526 P.2d 458 | Or. Ct. App. | 1974
Defendant was indicted for criminal activity in drugs, OBS 167.207, and carrying a concealed weapon, OBS 166.240. Prior to trial, the defendant moved to suppress the knife which was the subject of the concealed weapon indictment and the drugs which were the subject of the other indictment. The trial court allowed the motion and the state appeals pursuant to OBS 138.060 (3).
A Multnomah County sheriff’s deputy observed a vehicle blocking three eastbound lanes at Halsey Street in Portland, Oregon, at about 3 a.m. He approached the vehicle and found three people in the car. A man, with a woman on his lap, was sitting behind the wheel, and they were fighting to see who was to drive. The defendant was sitting in the passenger side, slumped against the dashboard. The man and woman were arrested for drunk driving and were carried to the police car.
The deputy then returned to the car and asked defendant to step out. Defendant, though not unconscious, was incoherent. He was unable to walk so the deputy removed him from the automobile. As he did so he felt something hard under defendant’s coat. He stated that the object felt long, hard and cubic and that it could have been a small caliber pistol or something innocuous. The officer then searched defendant
We disagree with the trial court’s disposition of the motion. Here the officer came upon an emergency situation: a ear that was blocking three lanes of a highway at 3 a.m. with two people sitting in the driver’s seat fighting over who was going to drive it, and both incoherently drunk. The other person was slumped over the dashboard and apparently equally incoherent. After arresting the contending drivers it was necessary to tow the automobile, and it thus became necessary to have defendant leave the vehicle. Since defendant was apparently unable to leave by himself, the officer attempted to assist him. It was in so doing that he came in contact with the hard object which further inspection revealed to be the concealed weapon.
The officer made the initial discovery while engaging in an activity he was entitled to pursue and in a place where he was entitled to be. Once the circumstances arose which suggested that defendant might be armed, we have previously held “we shall not draw a fine line measuring the possible risk * * The officer properly could make the search. State v. Lewis, 10 Or App 378, 380-81, 499 P2d 836, Sup Ct review denied (1972). Indeed he would have been remiss in his duty had he failed to pursue the
As we said in Swartsfager, and the same is true here, the procedure followed was reasonable both for the protection of the police and of the defendant.
Reversed and remanded for trial.