Colorado v. Marshall

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In early 2012, two uniformed Colorado Springs police officers went to Defendant Jeffrey Marshall's residence to serve a summons for his alleged indecent exposure. Defendant wasn't home at the time; the officers waited in their squad car for him in a nearby parking lot. Defendant eventually came home, parking in the same lot as the officers. He was carrying a black backpack with him at the time. The officers approached Defendant to serve the summons. Despite his apparent cooperation, one officer was concerned that Defendant might run away. Defendant was then put under arrest on the indecent exposure charge. While one officer placed Defendant in the squad car, the other officer opened the backpack and found six individual bags of marijuana weighing 7.4 grams total, an assortment of prescription pills, and a digital scale. Based on the items found in the backpack, the State charged Defendant with possession with intent to manufacture or distribute marijuana, possession of a schedule-three controlled substance, and five habitual criminal counts. After two suppression hearings, the trial court found that Defendant's arrest was valid because the officers had a summons that required fingerprinting and processing Marshall at the Colorado Springs stationhouse. Nonetheless, the trial court concluded that the subsequent search of the backpack was illegal because Defendant was handcuffed and either in, or standing next to, the police car at the time of the search. The trial court reasoned that under "Arizona v. Gant," (556 U.S. 332 (2009)), the search incident to arrest exception did not apply because the exigencies discussed in that case that would justify a search were absent. The State appealed. Upon review, the Supreme Court agreed with the State that the evidence in Defendant's backpack should not have been suppressed because the officer conducted a valid search incident to arrest. Therefore the Court reversed the trial court's order suppressing the evidence. View "Colorado v. Marshall" on Justia Law