MEMORANDUM ORDER
Defendant Devon Kelly is charged by indictment with one count of unlawful possession of a firearm and ammunition by a person convicted of a crime punishable by a term of imprisonment exceeding one year, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). The firearm was found in Kelly’s automobile by officers of the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) on November 17, 2002. Kelly has moved to suppress the physical evidence of the firearm, arguing that the MPD officers violated his Fourth Amendment rights when they recovered the gun. For the reasons set forth below, that motion is denied. 1
Background
On November 17, 2002, at around 4:30 in the morning, Officer Michael Architzel of the MPD, on patrol at the time, responded to a call reporting an injured man at the intersection of Kenilworth Avenue and Quarles Street, Northeast, in the District of Columbia. Initially, the report Archit-zel received was of a man shot in the head, but before reaching the location, he was informed that he was actually responding to a traffic accident. Transcript of May 1, 2002 Hearing (“Tr.”) at 7. Architzel was the first officer to arrive at the scene.
*8 Architzel described Quarles and Kenil-worth as forming a “T intersection,” Tr. at 7, in that Quarles Street ends at the intersection with Kenilworth. Id. Straight across from the end of Quarles Street, on the far side of Kenilworth, is a guard rail. Id. At the intersection, Architzel observed a white Chevrolet Blazer that had struck the guard rail. The front of the Blazer was touching the guard rail, part of the Blazer was on the grass, and the rear end of the Blazer was protruding onto Kenil-worth Avenue. Tr. at 8;
Architzel saw that a man, whom Archit-zel identified at the hearing as Kelly, was “jammed in” the driver’s side window of the Blazer, Tr. at 8. Kelly’s lower legs were caught in the window, while his body was sitting upright outside of the window, and his arms were thrashing about. Id. He was emitting various “unintelligible noises.” Tr. at 19. As Architzel approached Kelly, he observed foam emanating from Kelly’s mouth and a glazed look in his eyes. Tr. at 9. Architzel attempted to extricate Kelly from the car window, but could not. Tr. at 10.
At around that time, two other policemen — Officer Ronald Burgeson and Sergeant Foster — arrived on the scene. Burgeson grabbed Kelly, so that he would not fall, while Architzel entered the Blazer from the passenger side (the first entry) in order to lower the window in which Kelly was stuck. Tr. at 89. While Architzel was in the car for this purpose, he observed on the floor of the driver’s side a gun box, which he recognized because, in his experience as a police officer, “numerous officers use just such a box to store their personal weapons in,” himself included. Tr. at 11. He searched neither the box nor the car at that time, however, and instead lowered the window so that his colleagues could remove Kelly.
Once Kelly had been removed from the vehicle, the officers attempted to ascertain his identity, since they had already determined that Kelly needed hospitalization, and because Kelly had been involved in a traffic accident. Tr. at 12. They asked Kelly directly, but he was “incoherent,” Tr. at 11, and provided no information. After a search of Kelly’s pockets revealed no identification, Architzel, along with Officer Henderson who had arrived on the scene, entered the car (the second entry) to look for a driver’s license in the glove compartment, and to search for the gun that would presumably accompany the gun box Ar-chitzel had previously seen. Tr. at 12, 15. Henderson opened the glove compartment, found Kelly’s license, and closed the glove compartment. Tr. at 22. Architzel searched the passenger compartment, Tr. at 15, and he opened the gun box, Tr. at 63, but he found no gun.
Soon thereafter, an ambulance arrived. Kelly, accompanied by Burgeson, was taken to Howard University Hospital. Ar-chitzel stayed on the scene of the accident. He first attempted to ascertain who owned the Blazer, which bore District of Columbia temporary license plates. Architzel “ran” the car’s Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) with the dispatcher, Tr. at 14, but the only information that came back was that the car was “an untagged vehicle in the state of Pennsylvania with no ownership information.” Id. At this point Ar-chitzel entered the car again (the third entry), this time to look in the glove compartment for the registration. Tr. at 13. The glove compartment in this car was situated next to a center console that held a DVD player. Architzel testified that, as he opened the glove compartment, the door of the glove compartment “must have caught the corner of the center console and it basically just pushed it [the center console] out about two or three inches.” Tr. at 32. As the center console slipped *9 out of place, Architzel spotted the butt end of a gun behind the console. Tr. at 33. He removed a “D.C. bill of sale/registration,” Tr. at 15, from the glove compartment, and let go of the door of the glove compartment. The glove compartment snapped shut, and the center console slid back into place. Tr. at 33. Architzel then notified the crime scene search unit so that they could recover the gun, which turned out to be a Baretta 9 millimeter pistol, Tr. at 16, and he called the MPD officers at the hospital to advise them to place Kelly under arrest for possession of the firearm. Tr. at 31. Finally, Architzel moved the car, which was partially still jutting out onto Kenilworth Avenue, to a legal parking spot on the street. Tr. at 16.
Analysis
The Supreme Court’s Fourth Amendment analysis “has traditionally drawn a distinction between automobiles and homes or offices ... [and] warrantless examinations of automobiles have been upheld in circumstances in which a search of a home or office would not.”
South Dakota v. Opperman,
The First Entry
Architzel effected the first entry in order to assist Kelly, who was in obvious distress. It is well settled that “the Fourth Amendment does not bar police officers from making warrantless entries and searches when they reasonably believe that a person "within is in need of immediate aid.”
Mincey v. Arizona,
The Second Entry
The second entry into Kelly’s car involved two distinct searches: Henderson searched the glove compartment for Kelly’s license, while Architzel searched the car and the gun box for a gun. Both searches were reasonable. The first search, for Kelly’s license, was justified as a continued attempt to aid Kelly, who was in need of medical assistance. Kelly could not identify himself, and he had no identification on his person. The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals dealt with a similar situation in
United States v. Haley,
Architzel’s contemporaneous search for a weapon was justified for a different reason. A police officer may conduct a warrantless search of an automobile if the officer has probable cause to believe that the vehicle contains contraband or an illegal weapon.
See Carroll v. United States,
“Probable cause to search exists where in view of the totality of the circumstances, there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.”
United States v. Gilliam,
The Third Entry
The third entry, which involved Archit-zel reentering the car in order to find the car’s registration, is more problematical, and the government has offered at least five arguments to justify it. This case turns out to be yet another proof of Occam’s Razor — that plurality should not be posited without necessity — as the correct answer is the simplest one, but a brief review of the government’s contentions is warranted, if only to demonstrate how needlessly convoluted Fourth Amendment theory has become. The pretzel shapes into which the government has twisted its arguments show how far the case law has departed from the notion that it might serve as a useful guide for police officers.
The government actually presses only three of its five arguments. 2 First, the government asserts that, at the time of the third entry, probable cause still existed to believe that a gun was present in the car. 3 Second, the government argues that because the policemen suspected that Kelly was under the influence of a narcotic, probable cause existed to believe that narcotics could be found in the car, thereby justifying a search of the car. Finally, the government believes that the final search was justified as a search incident to arrest.
*11 1. Probable Cause to Believe a Firearm Was in the Car.
The first argument ignores the fact that, by the time of the third entry, Architzel had already searched both the gun box and the passenger compartment of the car for the gun. Tr. at 15. Neither a warrant nor a warrantless justification to search is unlimited as to time and circumstance. Unquestionably, when there is probable cause to believe that contraband might be found in a car, police officers may “decide in good faith to delay their search for a more opportune time or place.”
United States v. Whitfield,
Here, Architzel had already searched for the gun during his second entry into the car. There is nothing in the record to indicate that Architzel considered that search incomplete. In
Keszthelyi
the Sixth Circuit stated that “the government has not shown that, at the time of the second search, the agents possessed a reasonable basis for believing that undiscovered evidence remained in the defendant’s home.
Such a showing, we think, is critical to establishing the reasonableness of the second search.”
2. Probable Came to Believe Narcotics Were in the Car.
The second argument, asserting probable cause to believe that narcotics were located in the car, fails for essentially the same reason that the first argument fails. A police officer’s observation of a person who is or has been driving under the apparent influence of a narcotic
4
may give rise to probable cause to believe that the narcotic is present in the vehicle.
See Foote v. Spiegei
3. Search Incident to Arrest.
The government’s final theory is that, since probable cause existed to arrest Kelly either for reckless driving or for driving under the influence, the third entry can be justified as a search incident to arrest. In
New York v. Belton,
Since Kelly was not under arrest at the time of the third entry, the government’s argument apparently simply dispenses with the first element of this doctrine — lawful custodial arrest — and urges the lawfulness of a “search incident to probable cause to arrest.” This mutation of the search incident to arrest doctrine is unacceptable. A search incident to an arrest may be performed before the formal act of arresting a person,
see Rawlings v. Kentucky,
The Supreme Court case
Knowles v. Iowa,
In the instant case, even assuming that probable cause existed to arrest Kelly for either reckless driving under D.C.Code § 50-2201.04 or driving while under the influence of liquor or drugs under D.C.Code § 50-2201.05, Kelly was not actually arrested under either of these provisions.
5
The third entry was not justified by Kelly’s subsequent arrest for possession of the gun that was only discovered during the third entry.
See Sibron v. New York,
4. Occam’s Razor.
Even though all of the justifications for the third entry offered by government counsel have failed, the evidence will not be suppressed, because Architzel himself articulated an appropriate basis for the third entry: that he was looking for the car’s registration in order to establish ownership of the vehicle. Tr. at 14. As Professor LaFave instructs, in certain unusual circumstances, “it is reasonable for the police to make a limited search of a vehicle in an effort to determine ownership.” Wayne R. LaFave,
Search and Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment
§ 7.4(d) (3d ed.1996). For instance, a police officer who encounters an abandoned car on a public highway may search the vehicle for the registration.
See Muegel v. State,
The Supreme Court dealt with a roughly analogous situation in
New York v. Class,
“The permissibility of a particular law enforcement practice is judged by balancing its intrusion on the individual’s Fourth Amendment interests against its promotion of legitimate governmental interests.”
Delaware v. Prouse,
Under this exception to the Fourth Amendment’s proscription against war-rantless searches, Architzel needed neither a warrant nor probable cause to enter the car to look for the registration. Kelly, whose incoherence had prevented him from providing any information, had already departed in an ambulance for the hospital. Architzel had run a check on the car’s VIN but had not been able to ascertain the identity of the owner. With the car still half positioned in the middle of the street, and with an accident report waiting to be filled out, Architzel reasonably reached into the glove compartment, seeking the car’s registration.
See State v. Gammons,
113 NJ.Super. 434,
* * * * * *
The motion to suppress the firearm is denied. The Clerk will communicate with the parties to schedule a continuation of *15 the hearing on the suppression of Kelly’s statements.
Notes
. Kelly has also moved to suppress certain statements he made to the police. On May 1, 2003, the motions hearing in this case was adjourned before the testimony concerning the suppression of statements was completed, with the understanding that, if the motion to suppress physical evidence was denied, I would resume hearing evidence on the statement suppression issues at a later time. Since that testimony has yet to be completed, the summary of facts in this memorandum will recount only those facts pertinent to the suppression of physical evidence.
. The government's initial brief opposing the motion to suppress did not proffer any of these three arguments, but instead relied on two others: that Kelly lacks standing to make a Fourth Amendment argument, and that the pistol would have been inevitably discovered. The government abandoned those two arguments at the motions hearing, see Tr. at 86, 91.
. As the government points out, "[s]ubjective intentions play no role in ordinary, probable-cause Fourth Amendment analysis.”
Whren
v.
United States,
. It must be noted that no officer observed Kelly driving the vehicle here.
. The government has not argued — let alone shown — that Kelly would have been "inevitably” arrested for these offenses.
. Defense counsel, at the motions hearing, suggested that Architzel's explanation of how the center console of the dashboard came open "strains credibility.” Tr. at 88. I disagree. Architzel’s explanation was detailed and reasonable. Tr. at 32-34. The hypothesis that the car’s having struck the guardrail pushed various sections of the dashboard out of alignment, thereby causing the center console to come open when the glove compartment was opened, hardly "strains credibility.”
