OPINION
These are consolidated appeals from Superior Court judgments denying applications for postconviction relief filed pursuant to G.L.1956 (1969 Reenactment) § 10 — 9.1—1, as enacted by P.L.1974, ch. 220, § 3. The applicants were originally convicted in 1973, in the Superior Court of Providence County on charges of (1) assault with a dangerous weapon, (2) abominable and detestable crime against nature, (3) kidnapping, (4) rape, and (5) robbery.
The pertinent facts are set out in
State v. Benoit,
It is important to point out that the applicants did not raise the issue we face on this appeal — whether the warrantless search and seizure infringed rights guaranteed to citizens of this state by art. 1, sec. 6 of the Rhode Island constitution — either at the hearing on the motion to suppress, at trial, or in their brief. In fact the applicants only addressed the issue for the first time when the court raised it
sua sponte
during oral argument. In our decision on the direct appeal, we refrained from answering the state constitutional question raised at oral argument. We indicated, however, that we were “certainly free to interpret our own constitutional search and seizure provision more restrictively than the fourth amendment * *
State v. Benoit,
The state made a motion to dismiss the applications. The postconviction judge heard the motion to dismiss; he did not, however, rule separately on the state’s motion. Rather, he incorporated his denial of the state’s motion to dismiss in his decision on the merits of the applications. He then found the limitations on delayed police searches of automobiles imposed by the United States Constitution and by the Rhode Island constitution to be coextensive. In arriving at that finding, he was satisfied that this court’s decision in the instant case demonstrated “no inclination to establish a *898 rule based on the Rhode Island Constitution which would not comport with the United States Supreme Court decisions on the Fourth Amendment.” The trial justice denied both applications, and the applicants now appeal from that decision.
I
In the first instance, we must determine whether our review of the constitutional claim is warranted in view of the applicants’ failure to raise it prior to post-conviction proceedings. Normally, we have required as a procedural matter that claims be raised at the trial level in order to be preserved for direct review.
See State v. Pope,
R.I.,
Not all constitutional claims will be heard for the first time in postconviction proceedings. At the time of these proceedings, the test to be applied by the trial court to determine the appropriateness of hearing a federal constitutional claim raised for the first time in an application for postconviction relief was whether the applicant had deliberately bypassed the claim as a matter of trial or appellate strategy.
See Reynolds v. Langlois,
Although the state pressed the argument on the applicants’ failure to raise the claim at trial or on appeal, the trial justice made no express finding that the applicants either did or did not deliberately bypass the state constitutional claim. Nevertheless, because we believe that the record is not reasonably susceptible of the inference that the applicants deliberately bypassed the state constitutional claim, we need not remand for an express finding on that issue.
See State v. McGehearty,
R.I.,
Our current rule on the propriety of hearing constitutional claims for the first time in postconviction proceedings also requires the Superior Court justice to find as a preliminary matter that “the record discloses that the breach complained of will constitute something more than harmless error.”
State v. McGehearty,
R.I.,
Although the trial justice was not bound to make a harmless-error determination before reaching the merits, the question remains whether we should make such a determination before proceeding to review the trial justice’s ruling on the substantive constitutional claim. In our view, McGehearty adopted an additional procedural standard by which to regulate the cognizability of constitutional claims raised for the first time in postconviction proceedings. We see no reason to apply that procedural standard retroactively to postconviction proceedings that occurred before the McGehearty decision. Since the merits of the applicants’ claim were ruled on below, our function now is only to review that ruling.
*899 II
Our resolution of questions of federal constitutional law is controlled by decisions of the United States Supreme Court.
Oregon v. Hass,
The Court has specifically recognized the right of state courts, as final interpreters of state law, “to impose higher standards on searches and seizures than required by the Federal Constitution,” even if the state constitutional provision is similar to the Fourth Amendment.
Cooper v. California,
The power and right of this court to provide Rhode Island citizens with stricter safeguards against governmental intrusions than are provided generally under the Fourth Amendment is therefore indisputable. Nevertheless, we recognize the Fourth Amendment as an indispensable guardian of fundamental rights, which in most contexts provides ample protection against unreasonable searches and seizures, and the manner in which it has been interpreted by the Court should command respect by state courts. The decision to depart from minimum standards and to increase the level of protection should be made guardedly and should be supported by a principled rationale. See generally Howard, State Courts and Constitutional Rights in the Day of the Burger Court, 62 Va.L.Rev. 873 (1976).
The applicants ask us to make such a departure. They argue that art. I, sec. 6 does not permit the sort of delayed search and seizure found to be reasonable in Chambers v. Maroney and Texas v. White, both supra, but requires the procurement of a warrant before the search. We agree.
We observe initially that textually the Fourth Amendment and art. I, sec. 6 are virtually identical, and in most instances we have not felt compelled to depart from the Fourth Amendment standards. In this instance, however, we believe that the rule of Chambers v. Maroney, supra, does not reflect a fundamental tenet built into art. I, sec. 6 and traditionally into the Fourth Amendment.
The Court has repeatedly emphasized that the Fourth Amendment “requires adherence to judicial processes,”
United States v. Jeffers,
One of the early exceptions to the warrant requirement was recognized and delineated by the Court in
Carroll v. United States,
In
Chambers v. Maroney, supra,
the Court stretched the
Carroll
exception to its outer reaches, if not beyond. The Court suggested that exigent circumstances — the mobility of the vehicle — still obtain at the station house.
Chambers
v.
Maroney,
We find ourselves persuaded by Justice Harlan’s dissent in
Chambers
because it adheres more closely to the guiding principle underlying art. I, sec. 6. Justice Harlan stated his belief that the
Chambers
majority’s approval of warrantless, delayed searches and seizures was not “consistent with our insistence in other areas that departures from the warrant requirement strictly conform to the exigency presented.”
Chambers v. Maroney,
We interpret art. 1, sec. 6 to reflect the intent of the framers to declare all warrantless searches and seizures unreasonable. Only if circumstances render procurement of a warrant impracticable, and if the needs of society demand swift action, does art. I, sec. 6 permit the temporary, limited infringement of an individual’s right of privacy. At the time the police searched the vehicle, it was no longer mobile and the applicants’ privacy interest had regained its paramount importance. That interest should have been infringed only upon the authorization of a neutral magistrate. Our conclusion then is that the postconviction trial justice erred in his determination that art. 1, sec. 6 permitted the warrantless, delayed search and seizure.
Ill
The state argues that if the search was unreasonable and the admission of the evidence was error, it was harmless error.
In addressing the harmless-error question, we note first that the error complained of violated no federal constitutional right; therefore, we are not bound by the federal harmless-error rule.
See Cooper v. California,
The state rule requires this court to examine “ ‘the record with a view to determining what in our judgment would have been the probable impact of the improper evidence on the minds of the average jury. Once that judgment is made, we will assume that the objectionable evidence had a similar impact on the jury’ in this case.
State v. Bower,
The complaining witness’s testimony and her identifications of the applicants constituted the primary evidence hearing on the ultimate issue of guilt or innocence. The identifications were based on her observations during her long ordeal, and they represented strong, direct evidence that the applicants perpetrated the crimes charged. The applicants’ counsel “had ample opportunity to cross-examine the complainant and to impeach her credibility, thereby diminishing the risk that the jury would place undue emphasis” on her pretrial and in-court identifications.
See id.,
The applicants’ appeals are denied and dismissed, the judgments appealed from are affirmed, and the cases are remanded to the Superior Court.
Notes
. The
Chambers
analysis has clearly been eroded, if not rejected by the more recent cases of
United States v. Chadwick,
