OPINION
Defendant Andrew Ruffino was convicted for the first-degree murder of Don Johnson. He appeals claiming two errors. During the trial the court denied Ruffino’s motion to suppress evidence taken in the search of his car. Ruffino also claimed prejudice because of statements made by the assistant district attorney during closing argument. We affirm.
On February 26, 1979, Officer Quintana of the Albuquerque Police Department was called to assist in the impoundment of a motor vehicle belonging to Ruffino, after Ruffino had been arrested on a minor charge. Pursuant to police regulations, Officer Quintana began to inventory the contents of the car prior to its being towed. He first inventoried the interior of the car and then using the keys, obtained by another officer from Ruffino, opened and inventoried items in the trunk. The items in the trunk included grocery bags, clothing, a radio, repair items and a twelve-gauge shotgun with shells. The inventory completed, Officer Quintana returned all items to the trunk and locked the car. The car was then towed to a wrecking yard and secured. Later Officer Quintana returned with a search warrant and seized the shotgun and shells. Prior to the inventory search of the car, Officer Quintana had no knowledge or reason to suspect that Ruffino had been involved in any killing or that the search would produce items that would so implicate him.
I.
The inventory search
1
of Ruffino’s car was done without a warrant. Warrant-less searches are permissible under the Fourth Amendment, as applied to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment, if they fall within one of the exceptions to the warrant requirements. Three of the exceptions, plain view, probable cause plus exigent circumstances, and search incident to a lawful arrest, were set forth in State v. Gorsuch,
The overwhelming majority of state and federal courts have concluded that inventory searches are constitutionally permissible. See, South Dakota v. Opperman,
We accept the following requirements for an inventory search: (1) The vehicle to be inventoried must be in police control and custody. Dombrowski, supra; State v. Vigil, supra. Custody of the vehicle must be based on some legal ground and there must be some nexus between the arrest and the reason for the impounding. Preston v. United States,
We hold that the initial search was valid and also hold that the entry into the trunk was equally valid. Dombrowski, supra; United States v. Edwards,
II.
The second issue to be decided by this Court is whether certain statements made by the prosecutor during closing argument so prejudiced the jury as to require a new trial. We feel they did not.
Although several allegedly improper statements are complained of, only one was objected to at trial. This Court has consistently held that unless a timely objection is made to an allegedly improper comment it will not be reviewed. See State v. Seaton,
Generally, reference by the prosecutor to the defendant’s silence will be reversible error. As stated in State v. Lara,
The only remaining question is whether the reference to the defendant’s failure to call witnesses or the indication of the prosecutor’s personal belief of the defendant’s guilt, have the cumulative effect of prejudicing the jury. We hold that it did not.'
While the reference to personal belief in closing argument is of questionable ethical propriety, it is not always reversible error. See State v. Seaton, supra; State v. Polsky,
The reference to the defendant’s failure to call a witness was not so extreme, in this case, as to constitute reversible error. The prosecutor, as well as the defense, has reasonable latitude in closing arguments, State v. Riggsbee, supra; State v. Pace,
We affirm.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Although some courts have held that a mere inventory search of a vehicle is not a search under the Fourth Amendment, Haerr v. United States,
. That case has been severely limited in its holding by Dombrowski, supra.
. “Mr. Taylor [defense counsel] then tells you that Angelo Ruffino stands here telling you that he didn’t do the crime — he didn’t commit the crime. First of all, he’s not standing and second of all, he hasn’t told you anything. Now let me tell you something: Mr. Taylor tells you that his client didn’t testify in this case because there wasn’t anything he could have told you. How about Rosie? Back, uh, when he was arrested, the person he was with— where’s Rosie? She’s not here. She didn’t testify. He didn’t testify because he’s guilty, that’s why. And not because he didn’t have any evidence.”
