[¶ 1.] This is an intermediate appeal from the trial court’s order suppressing evidence of cocaine in the defendant’s urine. We reverse.
FACTS
[¶ 2.] During the early morning hours of May 1, 2004, police responded to a noise complaint at a Brookings residence. Upon their arrival, the police could see individuals in the backyard, several of which were holding alcoholic beverage containers. As Officer Weber of the Brookings Police Department walked into the yard, some of these individuals started running. Shortly thereafter, William Loveland was apprehended by Officer Weber and arrested for fleeing an officer. Loveland was searched and a glass pipe and a small glass jar containing marijuana were found on his person. Loveland was then taken to the Brookings County Detention Center, where officers secured a urine sample from him. Loveland did not consent to providing the urine sample. The sample
[¶ 3.] A motion hearing was held on the suppression issue. At the hearing, Love-land did not contest the. constitutionality of the
seizure
of his urine, nor did he contest the testing of the urine for marijuana. However, Loveland argued that the scope of the drug screen was impermissibly expanded to test for the presence of drugs for which there was no probable cause to believe were present; specifically, cocaine. Loveland compares this to the type of general exploratory search prohibited by
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[¶ 4.] “A motion to suppress based on an alleged violation of a constitutionally protected right is a question of law reviewed de novo.”
State v. Chavez,
ISSUE
Whether the trial court erred when it suppressed all evidence of the presence of cocaine in Loveland’s urine.
DECISION
[¶ 5.] The issue on appeal is narrow and straight-forward. After a urine sample is properly seized pursuant to an ár-rest on drug charges, may the sample be tested for the presence of all illegal substances or must the test be limited only to the suspected illegal substance? Loveland argues that the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article VI § 11 of the South Dakota Constitution require probable cause to search for each, specific substance before the State can test for it. To test for a substance without probable cause to believe it may be present, Loveland claims, is an unconstitutional search. In response, the State does not directly argue the issue of whether there was probable cause to test for cocaine in the urine sample. Instead, the State asserts that once the police rightfully obtain the sample, the subsequent conduct of testing the sample is not a search that is subject to Fourth Amendment protections. In this regard, the State points out that the Fourth Amendment protects a citizen from official conduct only when that conduct infringes upon a legitimate expecta
[¶ 6.] The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and Article VI § 11 of the South Dakota Constitution protect against “unreasonable searches and seizures.” Not all governmental intrusions, however, are considered a search or seizure subject to Fourth Amendment protection. In
Katz v. United States,
a two-part test to assist in determining whether a governmental intrusion raises Fourth Amendment implications was set forth.
[¶ 7.] The issue here involves the second prong of the Katz analysis. The question is whether Loveland had an expectation of privacy in the urine sample that “society is prepared to recognize as reasonable.” While the State urges us to find that Loveland had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the sample generally, we restrain ourselves to a more limited holding. 1 Once a urine sample is properly seized, the individual that provided the sample has no legitimate or reasonable expectation that the .presence of illegal substances in that sample will remain private.
[¶ 8.] After the urine sample was seized by the police, testing the sample for the presence of illegal substances required no further seizure of Loveland’s person or effects. The testing itself was only a search of items already seized. In an analogous context, the United States Supreme Court addressed whether there is a legitimate privacy interest in the presence of illegal substances so as to prevent the unintrusive use of a drug-sniffing dog, which reveals only the presence of illegal substances:
Official conduct that does not compromise any legitimate interest in privacy is not a search subject to the Fourth Amendment. We have held that any interest in possessing contraband cannot be deemed legitimate, and thus, governmental conduct that only reveals the possession of contraband compromises no legitimate privacy interest. This isbecause the expectation that certain facts will not come to the attention of the authorities is not the same as an interest in privacy that society is prepared to consider reasonable.
Illinois v. Caballes,
—— U.S. -, -,
[¶ 9.] In the present case, the police lawfully seized the urine sample and any substances contained therein. The testing to determine whether that sample contained traces of cocaine compromises no legitimate privacy interest.
Id.; See also Jacobsen,
[¶ 10.] The trial court is reversed.
Notes
. We are hesitant to hold there is no privacy interest at all in these urine samples, as such samples may contain vast amounts of sensitive personal information about the person they were taken from.
See e.g. Skinner v. Railway Labor Executives’ Ass’n,
