DECISION AND ORDER
Magistrate Judge William G. Bauer issued a Report and Recommendation on March 28, 2002 (Dkt. # 19), recommending, inter alia, that the Court grant the motion by defendant, Joshua Vaneenwyk, to suppress a cellular telephone and day planner book, as well as the telephone numbers and other information obtained from them. The Government has timely filed an objection to a portion of the Report and Recommendation (Dkt. # 21). The Government states that it objects only to that part of the Report and Recommendation recommending suppression of the day planner, and is not objecting with respect to suppression of the cellular telephone.
Such an appeal requires the Court to examine the matter, de novo, and make a separate determination of the Fourth Amendment issues involved. Based on the evidence submitted at the suppression hearing, I believe that the motion to suppress should be denied.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The pertinent facts are largely undisputed. On August 9, 2001, Special Agent Jeffrey Gelina of the United States Drug Enforcement Administration, Officer Donald Kenny of the Town of Greece Police Department, and Officer Paul Adriaansen of the Town of Webster Police Department (collectively “the officers”) were involved in the execution of an arrest warrant issued for defendant at defendant’s residence in Sodus, New York. After placing defendant under arrest, the officers read him his rights and explained to defendant *425 that they were interested in obtaining his cooperation. Defendant agreed to discuss the matter with them at a nearby police station. Suppression Hearing Transcript (“Tr.”) at 7-10.
The officers decided that they would let defendant drive his own vehicle, a pickup truck, to the police station. Agent Gelina and Officer Adriaansen performed a protective sweep of the truck before allowing defendant to get inside. Officer Adriaan-sen testified that before conducting the sweep search, he asked defendant if it was okay if Adriaansen looked in the truck, and defendant gave an affirmative response. Tr. at 65.
When the officers looked inside defendant’s truck, they found a day planner or address book. Agent Gelina asked defendant if he could “hold on to it,” and defendant indicated that he could. Tr. 20, 43, 66.
The officers and defendant then proceeded to the police station, where Officer Adriaansen, apparently at Agent Gelina’s direction or with his approval or agreement, made a photocopy of the contents of the day planner. Tr. at 22, 69-70. There is no evidence, and the Government does not assert, that defendant expressly consented to the officers examining the contents of the day planner or copying it.
DISCUSSION
In his Report and Recommendation, Magistrate Judge Bauer found that defendant gave the officers permission to hold onto the day planner, but that “this limited consent did not authorize Adriaan-sen to photocopy the day planner.... ” Report and Recommendation at 18. In my view, however, defendant’s general, unqualified consent to a search of his vehicle necessarily extended to a search of the day planner which was found inside that vehicle. I also believe that by consenting to the officers “holding on” -to the day planner, defendant implicitly consented to the officers examining the day planner a's well. In addition, since the officers could lawfully examine the contents of the day planner,' they were also entitled to make a photocopy of those contents.
In
United States v. Snow,
Based on this same reasoning, I conclude that since defendant gave the officers a general consent to search his vehicle, he should reasonably have expected that they might look inside the day planner book, which is analogous to a closed container, that they found in the vehicle.
Cf. United States v. Galante,
No. 94 Cr. 633,
Since the search of defendant’s truck was also contemporaneous with defendant’s arrest pursuant to a warrant, I also believe that the seizure and subsequent examination of the day planner can be justified as part of a search incident to arrest. This exception to the search warrant requirement permits police to search, “the area into which an arrestee might reach in order to grab a weapon or eviden-tiary items....”
Chimel v. California,
395
*426
U.S. 752, 763,
In the case at bar, defendant, who had just been arrested, was going to be allowed to enter his truck to drive it to the police station. Under these circumstances, then, the officers were certainly justified in searching the interior of the truck cab for weapons or evidence. Id.
It is also clear that an object such as a day planner, address book or the like is subject to seizure as part of such a search incident to arrest.
See, e.g., United States v. Rodriguez,
Furthermore, “the search of a wallet or address book does not have to take place immediately upon the arrest of the defendant. The fact that the object is no longer at risk of being accessed by the defendant, because it is in the exclusive control of the arresting officers, is immaterial.”
Lynch,
Furthermore, when the officers asked if they could “hold on to” the day planner, it would not have been reasonable for defendant to believe that they would not look inside it or read its contents. There would have been little other reason for them to want the day planner if they did not intend to look inside it. This was not a weapon, which the officers would obviously take possession of for their own safety; it was not drugs or other contraband, which defendant could not lawfully possess in the *427 first place. Nor was this a situation m which defendant was carrying or holding a large, heavy or unwieldy object, such as a shopping bag, which the officers offered to hold on to temporarily as a courtesy while defendant was at the police station. The officers could easily have left the day planner in defendant’s pickup truck. When they asked if they could “hold on to” the day planner, it would have been reasonable to assume that they believed that it might have had some evidentiary value, and that their reasons for wanting to hold on to it were both to prevent defendant from accessing or destroying it, and also to look at the day planner and see what information it contained. 1
The fact that the officers later photocopied the day planner is of no moment. Having already legitimately looked through the contents of the book, the officers’ copying of it simply preserved what they had already lawfully seen.
See Rodriguez,
CONCLUSION
The Government’s objections to the Report and Recommendation filed March 28, 2002 are sustained, and I reject the recommendation of the Magistrate Judge in the Report and Recommendation that the defendant’s day planner and information obtained therefrom be suppressed. Defendant’s motion to suppress the day planner and its contents (Dkt. # 11) is denied.
In all other respects, the Report and Recommendation is adopted, and defendant’s motion to suppress his cellular telephone and information obtained therefrom (Dkt. # 11) is granted. Defendant’s motion for a bill of particulars and disclosure of the identity of a confidential informant (Dkt. # 11) is denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Seizure of the day planner may also have been permissible pursuant to the plain-view exception to the warrant requirement.
See United States v. Diecidue,
