Joseph Scott Laing appeals his conviction for the unlawful possession of methaqua-lone, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841. He urges that the search which uncovered the drug contravened his fourth amendment rights, and therefore, that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress the evidence. Finding no constitutional violation, we affirm.
As part of an undercover operation, an agent of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), in conjunction with local law enforcement officials, apprehended Laing while he was driving an automobile. At the time of the arrest, the DEA agent had probable cause to believe the defendant was carrying marijuana in the trunk of the vehicle. 1 Local police officers transported La-ing to jail while the DEA agent took custody of the car. Upon reaching the DEA office, the agent, without first obtaining a warrant, opened the trunk of the automobile and located two bales of marijuana. Thereafter, he removed an unsecured Yahtzee game box from the trunk during the process of making an inventory of its contents. Inside the box, the agent found 954 methaqualone tablets.
Based on that discovery, the government obtained an additional one count indictment against Laing charging him with possession of methaqualone. In a pre-trial motion, the defendant urged the district court to suppress the drugs found in the Yahtzee box. He claimed that the DEA agent violated the fourth amendment by opening the closed container in the trunk without first obtaining a warrant. The district court denied the motion and, following a bench trial, found Laing guilty. This appeal followed.
We note at the outset that the basis of the district court’s oral ruling denying the suppression motion is not entirely clear. At one point during the hearing, the judge suggested that the search could not be justified as an inventory search because, in his view, the DEA agent had deviated from departmental procedures. Later, the court appears to have upheld the search as a permissible inventory check conducted pursuant to a valid forfeiture under 49 U.S.C.
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§ 782.
See United States v. Sink,
The Supreme Court has recognized the reasonableness of inventory searches when executed in accordance with standard police practice.
E.g., South Dakota v. Opperman,
In this case, the government presented ample uncontroverted proof that the DEA agent’s inspection of the contents of Laing’s car was a customary procedure. At the hearing, the officer testified that upon seizing Laing’s vehicle, he drove it back to the DEA administrative office. There, he removed all items of personal property from the automobile and compiled a detailed list of the articles. The agent then placed the effects in the office in which such items were normally stored. As he explained the procedure, “[wjhenever a vehicle is seized, all valuables, anything that could be removed from the vehicle, is customarily removed from the vehicle for safekeeping.” Hearing Transcript at 123. This uncontra-dicted testimony sufficiently established the routine nature of the procedure, thereby eliminating the possibility that the inventory check was conducted as a subterfuge for an investigatory search.
3
C.f. Bosby,
The defendant contends that even if the inventory search itself was proper, its lawful scope did not extend to the inspection of the contents of a closed container, in this instance, the Yahtzee box. Prior to the recent line of Supreme Court cases exploring the interrelationship between movable containers and the automobile exception to
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the warrant requirement,
4
this court consistently held that “when the police take custody of any sort of container — be it an automobile, suitcase, or any other thing in which property may be stored — it is reasonable to search the container to itemize the property to be held by the police.”
United States v. Gravitt,
As always, the reasonableness of the inventory search depends on the particular facts and circumstances.
See Edwards,
In short, the inventory search of the automobile, including the Yahtzee box, was reasonable. Accordingly, the court correctly denied the motion to suppress the evidence discovered in that box.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Laing’s initial arrest resulted in his conviction on a charge of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. This court recently affirmed without opinion that judgment in
United States v. Wainer,
. For the same reason, we need not consider the possibility that the standard for permitting a search conducted after a forfeiture may be less stringent than that governing inventory searches in other contexts.
See United States v. Johnson, 572
F.2d 227 (9th Cir.)
cert. denied,
. We see no significance in the fact that the DEA transported several other vehicles apprehended that day directly to an impoundment garage and obtained warrants before conducting a search, whereas Laing’s automobile was carried first to the DEA’s administrative office and searched without a warrant. As previously noted, a warrant is unnecessary for a lawful inventory search. See, e.g.,
Bosby,
.
United States
v.
Chadwick,
. Thus, we reject the contrary view expressed in cases such as
United States v. Monclavo-Cruz,
