United States v. Scott

987 A.2d 1180, 2010 D.C. App. LEXIS 25, 2010 WL 304530
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 2010
Docket07-CO-871
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 987 A.2d 1180 (United States v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Scott, 987 A.2d 1180, 2010 D.C. App. LEXIS 25, 2010 WL 304530 (D.C. 2010).

Opinion

GLICKMAN, Associate Judge:

The United States appeals from the suppression of evidence in its prosecution of Donte Scott for simple possession of marijuana and possession with intent to distribute cocaine. The police recovered the marijuana and the cocaine in separate searches after they arrested Scott for selling drugs in plain view of an undercover police officer. The government claims that the trial court erred in ruling that each seizure -violated Scott’s rights under the Fourth Amendment. We agree with the government as to the cocaine, but not as to the marijuana.

The marijuana was discovered first, in a car parked near the site of Scott’s drug transaction. Police searched the vehicle, without a warrant, after finding the keys to it in Scott’s possession and learning that he had been using the car with its owner’s permission. Although we do not adopt the trial court’s stated rationale, we uphold its conclusion that the search of the car violated Scott’s Fourth Amendment rights. Contrary to the government’s contentions, the record cannot support a finding that Scott relinquished his legitimate expectation of privacy in the vehicle by disclaiming ownership of it; and the evidence of record supports the trial court’s implicit determination that the police lacked probable cause to search the car.

The cocaine was found after Scott was transported to the police station. There the police required Scott to submit to a full strip search, which culminated in the discovery of a packet of cocaine on Scott’s buttock. The trial court ruled that the strip search and ensuing seizure of the packet violated Scott’s Fourth Amendment rights. We disagree. Despite its intrusiveness, a strip search for contraband (or a weapon) is permissible as part of a search incident to a lawful arrest if the search is supported by reasonable suspicion and conducted in a reasonable manner. Those conditions were met in this *1185 case. And where, as here, a lawful strip search reveals evidence that can be removed from the outer surface of the arres-tee’s body without posing any threat to the arrestee’s health or safety, the Fourth Amendment permits the police to seize that evidence immediately, without interrupting the search procedure to obtain a warrant.

I. Factual Background

The facts relevant to Scott’s arrest and the ensuing searches of his car and person were elicited at a pretrial evidentiary hearing on his suppression motion. The sole witness at that hearing was Officer Robert Schagnon of the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD). We understand the trial court to have credited Officer Schagnon’s testimony in full. For purposes of this appeal, Scott does not dispute Schagnon’s account of the events leading up to and following his arrest.

A. The Arrest

Scott was arrested in an MPD narcotics enforcement operation carried out under the joint supervision of Officer Schagnon and Lieutenant Murphy 1 on the evening of March 15, 2007. In the course of that operation, Schagnon testified, an undercover police officer observed Scott speak with an unidentified woman outside a convenience store in the 4000 block of South Capitol Street in Southwest Washington, D.C. Scott and the woman then entered the store together, and the undercover officer followed them inside. At the rear of the store, according to Schagnon, the undercover officer observed Scott reach behind his back “into the waistband of his pants” and pull out a single ziplock bag containing “a white rock substance,” which he handed to the woman in exchange for cash. Not having observed this transaction himself, Schagnon was unable to say how far down into his pants Scott reached to retrieve the ziplock bag or how long Scott’s hand remained in the back of his pants.

The undercover officer left the convenience store to report what he had seen. Moments later, a team of uniformed officers entered the store and detained Scott there. (The police did not stop the woman who had been with Scott.) The officers conducted a “field search” of Scott’s person and found $813 in cash and the keys to a Lexus automobile, but no drugs. Although Officer Schagnon did not observe the field search, he testified at the suppression hearing that the officers would have patted Scott down and looked inside his pockets but would not have put their hands inside the back of his pants, because “[w]e don’t do half strip searches on the scene.... [W]e do not pull down pants on the scene or reach on the scene into private areas.” 2

B. The Search of the Lexus

In addition to finding the Lexus car keys in Scott’s possession, the police noticed a Lexus parked approximately thirty feet from the convenience store in an adjacent parking lot. Officer Schagnon testified at the suppression hearing that “Scott initially said he didn’t have a car there and then later retracted it and said that the Lexus that was parked outside wasn’t his *1186 car,” but rather belonged to his cousin, Stephan White, who was working at a pizza restaurant four doors down from the convenience store in the same block. In his suppression hearing testimony, Schag-non did not state what the police asked Scott to elicit his initial statement that he “didn’t have a car there.” Schagnon added, though, that Scott “volunteered” the information that his cousin owned the Lexus.

Upon receiving that information, Schag-non went to the nearby pizza restaurant and met with White. White confirmed that he owned the Lexus and told Schag-non he had been allowing his cousin Scott to “use” the automobile “for the past several months.” Schagnon did not testify whether White said Scott had exclusive use of the Lexus or was using it that day.

Schagnon obtained White’s consent to search the Lexus. The police then entered the vehicle, using one of the keys they had taken from Scott to do so. Above the driver’s-side visor, the officers found mail addressed to Scott. On the driver’s-side floor board they found “a small quantity” of marijuana.

At the suppression hearing, Schagnon agreed that “the only reason” the police searched the Lexus was that they found a key to it in Scott’s possession. The police had no “specific information” indicating the presence of a stash of drugs or other contraband in the automobile, and no officer had seen Scott exit the Lexus or have any contact with it. There is no evidence in the record that it was Scott rather than his cousin who had parked the car in the lot next to the convenience store; nor does the record make clear that Scott knew the vehicle was there before the police questioned him about it.

has reason to suspect that weapons, contraband or evidence are concealed on the person or in the clothing in such a manner that employing a field search technique may not discover them. Suspicion may be formed on facts surrounding the crime or arrest, on the basis of information received about [the] prisoner, or as a result of discoveries during the field search. These searches can be conducted only with the authorization of the Assistant District Commander and in a secure area. A sworn member of the same sex as the prisoner shall conduct the search in a private and secure area.

C. The Strip Search

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
987 A.2d 1180, 2010 D.C. App. LEXIS 25, 2010 WL 304530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-scott-dc-2010.