As a result of a search of his person and briefcase by a United States Deputy Marshal not on official duty, evidence was discovered which led to the arrest and conviction of appellant Ronald M. Schleis for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). The single issue presented on this appeal is whether the District Court 1 erred in overruling Schleis’s motion to suppress the seized evidence. We hold it did not and affirm the judgment of conviction.
On November 17,1974, Leon Cheney was leaving Jack’s Restaurant in Burnsville, Minnesota, where he had eaten dinner with his family. He observed appellant walking toward the restaurant. Appellant was weaving and stumbled at the restaurant foyer. Cheney watched as appellant attempted to make a telephone call; he saw appellant make several unsuccessful attempts to dial and fumble coins as he attempted to place them in the slot. Cheney, a federal deputy marshal, reentered the foyer and approached appellant, who at that point was leaning against the telephone and clutching his briefcase, his head bobbing and weaving. At close vantage, Cheney observed that appellant’s eyes were dilated and staring, but he detected no odor of alcohol on appellant’s breath. Appellant’s responses to Cheney’s questions were inaudible; Cheney concluded that he was under the influence of something other than liquor.
Cheney’s reaction to this situation was to request appellant to come outside with him. Before they left the foyer, Cheney attempted to identify himself to appellant as a deputy marshal' and read appellant his Miranda rights from a card. Cheney asked his wife to call the local police department. 2
Cheney next placed appellant’s hands on the hood of an automobile and patted him down for weapons. In the course of the pat-down, Cheney removed a large bulky wallet from appellant’s hip pocket and threw it on the hood of the automobile, where it opened, revealing a small plastic bag of marijuana and a large amount of currency.
When the police officer arrived at the scene, Cheney showed him what he had *61 discovered. The officer recalled that, approximately a year earlier, another police officer had pointed out appellant to him as a drug dealer. He placed appellant under arrest.
A crowd was gathering and the local police elected to take appellant to the station before completing the search. At the station a search of appellant’s clothing revealed a plastic medicine bottle containing a white crystalline substance that appeared to Cheney to be cocaine. (This was confirmed in a subsequent test.) A police officer then forced open the briefcase and found inside over two pounds of cocaine in plastic bags.
Appellant contends that Cheney’s search of his person was improper because nothing had occurred to justify an arrest and because Cheney was without authority to conduct a search on any other basis. From this he reasons that the discovery of the cocaine in the briefcase was tainted by a prior unreasonable search. Alternatively he contends that the warrantless stationhouse search violated his Fourth Amendment rights.
It is arguable that Cheney’s actions prior to appellant’s arrest should be evaluated as acts by a private citizen and hence, outside the reach of the exclusionary rule’s protection of Fourth Amendment rights.
See United States v. Kelly,
Investigatory Stop
The facts previously outlined formed a basis from which Cheney could reasonably infer that appellant was under the strong influence of some drug other than alcohol. He could also conclude, on the basis of his observations, that it was necessary for his own protection to determine whether appellant was carrying any dangerous weapons. The facts known to Cheney satisfy the requirements of
Terry v. Ohio,
Search of Appellant’s Person
Had the search of appellant’s person taken place at the scene, it would have been fully authorized as a lawful search incident to arrest.
See Gustafson v. Florida,
Search of the Briefcase
We first examine the search of the briefcase in terms of whether such a search would have been proper at the time and place of arrest. In
United States v. Eatherton,
Turning next to the reasonable time and reasonable extent tests approved in
Edwards,
the Second Circuit in a
pre-Edwards
case concluded that a delayed search of a briefcase was a reasonable accommodation to avoid public embarrassment to the accused.
United States ex rel. Muhammad v. Mancusi,
While the dissenting opinion in
Edwards
suggested that the justification for the delayed warrantless search disappeared once the accused was in custody,
see
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Miles W. Lord, United States District Court for the District of Minnesota. The case was tried to the Court.
. Cheney testified that he thought appellant should receive treatment under the public welfare law as he was unable to care for himself.
. In view of our holding, it is unnecessary to rule upon the government’s alternative claim that the search was a proper inventory search. It may be said, however, that the record does little to support this claim.
