Police may search unarrested passenger’s belongings found
outside car
Jan. 8, 2009 – Police may search the belongings of a passenger
who has not been arrested and that are outside of the automobile
searched, the Wisconsin Supreme Court held Dec. 30 in State
v. Denk, 2008 WI 130.
The court reasoned that such a warrantless search is consistent with
the historical rationales of protecting the police officer and
preserving evidence.
In this case, Jordan A. Denk was a passenger in a car parked at night
alongside a county road. When a police officer stopped to see if the
motorists needed assistance, he ran a license plate check to discover
the plates did not match the car. The officer approached the car a
second time to talk to the occupants and smelled marijuana.
After receiving consent to search the car, the officer ordered the
driver and Denk out of the vehicle. The officer noticed the
driver’s sweatshirt pocket was bulging, but the driver refused to
allow the officer to perform a protective pat down. The officer directed
the driver to empty his pockets whereupon the officer spotted drug
paraphernalia. The officer arrested the driver and completed a search
uncovering more contraband.
Turning to Denk, the officer noticed an eyeglass case lying on the
ground next to the passenger door. Denk acknowledged that it belonged to
him. The officer asked Denk to retrieve the case and he did so, placing
it on the hood of the car. The officer opened the case and found drug
paraphernalia. The officer handcuffed Denk and searched him, finding
marijuana and methamphetamine.
The supreme court affirmed the circuit court order upholding the
search, citing State
v. Pallone, 2000 WI 77. In Pallone, a
passenger’s belongings can be searched incident to the arrest of
the driver when the passenger poses as much danger as the arrested
driver. In this case, the court found that the eyeglass case was
within easy reach of Denk who had not been restrained by the lone
officer. The case could have contained a weapon or evidence Denk might
seek to discard.
Denk failed to persuade that a court should first determine whether
the unarrested passenger’s belongings seized outside the car had
originally been loose within the vehicle compartment (where it would
have been subject to a search) or if it had been on the
passenger’s person (where it would not). The court said the
circumstances of how an item came to rest outside the vehicle does not
address the concerns of protecting the officer or preserving
evidence.
However, the court reaffirmed that unarrested passengers cannot
themselves be searched based solely on the arrest of the driver. In
order to search the body of a passenger, the arresting officer must have
individualized cause.
By Alex De Grand, Legal
Writer, State Bar of Wisconsin