The defendant challenges the refusal of the court to suppress hashish that he handed to police officers without being informed of his rights. We affirm the Court of Appeals holding that the hashish is not suppressible under the fifth amendment to the United States Constitution and affirm the conviction for unlawful delivery of a cоntrolled substance.
The essential facts are not disputed. At approximately 8 p.m. on May 17, 1985, Detective Dave Dohman was parked at the Marine Park boat launch area in Vancouver. In his undercover capacity, Dohman noticed Michael Wethered drive into the park in a Ford Torino. Dohman observed Wethered reach down to the floor of the vehicle, and then saw Wethered pull out what appeared to be a brown chunky substance. Dohman saw Wethered move his arm in what appeared to be a cutting motion. A woman approached Wethered's vehiсle and placed money on the windowsill. Wethered took the money and gave her some of the brown chunky substance. Dohman, through his experience in the Vancouver Police Department Narcotics Unit, was aware that hashish normally comes in a brown chunky form.
Dohman, because of his underсover role, radioed his observations to dispatch. Dispatch sent three police vehicles, including one driven by Detective Keeney, to the scene. Keeney approached Wethered, asked Wethered for identification and placed him under arrest. Keeney did not warn Wethered of his rights pursuant to
Miranda v. Arizona,
Wethered was concerned about the passengers in his car, two of whom were a young woman and a baby, and asked if he gave the officers the drugs could the others go and his car not be impounded. Keeney assured Wethered that if Wethered gave the officers the drugs the car would not be impounded. Wethered went to the car, retrieved a plastic bag containing a brown chunky substance from one of the passengers, and gave it to Keeney. A records check was run which showed that Wethered's driver's license had been revoked and he was a habitual offender. Wethered's car was subsequently impounded despite Keeney's assurances. A chemical test at the Washington State Crime Laboratory revealed the brown chunky substance Wethered handed to Keeney contained a derivative of marijuana.
Wethered moved to suppress all evidence seized pursuant to questioning by the police. The trial court determined that the production of the hashish was voluntary, and held the evidence admissible. At a bench trial on stipulated facts, the court convicted Wethered of unlawful delivery of a controlled substance. Wethered appealed his conviction. In an unpublished opinion, the Court of Appeals held Wetherеd's act of producing hashish was testimonial and inadmissible because he had not been warned of his constitutional rights pursuant to Miranda v. Arizona, supra. However, it held the hashish itself admissible. The Court of Appeals found the error in admitting evidence of the act of surrendering the hashish harmless and affirmed the conviction. This court grantеd Wethered's petition for discretionary review.
Surrendering Hashish as Testimonial Act
The Court of Appeals held that Wethered's act of handing hashish to the officers was testimonial, as it was an admission that he was aware of the hashish in his vehicle; therefore the police were not entitled to request this act without first warning Wethered оf his rights pursuant to
*469
Miranda.
The Court of Appeals relied primarily on the decisions in
State v. Dennis,
The facts of Dennis are very similar to those presented here. An officer detained the defendants in their home and kept an eye on a refrigerator where he suspected drugs to be. He suggested to the defendant that the defendant produce the drugs voluntarily and save the officer the trouble оf a search. The defendant thereupon removed several packages of cocaine from the refrigerator and placed them on the table before the officer, who seized them. Dennis, at 419. The trial court found that the defendant produced the evidence freely and voluntarily without any coercion. Dennis, at 420. The Court of Appeals held that the defendant was in custody, and therefore statements elicited by police questioning must be preceded by Miranda warnings. Dennis, at 421.
The Dennis court then considered whether the defendant's act of producing evidence against himself was testimonial, so as to invоke the protections of Miranda. It first considered United States Supreme Court and Washington cases holding that when a defendant is simply the source of real or physical evidence, this is not self-incrimination for the purposes of the fifth amendment to the United States Constitution. Dennis, at 422-23. The Dennis court distinguished those cases, which invоlved compulsion of physical evidence such as blood or handwriting samples as follows:
Unlike the activities required of the defendants in the above cited cases, which necessitate the application or consideration of extraneous facts or circumstances such as сomparison and identification in order to prove guilt, the act of defendant Dennis in procuring the cocaine from its hiding place and placing it on the table in itself constituted an admission. This act served more graphically than words to convey the incriminating fact that he knew of the presence and precise location within his home of the contraband substance. . . . Defendant's response was therefore testimonial in nature and served *470 to incriminate him, and the evidence should have been suppressed.
Dennis, at 423-24.
Moreno
similarly involved a defendant producing contraband when questioned by offiсers. The defendant in
Moreno
was physically detained by officers in a security office of an airport, and basically asked if he possessed cocaine. In response he produced a packet containing three baggies of cocaine. The
Moreno
court found the rationale in
Dennis
convincing, and held production of the cocaine to be testimonial, and therefore inadmissible without prior
Miranda
warnings.
Moreno,
at 433;
see also People v. Hoffman,
This court discussed
Dennis
and
Moreno
in
State v. Franco,
A review of these cases convinces us that they do not purport to change any existing case law. While we might not adopt the court's language that the production of the cocaine was "testimonial in nature", Dennis, at page 422, because the acts of producing the drug supplied the incriminating ingredient of guilty knowledge necessary to prove a case; we note that the Moreno and Dennis courts were careful to distinguish the Schmerber [v. California,384 U.S. 757 ,16 L. Ed. 2d 908 ,86 S. Ct. 1826 (1966)] line of cases where the dеfendant was simply a "'source of "real or physical evidence". Dennis, at 422. See Moreno, at 433. It has been consistently held that compulsion which makes an accused the source of real or physical evidence does not violate the privilege. It is only violated *471 when the accused is compelled tо make a testimonial communication that is incriminating.
Franco, at 827. We reaffirm Franco, and now also hold that Dennis and Moreno correctly state the rule that where a police officer's questioning or requests induce a suspect to hand over or reveal the location of incriminating evidence, such nonverbal act may be testimonial in nature; the act shоuld be suppressed if done while in custody in the absence of Miranda warnings. Here, Wethered's act of producing the hashish was a confession of knowledge concerning the hashish, and is not admissible against him.
Our holding does not change the law with respect to situations involving consent to search.
In State v. Rodriguez,
Secondary Evidence of Hashish Itself
The Court of Appeals held that although Wethered's production of hashish in response to the officer's questioning was inadmissible because he was not advised of his rights under Miranda, the hashish itself was admissible.
Wethered argues that his claims should be decided under the provisions of the Washington State Constitution. We would normally first consider Wethered's claimed violation of his individual rights under the provisions of the Washington Constitution.
State v. Coe,
As a further aid to developing a sound basis for our state constitutional law, in
State v. Gunwall,
Wethered urges this court to follow our holding in
State v. Lavaris,
*473 While many states have found independent grounds in their own constitutions for Miranda warnings and have held their constitutions to provide wider protection than the United States Constitution, 1 we will not consider that question until the issue is adequately presented and argued to us. We therefore will only сonsider Wethered's claims under federal constitutional law. The Court of Appeals is clearly correct under current federal rulings.
The Court of Appeals relied primarily on the reasoning of the United States Supreme Court in
Oregon v. Elstad,
Because the
Elstad
opinion relies heavily on volition of the defendant as an insulating factor in successive-confession cases, it does not necessarily foreclose applying the "fruit of the poisonous tree" rule,
see Wong Sun v. United States,
In
Michigan v. Tucker,
Here, the trial court found that, although there was a Miranda violation in requesting Wethered to hand over the hashish, there was no direct Fifth Amendment violation, or coercion:
Under the totality of [the] circumstances the production of incriminating evidence was voluntary and resulted from defendant's own essentially free and unconstrained choice whose will had not been overborne and whose capacity for self-determination had not been critically impaired.
Clerk's Papers, at 6-7. Extending the Court's reasoning in Elstad and Tucker, the hashish derived from the non-Mirandized testimonial act need not be suppressed under the fifth amendment to the United States Constitution.
The hashish itself being admissible, the sole issue under the United States Constitution is whether the trial court's error in considering the confessional asрect of Wethered's surrendering the hashish was harmless error. A
*475
constitutional error is harmless if the appellate court is convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that any reasonable finder of fact would have reached the same result in the absence of the error.
State v. Guloy,
We are bound by the United States Supreme Court's determination that evidence derived from a confession made in violation of
Miranda v. Arizona,
Pearson, C.J., Brachtenbach, Andersen, Callow, Goodloe, and Durham, JJ., and Wetherall, J. Pro Tern., concur.
Dore, J., concurs in the result.
Notes
See Note, Miranda and the State Constitutions: State Courts Take a Stand, 39 Vand. L. Rev. 1693, 1717-34 (1986).
