This ease involves the scope of a search incident to an arrest. The district court granted the motion to suppress filed on behalf of Benjamin Reed LaMay. The Court of Appeals reversed the district court. This
I.
BACKGROUND AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS
On November 26, 2001, shortly after midnight, Boise City police officers were running warrant checks on the license plates of vehicles at the Plaza Suite hotel. One of the vehicles belonged to LaMay, who had two outstanding misdemeanor warrants. The officers spoke with employees of the hotel and determined that Joseph LaMay, LaMay’s brother, had rented a room at the hotel. Three officers proceeded to the hotel room. When Joseph LaMay answered the door, the officers detected the odor of marijuana. They entered the room and observed drug paraphernalia on a table and a knife on the breakfast bar. Apparently the knife had been used to cut pizza. The officers placed the knife in a drawer and did not feel threatened by it.
There were seven people in the room. The officers asked for everybody’s name and identification. No one was free to leave. LaMay was lying on the bed with a woman watching television. He claimed that his name was Jake Tuttle but did not give the officers any identification. The officers suspected LaMay was not Jake Tuttle. They took everybody except for Joseph LaMay into the hallway, a distance of approximately fifteen feet from where LaMay had been at the initial encounter. Joseph LaMay was taken to the bathroom for questioning. An officer did a cursory protective sweep of the apartment to make sure there were no other persons in the room. During this protective sweep, the officer saw a backpack on the floor about ten inches from where LaMay’s hand had been hanging off the bed when the officers entered the room.
LaMay gave his correct name to the officer in the hallway. The officer placed LaMay under arrest on the warrants, handcuffed him, and required him to remain seated in the hallway with the rest of the persons from the room. Another officer guarded LaMay in the hallway. The officer asked LaMay whether there was marijuana in the room. LaMay stated there was some in a jar under the pillow of his bed. One officer retrieved the jar, and at this point another officer told him about the backpack. While LaMay was handcuffed and guarded in the hallway, an officer searched the backpack, finding currency, cocaine, and LaMay’s driver’s license. One to two minutes had elapsed from the time the occupants had been removed from the room and the search of the backpack. The location of LaMay’s arrest was approximately fifteen feet from where he had been lying on the bed.
LaMay was charged with possession of cocaine with intent to deliver, felony possession of marijuana, and misdemeanor possession of paraphernalia. He moved to suppress the items discovered in the search of the backpack. The district court granted the motion to suppress, finding that the backpack was not within LaMay’s immediate control such that it could be searched incident to arrest. The state appealed, and the Corut of Appeals reversed. This Court granted review.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
On review of a decision of the Idaho Court of Appeals, the Idaho Supreme Court directly reviews the decision of the trial court but gives serious consideration to the intermediate appellate decision.
State v. Sheahan,
III.
THE SEARCH WAS NOT A REASONABLE SEARCH INCIDENT TO THE ARREST
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures. “Warrantless
A search incident to arrest permits police to search an arrestee following a lawful custodial arrest and is premised upon the dual justifications of necessity to (1) protect the officer and other persons in the vicinity from any dangerous objects or weapons in the possession of the person arrested; and (2) prevent concealment or destruction of evidence within the reach of the arrestee.
Chimel,
(1) the distance between the arrestee and the place searched; (2) whether the arrestee. was handcuffed or otherwise restrained; (3) whether police were positioned so as to block the arrestee from the area searched; (4) the ease of access to the area itself; and (5) the number of officers.
State v. Bowman,
1. The test adopted in Belton does not apply to searches incident to arrest not involving a vehicle in Idaho.
The United States Supreme Court has developed a narrow bright-line test regarding searches of automobiles incident to arrest.
See New York v. Belton,
Our holding today does no more than determine the meaning of Chimel’s principles in this particular context. It in no way alters the fundamental principles established in the Chimel case regarding the basic scope of searches incident to lawful custodial arrests.
Belton,
2. The district court properly applied the Chimel test to the facts in determining that the backpack was not within LaMay’s “immediate control” at the time of his arrest.
The district court applied the factors previously set forth by the Court of Appeals in
State v. Bowman,
The State argues that a container is considered to be within an arrestee’s immediate control where the item was formerly within the defendant’s immediate control at the time officers first encountered the defendant, relying on
Hams
and
Champagne
which involved searches of automobiles, applying the bright-line
Belton
test.
See e.g., Champagne,
The State relies on a sentence in
Northrop v. Trippett,
The State also relies on
United States v. Han,
The State relies on
United States v. Hudson,
It is unnecessary to conduct an independent analysis of the Idaho Constitution. The United States Supreme Court expressly limited the holding in Belton to searches incident to arrest involving automobiles. This Court’s decision in Foster applies that standard. The search in this case violated the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. It is not necessary to engage in an analysis of whether the Idaho Constitution provides a greater protection to individuals than those rights under the Fourth Amendment.
IV.
CONCLUSION
The decision of the district court granting LaMay’s motion to suppress is affirmed.
