Lead Opinion
Defendant-appellee William Trigg was charged with one count of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) after a search incident to a traffic arrest revealed the presence of 53 grams of cocaine in his coat pocket. Prior to trial, Trigg moved to exclude the cocaine as well as any incriminating statements he had made after being
I.
On February 1, 1988, Officers Philip Bird and Dan Edenfield, then assigned to the warrants and fugitive division of the Allen County Police Department, arrested defendant Trigg on an outstanding body attachment.
On the morning of March 16, 1988, Officer Bird, now assigned to the narcotics division, decided to investigate some of the known crack houses in town for possible drug trafficking. During the course of this investigation, Bird drove by Trigg’s house where he noticed a maroon Cadillac parked in the driveway. The automobile aroused Bird’s interest for he remembered seeing it parked in front of a known crack house the week before.
The dubious history of the maroon Cadillac prompted Bird to request permission to set up surveillance on the automobile. Permission was granted, and two other police cars were dispatched to the scene. Shortly, thereafter, Trigg emerged from his house, entered the maroon Cadillac and drove away. Continuing the surveillance, the three police cars followed closely behind. It is undisputed, however that the officers lacked probable cause to believe that Trigg was engaged in narcotics activity at this time.
During the course of the surveillance, Bird, remembering the events of February 1, had headquarters run another check on defendant’s license which revealed that Trigg’s license was still suspended. This information was relayed to Officer Royse of the Allen County Police Department who was asked to assist in the stopping of a suspended driver.
The discovery of the cocaine resulted in Trigg’s indictment on one count of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Prior to trial, defendant moved to exclude all evidence obtained after the arrest on the grounds that the police had employed the traffic arrest as a pretext to search for evidence of narcotics. The district court, relying primarily on the fact that several narcotics officers had participated in a routine traffic arrest, concluded that the traffic arrest was a pretext to search for narcotics and granted defendant’s motion.
II.
The subject of pretextual arrests presents some of the most intriguing historical, conceptual and practical issues in
The above discussion hints at but fails to identify the source of the pretext problem. Specifically, the possibility of pretextual police activity stems from a combination of the Supreme Court’s recognition of various exceptions to the fourth amendment’s warrant requirement and expansive interpretation of the type of admissible evidence that may be procured through these exceptions. In the present case, the possibility that the police used the traffic arrest as a pretext to search for evidence of narcotics arises due to the confluence of three factors. The first factor is the recognition of a search incident to arrest exception to the warrant requirement. See e.g. Chimel v. California,
The Supreme Court’s response to the problem of pretextual arrests has been ambiguous. In United States v. Lefkowitz,
While the Supreme Court has never directly confronted the issue of pretextual arrests, several Court decisions guide our analysis in the present case. Prior to 1973, it was possible for an appellate court to exclude evidence obtained during the search of a person incident to a traffic arrest on two theories. The first theory focused on the reasonableness of the search and held that a full search of the person incident to a traffic arrest was unreasonable under the fourth amendment. See United States v. Robinson,
The traditional approach to this problem deems arrests made for illegitimate purposes such as those undertaken to search for evidence of other crimes as violative of the fourth amendment. See Henderson v. United States,
Recent Supreme Court decisions, however, cast substantial doubt upon the continuing validity of the subjective intent approach. In a trilogy of cases, the Court has stressed that fourth amendment analysis ordinarily involves “an objective assessment of the officer’s actions in light of the facts and circumstances confronting him at the time.” Maryland v. Macon,
The adoption of an objective standard does not of course end the inquiry in the present case for the relevant objective facts remain to be determined. One such factor might be the participation of police officers in activities they would ordinarily not be engaged in. See LaFave, Search and Seizure: “The Course of True Law ... Has Not ... Run Smooth,” 1966 U.Ill.L.F. 255, 281-82. The district court relied on this consideration in the present case, repeatedly emphasizing the fact that six narcotics officers participated in a traffic of
Another potentially relevant objective factor would be the usual police practice in the area. See United States v. Guzman,
The “usual practices” approach is designed to prevent the arbitrary exercise of police power. See 1 W. LaFave supra at 94-95. This approach, however, is not really a response to the problem of pretextual arrests. Under a “usual practices” standard an arrest made for an improper reason will be valid so long as the decision to arrest for a particular offense is not a departure from the norm while an arrest made for proper reasons will be invalid if the decision to arrest for the particular offense is a departure from the norm. Rather the “usual practices” standard represents a far reaching check on the discretion of individual police officers to effect custodial arrests.
The Supreme Court has held that the discretionary exercise of police power may be unconstitutional in certain circumstances. In Delaware v. Prouse,
Though the officer here was not required to take the petitioner into custody by police regulations as he was in Robinson and there did not exist a departmental police establishing the conditions under which a full-scale body search should be conducted, we do not find these differences determinative of the constitutional issue [citation omitted]. It is sufficient that the officer had probable cause to arrest and that he lawfully effectuated the arrest and placed the petitioner in custody.
Given this language in a Supreme Court opinion, we, as an intermediate appellate court, do not feel empowered to evaluate the reasonableness of a particular arrest based on the arrest’s conformance to usual police practices. Rather, we believe that the reasonableness of an arrest depends upon the existence of two objective factors. First, did the arresting officer have probable cause to believe that the defendant had committed or was committing an offense. Second, was the arresting officer authorized by state and or municipal law to effect a custodial arrest for the particular offense. If these two factors are present, we believe that an arrest is necessarily reasonable under the fourth amendment. This proposition may be stated in another way: so long as the police are doing no more than they are legally permitted and objectively authorized to do, an arrest is constitutional. See United States v. Causey,
Notes
. The body attachment had issued due to Trigg’s failure to appear in court on several occasions.
. Although, authorized to do so, narcotics officers ordinarily do not make traffic arrests in Allen County.
. Royse testified that in Allen County the decision to arrest an individual for driving on a suspended license was left to the individual officer's discretion. At the hearing, Royse claimed that he arrested Trigg both because he was familiar with defendant's history of failing to appear in court and because Trigg had attempted to flee. The district court, however, expressly discredited the latter assertion.
.The district court also placed some emphasis on the fact that Royse could have issued Trigg a traffic citation but declined to do so.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
The issue presented here is a most difficult one and, as my brothers point out, the Supreme Court has not yet provided us with definitive guidance. Our task, therefore, is to extract from the existing precedent a principle sufficiently broad to permit resolution of this case. The majority’s thoughtful and, indeed, scholarly discussion of the relevant constitutional concerns leads it to the correct resolution of the case before us. In accomplishing this task, however, the majority formulates a test that is broader than that needed to resolve the problem before us and, indeed, broader than that established by the Supreme Court precedent upon which it relies for its legitimacy. Read literally, the test formulated today requires a rigidity that will, in future cases, ill serve what Chief Justice Rehnquist has termed “the overarching principle of ‘reasonableness’ embodied in the Fourth Amendment.” United States v. Villamonte-Marquez,
The starting point of the analysis is, in light of the recent Supreme Court precedent, not in serious dispute: in determining whether police conduct is “pretextual,” an objective analysis of the police conduct is appropriate. A court is not to inquire into the officer’s subjective intent. See Maryland v. Macon,
The first approach certainly can claim that it promotes the values underlying the fourth amendment. It permits the court to focus on the “reasonableness” requirement of the fourth amendment, but does not require an inquiry into the officer’s subjective intent. See Guzman,
Serious questions abound in the use of otherwise valid warrants to pocket a onetime pass to the strictures of the fourth amendment rather than to prosecute the offense for which probable cause was found. Stated more directly, there is a risk that with the storage and retrieval capability of today’s computers, warrants may function in a manner similar to the old general writs of assistance.
Causey,
In the case before us, we have no such gross abuse. Viewed objectively, Mr. Trigg was arrested because he was observed driving with a suspended license. The police had acquired that information lawfully and even confirmed its accuracy before making the arrest. The arrest and search were conducted within the limitations on police conduct established by law. The exclusionary rule is meant to deter unlawful police activity that results in unwarranted “incursions to an individual’s personal liberty.” United States v. Hawkins,
