State v. Wheless

14 P.3d 184, 103 Wash. App. 749
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 18, 2000
DocketNo. 45749-7-I
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 14 P.3d 184 (State v. Wheless) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wheless, 14 P.3d 184, 103 Wash. App. 749 (Wash. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Per Curiam

Atlas Wheless appeals his conviction for delivery of cocaine within a school bus route stop zone in violation of RCW 69.50.401(a)(1)(i) and .435(a)(3), contending the trial court violated his constitutional rights by refusing to suppress a crack cocaine pipe found during a vehicle search. Because Wheless was arrested far away from the truck in which police found the pipe, it was not a lawful search incident to arrest, and the trial court should have suppressed the evidence. Accordingly, we reverse the conviction.

[752]*752FACTS

On February 5, 1999, several Seattle police officers were conducting a “buy-bust” operation near the Hook, Line and Sinker tavern on Rainier Avenue. Working undercover, Officer Joseph Pioli made contact with Wheless in the tavern’s parking lot and asked Wheless for “a forty,” a common street term for 40 dollars worth of crack cocaine. Wheless pulled a folded bottle cap out of his pocket, opened it and handed Pioli two rocks, of what appeared to be crack cocaine, a suspicion later confirmed by crime lab testing. In exchange, Pioli gave Wheless two premarked 20-dollar bills.

As Pioli walked away from Wheless, he signaled the successful buy to three other officers who were participating in the operation. After hearing a description of the suspect over the radio, Officer Daniel Bresnahan observed Wheless, who matched the description, walk to a yellow pickup truck parked in the lot about 50-75 feet from the tavern’s entrance.1 Wheless got into the driver’s seat and, a few moments later, an unidentified woman exited the tavern, walked to the truck, and got into the passenger seat. While Wheless and the woman sat in the car for less than a minute, the observing officers were unable to see their hands. When the woman got out of the truck and walked away, Wheless also left the vehicle and walked toward the tavern’s entrance.

Officers followed Wheless into the tavern and arrested him in the tavern’s bathroom. They searched him and found six dollars, but they did not find the buy money. A short time after Wheless’ arrest, Officer Raymond Volluz searched the pickup truck using a narcotics detection dog. The dog located a glass tube of the type customarily used to smoke crack cocaine under the floor mat on the driver’s side.

[753]*753Wheless was charged with unlawful delivery of cocaine within 1,000 feet of a school bus stop. At the CrR 3.6 hearing, he argued that the truck search was an unlawful warrantless search and moved to suppress the crack pipe. The trial court denied the motion, concluding that the search was lawful as incident to an arrest. A jury found Wheless guilty. At the sentencing hearing, he moved for arrest of judgment or, in the alternative, a new trial. The court denied the motion and imposed a standard range sentence plus a 24-month school bus route stop zone enhancement. This appeal followed.

DISCUSSION

The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guards against unreasonable searches and seizures.2 Although warrantless searches are unreasonable per se under the Fourth Amendment, there are several exceptions to that rule: consent, exigent circumstances, searches incident to a valid arrest, inventory searches, plain view, and Terry3 investigative stops.4 These exceptions are “jealously and carefully drawn,”5 and the State has the burden of proving them.6 Here, the State contends the truck search was justified under the search incident to arrest exception. We disagree.

[754]*754In Chimel v. California,7 the United States Supreme Court established a broad principle for the search incident to arrest exception, holding that officers may search the area within the “immediate control” of an arrestee to ensure officers’ safety and prevent destruction of evidence. More than a decade later, in New York v. Belton,8 the Court articulated a bright-line rule for applying that exception in situations involving a vehicle search: An officer who has made a lawful custodial arrest of the occupant of a vehicle may search the passenger compartment contemporaneously with the arrest. This rule satisfied Chimel’s “immediate control” principle because “articles inside the relatively narrow compass of the passenger compartment of an automobile are in fact generally, even if not inevitably, within ‘the area into which an arrestee might reach in order to grab a weapon or evidentiary ite[m].’ ”9

In State v. Stroud,10 our Supreme Court held that arrestees receive even greater protection under article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution11 and fashioned a Belton-Yike rule that distinguished between a locked and unlocked container or glove compartment accordingly:

During the arrest process, including the time immediately subsequent to the suspect’s being arrested, handcuffed, and placed in a patrol car, officers should be allowed to search the passenger compartment of a vehicle for weapons or destructible evidence. However, if the officers encounter a locked container [755]*755or locked glove compartment, they may not unlock and search either container without obtaining a warrant.[12]

The Court reiterated Belton’s pronouncement that the exigencies of danger to the officers and the potential destruction of evidence provide the justification for searching a vehicle incident to a lawful custodial arrest.13

This court refined the analysis further in State v. Fore,14 when we held that, according to Stroud, “a valid vehicle search incident to an arrest requires a close physical and temporal proximity between the arrest and the search.” Although this gloss injected a dose of subjectivity into Stroud’s bright-line rule, it was appropriate. The Fore proximity rule ensures that an application of the search incident to arrest exception does not contravene the underlying justification for the Stroud rule — preventing harm to officers and the potential destruction of evidence. Without this gloss, Stroud could be read to allow a search at the time of an arrest regardless of whether the arrest took place in or close to the vehicle being searched.

Applied to the facts here, Stroud and Fore require that items in the truck were at least arguably within Wireless’ control at the time of the arrest. They were not. Even assuming temporal proximity,15 there was no physical proximity between the arrest, which took place inside the tavern’s bathroom, and the car search, which occurred in the tavern parking lot. As such, it was not a proper search [756]*756incident to arrest.16 The trial court’s conclusion that physical and temporal proximity was present because Wheless “was seen sitting in the driver’s side of the car in question immediately after having sold narcotics to an undercover police officer” missed the mark.

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State v. Wheless
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Bluebook (online)
14 P.3d 184, 103 Wash. App. 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wheless-washctapp-2000.