The state appeals from an intermediate appellate order of the district court reversing the magistrate’s decree that John Doe falls within the purview of the Juvenile Corrections Act (JCA) for possession of marijuana. Specifically, the state challengеs the district court’s order reversing the magistrate’s denial of Doe’s motion to suppress evidence. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse the order of the district court vacating the magistrate’s decree and remand.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
In April 2006, a church employee contаcted the police regarding two individuals who were looking in a window and appeared to possibly be attempting to gain access to the church. Dispatch contacted several police officers and, around 9:45 p.m., four police officers arrivеd at the church. Two officers, in separate patrol cars, cornered two young individuals dressed in black. The officers ordered the two individuals to he down on their stomachs and they complied. Several of the officers circled the church, and it was determined that thе two individuals dressed in black were the ones seen by the church employee. One of those individuals was seventeen-year-old John Doe and the other was his sixteen-year-old Mend.
After ordering the boys to the ground, one officer placed Doe in handcuffs while he was
The state filed a petition alleging that Doe was a juvenile, had possessed marijuana in violation of I.C. § 37 — 2732(c)(3), and was therefore within the purview of the JCA. Doe filed a motion to suppress the marijuana and two admissions he made regarding his ownership. An evidentiary hearing was held before the magistrate. The officer who handcuffed Doe testified that, after he paused his frisk so Doe could hear the Miranda wаrnings, the officer felt a square box in Doe’s front pocket. The officer testified that he immediately recognized the box as a cigarette package. The officer testified he asked Doe how old he was, and Doe responded that he was seventeen yеars old. The officer reached into Doe’s pocket and removed the cigarettes and then asked Doe if he had anything else illegal on his person. Doe responded that he had marijuana in another pocket of his pants. The officer retrieved the mаrijuana from Doe’s pocket. Doe admitted to the officer that the marijuana was his. Later at the police station, Doe again confessed that the marijuana was his.
The magistrate denied the motion to suppress and found Doe to be within the purview of the JCA for рossession of marijuana. Doe appealed, and the district court reversed the magistrate and suppressed the marijuana and Doe’s statements on the ground that the officer had no justification for the frisk which led to the discovery of marijuana. The state apрeals.
II.
ANALYSIS
The state contends that the district court erred because that the officer who handcuffed Doe was justified in conducting a frisk of Doe’s clothing for weapons. On review of a decision of the district court, rendered in its appellate capacity, we review the decision of the district court directly.
Losser v. Bradstreet,
The standard of review of a suppression motion is bifurcated. When a decision on a motion to suppress is challenged, we accept the trial court’s findings of fact which are supported by substantial evidence, but we freely review the application of constitutional principles to the facts as found.
State v. Atkinson,
A warrantless search is presumptively unreasonable unless it falls within certain special and well-delineated exceptions to the warrant requirement.
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
The stop is justified if there is a reasоnable and articulable suspicion that the individual has committed or is about to commit a crime.
Florida v. Royer,
In this case, Doe concedes that the officer was justified in stopping him. The state argues that the officer was also justified in conducting a Terry frisk because the encounter occurred at night, the officers were responding to a possible burglary, Doe and his friend were dressed in black, and police had responded to a brеak-in or burglary report at the church one week prior to this incident.
Several jurisdictions have concluded that certain crimes, like burglary, by their very nature are so suggestive of the presence and use of weapons that a frisk is always reasonable when officеrs have a reasonable suspicion that an individual might be involved in such a crime.
See, e.g., United States v. Bullock,
Terry
frisks of suspected burglars have been justified on two separate grounds. First, it is not unlikely that someone engaged in stealing another persons property would arm himself or herself against the possibility that someone will appear unexpectedly and object strenuously.
See People v. McGowan,
Although we decline to adopt a bright-fine rule that officers are automatically entitled to
At the hearing on Doe’s motion to suppress, the officer who frisked Doe’s friend testified regarding the special risks associated with investigating a possible burglary:
You do not know the uhm exact location of the possible burglar as you’re responding to the call. You don’t know if they do have any type of weapons with them. You don’t know what their mentality is, whether or not they’re uh — may be uhm under the influence of any alcohol or drugs or anything else. You don’t know what their mental state is when you’re responding to those calls.
Doe and his friend could have been in possession of burglary tools- — screwdrivers, hammers, picks — that could easily have been used as weapons. Therefore, based on the facts of this case, we conclude that the officer was justified in conducting a Terry frisk of Doe’s outer clothing for weapons.
Having determined that the officer was justified in conducting a
Teiry
frisk of Doe for weapons, we must now determine whether the officer acted lawfully thereafter. The plain touch or plain feel excеption to the warrant requirement may be invoked when, during the course of a
Terry
frisk for weapons, an officer feels an object whose contour or mass makes its identity “immediately apparent.”
Minnesota v. Dickerson,
In this case, the officer who frisked Doe testified at the suppression hearing that he felt the cigarette box in Doe’s pocket and immediately recognized it as a cigarette pack. The officer testified that, before removing the cigarette pack from Doe’s pocket, he asked Doe how old he was and Doe responded that he was seventeen. 2 Therefore, we conclude that the officer was justified in removing the contraband cigarettes from Doe’s pocket.
The officer testified that, once he had retrieved the cigarettes from Doe’s pocket, he asked if Doe had anything else illegal on his person. In response, Doe admitted that he had marijuana in his pocket. Based on Doe’s response, the officer reached into Doe’s pocket and removed the marijuana. We conclude that Doe’s admission to possession of marijuana created probable cause for Doe’s arrest and, therefore, the officer was justified in removing the marijuana from Doe’s pocket as a search incident to arrest.
See State v. Johnson,
III.
CONCLUSION
Based on a response to a possible burglary, coupled with the facts of this case, we conclude the officer was justified in conducting a Terry frisk of Doe’s outer clothing to search for weapons. The Terry frisk led the officer to the lawful discovery of cigarettes, which indirectly led to the lawful disсovery of marijuana. Therefore, the intermediate appellate order of the district court reversing the magistrate’s denial of Doe’s motion to suppress and vacating the magistrate’s decree that Doe fell within the purview of the JCA is reversed and this case is rеmanded to the magistrate to reinstate the decree and adjudication vacated by the district court.
Notes
. We also note that factors which militate against a frisk discussed by our Supreme Court’s opinion in
State v. Henage,
. During cross-examination. Doe’s counsel read to the officer from the officer’s police report. In that report, the officer noted that he felt what he immediately recognized as a cigarette pack during thе Terry frisk of Doe. The officer’s report provided that the officer then removed the cigarette pack because Doe did not look to be eighteen years old. Although we recognize the discrepancy between the officer's testimony that he first asked Doe his age before removing the cigarettes and his report stating that he removed the cigarettes because Doe did not appear to be eighteen, we conclude this factual distinction does not make a difference because the magistrate concluded the officer had reason to believe Doe possessed contraband and was therefore justified in removing the cigarettes from Doe’s pocket.
