OPINION
Thе defendant was convicted by a jury of possession of narcotic drugs, a class four felony, and possession of drug paraphernalia, a class six felony, both repetitive offenses. He was sentenced to concurrent, mitigated tеrms of imprisonment.
FACTS
Police officers received a tip from the “silent witness” program that the defendant was selling drugs from his apartment. A few days later, the officers began a surveillance of the defendant’s apartment to determine whether there was any “drug traffic” at his residence. Prior to beginning the surveillance, the officers conducted a routine computer check of the defendant and discovered that he was on probation and that there were outstanding traffiс warrants for his arrest.
The surveillance began at 6:00 a.m. and lasted for approximately an hour and a half. At that point, the officers decided to arrest the defendant on the traffic warrants. When the defendant answered the door, the оfficer showed the defendant his identification and told him he was under arrest. The officer also saw someone sitting on the couch behind the defendant and immediately entered the. house in order to secure the arrest scene for the рrotection of all the officers. The officer asked the *295 person on the couch whether anyone else was in the residence and was told someone was in the bathroom. The person in the bathroom was then brought into the living room and placed on the couch. While the officer was talking to the persons on the couch, he noticed a burned marijuana cigarette on an end table which was by the couch and behind the front door. When the defendant denied thе officer’s request to search the apartment, the officer contacted the defendant’s probation officer. The probation officer’s search revealed several controlled substances, including marijuana, weаpons, ammunition, and assorted drug paraphernalia.
ISSUES
On appeal, the defendant argues that:
1. The search of his apartment was an invalid “pretextual” search.
2. The trial court erred in denying his request for a voluntariness hearing and in refusing to suppress statements made by him during the booking process.
SEARCH OF DEFENDANT’S APARTMENT
The defendant argues that he was arrested by the police officers on a minor traffic offense simply because they suspected him of more serious criminal activity and, therefore, that the arrest was “pretextual” аnd the evidence seen during that arrest should have been suppressed. The defendant also argues that because the officer admitted his normal duties did not include the execution of traffic warrants, the arrest of defendant on a traffiс warrant was a “subterfuge” used to allow the officers to enter his apartment to search for drugs. Finally, he argues that, pursuant to
State v. Bolt,
The state argues that when an arrest warrant places a police officer in a position where he has the lawful authority to be, the inadvertent viewing of items subject to seizure allows the officer to seize them.
State v. Reasoner,
A “pretextual” arrest occurs “when the police employ an arrest based on probable cause as a device to investigate or search for evidence of an unrelated offense for which probable cause is lacking.”
United States v. Trigg,
The United States Supreme Court, in a trilogy of cases, has stressed that fourth amendment analysis ordinarily involves “an objective assessment of the officer’s actions in light of the facts and circumstances confronting him at the time.”
Maryland v. Macon,
Most state courts have now adopted the view that so long as the police do no more than they are objeсtively authorized and legally permitted to do, their motives in making an arrest are irrelevant and not subject to inquiry.
See, e.g., State v. Law,
[T]he proper inquiry for determining the constitutionality of a search-and-seizure is whether the conduct of the law enforcement officer ... was objectively reasonable, without regard to his or her underlying motives or intent. We emphasize that the Fourth Amendment proscribes unreasonable actions, not improper thoughts.
In
Smith v. State,
Based on the language in Scott, we agree with these courts that have adopted an objective rather than a subjective test for determining the reasonableness of an officer’s search under these circumstances.
Our discussion, however, does not end here. We must further determine whether the arrest was objectively reasonablе under the standards of the fourth amendment. In this case, the officers arrested the defendant on valid warrants which the defendant does not allege were in any way defective. Regardless of the officers’ subjective intent, they had an objectively valid reason to make the arrest. There is no suggestion that the traffic warrants were held or issued for any purpose other than their execution for a traffic offense.
See Causey,
The defendant claims that even the objective facts reveal an invalid pretextual search. He points to the fact that arresting officers usually workеd on the narcotics detail and did not normally arrest citi
*297
zens on traffic warrants. A similar argument was rejected by the United States Supreme Court in
Villamonte-Marquez,
Becausе the officers acted with the “authority of law,” they did not violate the defendant’s right to privacy under art. 2, § 8 of the Arizona State Constitution.
State v. Bolt,
DENIAL OF VOLUNTARINESS HEARING
The state proved the defendant’s ownership or control of the residence in part with his statement, made during the booking рrocess, that he resided at the searched residence. In declining to conduct a volun-tariness hearing on the admissibility of his responses, the court concluded the statements were made in the course of a routine booking proсedure and did not require
Miranda
warnings.
Miranda v. Arizona,
The defendant argues on appeal that because he was in custody at the time he gave the booking information to the arresting officer, he was entitled to the warnings required by
Miranda
and the failure to give them preсluded the admissibility of the statement which he made. In any event, the defendant argues that the
Miranda
violation and a voluntariness determination are separate inquiries and that a hearing should have been held before the statements were admitted.
State v. Montes,
The routine gathering of background information on a defendаnt has generally been held not to constitute interrogation.
See generally, State v. Garcia,
The statements in this case were given during a routine booking procedure and the fact that they were later used against the defendant does not transform that routine procedure into an interrogation so as to have required a voluntariness hearing before those statements could have been admitted at trial.
See Sims; Cozad,
The conviction and sentence are affirmed.
