Defendant petitions for reconsideration of our decision in
State v. Wiggins,
We briefly summarize the facts. The police received a report of a verbal altercation in which one of the participants was heard saying that he was going to get a gun and would return. Defendant’s car was seen leaving the place of the altercation. Fifteen minutes later, an officer located defendant’s car, which was headed back toward the spot of the altercation, and initiated a traffic stop with two deputies acting as backup. As defendant was being stopped, he pulled his car into a private driveway; defendant apparently knew the owners of the property. Defendant admitted to the officer that he was involved in a verbal altercation but denied making any threats. He declined consent to search the car for firearms, and he was subsequently arrested for a parole violation.
Defendant was transported to jail by the officer. His car keys were left with the property owners, who were directed (by defendant) to contact his girlfriend to retrieve the car. The two deputies left the scene to further investigate the possibility that a gun was in the car. The car was left unattended for about 25 minutes; the car was locked, but a window was left down. The property owners were adamant that nobody had accessed the car during that time.
*493 The deputies returned to the car believing they had probable cause that it contained a gun. They guarded the car while they sought a search warrant. Before a warrant was obtained, defendant’s girlfriend arrived and demanded to take the vehicle. The deputies then searched the car and found a loaded gun and additional ammunition. Defendant was charged with crimes related to his possession of a firearm. Before trial, the court suppressed the evidence found during the search of defendant’s car. The state appealed.
In our prior opinion, we explained that, under the automobile exception, police may conduct a warrantless search of a vehicle where (1) the vehicle is mobile at the time it is stopped by police or other governmental authority and (2) probable cause exists for the search of the vehicle.
Wiggins,
In reaching that conclusion, we partly relied on the facts in Kurokawa I, where this court applied the automobile exception “[d]espite the lapse in time and apparent break in contact with the vehicle.” Id. We also cited that case for the proposition that a vehicle need only be “operable” in order to be considered “mobile” for purposes of the automobile exception. Id. at 125. However, the latter point had no bearing on the disposition of the case.
Subsequent to our decision, the Supreme Court reversed
Kurokawa I,
rejecting the notion that any operational vehicle is “mobile” under the automobile exception.
*494
Kurokawa II,
On reconsideration, defendant argues that his car was “parked, immobile, and unoccupied” at the time of the search and that “the fact that [the] car was known to be ‘operable’ at [that time] does not mean that it remained mobile.” Thus, in defendant’s view, his car had ceased to be mobile due to either the break in contact with the vehicle or to the general delay — “90 minutes or more” — between the initial stop and the time of the search.
The Supreme Court has not directly addressed when a “mobile” vehicle, stopped by police in connection with a crime, ceases to be mobile for purposes of the automobile exception of Article I, section 9.
1
Nonetheless, the court’s decision in
Meharry,
“Nothing occurred between [the time of the initial encounter] and the search that rendered the van immobile. [The officer] had not impounded the van, and there was no physical or mechanical impediment to the van’s being driven away once [the officer] relinquished control over it. In short, the van remained mobile and the exigency continued.”
Id.
at 180;
see also Kurokawa II,
Similarly, here, defendant’s car was mobile at the time it was stopped. That exigency persisted at the time of the search despite the intervening break in contact with the vehicle and the lapse of time.
See, e.g., Meharry,
“[n]othing occurred between the moment of the initial encounter and the time the officers searched defendant’s car that rendered the vehicle immobile. The car had not been impounded, the car was not functionally disabled, and *496 nothing prevented the car from being driven away once the officers relinquished control over it.”
Wiggins,
We need not
go
further and decide when a “mobile” vehicle ceases to be mobile by virtue of police delay. The Supreme Court has made clear that the automobile exception has only two requirements: (1) the vehicle must be mobile at the time that it is first encountered by police and (2) probable cause must exist for the search of the vehicle.
Kurokawa II,
Reconsideration allowed; former opinion modified and adhered to as modified.
Notes
We note that previous decisions do contain casual references to the timing of a search under the automobile exception.
See, e.g., Meharry,
