Police pulled Dewayne Cartwright over for a traffic violation, arrested him when he failed to produce a driver’s license and gave a false name, then searched the car incident to his arrest, locating a gun in the back seat. Charged with possessing a firearm as a felon,
see
18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), Cartwright moved to suppress the firearm, relying on
Arizona v. Gant,
-U.S.-,
I. BACKGROUND
On August 12, 2008, at about 9:00 p.m., Officer Richard Stratman of the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department (“IMPD”), while on routine patrol, noticed a vehicle without an illuminated rear license plate, a violation of Indiana law. See Ind.Code § 9-19-6-4(e). Stratman stopped the vehicle, which pulled into a grocery store parking lot, stopping between two rows of parking spaces but not in a designated spot. The car was occupied by the driver, Cartwright; a front seat passenger, Ciera Golliday, who owned the car; and in the back seat, Golliday’s two- or three-year-old child.
Stratman asked Cartwright for his driver’s license, but Cartwright replied that he did not have one in his possession. Stratman asked the driver for his name, and Cartwright gave a name Stratman could not confirm. Based on Cartwright’s nervous demeanor and refusal to identify himself, Stratman removed him from the car, handcuffed him, and placed him under arrest. See Ind.Code § 34-28-5-3.5 (“A person who knowingly or intentionally refuses to provide either the person’s: (1) name, address, and date of birth; or (2) driver’s license, if in the person’s possession; to a law enforcement officer who has stopped the person for an infraction or ordinance violation commits a Class C misdemean- or.”).
In the meantime, Officer James Barleston arrived on the scene and removed Golliday and her child from the car. Subsequent to Cartwright’s arrest, Barleston searched the back seat and found a loaded Ruger semi-automatic pistol. After removing and securing the gun, Barleston completed a search of the car, finding nothing other than old clothes.
Pursuant to IMPD policy, Stratman had the car towed, as Cartwright was under arrest and Golliday did not have a driver’s license. Also pursuant to IMPD policy, Barleston performed an inventory search of the car prior to its impoundment, finding nothing of value, and filled out a tow slip, listing the reason for the tow as “arrest.” However, contrary to IMPD policy, Barleston failed to list all of the car’s contents, only the keys. He testified that, although he usually lists the inventory of a vehicle on the tow slip, he did not do so in the present case because he found nothing of importance.
*613 Golliday testified that upon learning the car would be towed she asked the officers to allow her to have someone else move it, but they refused. She stated that because she lacked the funds to retrieve the car from impoundment she would have allowed anyone, even a stranger, to move the car. Stratman and Barleston testified that they did not recall Golliday making any such request.
At the time of this encounter, our circuit allowed police to search a vehicle incident to the driver’s arrest even after having removed and secured the driver.
See, e.g., United States v. Sholola,
Police may search a vehicle incident to a recent occupant’s arrest only if the arrestee is within reaching distance of the passenger compartment at the time of the search or it is reasonable to believe the vehicle contains evidence of the offense of arrest. When these justifications are absent, a search of an arrestee’s vehicle will be unreasonable unless police obtain a warrant or show that another exception to the warrant requirement applies.
In response to Cartwright’s motion to suppress below, the government acknowledged that Gant made a search incident to arrest improper but argued that the police would have inevitably discovered the gun pursuant to the inventory search. The district court agreed and denied the motion.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
We apply a dual standard of review to a district court’s denial of a suppression motion, reviewing legal conclusions de novo and findings of fact for clear error.
United States v. Jackson,
B. Inevitable Discovery
Under the inevitable discovery doctrine, if the government can establish that the evidence at issue, even though unlawfully obtained, would have inevitably been discovered through lawful means, then the deterrence rationale animating the exclusionary rule has so little basis that the evidence should be admitted.
Nix v. Williams,
Inventory searches constitute a well-recognized exception to the warrant requirement and are reasonable under the Fourth Amendment.
See South Dakota v. Opperman,
In the present case, the district court found that, pursuant to IMPD policy, the officers towed the vehicle from the scene because Golliday, the passenger/owner, did not have a driver’s license and Cartwright was under arrest. The district court further noted that under IMPD policy the police conduct inventory searches prior to impounding a vehicle. The district court found that the police conducted such a search in the present case and concluded that had they not already found the gun, they would inevitably have done so.
Cartwright argues the district court ignored Golliday’s testimony that she could have found someone to move the car, making impoundment unnecessary. He relies primarily on
Duguay,
in which we found unreasonable the decision to impound a car in which the defendant was a passenger because the defendant’s girlfriend, the driver, could have moved it. We said that: “The decision to impound an automobile, unless it is supported by probable cause of criminal activity, is only valid if the arrestee is otherwise unable to provide for the speedy and efficient removal of the car from public thoroughfares or parking lots.”
Duguay,
As we have noted, the police followed IMPD policy in deciding to tow the car. While that fact is important, it is not dispositive for purposes of the Fourth Amendment. The existence of a police policy, city ordinance, or state law alone does not render a particular search or seizure reasonable or otherwise immune from scrutiny under the Fourth Amendment.
See Sibron v. New York,
Unlike the police department in
Duguay,
which had no standardized procedure,
see id.
at 352, the IMPD has a comprehensive towing and impoundment policy, which the government introduced at the evidentiary hearing below. The policy sets forth the circumstances under which the police may tow a car, establishes the procedures officers must follow in calling for a tow, requires an inventory search whenever an officer takes a vehicle into
*615
custody, and specifically forbids inventory searches “motivated by an officer’s desire to investigate and seize evidence of a criminal act.”
See Cherry,
Unlike
Duguay,
where the officers impounded the car despite the presence on the scene of a licensed driver readily able to move it,
*616
Moreover, no one could have lawfully driven Golliday’s car from the scene, as it did not have the functional license plate lamp required by Indiana law. Ind.Code § 9-19-6-4(e) (“Either a tail lamp or a separate lamp must be placed and constructed so as to illuminate the rear registration plate with a white light and make the plate clearly legible from a distance of fifty (50) feet to the rear.”). In the absence of such a lamp, the car was not lawfully operable.
See, e.g., Freeman v. State,
Finally, Cartwright argues that Barleston did not conduct the inventory search properly, failing to make a complete list of the property he found in Golliday’s car. While Cartwright correctly points out that IMPD policy required Barleston to make such a list, Barleston’s failure to do so does not undermine the proposition that the police would inevitably have found the gun through a lawful inventory search. In determining whether the inevitable discovery doctrine applies, the court considers a hypothetical situation. Of course, by the time Barleston conducted the actual inventory search here, the gun had already been seized, and Cartwright was already under arrest. But the district court found, based on the evidence and the IMPD policy, that án inventory search would have been conducted and that the gun would have been found pursuant to such a search. The evidence supports that conclusion. In any event, we have held that minor deviations from department policy do not render an inventory search unreasonable.
See United States v. Lomeli,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we Affirm Cartwright’s conviction.
Notes
. At oral argument, Cartwright's lawyer advised that the grocery store permitted abandoned vehicles to remain in the parking lot for seventy-two hours, possibly enough time for Golliday to find a licensed driver or fix the license plate lamp. However, the Fourth Amendment did not require the officers to explore such alternatives with the store owner. Nor were the officers obliged to leave the car where it was — stopped between two rows of parking spaces — as this may have created a hazard to others using the lot or rendered the police vulnerable to claims had the car been stolen, vandalized, or damaged.
See, e.g., United States v. Brown, 787
F.2d 929, 932 (4th Cir. 1986) ("[W]e are of opinion that the police
*616
officer in this case could reasonably have impounded Brown’s vehicle either because there was no known individual immediately available to take custody of the car, or because the car could have constituted a nuisance in the area in which it was parked [i.e., a private lot adjacent to apartments and a business.]”);
Cabbler v. Superintendent, Va. State Penitentiary,
. Because we affirm based on inevitable discovery, we need not address the government's alternate argument that the search should be upheld under the good faith doctrine.
