Lead Opinion
These criminal cases were consolidated for appeal. In each, the state appeals from an order granting the defendant’s motion to suppress items seized during booking procedures. The issue is whether a booking officer who is conducting an administrative inventory of an arrestee’s possessions may open a wallet or a purse, including containers found inside the purse, in order to inventory the contents, without violating Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution. We reverse in State v. Mundt (CA A46629) and affirm in State v. Fincher (CAA46731).
In Mundt, defendant was arrested for driving while suspended, taken to the police station and booked. The officer who conducted the booking procedure opened defendant’s wallet, which had a wrist watch wrapped around it. He removed a blue, plastic “ID holder.” Inside that holder, he found another ID holder made of black leather with a snap closure, which he also opened. There he discovered a clear plastic bag that was rolled v. and secured with a piece of tape with “1/2” written on it. The officer testified that, on the basis of his experience, he knew that the bag contained a controlled substance. He also stated that, when he asked defendant if the bag contained cocaine, defendant said, “No, it’s crank.”
Mundt moved to suppress the contents of the wallet. The trial court concluded that State v. Ridderbush,
In Fincher, defendant was arrested in Eugene for shoplifting, taken to the Lane County Jail and booked. The officer who conducted the booking procedure opened defendant’s purse. She removed a cigarette box, a Tylenol bottle and a separate leather pouch
Fincher moved to suppress the contents of her purse and all evidence derivative of that search. The trial court granted her motion with regard to all of the items seized, except the syringe.
“The fact is that—and I make the finding in this case —that the jail did, in fact, adopt policies that appear to satisfy the purposes required by [State v.] Atkinson, [298 Or 1 ,688 P2d 832 (1984)] - that is, protection of property, elimination of false claims, and protection against injury.
“The only question remaining, then, under Ridderbush and under Atkinson is do those policies violate any constitutional guarantees. And that’s really the only analysis that the Court can get into.
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“So I think here it’s perfectly okay for an inventory of the search, of the purse to be, to be taken, including the zippered compartment.
“I think that the problem then begins, under Ridderbush, when you get down to the smaller items that clearly can’t be suspected to contain explosives or guns or whatever: the Tylenol bottle, the small leather pouch, the cigarette carton — those are the kinds of things that Ridderbush seems to say would have to be inventoried as they appear and not looked into.
“ * * * *
“And so I’m going to hold, if I haven’t already, that the search of the purse was lawfiil but that the search of the leather pouch * * * the Tylenol container * * * and the search of the cigarette box * * * those searches would be unlawful and, therefore, I would grant the Motion to Suppress so far as those items are concerned.”
Defendants in both cases argue that the issue of whether a closed container can be opened during a booking inventory procedure without a warrant was answered in State
Ridderbush does not control the inventory of a wallet or a purse. Neither a wallet nor a purse is a “closed, opaque container.” The black box in Ridderbush could have contained anything small enough to fit in it. However, a wallet typically has openings for inserting money, credit cards and other valuables; even when folded shut, it is not “closed” in the way that the box in Ridderbush was. A purse usually has compartments for storing money and other valuables and frequently holds a wallet. Because wallets or purses are primarily intended to be used to store valuábles, it may be important to discover what is in them, both to protect the owner’s property and to prevent the assertion of false claims against the police. See ORS 133.455. Both are legitimate purposes for inventories of impounded property. State v. Atkinson, supra,
State v. Atkinson, supra,
In Mundt, the state attached excerpts from the jail’s “STANDARD ORDER OF PROCEDURE - JAIL OPERATIONS/EMERGENCY JAIL PROCEDURES” to its memorandum in opposition to defendant’s motion to suppress. Specific instructions are given regarding an arrestee’s personal property. Booking officers are required to
*413 “ [i]temize all personal property in the possession of the person detained. Contraband is retained as evidence and booked into custody on a property report. When itemizing property circle the number of items listed (i.e., 2 black combs, 6 keys, etc.). Indicate the breakdown of all cash and negotiable checks by coin, currency, and checks. Negotiable check means a check which can be cashed by any person by endorsement of his/her signature. Checks made out to other persons should be listed in the itemized list of property as ‘miscellaneous n/neg. ckecks.’ If possible all cash should be counted in another person’s presence.
“ * * * *
“Anything seized as contraband or evidence should be listed on a receipt which is then attached to the case report.”4
The instructions require a booking officer to itemize all personal property in the possession of an arrestee. They specifically mention cash, checks and other items of value typically found in a wallet or purse. The fact that the word “wallet” does not appear in the instructions is not dispositive of whether the outlined procedure meets the Atkinson criteria. It would be impossible to list every type of container that should be opened during a booking. The guidelines obviously were phrased generally to require inventory of every type of container designed or objectively likely to contain money or valuables, including wallets.
Those guidelines effectively eliminate any discretion on the part of the booking officer about whether to inventory the contents of a wallet. They provide explicit directions about what and how to itemize property and money of arrestees. At the suppression hearing, the booking officer testified that he had opened defendant’s wallet and the ID holders in order to check for currency to inventory. He stated that the “procedure is to go through everything and make an accounting” in order to protect against fraudulent claims. During questioning by the trial court, he indicated that the procedure that he used in regard to defendant’s wallet, and wallets generally, was the
We turn to the evidence in Fincher. The record includes excerpts from an “On the Job Training Manual” that is issued to employes who are assigned to the Lane County Corrections Division. That manual instructs booking officers to advise arrestees of the booking procedure, take them to the records counter and perform a frisk search. It then states:
“Records clerks will issue a receipt listing all property taken and any money the prisoner has. At this point handcuffs can be removed but only after all property has been removed from the counter. The prisoner is asked to sign the receipt. If the prisoner refuses, booking officers are to write refused on space provided for inmate’s signature and sign the receipt. An explanation of the inmate’s refusal should be noted on the reverse side of the receipt.”
Copies of orders posted at the jail are also in evidence. They provide, in pertinent part:
“F. INFORM THE BOOK-IN OF THE PROCESS WE FOLLOW AND WHAT HIS/HER RESPONSIBILITIES ARE. Be clear, concise and professional regarding their responsibilities.
“G. FRISK SEARCH BOOK-IN AND PLACE ALL PROPERTY AND MONEY ON THE COUNTER FOR THE COMMUNICATIONS RECORDS OFFICER TO LIST AND RECEIPT.
“ * * * *
“2. All personal property such as rings, watches, necklaces, earrings, contents of pockets, etc., is to be receipted by the Communications Records Officer and stored in the records area. Plain wedding bands and jewelry that cannot be removed are the only jewelry items that may be left on the book-in.”5
Turning to the breadth of the inventory of the contents of the purse in this case, “[t]he degree to which [the] inventorying officer may scrutinize the items uncovered is limited. See State v. Perry,
State v. Mundt (CA A46629) reversed and remanded; State v. Fincher (CA A46731) affirmed.
Notes
The trial judge referred to a “leather utility case” in his order. However, the parties and the trial judge referred to a “small leather pouch” at the suppression hearing.
Defendant does not cross-appeal the trial court’s refusal to suppress the syringe that was found in the inside zipper compartment of the purse.
The dissent inflates the Atkinson requirements.
According to the dissent, those orders do not authorize the opening of any containers.
Captain Sunderland, of the Lane County Sheriffs Department, testified that he issues orders to each employe to search and inventory arrestees and their property thoroughly, including clothing and other personal property. He said that there had been problems with contraband being smuggled into the jail, as well as claims against the county for missing valuables. He stated that the jail’s booking procedure was revised in an effort to reduce the number of claims and to keep contraband out. He testified that an effort had been made to conform procedures to the American
“Written policy and procedure provide for a written, itemized inventory of all personal property of newly admitted inmates and secure storage of inmate property, including money and other valuables. The inmate is given a receipt for all property held until release.”
According to her testimony, the booking procedure is a two-step process in which she is responsible for checking the arrestee and her belongings for contraband and weapons to assure the safety and security of the inmates and the staff and the records officer is responsible for inventorying the property placed on the counter and for keeping an accurate record of valuables.
In State v. Smith,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in State v. Fincher and dissenting in State v. Mundt.
I concur in State v. Fincher (CA A46731). I dissent in State v. Mundt (CA A46629).
First, I have serious doubt that the authorized administrative program satisfies the requirements set forth in State v. Atkinson,
“It is not our function to decide as a matter of policy how, and for what purpose, automobiles or other private property that come into official custody should be examined. That is a matter for politically accountable officials to decide by laws, ordinances, or delegations of rulemaking authority.”298 Or at 6 .
The court’s role is to assure that adopted policies and procedures do not violate constitutional guarantees. I understand Atkinson to say that, in the first instance, politically accountable officials must adopt the rules by laws or ordinances or must expressly delegate rulemaking authority to the official making the rules. Here, we do not know what authority, if any, the Albany Police Department had to establish booking inventory procedures.
Assuming that the department had authority to adopt procedures, the written rules either exceed the scope of an inventory authorized by Atkinson or do not clearly authorize the opening of any containers. As the majority points out, the written procedures provide that “all persons taken into custody shall be searched as soon as possible. The search should extend to articles in the prisoner’s possession which
To the extent that the authorized procedures relied on here authorize a search, as distinguished from an inventory, of defendant’s possessions, they exceed the authority that Atkinson would permit. On the other hand, if the procedures mean that the police are to inventory all articles in the person’s possession, they would conform to Atkinson, but would not authorize the opening of closed containers. Those specific instructions, quoted by the majority,
Second, even if the rules on which the state relies were validly adopted and even if they authorized the opening of closed containers to inventory their contents, rather than engage in a search, we held in State v. Ridderbush,
The majority would distinguish a wallet from an opaque plastic box. Of course, the two items are different. A major distinction, in my view, is that the contents of a wallet are much more likely to be personal in nature than those in an opaque plastic box. Defendant clearly has a privacy right, not an expectation of privacy, in the wallet, State v. Campbell,
Accordingly, I dissent in State v. Mundt.
