The State appeals from the trial court’s order granting Sharon Laverne McCullough’s motion to suppress evidence seized following her arrest. Because the search of McCullough’s car was illegal under the United States Supreme Court’s holding in Arizona v. Gant,
McCullough was arrested during a “warrant round-up.” The arresting officer executed the warrant after McCullough pulled into her private driveway. She had already exited her vehicle and locked her door when the officer approached her. After McCullough locked the vehicle door, the officer effectuated the arrest under the outstanding warrant by instructing her to put her hands behind her back for handcuffing. Before being handcuffed, McCullough threw her vehicle keys to her son, who entered the residence at which the car was parked. McCullough was then escorted into thе patrol car “without incident.”
After the officer placed McCullough in his car, he again approached her vehicle and сonfirmed that it was locked. No evidence was presented that the officer could see any contraband or evidence of any crime inside the car. The officer then went to the door of the home and instructed McCullough’s son to give him the keys. After McCullough’s son complied with this instruction, the officer returned to the vehicle, unlocked it using McCullough’s key, and conducted a search inclusive of McCullough’s purse that was inside the car. The search revealed cash, marijuana, and cocaine inside McCullough’s purse.
McCullough filed a motion tо suppress these items as well as any statements
The State argues on appeal that because the offense underlying the outstanding arrest warrant was drug-related, it necessarily fоllows that a search of McCullough’s vehicle incident to that arrest was per se reasonable and no further analysis is appropriate. In support of this argument, the State points to Brown v. State,
Gant holds that “[pjolice may search a vehiсle incident to a recent occupant’s arrest only if the arrestee is within reaching distance of the passenger compаrtment at the time of the search or it is reasonable to believe the vehicle contains evidence of the offense of аrrest.”
The Bromi court interpreted Gant’s second prong to mean that the nаture of the charge for which the defendant is arrested is “determinative of whether there exists a reasonable basis to search fоr evidence, not whether there is some independent evidence that gives rise to a belief that the particular vehicle contains evidence.”
If this reasoning is accurate, then an arrest warrant for a single sale of perishable contraband would authorize a search of the arrestee’s vеhicle at any time, whether days, months, or even years later, despite the fact that it may not be reasonable to believe any evidence of the original illegal act remained. We do not believe this is what the Supreme Court envisioned when it explicitly conditionеd the search of a secured arrestee’s vehicle on a reasonable
• McCullough’s warrant was issued four to five months prior to her arrest, and the record is devoid of any evidence whatsoever suggesting that the sale of cocaine she allegedly committed months before her arrest was still taking place or that the car was involved in thаt sale. Further, from his lawful standpoint outside the vehicle, the officer observed no contraband, weapons, or any other evidenсe which would support a reasonable belief that evidence from an offense committed at least four months prior — at an unknоwn location— would exist inside McCullough’s vehicle at the time of her arrest.
This lack of any information, beyond the mere existence of а warrant issued months prior, also distinguishes these facts from Brown, where the officer immediately observed a woman’s wallet on the seat of thе car that the defendant, a male with two outstanding warrants for theft, had just been driving.
The order granting McCullоugh’s motion to suppress is affirmed, and to the extent the reasoning of this opinion conflicts with Brown, we certify conflict.
Affirmed.
Notes
. We note that this is not the first court to disagree with the reasoning employed in Brown. See U.S. v. Reagan,
. Notably, the Brown court did not rely on this fact in reaching its conclusion, instead focusing on the "nature of the charge” analysis described above.
