The state appeals from a pretrial order suppressing evidence found in a warrantless search. ORS 138.060(3). We affirm.
A wоman found defendant’s wallet at a shopping mall in The Dalles. Inside the wallet she found identification, a razor blade аnd a small plastic bag of what she thought was cocaine. The woman replaced all the items and gave the wallet to a clerk at the Wasco County Sheriffs office. She explained that she had found a wallet containing drugs and that she did not want anything further to do with it. She would not leave her name. After examining the wallet’s contents, the clerk phoned The Dalles police, who told the clerk to send them the wallet. The clerk sent the wallet, along with a note about the drugs. Acting without a warrant, a deputy for the drug task force examined the wallet and its contents, including the bag, 1 which contained methamphetamine. The police used the identification in the wallet to find defendant.
Defendant moved to supрress the methamphetamine. The trial court found that the deputy had probable cause to search the wallеt but that there was no justification for a warrantless search. On appeal, the state argues that the search оf the wallet was not a search for constitutional purposes, because there is no reasonable expectation of privacy in a lost wallet. We disagree.
Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution protects ‘ ‘thе right of people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable search, or seizure.” A government action that invades a protected property or privacy interest is a search.
State v. Faulkner,
“Had the deputies opened the manila envelopes in search of contraband, they would have violated defendant’s state and probably federal constitutional rights.”306 Or at 342 .
That is precisely what happenеd here. The wallet was searched for drugs after the deputy had found identification. A prosecutorial objective motivated the search; therefore, the warrantless search violated defendant’s Article I, section 9, rights. 2
The same result follows from the analysis in
State v. Morton, supra,
where a private citizen found the defendant’s purse, searched it and discovered a syringe inside a cigarette case. The citizen phoned the police and told them about the lost purse and the syringe. The police examined the contents
of the purse and found seven pieces of identification with a name variously spelled “Joel,” “Joe’l,” “Joe. L.” They examined the identification, noticed the discrepancies in the way that the names were spelled and оpened the cigarette case, ostensibly for more identification. We held that, because the police lacked probable cause
3
to conduct an investigative search, it was unreasonable for them to oрen the cigarette case, once they had found identification.
Morton stands for the proposition that police may search lost property to identify the owner but that the search must stop when identification is found. In this case, the dеputy found two pieces of identification with the same name and different addresses. That search was reasonаble. It was the failure to stop searching once identification was found that was unreasonable and violated defendant’s Article I, section 9, rights.
Affirmed.
Notes
Although it is not clear, the officer appears to have found the driver’s license on thе left and additional information on the right side of the wallet. The officer testified:
“Q. Where was the condom, razorblade and ziplock bag?
“A. It was in a side compartment where you would put identification, that type of thing, in it.
“Q. [The clerk] testified that when you opened the wallet you could see identification on one side and the other was within an area that you could not see the cocaine without pulling it oрen, I think she said.
“A. Well, when I opened it up I was able to — when I opened it like this (indicating) there was the plastic things where you put pictures and things like that in there. There was some I.D. in there, and there was some money in the wallet part of it. And then lоoking — when I held it open like this, I could see the top of the plastic baggie. I couldn’t see the razorblade. And I could see the plastic wrapper that was on it.
“Q. With the identification for Lebanon and Hermiston — I think you said?
“A. Yes.”
A prosecutоrial objective can justify a warrantless search of a found item if there is probable cause and an excеption to the warrant requirement. In
State v. Lichty,
In
Morton,
the officer conceded, and the trial court found, that the citizen’s report of a syringe did not furnish probable cause to search the cigarette case.
