Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WALD.
Thе United States appeals from the order of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia suppressing a shotgun that the police found in a leather bag during the course of a warrantless search of an automobile. The District Court held that defendant Caroline’s fourth amendment rights had been violated since the police had a duty to obtain a warrant prior to the search, and, alternatively, were not authorized to open the bag that they found in the car even if the warrantless search of the car was justified. We reverse and hold that the automobile exception to the warrant requirement applied here, that the police had probable cause to search the car, and that they had the right to open the bag in the course of the search.
I. Background
On May 5, 1985, at approximately 4:30 in the afternoon, two Metropolitan Police Department officers observed the defendant, James S. Caroline, and his accomplice, Michael L. Everett, hurriedly leave a clothing store at the corner of 26th and P Streets, N.W., cross the street in the middle of the block of traffic, and enter a sewing store. Immediately after walking into the store, Everett turned around and came back to the sidewalk wherе he began looking up and down the street. Twenty to thirty seconds later, Caroline left the shop, tapping Everett on the shoulder as he passed him. Both men then jogged to a dark blue Datsun 280Z which was parked about a half block from the shop, and rode away.
Recognizing that the men’s activities fit the pattern often accompanying petty larcenies, one of the officers entered the sewing shop to investigate. The owner of the shop informed the officer that Caroline had grabbed some clothes from hangers in the shop and had begun walking out. The *199 owner, however, had surprised Caroline and was ablе to grab the clothes away before Caroline ran from the shop. The owner indicated that she was unwilling to prosecute the incident.
After futilely attempting to locate the Datsun 280Z, the two officers broadcast a radio lookout for the suspects and the car. Approximately ten minutes after thе broadcast, another patrol officer radioed that he had observed the suspects parking the car in the 3200 block of Reservoir Road, N.W., and walking away from the vehicle.
The two officers who had earlier observed the suspects on P Street proceeded to the Reservior Road area where, together with two additional officers, they continued their surveillance of Caroline and Everett. Over the next 35 minutes the suspects were observed entering four stores on Wisconsin Avenue, about a quarter of a mile from where they had left the car. Everett was seen coming out of some of those stores and looking up and down the street, just as he had done at the sewing shop on P Street. After leaving one store, a sporting goods shop, the police saw Caroline reach underneath his jacket or shirt and pull out some yellow shopping bags. After the suspects left the fourth store, a women’s clothing shop, one of the officers interviewed the owner and was told that there were two blouses missing from the area where the suspects had been looking. The officer radioed the other officers to stop the suspects. When they were apprehended, Caroline was holding a yellow bag containing merchandise stolen from the fourth shop. Both Caroline and Everett were placed under arrest.
The police obtained the keys to the Dat-sun 280Z from Caroline, who confirmed that the car was registered to Barbara Harrington, an alleged friend of Caroline’s. Two officers proceedеd to the car, where they observed through the window “what appeared to be a new leather jacket,” and “what appeared to be a new leather bag.” Transcript (“Tr.”) at 33, 55, 59. After opening the car with the keys, the officers searched for evidence of other thefts, and found three items they considered relevant: the jacket, the leather bag, and a halloween mask. One of the officers noted that the bag “felt very heavy,” and that it seemed to contain “a long, hard cylindrical object” that “felt like a barrel of a gun.” Tr. at 60. On opening the bag, the officer found a sawed-off shotgun disassembled in thrеe pieces. Subsequently, a federal grand jury indicted both Caroline and Everett of possession of an unregistered firearm, 26 U.S.C. §§ 5861(d), 5871, and second degree theft, 22 D.C.Code §§ 3811, 3812(b).
Caroline moved to suppress the shotgun, arguing that the warrantless search of the automobile, and opening of the bag, violated his fourth amendmеnt rights. After a one-day hearing, the District Court granted the motion. The court first held that, whether or not there was probable cause to search the Datsun, “the police had the duty to attempt to get a search warrant, and go to a magistrate before they searched that car.” Tr. at 101-02. Moreover, the District Court concluded that, even if the police had the right to conduct a warrantless search of the car, they still were required to get a warrant before opening the bag containing the shotgun. Id. at 102. Given these holdings, both of which independently required suppression of the shotgun, the District Court did not pass on whеther or not there was in fact probable cause to search the car.
II. Discussion
A. Search of the Car
1. Applicability of the Automobile Exception
The District Court erred in holding that the police were duty bound to obtain a search warrant before searching the Datsun 280Z. The police knew that the car was owned by a third party who presumably had a set of keys. Thus, their only methоd of ensuring that the car would not be driven away, or that evidence would not be tampered with, would have been to post a guard nearby until a search warrant could be obtained, or to tow the car. Ad *200 dressing a similar claim that the police must, whenever possible, immobilize a vehicle while they seek а search warrant instead of conducting an immediate warrant-less search, the Supreme Court has held that:
arguably, only the “lesser” intrusion is permissible until the magistrate authorizes the “greater.” But which is the “greater” and which is the “lesser” intrusion is itself a debatable question and the answer may depend on a variety of circumstances. For constitutional purposes, we see no difference between on the one hand seizing and holding a car before presenting the probable cause issue to a magistrate and on the other hand carrying out an immediate search without a warrant. Given probable cause to search, either course is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment.
Chambers v. Maroney,
Caroline argues, nonetheless, that
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
The facts of this case, however, are quite different from
Coolidge
and
Robinson.
Securing a warrant would have necessitated the police’s posting a guard at the car or transporting the car to a compound, in order to ensure that thе car’s owner did not take the car or tamper with any evidence. Had the police chosen to go that route, as they did in
Coolidge
and
Robinson,
a war-rantless search might not have been justified. But
Chambers
established that where the police do not commit themselves to guarding the vehicle, and where some exigency such as a realistic potential for mobility exists, the automobile exception applies.
1
The circumstances here thus clearly take this case out of
Coolidge
and
Robinson,
and place it squarely within the confines of
Chambers. See generally Cardwell v. Lewis,
2. Probable Cause
Probable cause for a search exists where “there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.”
Illinois v. Gates,
From 4:30 p.m., when the defendants first captured police attention, until the time of their arrest, approximately one hour and five minutes later, the police had the defendants under surveillance for approximately 35 minutes. First, the police observed their activities around the two stores on P Street, and learned of the аttempted theft at the second store. Then, after a 28-minute lapse in surveillance, only part of which could be accounted for by a nine block drive from P Street to Reservoir Road, Caroline and Everett entered four more stores in the 35 minutes prior to their arrest.
In light of this pattern of activity the police could justifiably deem it probable that when Caroline and Everett went back to the car after having been seen entering the two stores on P Street, they had stolen merchandise with them. Although the police knew that the theft from the sewing store had been foiled, it was quite probable that the defendants hаd stolen merchandise from the first store where the police observed them. Indeed, it was their behavior in leaving that very first store that triggered the officers’ suspicion; the suspects had hurriedly left the store, crossing the street in midtraffic. Any merchandise they had stolen from that store, and any merchandise they might have stоlen from stores entered into as part of their spree before the police spotted them, or during the lapse in surveillance, would almost surely have been deposited in the automobile before Caroline and Everett parked on Reservoir Road to continue their criminal activity.
See United States v. Christenson,
We reach this determination without relying on the jacket and bag that the police observed in the car. 2 While there was some evidence that observing these items further heightened thе officers’ suspicion, we hold that the police already had probable cause before they saw the items. Indeed, one of the searching officers testified that the decision to search was made without regard to the items in the car. He explained that,
*202 [considering the attempted theft thаt had been made on P Street — we were aware of the time period inbetween [sic] the theft on P Street and the time the vehicle and the defendant had been relocated — I thought there was a high possibility that they might have made other thefts in the area that could be possibly be [sic] inside the vehicle.
Tr. at 34.
B. Opening the Bag
Once the police had probable cause to search the car in this case, they had the right to open all containers within it that might have contained contraband or evidence of the criminal activity. In
United States v. Ross,
As we have already discussed, see supra pp. 201-202, the police had probable cause to search the entire car in this case, not just the bag that they happened to see through the window. Thus, the police had the right to open the bag as well, and the shotgun found in it should not have been suppressed.
Conclusion
We have carefully reviewed the undisputed facts and the law of this case and have determined that the police had probable cause to search the Datsun 280Z. Because the warrantless search fell within the automobile exception to the warrant requirement, the District Court’s order suppressing the shotgun is
Reversed.
Notes
. In
United States v. Free,
. Since the District Court made no ruling on probable cause, we, of course, base our decision exclusively on the uncontested facts brought out at the suppression hearing. The District Court did express some doubts about whether the bag and jacket in the car looked new; we reach our decision without relying on the appearance of those items.
