After the trial court denied his motion to suppress evidence, defendant was convicted of crimes involving the possession, manufacture, and delivery of marijuana. He appeals, arguing that the warrantless search of a backpack that officers found on the front seat of his truck, after he had been arrested approximately 10 feet from the vehicle, violated his rights under Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution.
The following facts are undisputed. While on a general patrol one afternoon in Roseburg, Officer Crouse noticed a tan Toyota pickup truck with a tan shell parked in a lot near two taverns, the Wild Rose and Restin Red’s. The driver, Crouse noticed, was a white male who appeared to be between 30 and 40 years old, wearing a distinctive camouflage hat. The driver and the truck exactly matched the description of a drug dealer and his vehicle that Crouse had heard from an unnamed informant while on duty at the Douglas County Courthouse some three weeks earlier. His interest “piqued,” Crouse watched while the driver and his passenger appeared to be engaged in a hand-to-hand exchange under the truck’s dashboard; although he could not see their hands, Crouse was convinced that such an exchange was occurring by virtue of the motions that he could see — the participants were looking at what was in their hands and “passing things around.”
At that point, Crouse, who was relatively inexperienced as a police officer — he had been on the job only 18 months — called for another officer, Koberstein, who had extensive training and experience in drug cases. After Crouse briefed him on what he had observed, Koberstein confirmed
The two officers entered the Wild Rose. When they spotted defendant, they asked him if he would come outside with them. He agreed. They left the tavern and walked to a spot approximately 10 feet from the truck. There, Koberstein told defendant that he suspected drug activity was afoot, and he requested consent to search his person. Defendant consented. Koberstein found a cell phone, a wallet containing $1,900 in cash, a wad of loose bills totaling $138, and two small notebooks. In one notebook, Koberstein saw notations that appeared to him to be records of drug transactions, including one that read, next to a name, “15 oz Mex.” According to Koberstein, the amount of money that the notations referred to approximated the amount of money found on defendant’s person. Based on what Crouse had told him and on the contents of defendant’s pockets, Koberstein reached the conclusion that defendant was a “mobile drug dealer.”
The officers then turned their attention to a backpack that they observed on the front seat of defendant’s truck. Koberstein asked defendant if he could search it, and defendant, appearing nervous, told him that he could not. The officer did so anyway. Inside he found the evidence that defendant sought unsuccessfully to suppress.
Although this incident occurred within a few blocks of the Douglas County Courthouse during business hours on a weekday, neither officer, confronted with defendant’s refusal to consent to the search of his backpack, tried to obtain a search warrant.
Under Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution, a warrantless search is presumed to be unreasonable and is therefore unlawful unless it falls within one of the existing exceptions to the warrant requirement. State v. Nagel,
The state does not contend that the search of the backpack was justified by concerns for officer safety or preservation of evidence; they argue only that they had probable cause to arrest defendant for drug-related crimes, that the backpack could have contained evidence of those crimes, and that the search was reasonable in time, place, and scope. We agree that probable cause existed; the match between the informant’s information and defendant’s clothing and vehicle, the observed interaction between defendant and his passenger, and the contents of defendant’s pockets add up to information that would lead a reasonable person to believe that, more likely than not, defendant’s backpack would contain evidence of crimes. We also agree that the search was for evidence relevant to the crime under investigation — that is, the search was reasonable in scope — and that it occurred within a reasonable time after defendant’s arrest. The more difficult issue is whether a search of a container inside of a car that defendant was 10 feet away from is reasonable with respect to place.
The state and defendant both rely on existing case law. The state cites State v. Hartley,
In a recent case with facts remarkably similar to the ones in the present case, we resolved the apparent tension between Hartley and Hite in an analysis that is fatal to the state’s position here. In State v. Meharry,
Thus, in both Meharry and this case, a police officer spots a vehicle and driver and, based on an informant’s description, he suspects that the driver has engaged in criminal activity. He follows the suspect into a nearby commercial establishment and asks the suspect to accompany him to a spot outside, near the vehicle. There, he develops information giving him probable cause to arrest the suspect. He then searches the vehicle for evidence related to the offense for which he has made the arrest.
In Meharry, we held that the search was not justified under the “search incident to arrest” exception to the warrant requirement.
“[a] lawful search incident to an arrest is limited in scope to the person and to the belongings in the person’s immediate possession because there is no further intrusion into the possessory and privacy interests that an arrested person has in his or her person and in the belongings in the person’s immediate possession. Such an intrusion has already occurred as a result of the arrest * *
Id. The privacy and possessory interests in other objects, however, has not been relinquished.
We find no meaningful distinction between this case and Meharry. We therefore reverse and remand.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution guarantees “the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable search, or seizure[.]”
