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Question Title: Need for search warrant for vehicle towed to private
lot
E-Newsletter
Edition: May 2, 2007
Always note that state law may be
more restrictive on police power than the U.S. Constitution.
A vehicle fire suspect arson removed
to a private tow lot, no longer in police custody. If consent to
search denied or unavailable, is a search warrant needed to conduct
origin and cause and possible evidence collection?
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The short answer to this question
is the investigator probably does need to obtain a search warrant
in the situation described above.
This answer is based upon several
United States Supreme Court cases.
First, in Michigan v. Tyler,
436 U.S. 499 (1978), there was a fire at a furniture store. The
fire department responded to the
fire and made a report as to its initial findings. Later, the
fire department reentered the premises without a warrant to determine
the origin of the fire, and other warrantless searches were conducted
on t he premises. The U.S. Supreme Court held that an entry to
fight the fire required no warrant and that once in the building,
the officials could remain there for a reasonable time to investigate
the cause of the fire. However, subsequent searches of the premises
required that a warrant be issued in order to gather evidence
for
possible prosecution.
Next, in Michigan v. Clifford,
464 U.S. 287 (1984), arson investigators began searching defendants'
home
a half-day after firefighters
left the home and after the home was secured. The investigators
searched the upstairs of defendants' home after finding the cause
and origin of the fire in the basement. The court determined
that d efendants had a reasonable expectation of privacy in their
fire-damaged
home and that a warrantless entry of their home was limited
to an investigation immediately after the fire was extinguished
and to exigent circumstances. Because the investigators in the
case
had delayed investigating the fire until after the firefighters
had left and the home was secured, the court concluded that the
search of defendants' home, particularly the upstairs, was invalid
without a warrant.
Now we look at the “automobile exception” to the search
warrant requirement. While there is a long line of cases that establish
that police can search a vehicle based upon probable cause but
with a search warrant, the commonality in these cases is that the
vehicles were mobile. The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, in United
States v. Watts, 329, F.3d 1282 (11th Cir. 2003), held that the
automobile exception allows the police to conduct a search of a
vehicle if (1) the vehicle is readily mobile and (2) the police
have probable cause for the search. Further this same case held
that the “mobility” requirement is satisfied “merely
if the automobile is operational.”
When viewing Tyler and
Clifford, it is important to note that one fire was at a business
(Tyler) and the other at a residence
(Clifford). Both of these locations are treated differently than
automobiles. Therefore, because of the automobile exception, if
probable cause exists to justify a search of the automobile and the automobile is mobile, then the search could proceed without
a warrant. However, a vehicle, after a fire, may not be considered “operational” enough
to qualify for the mobility factor under the automobile exception.
Therefore, if the vehicle is not operational, a warrant should
be obtained. |