709 N.E.2d 1217 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1998
The state has appealed from a judgment of the Summit County Common Pleas Court that granted defendant's motion to suppress evidence found in a pill bottle that was in defendant's pocket during a weapons patdown. The state argues that the trial court incorrectly granted the motion because the "plain feel" doctrine allowed the officer who patted down defendant to examine the contents of a pill bottle he found while conducting a weapons patdown of defendant. This court reverses the judgment of the trial court because the plain-feel doctrine justified the search of the bottle.
During the patdown, as the officer placed his hand on defendant's upper right jacket pocket, defendant tried to grab his hand. The officer felt two objects in the pocket, one "long and cylindrical" and the other "smaller and cylindrical." One of the objects made a rattling sound, and the officer knew it was a prescription pill bottle. The officer had found in his experience that illegal drugs were often carried in such bottles. When the officer asked what was in the pocket, defendant replied, "Just a comb." The officer arrested defendant and removed the bottle. It was transparent, and the officer could see what appeared to be pieces of crack cocaine inside. Field tests confirmed that they were, in fact, crack cocaine. *149
Defendant was indicted for possession of cocaine, a violation of R.C.
"The item which was identified by its plain feel was a prescription pill bottle. The further conclusion that the bottle contained contraband drugs was an educated guess on the part of the officer. There was nothing, intrinsic about the shape of the pill bottle to reveal to the officer that it contained contraband.
"* * *
"The `plain feel' doctrine has expanded the limits of the search to items which, by their shape and tactile characteristics, can be identified as contraband by the searching officer.
"The State seeks to expand the scope of the `plain feel' to containers which the officer believes are likely to contain contraband. Down that path this Court cannot go. There are limitless items which may contain other items. The police may not, under the umbrella of self-protection, shelter the fruits of a search which went beyond constitutionally established bounds."
The state timely appealed.
The United States Supreme Court, in Minnesota v. Dickerson
(1993),
The court analogized the situation to the plain-view doctrine and held that, when an officer feels an object during aTerry-authorized patdown and the identity of that object is immediately apparent from the way it feels, the officer may lawfully seize the object if he or she has probable cause to believe that the item is contraband — that is, if the "incriminating character" of the object is "immediately apparent." Dickerson, supra,
The plain-feel doctrine has been applied by Ohio courts to uphold the denial of suppression motions in cases with facts similar to the ones in this case. In State v. Vaughn (June 27, 1997), Ashtabula App. No. 96-A-0063, unreported, 1997 WL 402366, two officers responded to two anonymous emergency calls reporting drug dealing in an area known for a large amount of drug trafficking. The officers were told that the participants were several black males, in dark clothing and dark hats, in a Cutlass. At the location, one officer recognized a black man who had previously been arrested for drug trafficking and noticed him motioning to a Cutlass to leave the area. The Cutlass was being driven by the defendant and had one other passenger in it. The two men were both black and were both wearing dark clothing. The officers followed the Cutlass as it drove away, noting that the defendant was using a hand-held mirror to watch them follow. The officers stopped the Cutlass, and one of them went to the driver's side window to speak to the defendant. That officer told the defendant to keep his hands on the steering wheel in plain view, but the defendant repeatedly lowered his hands to his sides. The defendant was ordered out of the car and patted down. During the patdown, the officer felt a pill bottle and heard a rattling sound from it. He testified that he had previously felt pill bottles like that one and that crack *151 cocaine had been in those bottles. Although he did not fear that it was a weapon, the officer removed the bottle and tested its contents, which turned out to be crack cocaine. Based on these facts, the Eleventh District Court of Appeals concluded that the trial court correctly denied the defendant's motion to suppress:
"[W]e conclude that [the officer] had probable cause to remove the pill bottle and remove its contents: (1) two telephone calls reported drug activity in a specific area; (2) two black males in a blue Cutlass matched the general description given by the anonymous callers; (3) it was an area known for a large amount of drug activity; (4) a known drug dealer made what appeared to be a gesture to [defendant] to leave; (5) [defendant] used a hand-held mirror to observe the police cruiser behind him; (6) [defendant] repeatedly refused to keep his hands where [the officer] instructed him; and (7) the rattling of objects in a pill bottle of the type that [the officer] had observed crack cocaine in [in] the past. Therefore, based upon the totality of the circumstances, we conclude that upon the officer's touch and the subsequent rattle of the pill bottle, it was readily apparent to [the officer] that the bottle contained crack cocaine." Id. at 9-10.
In State v. Hunter (1994),
Similarly, in this case, the totality of the circumstances justified the officer's search of the pill bottle: (1) defendant was leaning into a car window at 1:00 a.m. in an area known for crimes, including drug activity; (2) defendant appeared startled and walked away when he noticed the two officers; (3) defendant put something into his jacket pocket while turning the front of his body away from the officers' view; (4) defendant appeared to have cracked, burned lips, an indication of possible crack cocaine use; (5) while being patted down, defendant grabbed at the officer's hand; (6) the officer felt a prescription pill bottle, a type *152
of container he knew was commonly used to carry illegal drugs; (7) the pill bottle rattled when patted; and (8) defendant said he had only a comb in his pocket after the officer felt the pill bottle and heard it rattle. To search the bottle, Officer Schismenos needed only probable cause to associate it with criminal activity, rather than certainty that it was contraband. See State v. Woods (1996),
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
BAIRD and SLABY, JJ., concur.
Compare State v. Oborne (1994),