ORDER RE GANT
I. BACKGROUND
On Mаrch 26, 2009, this court entered an “Order Denying Motion To Suppress” (Ct. Rec. 119). That order concluded the August 14, 2008 search of Defendant’s vehicle was a valid search incident to arrest under the law existing at the time. On April 21, 2009, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its decision in
Arizona v. Gant,
— U.S. —,
II. DISCUSSION
A. Validity of Search Incident to Arrest under Gant
In
Gant,
the Supreme Court held that a search of a motor vehicle incident to lawful arrest is justified in two circumstances: 1) when the arrestee is unsecured and within reaching distance of the passenger compartment at the time of the search; and 2) when it is reasonable to believe evidеnce relevant to the crime of arrest “might” be found in the vehicle.
Based on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in
United States v. Gorman,
Initially, the court finds that based on the totality of the circumstanсes testified to by the officers, and as reflected in their reports, there was probable cause to arrest the Defendant for DUI, regardless of any concern about the accuracy of the PBT (Portable Breath Test) reading. 3 The question is whether based on that lawful arrest, the officers had probable cause to conduct a warrantless search of Defendant’s vehicle for evidence of DUI.
In Gant, the Supreme Court stated:
In many cases, as when a recent occupant is arrested for a traffic violation, there will be no reasonable basis to believe the vehicle contains relevant evidence. [Citations omitted]. But in others, including Belton 4 and Thornton 5 , the offense of arrest will supply a basis for searching the passenger compartment of an arrestee’s vehicle and any containers therein.
Neither the possibility of access nor the likelihood of discovering offense-relatеd evidence authorized the search in this case.... An evidentiary basis for the search was ... lacking in this case. *1204 Whereas Belton and Thornton were arrested for drug offenses, Gant was arrested for driving with a suspended license — an offense for which the police could not expect to find evidence in the passenger compartment of Gant’s car. [Citation omitted]. Because police could not reasonably have believed either that Gant could have accessed his car at the time of the search or that evidence of the offense for which he was arrеsted might have been found therein, the search in this case was unreasonable.
129 S.Ct.at 1719.
DUI is a traffic violation. RCW 46.61.502. This court, however, is hesitant to construe Gant as standing for the proposition that a traffic violation, and a DUI in particular, can never serve as a basis for a search of a vehicle incident to lawful arrest on the assumption it will never be reasonable to believe that evidence of DUI will be found in the vehicle. This court is equally hesitant to hold that a lawful arrest for DUI will always justify a search of a vehicle incident to arrest on the assumption it will always be reasonable to believe that evidence of DUI will be found in the vehicle. Resolution of this particular case, however, does not turn on application of any per se rule.
While Officer Greenland spoke with Defendant who was seated in the driver’s seat of the vehicle, Officer Moses went to the passenger side of the vеhicle. From the exterior of the vehicle, Officer Moses was able to observe a brown paper bag wrapped around a bottle which was located next to the Defendant. Officer Moses testified that it appeared to be a bottle of alcohol since liquor stores typically put such bottles in brown paper bags. 6 The officers testified that after the initial contact with Defendant in his vehicle, the officers gathered to confer and left Defendant alone in the vehicle. Officer Moses testified that when Defendant was re-contacted, he (Moses) noticеd the paper bag had been moved from the front passenger seat to the “back cab area” of the vehicle (the truck), presumably by the Defendant. According to Officer Moses, the bag remained visible from the exterior of the vehicle even after it (the bag) had been moved to thе back cab area. After the Defendant had been arrested and placed in the back of Officer Greenland’s patrol car, Officer Moses searched the interior of the vehicle. He inspected the contents of the brown paper bag and found that it contained a full, unopened bottle of vodka. Officer Moses acknowledged, however, that he did not inspect the bag first, but rather looked under the driver’s seat and discovered a loaded handgun and some blasting caps.
To prove DUI, the State must show a defendant operated or was in actual physical control of a vehicle while he was under the influence. Driving under the influence may be proven by one of three alternative methods: (a) a person has, within two hours of driving, an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or higher as shown by analysis of the person’s breath or blood; (b) driving a vehicle under the influence of or affected by intoxicating liquor or any drug; or (c) driving a vehicle under the combined influence of or affected by intoxicating liquor and any drug. RCW 46.61.502. The defendant’s physical condition is, by defini
*1205
tion, a critical element of the crime.
State v. Komoto,
Probable cause is an оbjective standard (“reasonable belief’) and the subjective motivations of the law enforcement officer are irrelevant.
Whren v. United States,
B. Good Faith Exception To Exclusionary Rule
Officer Moses testified he did not seize the unopened bottle of vodka and enter it into evidence. There is no indication whether the bottle was used as evidence against the Defendant regarding the DUI charge. Officer Moses did not testify he was searching for evidence of DUI in particular. He acknowledged he did not first inspect the bag which he thought contained a bottle of alcohol. Instead, the first place he searched was under the driver’s seat of the vehicle.
At the time Officer Moses conducted his search, it was well accepted in the Ninth Circuit and elsewhere that law enforcement officers could search a motor vehicle, and its compartments and containers therein, as a contemporaneous search incident to a lawful arrest, without regard to whether an arrestee was secured or unsecured, and without regard to whether evidence particular to the crime of arrest might be found in the vehicle.
United States v. McLaughlin,
*1206 Even if it was not reasonable for an officer to believe evidence of DUI might be found in the vehicle, and therefore that the search of the vehicle was not a valid warrantless search incident to arrest, the evidence obtained in the search should not be excluded because Officer Moses acted in good faith in conducting the search. Based on the state of the law existing at the time he conducted the searсh, prior to Gant, Officer Moses acted in an objectively reasonable manner in searching the vehicle incident to the Defendant’s lawful arrest. He acted in an objectively reasonable belief that his conduct did not violate the Fourth Amendment.
Although the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule originated from a case involving a search conducted pursuant to an invalid warrant,
United States v. Leon,
Application of the exclusionary rule here clearly will not deter future police misconduct. The simple reason is that the police conduct in question — warrantless searches incident to lawful arrest — will now be evaluated by the new legal standard articulated in Gant, not by the legal standard that existed when Officer Moses conducted his search. As there is no deterrent effect to be gained, application of the exclusionary rule cannot be justified considering the substantial social costs imposed by the rule. It is important to point out that Officer Moses made no mistake of law or fact. Instead, he acted reasonably pursuant to the law as it existed at the time he conducted the search of the vehicle. Application of the good faith exception here is not intended to excuse a mistаke on the part of Officer Moses, but to recognize that Gant represents a change in well-established law on which law enforcement officers once reasonably relied. 8
III. CONCLUSION
The August 14, 2008 search of the vehicle was a valid search incident to arrest even under Gant. Even if it was not a valid search incident to arrest under Gant, the good faith exceрtion to the exclusionary rule applies and the evidence obtained during the search should not be excluded. *1207 For these reasons, the court reaffirms its March 26, 2009 “Order Denying Motion To Suppress.”
IT IS SO ORDERED. The District Court Executive is directed to enter this order and to provide copies to counsel.
Notes
. This is distinсt from the search incident to arrest exception. The rationale for the automobile exception is that vehicles are mobile, can be moved quickly, and the expectation of privacy is reduced by pervasive regulation governing vehicles.
United States
v.
Hatley,
. The Ninth Circuit alone has held the "reason to believe” standard "embodies the same standard or reasonableness inherent in probable cause.”
U.S. v. Thomas,
. Probable cause to arrest was not an issue specifically raised by Defendant in his initial or supplemental papers.
.
New York v. Belton,
.
Thornton v. United States,
. According to Officer Moses’ written report (Ct. Rec. 72-2):
I moved to the passenger side and could see inside on the front seat. There was a brown paper bag likе the ones that wrap a liquor bottle from a liquor store, it also was in the shape of a liquor bottle laying next to Grote.
. As such, it is unnecessary to consider whether another warrantless search exception, such as the inventory search exception, would apply.
. Whether Gant constitutes an overruling of Belton and Thornton, as asserted by Justice Alito in his dissenting opinion, or whether it does not, as asserted by the majority opinion, there is no question that at a minimum, Gant constitutes a change in how Belton and Thornton had been interpreted.
