The determination of the suppression question is dependent upon whether the seizure of the pistol comes within the “plain view” warrantless search exception to the exclusionary evidence rule.
In
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
1. the prior intrusion must be valid;
*268 2. the discovery must be inadvertent;
3. the evidence must be immediately apparent as such; and
4. the evidence must be in plain view.
After voir dire the trial court, in concluding that the plain view doctrine was applicable and denying the defendant’s motion to suppress, found facts as follows:
“That Officer Floyd Dickerson of the Wilson Police Department received a radio message that a robbery had occurred at the Texaco Grill and that the suspects were two young black males, one of light complexion and one of dark complexion; that the two black males left the grill running in the direction of Carver Trailer Park. That Dickerson proceeded to the trailer park and observed a 1973 Chevrolet automobile, that he followed the automobile and observed two black males in the rear seat who looked back frequently at his car; that at one intersection that the car passed through it failed to stop for a stop sign and ran up on the curb, almost striking the stop sign, and accelerated rapidly. That the officer continued following the automobile and the subjects in the back seat continued to look back in the direction of the officer’s car. That he stopped the car and four black males got out, that they were all young and one was of dark complexion and one was of light complexion; that the four black males walked toward his patrol car and then one of the black males turned and walked back to the car and then returned to the patrol car. That the officer told the subjects to put their hands on his car and they were frisked and the defendant had $50.00 crumpled or balled up on his person. That Officer Dickerson walked over to the passenger side of the automobile and the door had been left open and he observed a .22 pistol in the floorboard on the passenger side.”
The foregoing facts were fully supported by the State’s evidence.
1. The Prior Valid Intrusion
The valid intrusion element has been applied liberally where the police discover evidence in plain view; in general it is only re
*269
quired that the police have legal justification to be at the place where he sees evidence in plain view.
State v. Thompson,
2. Inadvertent Discovery of the Evidence
The requirement of inadvertent discovery is not clearly defined in Coolidge, supra. Where the police know in advance the location of the evidence and intend to seize it, the constitutional requirement of a warrant applies. However, the mere expectation that the evidence will be discovered does not negate the in-advertency element. Some commentators feel that inadvertency means the absence of probable cause. Comment, 85 Harv. L. Rev. 3, 243-247 (1971). In the case before us Officer Dickerson did not have probable cause to believe that he would discover a pistol in the automobile operated by defendant. Though he was investigating a crime in which a firearm was used, there was at most an expectation or possibility that at the time of detention he would discover a pistol in the car.
3. Immediately Apparent
The requirement that the evidence seized be immediately apparent as such is a corollary of the probable cause requirement. There must be some “. .. nexus . . . between the item to be seized and criminal behavior.”
Warden v. Hayden,
In the case sub judice, there was a nexus between the pistol discovered in defendant’s car and the crime of armed robbery. The pistol was undoubtedly incriminating to the defendant. Consequently, the “immediately apparent” element is present in the instant case.
4. Plain View
The object of the Fourth Amendment is to protect reasonable expectations of privacy.
Katz v. United States,
In the casé before us, after defendant and the other three occupants of the car were frisked by Officer Dickerson and Officer Roberts and a wad of bills amounting to $50.00 was found in defendant’s pocket, Officer Dickerson then went to defendant’s car; he shined a flashlight into the car and saw a .22 caliber pistol on the floor of the front seat. He seized the gun. In
State v. Whitley,
We find that the .22 caliber pistol discovered by Officer Dickerson with the aid of the flashlight was in the plain view and *271 that its seizure without a warrant was justified under the plain view doctrine.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
