The opinion of the court was delivered by
Reno County law enforcement officers made a traffic stop of Dinah Sanchez-Loredo’s vehicle, detained her at the scene for approximately 75 minutes while obtaining a search war *51 rant, and recovered a large quantity of methamphetamine and some drug paraphernalia during the ensuing automobile search. Sanchez-Loredo seeks review of the Court of Appeals’ decision which reversed the district court’s suppression of the seized drugs and drug paraphernalia based upon the district court’s determination that exigent circumstances did not exist to support a war-rantless search and seizure. Sanchez-Loredo’s petition for review states the following narrow issue upon which review is sought: “Does the mobility of a vehicle provide exigent circumstances to search the vehicle regardless of the circumstances?” We hold that, for Fourth Amendment purposes, the mobility of a vehicle fulfills the requirement of exigent circumstances, so that a warrantless vehicle search is permitted based solely on probable cause. Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ reversal of the district court’s suppression order.
Factual and Procedural Overview
Reno County law enforcement officers had information that Dinah Sanchez-Loredo was transporting money to Dodge City and returning to Hutchinson with methamphetamine on behalf of drug distributors. Part of that information flowed from an investigation that ensued after a May 11, 2007, residential search in Hutchinson yielded a large quantity of methamphetamine and a large amount of money. Sanchez-Loredo’s alleged connection to that drug operation made her the subject of law enforcement surveillance.
On July 26, 2007, Reno County officers followed Sanchez-Loredo’s vehicle around the city of Hutchinson, observing her meet briefly with persons known to be involved with drugs. The vehicle left Hutchinson with Sanchez-Loredo driving and Amber Moore as a passenger. The officers followed the vehicle to Dodge City.
In Dodge City, the officers followed the vehicle for a time, until it appeared as though the vehicle driver was attempting to discern whedier the vehicle was being followed. The officers discontinued the tail for fear of detection but recommenced following Sanchez-Loredo after she left Dodge City and was en route back to Hutch *52 inson. When the vehicle crossed into Reno County, the officers stopped it and conducted an unsuccessful K-9 sniff of the vehicle.
During the course of their observation of Sanchez-Loredo, the law enforcement officers had been in contact with a Reno County assistant district attorney. After the drug dog failed to aleit, the officers requested that the prosecutor obtain a warrant to search Sanchez-Loredo’s vehicle. An officer was able to obtain the executed search warrant and return to the scene of the detained vehicle in approximately 75 minutes from the time of the initial vehicle stop. The ensuing search produced, inter alia, a large quantity of methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia. Both Sanchez-Loredo and Moore were charged, in separate cases, with drug crimes.
Both Sanchez-Loredo and Moore filed motions to suppress the evidence obtained from the search of the vehicle. The district court conducted a hearing on the motions and issued a joint opinion, explaining its rationale for granting the suppression motions. First, the court rejected the defendants’ challenge to the validity of the vehicle stop, specifically finding that, using the totality of the circumstances test, the officers had probable cause to stop the vehicle and detain the occupants. Further, the court summarily declared that the drug dog’s inability to alert on the vehicle did not destroy the probable cause that existed at the time of the canine sniff.
Nevertheless, the district court opined that the principle that a person has less expectation of privacy in a motor vehicle than a residence does not negate the rule of law that warrantless searches are the
exception,
not the rule. Citing to
United States v. Cantu,
The district court then found that the law enforcement officers had sufficient information to establish probable cause when Sanchez-Loredo’s vehicle left Dodge City and that they had more than adequate time to obtain a warrant through the standby prosecutor prior to the time of the vehicle stop. Moreover, the court could *53 not find any exigent circumstances that would have required law enforcement officers to stop the vehicle when they did. The ultimate rationale given for suppressing the evidence was that, “[ujnder the unique circumstances of this case, the Court finds it was practicable to obtain the search warrant prior to the stop and detention of the Defendants.”
The State appealed the suppression order. The Court of Appeals reversed the district court, holding that a “search without a warrant is allowed when probable cause is combined with exigent circumstances; in the case of potential evidence in a car, the mobility of the car provides the exigent circumstances.”
State v. Sanchez-
Loredo,
Before proceeding, we pause to clarify the issues we will not be addressing. Sanchez-Loredo did not cross-appeal the district court’s rulings that were adverse to her, such as the finding that the officers had probable cause to stop and detain her. See
State v. Adams,
Accordingly, this opinion will not address the district court’s finding of probable cause or the effect on probable cause of an unsuccessful olfactory search by a drug dog. Further, we will not consider the reasonableness of the length of detention or the validity of the search warrant. Likewise, no one has discussed whether the issuance of the search warrant could attenuate the taint of any prior unlawfulness. Rather, as noted above, the narrow question presented for our review is whether the Court of Appeals erred in finding, as a matter of law, that the mobility of a vehicle provides the exigent circumstances to support a warrantless vehicle search based on probable cause. We will confine our opinion to that issue.
Vehicle Mobility as Exigent Circumstance
A. Standard of Review
The general standard of review for an issue of evidence suppression is bifurcated. First, without reweighing the evidence, the appellate court reviews the district court’s findings for supporting substantial competent evidence.
State v. Woolverton,
B. Analysis
Applying the law to the facts of this case is complicated by the ambiguities in the trial court’s rulings. On the one hand, the district court’s written opinion recited that “when the Court considers the evidence in its totality, the Court does find probable cause existed to stop the vehicle and detain the occupants,” suggesting a lawful investigatory detention, if not a lawful arrest. With that finding, one would expect the inquiry to proceed to a determination of
*55
whether the length of the detention awaiting the search warrant transformed the investigative stop into a de facto arrest,
i.e.,
did the
seizure
become unlawful. See
United States v. Sharpe,
We pause to quickly review certain fundamental constitutional principles. We start with the premise that a warrantless search by a police officer is per se unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment unless the State can fit the search within one of the recognized exceptions to the warrant requirement. Those recognized exceptions are: “consent; search incident to a lawful arrest; stop and frisk; probable cause plus exigent circumstances; the emergency doctrine; inventory searches; plain view or feel; and administrative searches of closely regulated businesses.”
Fitzgerald,
“Probable cause” to search a vehicle can be established if the totality of the circumstances indicates there is a “fair probability” that the vehicle contains contraband or evidence.
State v. Davis,
But probable cause must be accompanied by exigent circumstances to permit a circumvention of the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement. This court has previously explained and illustrated the concept as follows: “ ‘Exigent circumstances exist where the police officer reasonably believes there is a threat of imminent loss, destruction, removal, or concealment of evidence or contraband.’ ”
State v. Fewell,
Frequently, the State meets the exigency requirement by relying on a subclass of the probable-cause-plus-exigent-circumstances exception referred to as the “automobile exception.” See
California v. Carney,
"On reason and authority the true rule is that if the search and seizure without a warrant are made upon probable cause, that is, upon a belief, reasonably arising out of circumstances known to the seizing officer, that an automobile or other vehicle contains that which by law is subject to seizure and destruction, the search and seizure are valid.” Carroll,267 U.S. at 149 .
The Supreme Court further clarified the scope of the automobile exception in
Chambers v. Maroney,
The Supreme Court has developed two rationales for the automobile exception,
i.e.,
two reasons for treating automobiles differently: (1) the mobility of an automobile; and (2) the lower expectation of privacy people have in their automobile, as opposed to their homes or offices. 3 LaFave, Search and Seizure § 7.2, p. 538 (4th ed. 2004). This court has recognized the exception and noted the joint rationale of vehicle mobility and reduced expectation of privacy. Conn,
What the district court relied upon was qualifying language in some of our opinions, such as the statement in
Fitzgerald
that “[a]s long as probable cause exists, automobiles and other vehicles may be searched without warrants
where it is not practicable to secure a warrant;
their mobility fulfills the additional requirements of the existence of exigent circumstances.” (Emphasis added.)
In
Pennsylvania v. Labron,
In
Maryland v. Dyson,
We pause to note that some states have rejected the
Labron/ Dyson
rationale when interpreting their state constitutions and require their police to demonstrate both probable cause and exigent circumstances before searching a vehicle without a warrant. See,
e.g., State v. Elison,
It is abundantly clear that Sanchez-Loredo’s vehicle was mobile, which inherently creates the possibility that evidence which an officer has probable cause to believe is contained in the vehicle could be lost. Applying mandatory Fourth Amendment jurisprudence, we need look no further than the district court’s finding that law enforcement officers had probable cause to believe the vehicle contained contraband or evidence of drug crimes. The district court erred in requiring the State to prove anything more. The Court of Appeals’ reversal of the district court’s suppression of evidence should be affirmed.
Reversed and remanded.
