Lead Opinion
Rhonda K. Ewertz appeals her conviction of possession of methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia with intent to introduce a controlled substance into the human body, claiming the district court erred in denying her motion to suppress. She argues the search of her car was not permissible as a search incident to arrest and the search of her makeup bag was not permissible under the plain view doctrine.
Facts
The parties stipulated to most of the following facts, with the exception of the testimony from the hearing on the motion to suppress specifically referenced below. On March 22, 2010, Officer Matt Tatro observed a car traveling with no taillights. Tatro testified that the car was swerving in its lane and once crossed over the fog line. Tatro stopped the car and identified the driver as Ewertz by her Kansas driver s license. After initiating contact with Ewertz, Tatro observed several clues of intoxication, including an odor of alcohol coming from the car and Ewertz’ bloodshot and glassy eyes, slurred speech, and overall speech pattern. Ewertz admitted that she told Tatro she had consumed at least one alcoholic beverage prior to driving; Tatro testified that Ewertz also told him that she could not remember how many alcoholic beverages she had consumed.
Ewertz showed clues of intoxication on multiple field sobriety tests, including an alphabet test, a counting test, the walk-and-turn test, and the one-leg-stand test. Officer Tatro observed six clues during a horizontal nystagmus gaze test. After Ewertz refused to take the preliminary breath test, she was placed under arrest for suspicion of driving under the influence.
After placing Ewertz in his patrol car, Officer Tatro prepared to conduct a search of the car for open containers of alcohol. Before returning to the car, Tatro asked Ewertz if she had a purse. Ewertz said she did and that it was in the passenger seat. Thereafter, Tatro went back to the car to retrieve the purse and to conduct a search of the car incident to arrest. In so doing, he observed an unzipped, pink makeup bag on the passenger side floorboard of the car containing a glass pipe with clearly visible burnt residue inside it. Ew-ertz admitted the makeup bag was hers, and Tatro thereafter searched through its contents. Tatro ultimately found a small zippered pouch, inside of which was a plastic baggie containing a crystalline substance that Tatro believed in his training and experience to be methamphetamine. The baggie and the glass pipe were tested, and methamphetamine was found in both.
Ewertz filed a motion to suppress the evidence discovered on the grounds that Officer Tatro did not have legal authority to search inside the car. After a hearing, the court held the search was lawful and the evidence legally admissible. Ewertz appeals from this ruling.
Analysis
On a motion to suppress evidence, this court reviews the factual findings underlying
Search Incident to Arrest
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits all unreasonable searches and seizures. Searches conducted without a valid search warrant are per se unreasonable unless the circumstances of the search fall within a specifically established and well-delineated exception to the search warrant requirement. These generally recognized exceptions include: (1) consent, (2) search incident to a lawful arrest, (3) stop and frisk, (4) probable cause to search with exigent circumstances, (5) the emergency doctrine, (6) an inventory search, (7) plain view, and (8) an administrative search of a closely regulated business. State v. Vandevelde,
The State argued to the trial court that the search of Ewertz’ car fell under the “search incident to a lawful arrest” exception. In Arizona v. Gant,
Citing the legal principles set forth in Gant, the district court in this case acknowledged that the interior of the car was no longer within Ewertz’ immediate control when she was seated in the patrol car; thus, the first Gant exception did not apply. The district court ultimately concluded, however, that the search incident to arrest was justified under the second Gant exception because it was reasonable to believe that evidence relevant to the crime of arrest (driving under the influence) might be found in her vehicle. On appeal, Ewertz asserts the facts do not support the court’s conclusion in this regard.
Whether it was “reasonable to believe” evidence relevant to the crime of driving under the influence might be found in Ewertz’ vehicle depends on how we read Gant. We begin our analysis with the explanation of this standard provided by tire Court in Gant:
“In many cases, as when a recent occupant is arrested for a traffic violation, there will be no reasonable basis to believe the car contains relevant evidence. [Citations omitted.] But in others, including Belton and Thornton [where the defendant is arrested for possession of drugs], the offense of arrest will supply a basis for searching the passenger compartment of an arrestee’s car and any containers therein.” Gant,556 U.S. at 343-44 .
In the wake of this explanation, two approaches to the ■ “it is reasonable to believe” standard set forth in Gant have developed. Some courts have interpreted the above passage
Other courts have rejected this categorical approach, reasoning instead that the “it is reasonable to believe” standard is akin to reasonable suspicion. See United States v. Taylor,
The Kansas Supreme Couxt has not yet interpreted the Gant Court’s “it is reasonable to believe” language. Although some decisions of this court have found there was no reason to believe evidence would be found in the car based solely on the crime of arrest, the crimes of arrest in those cases were the land of traffic violations identified by tire Gant Court as never providing a reasonable basis to believe the vehicle contains evidence of the crime of arrest. See State v. Karson,
In this case, the district court did not address whether it was reasonable to believe evidence related to Ewertz’ arrest would be found in the car; instead it only noted that an officer may search for evidence “ "relevant to the crime of arrest.’ ” As such, the district court’s decision appears to follow the categorical approach that some courts have used under Gant because, like drug offenses, driving under the influence is likely within the category of crimes identified by the Gant Court as supplying a basis for searching a vehicle. See
But the lawfulness of the search also can be affirmed if we construe Gant’s “it is reasonable to believe” language as imposing a reasonable suspicion standard. The district court found that Officer Tatro had probable cause to arrest Ewertz for driving under the influence based on the smell of alcohol in the car, Ewertz’ failure of some of the field sobriety tests, and her glassy and bloodshot eyes. There is substantial competent evidence throughout Tatro’s testimony—as well as the parties’ stipulated facts—to support these findings. The district court also found that Tatro observed Ewertz swerving before he made the stop and noted her speech was slurred. This finding is supported by Tatro’s testimony as well. In addition to evidence that the car Ewertz was driving swerved in its lane and crossed over the fog line, that Tatro smelled alcohol in the car after he pulled Ewertz over, that Ewertz failed field sobriety tests, that Ewertz had glassy and bloodshot eyes, and that Ewertz slurred her words, there is also evidence that Ewertz admitted to drinking at least one alcoholic beverage before driving the car. In light of these specific and articulable facts, as well as any rational inferences that can be drawn from those facts, we conclude die district court did not err in finding it was “reasonable to believe” evidence relevant to die crime of driving under the influence might be found in Ewertz’ vehicle.
The Plain View Doctrine
The plain view doctrine is one of the exceptions to the search warrant requirement recognized in Kansas. See Vandevelde,
Ewertz presents two arguments in support of her contention that the search of her makeup bag was not justified under the plain view doctrine: (1) the search of her car was not permissible as a search incident to arrest, so any evidence discovered as a result of that search—regardless of whether it was in plain view—was inadmissible and (2) Officer Tatro’s written report describing the search of the car incident to arrest was at odds with testimony provided by Tatro at the suppression hearing. Because we already have found that the search incident to Ewertz’ arrest was lawful under the second Gant exception, we find no merit to Ewertz’ first argument and therefore address only the second argument presented.
The written report submitted by Officer Tatro states:
• After he arrested Ewertz and placed her in the patrol car, he walked back to the car to retrieve her purse and do a search incident to arrest for any open containers of alcohol.
• In so doing, he “ looked under the seat and on both front seats. While [he] was doing this [he] observed a small pink makeup bag that was actually on the passenger floorboard right in front of the passenger seat.’ ”
• “ ‘[T]he bag had a zipper but it was unzipped and [he] could see inside’ the bag.”
• “ ‘[T]here appeared a lot of items in the bag but directly on top [he] could see what was clearly a glass pipe which through [his] training and experience [he] believed to be used for the smokingof illegal narcotics including methamphetamine.’ ”
• He then searched the bag and found a small zippered pouch, inside of which was a plastic baggie containing a crystalline substance that he believed in his training and experience to be methamphetamine.
At the suppression hearing, Officer Tatro noted that his report was not entirely accurate in that he walked back to the car to retrieve her purse and do a search incident to arrest for any open containers of alcohol but in retrieving the purse noticed the pink makeup bag on the passenger floorboard right in front of the passenger seat. Tatro testified he took the purse to the patrol car and asked Ewertz whether the makeup bag was hers and whether she wanted it, to which she responded in the affirmative. Tatro testified that he then walked back to the car a second time and observed tlrat tire makeup bag on the passenger floorboard was unzipped— with a 1½- to 2-inch gap, right inside of which was a glass pipe he believed to be used for smoking illegal narcotics.
In her brief, Ewertz appears to argue that the search of her makeup bag was not justified under the plain view doctrine because diere was a discrepancy between Officer Tatro’s written report stating that he observed the glass pipe in die makeup bag on his first trip to the car and Tatro’s oral testimony stating that he observed the glass pipe in the makeup bag on a second trip to die car. But tiiis argument has no merit. Even if Tatro observed the glass pipe on his second trip to the car, there is no dispute that Tatro returned to the vehicle to conduct a search incident to arrest. And, even if Ewertz did not tell Tatro that she wanted the makeup bag—again—there is no dispute that Tatro returned to die vehicle to conduct a search incident to arrest. Moreover, conspicuously missing from Ewertz’ argument is any challenge to Tatro’s testimony that the unzipped makeup bag revealing a glass pipe was in plain view as he began to conduct the search of her car for open containers of alcohol incident to her arrest for driving under the influence.
The finding that Officer Tatro observed the makeup bag containing drug paraphernalia in plain view is supported by substantial competent evidence in his testimony and the parties’ stipulated facts. Given that Tatro intended to retrieve the bag and give it to Ewertz until he saw die pipe inside through the unzipped opening, the discovery of the evidence in this case was inadvertent. Furthermore, die incriminating character of the pipe was immediately apparent to Tatro as paraphernalia used for smoking narcotics. Therefore, die factual findings of the district court support its legal conclusion that the search of the makeup bag was constitutional under the plain view exception to the warrant requirement.
Affirmed.
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Concurrence Opinion
concurring: I concur with the majority that the search of Rhonda K. Ewertz’ car was justified because it was objectively reasonable to believe that evidence relevant to the crime of arrest might be found in die vehicle. See Arizona v. Gant, 556 U.S. 332, 343-44,
There should be no categorical link between an arrest for driving under the influence (DUI) and a right to search the driver’s vehicle. In many instances, a law enforcement officer investigating a DUI may develop probable cause to arrest the driver without having reason to believe that evidence
In a search incident to a lawful arrest following a car stop, when the arrestee is secured and no longer has access to the passenger compartment of the vehicle, a law enforcement officer can only search the car when there is reasonable suspicion that evidence relevant to the crime of arrest might be found in the vehicle. Here, it appears that Officer Matt Tatro was determined to search Ew-ertz’ car under any circumstance. But Tatro’s subjective intent is not relevant in determining whether there was reasonable suspicion that evidence of the crime of arrest might be found in the vehicle. The test is an objective one. See Pollman,
The undisputed evidence at the suppression hearing established that Ewertz admitted to Tatro that she had consumed at least one alcoholic beverage. More importantly, Tatro smelled alcohol coming from the car when he initiated contact with Ewertz. Under the totality of the circumstances, an objective law enforcement officer would have reasonable suspicion that evidence relevant to the DUI arrest might be found in the vehicle. Thus, Tatro was authorized to search the passenger compartment, including any containers therein in which evidence of the DUI arrest might reasonably be found. See Gant,
