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State v. Barnes
Edward G. Rheinheimer, Cochise County Attorney by David R. Pardee, Bisbee, Attorneys for Appellant.
Mark A. Suagee, Cochise County Public Defender By Robert J. Zohlmann, Bisbee, Attorneys for Appellee.
¶ 1 A Cochise County grand jury indicted appellee Patricia Barnes on one count each of possessing a dangerous drug for sale, a class two felony, and resisting arrest by using physical force, a class six felony. Barnes moved to suppress evidence found during a strip search following her arrest, which included a bag containing methamphetamine that protruded from her anus and was removed during the search. The trial court granted the motion, finding that the strip search, lawful under the facts of the case, became a body cavity search, requiring a warrant, at the moment the officer touched the bag that extended into Barnes's rectum. On appeal, the state contends that, because the officer did not touch Barnes internally, the officer did not require a warrant to handle the protruding portion of the bag. We affirm.
¶ 2 In reviewing a trial court's ruling on a motion to suppress evidence, we defer to its factual findings, State v. Bonillas, 197 Ariz. 96, ¶ 2, 3 P.3d 1016 (App.1999), and review only what was presented during the suppression hearing, State v. Estrada, 209 Ariz. 287, ¶ 2, 100 P.3d 452, 453 (App.2004). On June 27, 2005, a Willcox police officer attempted to arrest Wesley Bohlender on an outstanding warrant. Barnes, Bohlender's girlfriend, intervened and tried to prevent the officer from arresting Bohlender. During the struggle, the officer saw Bohlender hand a small paper item to Barnes. The officer then saw Barnes move her hand down the front of her pants. He arrested Barnes for intervening in the arrest of Bohlender.
¶ 3 The arresting officer told Sergeant Childers, who transported Barnes to a Cochise County Sheriff's detention facility, that Barnes should be searched because she might have some contraband. Prior to booking Barnes, and without seeking a search warrant, Childers arranged for Lori Armstrong, a female city code enforcement officer,1 to search Barnes. Childers did not specify the type or extent of search that he sought, but Armstrong understood that she was to perform a strip search.
¶ 4 Armstrong took Barnes to an isolated cell and ordered Barnes to disrobe. Armstrong instructed Barnes to show the area behind her ears, then bend over and spread her buttocks. Armstrong saw something protruding out of Barnes's anus and asked Barnes to remove it. Barnes did not do so. Wearing rubber gloves, Armstrong then "grabbed a hold of the item" and it fell into her hands. The item was a bag that allegedly contained methamphetamine. During a subsequent interview, Barnes purportedly made incriminating statements about the bag.
¶ 5 On appeal, the state maintains the trial court erred in suppressing the bag removed from Barnes's rectum, contending "[t]he police may remove and examine what they find during the course of a warrantless strip search, including items found sticking out of the anus." We review a trial court's ruling on a motion to suppress for an abuse of discretion. State v. Fodor, 179 Ariz. 442, 448, 880 P.2d 662, 668 (App.1994). Although we defer to the trial court's factual findings, we "review de novo legal issues and mixed questions of fact and law." Bonillas, 197 Ariz. 96, ¶ 2, 3 P.3d at 1016.
¶ 6 The trial court found that the officer's constitutional authority to conduct a search incident to arrest, coupled with the officer's reasonable basis to believe that Barnes had secreted evidence on her person, justified the strip search and visual body cavity inspection. However, it concluded that a warrant was required for the officer to handle and remove the bag from Barnes's rectum. The trial court granted Barnes's motion, suppressing "the physical evidence seized from Defendant as well as any statements made to the police concerning such item following seizure." The state contends the factors entitling it to conduct the strip search, coupled with the fact that the officer did not herself reach into Barnes's body cavity—but merely handled the protruding portion of the bag—allowed the officer to remove the bag without a warrant.
¶ 7 As a threshold matter, controlling jurisprudence instructs that the state must generally secure a warrant before a law enforcement officer may intrude beyond the body's surface. In Schmerber v. California, 384 U.S. 757, 770, 86 S.Ct. 1826, 1835, 16 L.Ed.2d 908 (1966), quoting Johnson v. United States, 333 U.S. 10, 13, 68 S.Ct. 367, 369, 92 L.Ed. 436 (1948), the United States Supreme Court observed:
Search warrants are ordinarily required for searches of dwellings, and absent an emergency, no less could be required where intrusions into the human body are concerned. The requirement that a warrant be obtained is a requirement that inferences to support the search "be drawn by a neutral and detached magistrate instead of being judged by the officer engaged in the often competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime." The importance of informed, detached and deliberate determinations of the issue whether or not to invade another's body in search of evidence of guilt is indisputable and great.
(Citation omitted.) There, the Court expressly rejected the government's contentions that either the fact of a defendant's arrest or the presence of probable cause obviated the need for a warrant to conduct a search beyond the body's surface. Id. at 769-70, 86 S.Ct. at 1835. Thus, we must similarly reject the state's suggestion here that removal of the bag in the absence of a warrant was justified by Barnes's arrest or the likelihood that the protruding bag contained an illegal substance.2
¶ 8 The state primarily contends that Armstrong did not intrude beyond the surface of Barnes's body because "no piercing, probing, or even touching of the skin was required to seize" the bag. See State v. Magness, 115 Ariz. 317, 321, 565 P.2d 194, 198 (App.1977) () To address this contention, we must determine whether an officer transforms a lawful warrantless strip search into an intrusion beyond the body's surface requiring a warrant when he or she handles an object protruding from, and extending into, an arrestee's anal cavity. Although the state correctly observes that its officer neither inserted any object, digit, or instrumentality into Barnes, the officer's manipulation and removal of the protruding portion of the bag necessarily exerted force on the portion of the bag extending into Barnes's rectum. And the officer's actions had the effect of moving the portions of the bag within Barnes's rectum as the bag emerged. Once an officer's actions have the effect of exerting force within an arrestee's body, we decline to draw constitutional distinctions based on the mechanism by which the officer does so. The invasion of privacy is the same regardless of the mechanism used.3 See Fuller v. M.G. Jewelry, 950 F.2d 1437, 1449, 1449 n. 11 (9th Cir.1991) (). Moreover, the Court's opinion in Schmerber instructs that the instrusiveness of a body search must be assessed in part by the potential risks of inflicting trauma or pain. 384 U.S. at 771-72, 86 S.Ct. at 1836. Although nothing in the record suggests that Barnes actually suffered any trauma or pain, we have little doubt that an officer's removal of items extending into a suspect's "innards" generally poses such potential risks, the relevant consideration here.4
¶ 9 We are not the first court to conclude that an officer must secure a warrant to remove items partially protruding from an arrestee's rectum. In Hughes v. Commonwealth, 31 Va.App. 447, 524 S.E.2d 155, 159, 162 (2000), quoting Commonwealth v. Gilmore, 27 Va.App. 320, 498 S.E.2d 464, 469 (1998), the court found that an officer's removal of a plastic bag protruding halfway from a defendant's rectum constituted an "intrusive physical body cavity search" requiring a warrant in the absence of both exigent circumstances and "`a clear indication that evidence is located within a suspect's body.'" And, in People v. More, 97 N.Y.2d 209, 738 N.Y.S.2d 667, 764 N.E.2d 967, 969 (2002), quoting People v. Luna, 73 N.Y.2d 173, 538 N.Y.S.2d 765, 535 N.E.2d 1305, 1308 (1989), New York's highest court characterized physical body cavity searches, such as the seizure of a bag partially protruding from a suspect's rectum, as "`invasive'" and "`degrading'" and found such searches "at least as intrusive" as the blood test procedures addressed in Schmerber. Accordingly, the court held the evidence found in the suspect's rectum should have been suppressed because officers had neither complied with the warrant requirement set forth in Schmerber nor articulated exigent circumstances sufficient to obviate the need for a warrant. More, 738 N.Y.S.2d 667, 764 N.E.2d at 969-70.
¶ 10 The state counters that several cases have declined to characterize the removal of items protruding in plain view from body cavities as body cavity searches. But those cases did not squarely address the scenario presented here. Although the Washington Court of Appeals found that the removal of an item protruding out of a body is not a body cavity search, it did so exclusively in the context of determining the propriety of that action under the wording of a Washington statute. State v. Jones, 76 Wash.App. 592, 887 P.2d 461, 464 (1995). And the Ninth Circuit has held that an inspector did not conduct a body cavity search when she observed and...
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