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A recent case that Harter & Schottland won is a good example of how the […] The post Consent to search appeared first on Harter & Schottland.
A recent case that Harter & Schottland won is a good example of how the notion of “apparent authority” controls the validity of a search. A similar case was reviewed by an Illinois appellate court.
The defendant in People v. James was a passenger in a car that was stopped by officers of the Urbana police department. The officers directed the driver and the passengers to step out of the car. When the defendant exited the car, she left her purse on the front, passenger-side seat of the car. One of the officers then escorted the defendant away from the car.
Although the defendant was not aware of it, the driver of the car agreed to a police search of the car. During this search, the officer opened and looked into defendant’s purse, where they found cocaine.
The Defendant filed a motion to suppress the evidence found by police officers during the search of her purse. She argued that she had not consented to the search and that the driver lacked the authority to consent to a search of her purse.
The State argued that the police officer may have incorrectly assumed that the purse belonged to the driver of the car. Therefore, the State contended that the driver had the apparent authority to consent to a search of the defendant’s purse. The State further asserted that defendant assumed the risk that the driver of the car in which she was riding would agree to a police search of the car and its contents, including defendant’s purse. The State argues that it would be impractical to require police officers to “inquire of all of the occupants of an automobile whether they consent to the search of their belongings, and then sort out and classify all of those belongings.”
The appellate court determined that the issue on appeal was whether the driver had the apparent authority to give effective consent to the search of her companion’s purse.
The court held that the officer should have ascertained who owned the purse he found in the car before he opened and searched the contents of the purse. The court further observed that it would have been objectively reasonable for the law enforcement officer to realize that the purse might belong to one of the passengers rather than to the driver. A purse is normally carried by a woman, and all of the adult occupants of the vehicle were women. Thus, the purse could logically have belonged to any one of the three adult women in the car. The purse was found on a passenger seat in the car, not on the driver’s seat, thereby tending to the conclusion that the purse belonged to the passenger, not the driver. It would have been unreasonable for the officer to believe that driver shared some common use in the purse with one of the passengers in the car, since a purse is generally not an object for which two or more persons share common use and authority.
Therefore, the court held that the officer acted unreasonably when he proceeded to search the closed purse, although he was ignorant of the identity of the owner of the purse.
The fourth amendment to the United States Constitution commands that the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.” The fundamental purpose of the fourth amendment is to protect the legitimate expectations of privacy that citizens possess in their persons, their homes, and their belongings.
People v. James and Harter & Schottland’s recent victory demonstrate that this important right requires that police act reasonably even when faced with the possibility of consent to search.
The post Consent to search appeared first on Harter & Schottland.
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