Defendant was convicted for receiving and concealing a stolen brown 1975 Grand Prix automobile, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2313. The only issue on appeal is whether that Grand Prix was lawfully seized.
Police officers in Monona, Wisconsin were granted a search warrant allowing a search of Unit #4 of the Syene Road warehouse for a silver Trans Am. The police also had arrest warrants for defendant Schire and one Joe Gervasi. The warrants were based on violations of state law — not the Federal offense litigated here — although the search was in part related to an F.B.I. and local *17 police investigation of an auto theft ring, and Federal officers accompanied local police to the warehouse.
The police arrested Gervasi outside Unit # 4, and found defendant working on the Grand Prix inside Unit # 4. They arrested Schire, and saw but initially did not seize the Grand Prix. Moving into adjoining Unit #3, (the legality of their entry is not an issue in this case), the police found the Trans Am. Information obtained from the tow truck driver summoned to tow the Trans Am away, and portions of other cars seen about the premises, revealed that the Grand Prix might also have been stolen. We gather that this was suspected to be an operation where stolen cars were transformed and made impossible to identify, by substitution of parts. The officers returned to Unit # 4 and seized the Grand Prix.
Appellant’s theory is that the law enforcement officers made two searches of the warehouse. Schire argues that by finding the Trans Am and arresting the two suspects, the police fully executed the only warrants authorizing their entry. His theory implies that the officers should have turned on their heels and left Unit # 4 as soon as they effected the arrest and learned the silver Trans Am was not there. Any search or seizure subsequently made there was a “second search.” He maintains that such a “second search” was illegal, as no warrant authorized it, and that the plain view doctrine could not justify seizure of items during the warrantless “second search.”
The motion to suppress use of the Grand Prix as evidence was denied by the district court. We agree with that decision, rejecting appellant’s argument as too narrowly defining the scope of the plain view doctrine.
In order for evidence seized during a search to qualify for the plain view exception to the warrant requirement, it has been said it must be shown that (1) the initial intrusion which afforded the authorities the plain view was lawful; (2) the discovery of the evidence was inadvertent; and (3) the incriminating nature of the evidence was immediately apparent.
United States v. Wilson,
The activities of the police officers in this case meet all three criteria. Disposing of the easiest at once, the record indicates that the discovery was inadvertent, since police had no knowledge of the existence or location of the brown Grand Prix.
The first criterion — a lawful intrusion — is designed to insure that any official invasion of a citizen’s property is made with a careful prior judicial determination of necessity (a warrant), or is pursuant to a recognized exception to the warrant requirement, such as “hot pursuit.” We hold that only one “intrusion” was made in this case, and that it encompassed all the search activities of the police, including the later discovery of the Grand Prix’s incriminatory nature and its seizure. This entire search was made legally, pursuant to the warrants issued.
This court has stated that
searches
must end when the incriminating item listed in the warrant has been found.
United States v. Odland,
The United States Supreme Court dealt with a similar issue in
Michigan v. Tyler,
Appellant’s theory as to limited time scope of the “plain view” doctrine and the early point at which a “search” becomes a “second search,” is entirely out of harmony with this opinion of the Supreme Court. It may be noted that Part IV-A, containing the reasoning on which we rely, had the concurrence of a majority of the Court, and that it was more than dictum, since the case was to be retried. The Court’s holding as to the illegality of searches after January 22 had to be limited to such searches for the decision not to be misunderstood.
Finally, the seizure also meets the criterion that the nature of the incriminating evidence becomes immediately apparent to authorities. The officers discovered the importance and probably contraband nature of the Grand Prix during the course of their search and on the searched premises. They did not need to take information back to headquarters, analyze it, or conduct an extensive search of the premises to recognize that the Grand Prix was incriminating evidence or contraband.
Compare United States
v.
Gray,
Obviously, the intent of this requirement, assuming it to be valid, is to prohibit law enforcement officers from using the pretext of “plain view” to conduct general inventory searches for items that may have a suspect character in a context or for reasons unknown to officers when they initiated their legitimate, limited search. But in the present case, when the officers were involved in investigating an auto theft ring, and a detective actually
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stopped and checked the car’s identification number when he first saw it, the nexus between the car and the investigation was “immediately apparent” if the exact nature of it still was not.
See United States v. Griffin,
Appellant was not deprived of any fourth amendment protections in this case. The protection against unjustified intrusions was maintained — for the intrusion was authorized by a warrant. And the fourth amendment’s shield against general warrants was upheld, for the discovery of the Grand Prix was inadvertent, and its incriminatory nature became immediately apparent during the course of the search.
AFFIRMED.
