Summary
Judgment reversed. Birdsong, C. J., and Banke, P. J., concur.
Summary
Judgment reversed. Birdsong, C. J., and Banke, P. J., concur.
Text
Defendant McCloud was charged with four counts: possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, OCGA
The court granted defendant's motion to suppress the drug evidence. The undisputed evidence is as follows: Police officers had been called to the high school where defendant worked as a bus driver on January 14, 1987 to investigate the theft of checks and cash from the school vault. Defendant was a suspect in that theft, although officers did not have probable cause to arrest him. As part of the theft investigation, the officers had checked the record on defendant's driver's license the day before and learned that it was suspended. They also were aware that defendant had been taken off the school bus the previous day because he had no valid driver's license. About two or three minutes before the officers left the school, Mr. Brown, a school official, told them that he had information that defendant had sold drugs that day and had drugs in his car.
When the officers saw defendant driving the car, they called a marked police car and advised that defendant was driving with a suspended license. Officer Taylor stopped defendant, verified the suspended license information, and learned upon inquiry from defendant that the car had no insurance. Defendant was arrested for the two traffic offenses, his car impounded, and an inventory search of the automobile was conducted. Under the driver's seat, the officers found a plastic cassette tape container which held a plastic bag with rice and five tiny ziplock bags inside. The small bags contained a white powder which proved to be cocaine.
Defendant was then charged with the cocaine offense. A warrant was obtained for defendant's residence. A set of scales with white residue, a quantity of the small ziplock bags, and a small bag of marijuana were found there.
Defendant filed a motion to suppress in reliance on the federal Fourth Amendment, Ga. Const. 1983, Art. I, Sec. I, Par. XIII, and OCGA
The court found essentially the foregoing facts and "that the Defendant would not have been stopped by the officers absent the information given by a school official who approached them on the date of the stop and arrest and related that the Defendant 'had sold drugs that date and had drugs in his car.' " The court also considered important "that in the four-count special presentment . . . , the first two counts deal with drugs and the last two deal with traffic offenses." On these findings, the court concluded as a matter of law: "This makes the stop and search pretextual and invalid. It appears from the transcript and the court's order that this ruling was based on Miller and Smith. No independent argument or analysis of defendant's rights under state statutes or Constitution were made. We thus confine our review to the federal constitutional ground.
Initially, it should be noted that Miller and Smith are not binding on either the trial court or this court. Head v. State,
There is no doubt that the officers had probable cause to believe that McCloud was driving an automobile with a suspended license. "Probable cause to make a warrantless arrest exists where the facts and circumstances within the officer's knowledge, and of which he had reasonably trustworthy information, are sufficient in themselves to warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that an offense has been or is being committed. [Cits.]" Clark v. State,
Since, prior to April 2, 1987, driving an uninsured motor vehicle was not an offense for which a driver's license could be posted in lieu of bail pursuant to OCGA
The fact that the officer who made the initial stop and the other officers present suspected that McCloud had committed or was committing other crimes does not alter their authority to make the traffic stop. See Eisenberger v. State,
Once McCloud was arrested and the car impounded, it could be searched. New York v. Belton, 453 U. S. 454, 460 (101 SC 2860, 69 LE2d 768) (1981); South Dakota v. Opperman, supra; Oswell v. State,
The initial search being authorized, there is no "poisonous tree" to consider, in the trial court's words, with regard to those items later seized from the apartment pursuant to a warrant.
We conclude there was no Fourth Amendment violation.
Henry G. Bozeman, for appellee.
Notes:
1. We do not assume that the suspicion was not a reasonable one founded on specific and articulable facts or that it may not have been enough itself to have authorized the present stop (see State v. Brown,
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This document cites
- U.S. Supreme Court - Michigan v. Long, 463 U.S. 1032 (1983)
- U.S. Supreme Court - New York v. Belton, 453 U.S. 454 (1981)
- U.S. Supreme Court - Carroll v. United States, 267 U.S. 132 (1925)
- Supreme Court of Georgia - HEAD v. THE STATE., 253 Ga. 429, 322 S.E.2.d 228 (1984)
- Supreme Court of Georgia - FELKER v. THE STATE., 252 Ga. 351, 314 S.E.2.d 621 (1984)
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