The state appeals the decision of the Athens County Court of Common Pleas, which suppressed physical evidence. It argues that the trial court erred because a private party conducted the search at issue. Because we find that there was insufficient state involvement in the search by Federal Express employees to transform the seemingly private search into state action, we agree. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the trial court.
I
The state indicted David Jedd, David Parillo, Jennifer Roe, John Ketcham, and Robert McAdams (“the defendants”) for various drug offenses. The investigation and search of Ketcham’s premises, which yielded physical evidence and incriminating statements against the defendants, was premised upon several Federal Express employees’ discovery of psilocybin mushrooms in a package addressed to Ketcham’s residence.
Ketcham filed a motion to suppress. At a hearing on Ketcham’s motion, Agent Hawks (a member of a special state task force) testified that he contacted Federal Express and asked it to alert him when any suspicious packages addressed to Ketcham came into' its office because they suspected drug activity. According to Agent Hawks, Federal Express later attempted to contact him about a suspicious package. They could not reach Agent Hawks and delivered the packaged as addressed. At an even later date, a Federal Express employee reached Agent Hawks and advised him that Federal Express employees had opened a package addressed to Ketcham. Agent Hawks testified that the employee verbally described the package contents, dried mushrooms, to Agent Hawks. Agent Hawks then drove to the Federal Express office and determined that they were psilocybin mushrooms, a controlled substance. He took custody of
In its decision on Jedd, Parillo, and Roe’s motion to suppress, the trial court focused on the search of the package by Federal Express employees. The trial court seemed to believe Agent Hawks’s testimony as described above. The trial court concluded from this testimony that Federal Express was “acting in concert” with the police “rather than independently investigating factual situations which might pose a risk for [its] customers or employees.” The trial court further concluded that the search conducted by Federal Express constituted state action that should not have occurred without a warrant. Based on this finding, the trial court granted Jedd’s and McAdams’s motions to suppress.
The state appeals and asserts the following assignment of error:
“The trial court erred when it found that the action of Federal Express in Parkersburg, [West Virginia] was state action.”
II
In its only assignment of error, the state argues that the search conducted by Federal Express was a private search because there was no government involvement in the search. The state argues that in order to show that the private individuals were acting as more than private individuals, the defendants had to show that (1) the state actor “instigated, encouraged or participated” in the search, and (2) the private individual engaged in the search with the intent of assisting the police in their investigation. In doing so, the state relies upon
United States v. Pervaz
(C.A.1, 1997),
Appellate review of a decision on a motion to suppress evidence presents mixed questions of law and fact.
State v. McNamara
(1997),
“[T]he Fourth Amendment protection against unlawful searches and seizures applies only to action by government authorities or their agents.”
State v. Moms
(1975)
If a warrantless search is not “an exclusively private undertaking but involves some degree of police participation, then courts must look to the facts surrounding the search in order to determine whether it is an unreasonable police search or an excepted private search.”
Morris
at 316,
Normally, once a criminal defendant shows that a warrantless Fourth Amendment search has taken place, the burden of proof is on the prosecution to show that an exception to the warrant requirement exists. See
Xenia v. Wallace
(1988),
In a case where the defendant alleges that a government search arose from seemingly private conduct, the existence of a Fourth Amendment search is at issue. Thus, the defendant “has the burden of proof as to whether there was
The test of government participation is whether, in light of all the circumstances, the private person “acted as an ‘instrument’ or agent of the state.”
Coolidge v. New Hampshire
(1971),
Here, we find that there was not sufficient involvement by the state to transform Federal Express’s search into governmental action. Agent Hawks’s prior communication with Federal Express employees was limited to a request for them to alert him when any suspicious packages addressed to Ketcham came
Accordingly, we sustain the state’s only assignment of error and reverse the judgments of the trial court. We remand these cases to the trial court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Judgments reversed and causes remanded.
Notes
. We note that when the existence of a Fourth Amendment search is at issue, the state is not required to prove an exception to the warrant requirement to justify a warrantless search because if there is no governmental search,
i.e.,
no state action, the Fourth Amendment does not apply.
Burdeau v. McDowell
(1921),
