RULING ON PENDING MOTIONS
Defendants are charged with drug transaction violations arising out of a proposed sale of one kilogram of cocaine on April 27, 1987. Cabrera and Gorski were arrested at the point of consummation of the sale in Hartford. Yanes, a Florida resident and the alleged source or owner of the cocaine, was subsequently arrested in Florida. Pending are the fоllowing motions:
*929 (1) By defendant Cabrera to suppress items taken from his person or from a vinyl bag after his arrest.
(2) By defendant Gorski to suppress items taken from him after his arrest.
(3) By defendant Gorski to suppress statements allegedly made by him after his arrest.
Facts
Defendant Gorski, as he came to be identified, was suggested by an FBI informant as of April 6, 1987, to be interested in selling cocaine. FBI Agent Foster undertook to follow up on the matter. Further information from the same source predicted that Gorski would come to Connecticut on April 16, 1987, to discuss drug transactions. Foster arranged for the person meeting Gorski to wear a transmitter and for FBI agents to monitor the meeting. As predicted, Gorski arrived in Connecticut on April 16 and his conversations were overheard to propose drug dealing. Defendant Yanes was to be the source of the drugs, which were to pass through Gorski to a buyer in Connecticut. The conversations suggested that Gorski was familiar with the sale of cocaine in large quantities and had a feasible plan for and willingness to import cocaine into Connecticut. The conversations also suggested Gorski’s prior drug dealing. Gorski undertook to arrange the purchase from Yanes and delivery by a carrier from Florida to the buyer in Connecticut. The prospective buyer was to seek a price from Yanes, after which Gor-ski and the buyer would arrange to consummate the sale. Later, the prospective buyer talked by phone with Gorski and Yanes to firm the transaction.
On April 26, an actual datе for the consummation of the sale of one kilogram of cocaine was arranged between Gorski and the buyer. On April 27, Gorski arrived. He allegedly had arranged the delivery of the drugs in the range of 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. on April 27 by a courier who was to arrive in Hartford by bus. Gorski’s conversations were overheard by agents and some were recorded. As planned, Gorski met at the bus terminal a man (Cabrera) whose appearance was consistent with Gorski’s earlier description of his courier. Gorski was seen to take from the man a black travel bag and the two walked to meet the buyer at his car. Agents watched the pair throughout. When the three met, they were surrounded by agents and defendants were arrested. The bag was taken by Foster and both defendants were frisked and handcuffed.
Both defendants were read their rights under
Miranda v. Arizona,
No search warrants had issued. The search of the vinyl bag was regarded by the agents to be based on then-existing probable cause, as incident to a lawful arrest and as a security precaution, as warranted by exigent circumstances. Defendants were searched incidental to their arrest.
Probable Cause
Through monitoring of several of Gorski’s conversations, the agents learned of a proposed drug transaction in detail. Without more, the plan was only a plan and this information alone would not have provided probable cause for the arrests, seizure and search. However, the agents’ information was closely corroborated by Gorski’s conduct on April 27,1987. Specifi
*930
cally, at the bus station, Gorski met Cabrera, a man who fit Gorski’s prior description of his drug courier; Cabrera carried a bag and Gorski brought Cabrera with the bag to meet the prospective purchaser at a point a few blocks from the bus station. The conduct of Gоrski and Cabrera, down to their meeting with the prospective buyer of the cocaine, corroborated the transaction, the plan for its consummation, and the time, place and participants in the transaction.
Arkansas v. Sanders,
Exigent Circumstances
The government must justify the search of the bag without a warrant under the prevailing circumstances. An immediate search of the bag would be permitted if exigent circumstances existed.
Sanders,
As personal luggage, the bag was subject to the limitations of the fourth amendment.
Sanders,
*931
Exigent circumstances are one of the few “jealously and carefully drawn” exceptions to the need for a search warrant which are limited to “those cases where the societal costs of obtaining a warrant, such as danger to law officers or the risk of loss or destruction of evidence outweigh the reasons for prior recourse to a neutral magistrate.”
Id.
at 759,
The bag belonged to Cabrera. It was turned over to Gorski.
3
At the scene of the arrest, it had been taken from Gor-ski, both defendants were placed under arrest and handcuffed, and the bag was placed on the ground, all in the presence of several agents, all of whom had their guns drawn. The bag was thus not accessible to either defendant. It was not mobilе in the sense that the bag was going nowhere other than with the agents to the Federal Building. There was neither a risk of a defendant getting to a weapon in the bag nor a risk of a defendant destroying or absconding with evidence from the bag. Though the government argues that the search was lawful as incident to the arrests, presumably as a security procedure, that claim cannot stand. The facts at the time of the search suggest no exigency in the form of a risk of either harm to the agents or loss of evidence. While it may seem harsh that a slight change of facts might affect the result here, “an apparently small difference in the factual situation frequently is viewed as a controlling difference in determining Fourth Amendment rights.”
Id.
at 757,
The case was no longer within an exception to the warrant requirement of the fourth amendment which requires probable cause
and
a warrant. The blanket exception to the need for a warrant in automobile searches, based on their mobility, is not to be extended “to any movable container found in a public place,” the practical problem of detaining luggage while getting a search warrant being “significantly less than those associated with the detention of an automobile.”
Ross,
As no obstacle to the acquisition of a search warrant was shown, and the party claiming the exception has the burden “to show the need for it,”
United States v. Jeffers,
The claim that the warrantless bag search can be vindicated as an inventory search has no merit. No such claim was made as the basis for the search by the agent involved. Further, this was not a search done with an inventory immediately prepared. There is an administrative procedure with respect to arrested suspects whereby an inventory search at the agency office results in a listing of the personal property taken from them. Such а procedure is not dependent on probable cause, is not subject to the fourth amendment requirements, and is lawful.
Illinois v. Lafayette,
If a source of the information/material, independent of the unlawful search, can be shown, then the exclusionary rule has been held to bе inapplicable.
See Wong Sun v. United States,
Exclusion is intended to preclude law enforcement officers from enhancing the prosecution by unlawful means. It is not, however, a shield to the wrongdoer, who is not to be put beyond the reach of thе law when guilt can be shown by evidence lawfully obtained.
Sutton v. United States,
The inevitable discovery rule differs from the independent source exception *933 because it applies where the evidence is not discovered independently, but would be. However, the same rationale supports the two doсtrines: where there is a reasonable probability that evidence would have been discovered independently of the illegal actions, the policies of the exclusionary rule are not compelling. Thus, procedures which can be shown to be going to occur or would occur had the illegal acquisition not taken place and which would have brought the evidence lawfully into the government’s hands sufficiently remove the taint of the actual, unlawful acquisition as to permit admissibility. 5 See LaFave, Search and Seizure, at 383 n. 73.
As noted, defendants’ arrests are not challenged and are thus presumed to have been lawful. An inventory search of the property of an arrested person is a routine procedure.
United States v. Woolbright,
Lest the government discern an easy method for validating the results of an unlawful search, the government may not by-pass the warrant requirements and then mechanically rely on the inventory as inevitable to meet its burden of showing an inevitable, lawful discovery.
See United States v. Amuny,
Accordingly, the motions of Gorski and Cabrera to suppress items taken from them and from the bag are denied.
Motion to Suppress Statements
Defendant Gorski has also moved to suppress certain statements he made to the agents after his arrest. Gorski was read his rights, which he understood. That Gorski understood these warnings was shown by his initial refusal to make any statements, stating his intention not to do so, although he did not request an attorney. Later, voluntarily and in an exchange which was not initiated by any questions
*934
asked of him, Gorski sought to arrange a deal for himself in relation to the charges. Because these statements were voluntary, there was no violation of Gorski’s rights in the statements he made.
Moran v. Burbine,
Accordingly, his motion to suppress statements is denied.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The existence of probable cause thus distinguishes this case from
United States v. Place,
.
Sanders
did not determine the requirement of a warrant for a luggage seаrch incident to a lawful arrest.
. Cabrera thereby depleted, if not destroyed, his ability to preserve his claim of a reasonable expectation of privacy. This does not alter the case, as any container remains subject to the protection of the fourth amendment and the warrant requirement.
Chadwick,
. Sanders
affirmed the Arkansas Supreme Court, which found that "a warrantless search required probable cause and exigent circumstances,” and, where the bag was in police control, there was no exigent circumstance and no "impracticality in obtaining a search warrant.”
Sanders v. Arkansas,
. The facts here clearly demonstrate the inevitability of the inventory discovery of the evidence after a lawful search, thus establishing the reasonable probability of the discovery which was the concern of Oakes, J., in dissent in
United States
v.
Falley,
