INTRODUCTION
[ 1 Bradford Dale Gettling appeals the district court's denial of his motion to suppress. Police found drugs and drug paraphernalia in Gettling's personal belongings while conducting a search of the vehicle in which he had been traveling incident to the arrest of the vehicle's driver. During the pendency of this
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case, the United States Supreme Court ruled in Arizona v. Gant that officers could conduct a search of a vehicle incident to the arrest of a vehicle occupant only if the arres-tee could actually access the passenger compartment of the vehicle or i#f a failure to search could actually result in the loss of evidence pertaining to the crime underlying the arrest. - U.S. -, -,
BACKGROUND
T2 On January 2, 2006, Deputy Shawn Radmall, a K-9 officer with the Utah County Sheriffs Department, pulled over a vehicle for an improper lane change and failure to come to a complete stop at a stop sign. The vehicle had three occupants Steven Canals, the driver; Amber Childs, the front seat passenger and vehicle owner; and Mr. Get-tling, the backseat passenger. None of the vehicle occupants held a valid driver license. After discovering that Mr. Canals had outstanding warrants and was driving with a suspended license, Deputy Radmall arrested him and placed him in the police eruiser. While effecting the arrest of Mr. Canals, Deputy Radmall noticed Mr. Gettling making furtive movements in the back seat and ordered him and Ms. Childs to exit the vehicle. Deputy Radmall then conducted a free air sniff around the exterior of the vehicle with his narcotics-detection dog. The dog indicated the presence of nareotics in two areas: (1) the top of the driver's window, and (2) the door handle of the back passenger-side door. After the positive indication, Deputy Radmall put the dog in the car, where it detected narcotics in Mr. Gettling's belongings. Upon searching those belongings, Deputy Radmall discovered methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia in a closed glasses case. Both the driver and the other passenger denied ownership, and Mr. Gettling indicated by nodding that the glasses case and its contents belonged to him. He later entered a conditional guilty plea, which allowed him to appeal the district court's denial of his motion to suppress the evidence.
ANALYSIS
I. POLICE OFFICERS CAN DETAIN PASSENGERS UNTIL THE PURPOSE OF THE TRAFFIC STOP HAS BEEN COMPLETED
13 Mr. Gettling argues that he was illegally detained at the time Deputy Rad-mall conducted the free air sniff with his narcotics-detection dog and that the drugs and drug paraphernalia found in the subsequent search of his belongings should be suppressed. The State counters that Mr. Gettling was lawfully detained at the time of the search because Deputy Radmall was still permitted to conduct a search incident to the arrest of the driver and thus had not concluded the lawful purpose of the stop at the time of the canine sniff. After the Supreme Court issued Arizona v. Gant, - U.S. -,
[4 We determine that the purpose of the stop concluded after the arrest of the driver. Thereafter, Deputy Radmall had no continued justification to detain the passengers. However, while Mr. Gettling was unlawfully detained at the time of the search, we apply the federal good-faith exception to the exelu-sionary rule to any evidence discovered as a result of the unlawful detention.
15 Police can detain individuals on reasonable articulable suspicion that they are engaged or about to be engaged in criminal activity. State v. James,
T6 In State v. Baker, also announced today, we held that when a traffic stop eulmi-nates in the arrest of the driver, the "officers must release any passengers who were detained incident to the detention of the vehicle" after the officer has completed all procedures incident to the arrest of the driver. Baker,
17 In this case, Deputy Radmall detained Mr. Gettling while conducting a search incident to driver's arrest that, prior to Gant, would have been constitutional. At the time of Mr. Gettling's detention, Deputy Radmall had no reasonable articulable suspicion that Mr. Gettling was involved in criminal activity and thus could not continue to detain him after he completed the arrest of the driver. But Deputy Radmall did detain Mr. Gettling as he cireled the vehicle with the narcotics-detection dog. The fact that Mr. Gettling may have made "furtive movements" in the back seat is not sufficient justification to allow the officers to extend the stop. Schlosser,
CONCLUSION
T8 Although Deputy Radmall violated Mr. Gettling's Fourth Amendment rights by detaining him after concluding the lawful purpose of the traffic stop, we apply the federal good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule and uphold the district court's denial of Mr. Gettling's motion to suppress.
