they lacked reasonable suspicion to do so. Id. at 499. The court also recognized that the stop was the “but for” cause of the officers’ discovery of the evidence. Id. at 500-01. Relying on, among other things, the “defendant’s offer to let [the officer] search his luggage without a prior request for consent,” the court concluded that the discovery of the evidence was sufficiently attenuated from any illegality to say that it did not derive from it. Id. at 504-06.
The facts
in. Rodriguez
are similar. In that case, state and federal officers arrested the defendant at his home pursuant to an arrest warrant.
*651
The third case presents a variation on that pattern. In
Hall,
a police officer stopped the defendant as he was walking along the street.
This court concluded that the officer had stopped the defendant without reasonable suspicion in violation of Article I, section 9. Id. at 19. In analyzing whether the evidence that the officer had discovered as a result of the consent search derived from or was a product of the unlawful stop, the court explained that, if a defendant establishes
“a minimal factual nexus — that is, at minimum, the existence of a ‘but for’ relationship — between the evidence sought to be suppressed and prior unlawful police conduct, the state nevertheless may establish that the disputed evidence is admissible under Article I, section 9, by proving that the evidence did not derive from the preceding illegality.”
Id. at 25. The court reasoned that the state could prove that the evidence did not derive from the preceding illegality by showing (1) that it inevitably would have discovered the evidence; (2) that it had an independent source for the evidence; or (3) that “the preceding violation of the defendant’s rights under Article I, section 9, has such a tenuous factual link to the disputed evidence that that unlawful police conduct cannot be viewed properly as the source of that evidence.” Id.
Focusing on the last inquiry, the
Hall
court held that a voluntary consent to search following an unlawful stop is insufficient — standing alone — to establish that evidence found during the search did not derive from the unlawful stop.
Id.
at 28. The court was careful to make clear, however, that the question whether evidence derives from a prior illegality turns on the particular facts and circumstances of
*652
each case.
Id.
at 35.
4
For example, the court noted that the defendant in
Kennedy
had “volunteered to allow a search without any police prompting” following an unlawful stop.
Hall,
The decisions in Kennedy, Rodriguez, and Hall guide our resolution of this case. In deciding to put the baggie containing a controlled substance underneath the car in the parking lot, defendant acted both unilaterally and voluntarily. To be sure, the officer’s direction to defendant to “stop” and “come here” was the “but for” cause of defendant’s decision to put the baggie underneath the car, but that same “but for” causal connection was also present in both Kennedy and Rodriguez. However, defendant’s unilateral, voluntary decision to put the baggie underneath the car sufficiently attenuated the discovery of that evidence from the prior illegality, in the same way that the defendants’ acts in Kennedy and Rodriguez did.
In reaching a different conclusion, the Court of Appeals relied both on its determination that defendant had
*653
not “abandon [ed] his privacy and possessory interests in the baggie and its contents” and also on this court’s decision in
State v. Morton,
Regarding abandonment, it is certainly true that, if defendant had abandoned the baggie, he would have no basis to complain about the officers’ discovery of it.
See State v. Purvis,
The Court of Appeals also relied on this court’s decision in
Morton
in holding that the baggie was the product of the unlawful stop. In
Morton,
a plastic container containing drugs “fell from [the defendant’s] jacket” as the officers were placing her under arrest, unlawfully as it turned out.
The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Notes
Defendant has not argued either on review or before the Court of Appeals that Welberg stopped him in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
The state has not petitioned for review of the question whether the officer’s direction to defendant constituted a stop, and we assume for the purposes of this
*649
opinion that it did.
See State v. Hall,
Similarly, having seen a baggie that appeared to contain a controlled substance, the officers properly seized it.
See Owens,
After noting that the determination turned on the facts of each case, the court observed:
“we view several considerations to be relevant to that determination, including (1) the temporal proximity between the unlawful police conduct and the defendant’s consent, (2) the existence of any intervening circumstances, and (3) the presence of any circumstances — such as, for example, a police officer informing the defendant of the right to refuse consent [in the context of a consent search] — that mitigated the effect of the unlawful police conduct.”
Hall,
We note that the Court of Appeals did not have the benefit of the decision in Hall when it wrote its decision.
