Defendant Ricky Palmer appeals from a judgment and conviction for retail theft, a third degree felony. Defendant filed a motion to suppress certain evidence obtained from a warrantless X-ray search of his body. After the motion was denied, defendant entered a conditional plea of guilty pursuant to
State v. Sery,
On May 3, 1989, at about 6:00 p.m., a Sears security guard was called to the store's diamond counter where a salesclerk informed her that a customer had just taken a diamond ring, leaving a paste ring in its place. When the salesclerk called security, the customer had left the diamond counter and was exiting the store. The security guard examined the paste ring and then proceeded after the customer, defendant Ricky Palmer.
The security guard fоllowed defendant out to the store parking lot and waited until a second security guard arrived. The security guard then asked defendant to return to the store with them. Inside the store, defendant was informed that the security guards believed he had switched a pastе ring for a real diamond ring belonging to Sears. Defendant denied that he had possession of a ring. A pat-down search was conducted with defendant’s consent, but the ring was not found. The Salt Lake City Police Department was called, and Officer David Hendrix resрonded to the suspected shoplifting.
*1251 Officer Hendrix was joined at Sears by two other police officers. Because they were unsure how to proceed, Officer Hendrix called his supervisor, Sergeant Foster Mayo. When Sergeant Mayo arrived at Sears, a thorough search was conducted of the store parking lot where defendant had been first detained, and the surrounding area. Defendant then submitted to a strip search but the ring was still not located. At this point, the police suspected that defendant had swallowed the ring. Sergeant Mayo telephoned the Salt Lake County Attorney’s Office and the Salt Lake County Jail for advice, and decided to proceed with an X-ray search. If the X-ray showed defendant was not in possession of thе ring, Sergeant Mayo intended to send more officers to conduct another search of the Sears parking lot. Having already been placed under arrest, defendant was transported in handcuffs to Holy Cross Hospital at approximately 6:30 р.m.
After arriving at Holy Cross Hospital, defendant objected to being.subjected to an X-ray search. Three police officers who had accompanied defendant to the X-ray department told defendant that he did not have a choicе regarding the X-ray, at which point defendant became combative. The police officers forcibly restrained defendant and the X-ray was taken. There was a shape resembling a ring evident in the X-ray of defendant’s stomach. The police thеn took defendant to the Salt Lake County Jail where arrangements were made to place him in an isolation cell. The ring eventually passed through his system and was retrieved by jail personnel.
Defendant moved to suppress the X-ray and all evidenсe obtained after the X-ray was taken. Defendant argued that the warrantless bodily intrusion violated his fourth amendment rights and that all evidence derived from the search should be suppressed. The State contended that the search was reasonablе. The trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress, finding that the presence of exigent circumstances justified the warrantless search of defendant’s body.
On appeal, defendant reiterates his claim that the X-ray and all evidence thereafter obtained should have been suppressed. Specifically, defendant argues that there were not exigent circumstances present to dispense with the warrant requirement; nothing clearly indicated that the ring would be found inside of defendant; thе X-ray was not a reasonable method for locating the ring; and the X-ray was not conducted in a reasonable manner. The State argues that the X-ray search was reasonable, but that even if the search violated defendant’s rights, the ring was still admissible undеr the “inevitable discovery” rule.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The standard of review for a challenge to a lower court’s suppression ruling was stated by this court in
State v. Johnson,
WARRANTLESS SEARCHES
“Warrantless searches and seizures are per se unreasonable unless exigent circumstances require that the search be performed before a warrant can be obtained.”
State v. Christensen,
Both defendant and the State agree that in order to determine if a bodily search violates the fourth amendment, the applicable test is that articulated by the United States Supreme Court in
Schmerber v. Cal
*1252
ifornia,
In denying defendant’s motion to suppress, the court stated:
[T]he evidence shows that there was such a high probability that [Palmer] had swallowed the ring because [the officers] had made a thorough search of everywhere. No avenues seemed left where it could be. However, since that is a possibility that could exist, and because it was such a public place and because dark was approaching, that the circumstances were of such a nature as to require an immediate final determination in this regard and they were therefore justified in making this determination and not waiting for a search warrant.
The trial court explicitly relied on
People v. Williams,
In Utah, in order to establish exigent circumstances sufficient to justify a warrantless search the State must show either that the procurement of a warrant would have jeopardized the safety of the police officеrs or the public, or that the evidence was likely to have been lost or destroyed.
Larocco,
In
Larocco,
the Utah Supreme Court simplified the search and seizure rules so that they could “be more easily followed by the police and the courts and, at the same time, provide the public with consistent and predictable protection against unreasonable searches and seizures.”
Larocco,
This can be accomplished by eliminating some of the confusing exceptiоns to the warrant requirement....
[Warrantless searches will be permitted only where they satisfy their traditional justification, namely [1] to protect the safety of police or the public or [2] to prevent the destruction of evidence.
Id. at 469-470 (citations omitted).
Describing when the second exigent circumstance exception to the warrant requirement applies, the
Larocco
court said, “the police must have probable cause and believe that either contraband or evidence of a crime ... may be lost if not immеdiately seized.”
Id.
at 470 (quoting
State v. Christensen,
The possibility that the ring may have been discovered by some passerby or third person is not an exigent circumstance.
See Schmerber,
There was also no justifiable reason to believe the ring would be destroyed by defendant if he had swallowed it, as the State would have us believe.
People v. Bracamonte,
The State could have easily obtained a warrant for this search.
See United States v. Aquino,
Applying the Larocco analysis of exigent circumstances to the present case, we do not believe the circumstances were such as would justify a warrantless search.
INEVITABLE DISCOVERY
On appeal, the State argued that even if the warrantless X-ray of defendant were determined by this court to be unlawful, the ring which was subsequently seized by the police after it passed through defendant’s system, was admissible under the “inevitable discovery” rule.
See, e.g., Nix v. Williams,
The State raised the theory of inevitable discovery below; however, since the trial court found that exigent circumstances justified the warrantless X-ray of defendant, the trial court did not have to decide the question of whethеr or not the ring inevitably would have been discovered. This court cannot properly determine the outcome of a fact-sensitive issue where the record below is not clear and uncontrovert-ed, or capable of only one finding.
Acton v. Deliran,
Because we find that there were no exigent circumstances, the motion to suppress the X-ray was erroneously denied. As to the ring, we remand for the factual determination of whether the ring would have *1254 been inevitably discovered and for such other proceedings as may be appropriate.
BILLINGS and ORME, JJ., concur.
