v. Allen ( 2019 )


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    ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
    October 28, 2019
    
    2019 CO 88
    No. 19SA142, People v. Allen—Inventory Search—Protective Search for
    Weapons—Automobile Exception.
    The supreme court concludes that the inventory search of the defendant’s
    car violated the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable searches
    and seizures because there is no evidence that officers decided to impound the car
    pursuant to any written or oral standardized criteria or policies. Further, the court
    rules that the People did not establish that the search fell within the protective
    search exception to the warrant requirement or within that requirement’s
    automobile exception. Therefore, the court affirms the district court’s suppression
    order.
    The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
    2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
    
    2019 CO 88
    Supreme Court Case No. 19SA142
    Interlocutory Appeal from the District Court
    Weld County District Court Case No. 18CR1024
    Honorable Marcelo A. Kopcow
    ________________________________________________________________________
    Plaintiff-Appellant:
    The People of the State of Colorado,
    v.
    Defendant-Appellee:
    Billie Thomas Allen.
    ________________________________________________________________________
    Order Affirmed
    en banc
    October 28, 2019
    ________________________________________________________________________
    Attorneys for Plaintiff-Appellant:
    Clifford E. Riedel, District Attorney, Eighth Judicial District
    David P. Vandenberg, Chief Deputy District Attorney
    Fort Collins, Colorado
    Attorneys for Defendant-Appellee:
    Houtchens, Greenfield, Sedlak & Zacheis, LLC
    Melanie A. Sedlak
    Greeley, Colorado
    JUSTICE SAMOUR delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1    Following a traffic stop of a Cadillac driven by Billie Thomas Allen, Greeley
    Police Department officers conducted an inventory search that yielded a handgun
    and methamphetamine. In this interlocutory appeal brought by the People, we
    must determine whether the district court erred in granting Allen’s pretrial request
    to suppress those items.     The People argue that no constitutional violation
    occurred when the Cadillac was seized and inventoried because the officers
    properly exercised their discretion in deciding to impound it. Alternatively, the
    People maintain that the officers were authorized to conduct either a protective
    search for weapons or a search pursuant to the automobile exception to the
    warrant requirement. Whether the officers had probable cause to search the
    Cadillac, as required by the automobile exception, is a close question, but one we
    ultimately conclude the district court resolved correctly. And, because we also
    agree with the district court that neither the protective search exception nor the
    inventory search exception can justify the challenged search, we affirm.
    I. Facts and Procedural History
    ¶2    While working patrol at approximately 2:30 in the morning, Officer Randall
    Snyder observed a Cadillac with two occupants fail to stop at a posted stop sign
    in Greeley, Colorado. The Cadillac stopped, but not until after passing the stop
    sign and entering the intersection of 6th Avenue and 8th Street. Shortly after the
    Cadillac took a right-hand turn on 8th Street, Officer Snyder activated his
    2
    emergency lights to initiate a traffic stop.      But the Cadillac did not yield
    immediately and continued westbound on 8th Street toward 7th Avenue. When
    the Cadillac reached 7th Avenue, it turned into the parking lot of the Clarion Hotel.
    ¶3    Once in the parking lot, the Cadillac moved at a slow speed for a distance
    of about a city block. Because the passenger in the Cadillac ducked his head
    several times to possibly hide something under his seat, Officer Snyder radioed
    for assistance. As the Cadillac reached the north end of the parking lot, it made a
    left-hand turn, which was quickly followed by a sharp right-hand turn into an
    empty parking space. When the Cadillac started to back out, apparently because
    it was not parked straight and was sticking out of the parking space a few feet,
    Officer Snyder sounded his siren a couple of times to make sure the Cadillac didn’t
    hit his patrol car. The Cadillac then came to a complete stop—Officer Snyder
    estimated that this was approximately a minute after he first turned on his
    emergency equipment.
    ¶4    Officer Steven Vaughn arrived a short while later in response to Officer
    Snyder’s call for assistance. The two officers approached the Cadillac on foot—
    Officer Snyder on the driver’s side and Officer Vaughn on the passenger’s side.
    The driver, Allen, provided Officer Snyder a Colorado driver’s license but could
    not produce the vehicle’s registration or proof of insurance. Allen indicated that
    he was in the process of buying the Cadillac from a Cañon City resident, Klarissa
    3
    Swift, and that he was self-insured. But he couldn’t provide documentation to
    support either claim.
    ¶5    The passenger in the Cadillac identified himself as Robert Cross. That name
    was familiar to Officer Snyder because he had been told by other officers during
    the preceding days or weeks that Cross was possibly carrying a handgun and
    dealing methamphetamine. Officer Snyder conveyed this information, along with
    his earlier observation of Cross’s furtive movements, to Officer Vaughn, and
    Officer Vaughn, in turn, asked Cross to exit the vehicle so he could pat him down
    for weapons. Finding no weapons on Cross’s person, Officer Vaughn proceeded
    to perform a protective search for weapons in the area around the front passenger
    seat. Under that seat, he discovered a live bullet.
    ¶6    While Officer Vaughn remained with the Cadillac, Officer Snyder returned
    to his patrol car and ran the Cadillac’s license plate number and Allen’s driver’s
    license. He confirmed that the vehicle was registered to Swift in Cañon City and
    learned that Allen had a valid driver’s license and did not have any outstanding
    warrants.
    ¶7    Upon returning to the Cadillac, Officer Snyder asked Allen if he would
    mind stepping out of the vehicle so they could speak, and Allen agreed to do so.
    Allen was not handcuffed, no weapons were drawn, and no force was used. And
    Officer Snyder employed a professional and non-aggressive tone and demeanor.
    4
    After patting Allen down for weapons and finding none, Officer Snyder asked him
    how he knew Cross and what he was doing in Greeley (since Allen’s driver’s
    license showed he lived in Cañon City). Allen responded that he was visiting
    Cross because they were old friends. Officer Snyder then asked Allen why he
    failed to immediately pull over when the patrol car’s emergency lights were
    activated. Allen replied that he was staying at the Clarion Hotel and thought it
    would be safer to pull into the hotel’s parking lot. When Officer Snyder inquired
    about Cross’s furtive movements, Allen did not provide a direct response. Finally,
    Officer Snyder asked Allen whether there were any guns or illegal drugs in the
    Cadillac, and Allen said that he was not allowed to own a gun because he was a
    convicted felon.
    ¶8    As Officer Snyder was wrapping up his interview of Allen, Cross asked if
    he could leave and go into the hotel, and the officers allowed him to do so. Officer
    Snyder then told Allen that he would receive a traffic citation for failing to stop at
    the stop sign and for failing to provide proof of insurance. He also advised Allen
    that the Cadillac would be impounded due to the lack of registration and proof of
    insurance. While Officer Snyder filled out the necessary paperwork, Allen was
    allowed to return to the Cadillac and retrieve some of his property. Once he
    received the traffic citation, Allen was told he was free to leave. He left and walked
    into the hotel.
    5
    ¶9    Before towing the Cadillac, the officers inventoried its contents. Under the
    floormat on the driver’s floorboard, they located a black semiautomatic handgun.
    At that point, Officer Vaughn and Sergeant Daniel Frazen, who had just arrived,
    went looking for Allen in the hotel. With the assistance of the front desk, they
    eventually spotted him walking on a sidewalk outside the hotel with a woman and
    arrested him without incident.       Meanwhile, Officer Snyder continued the
    inventory search of the Cadillac. In the center console, he found a bag with
    methamphetamine and U.S. currency.
    ¶10   Allen was subsequently charged with multiple crimes, including possession
    of a weapon by a previous offender and possession of a controlled substance.
    Before trial, he requested, among other things, that the evidence collected from the
    Cadillac be suppressed as having been obtained illegally. The People filed a
    response, arguing that the officers were justified in seizing and inventorying the
    Cadillac before impounding it. In the alternative, they asserted that the officers
    were authorized to conduct either a protective search for weapons or a search
    pursuant to the automobile exception. The district court rejected all three of the
    People’s contentions and suppressed the handgun and methamphetamine.1
    1The district court suppressed “[e]vidence of the firearm and controlled substance
    located in the Cadillac.” It did not mention the U.S. currency recovered.
    6
    ¶11   The People then brought this interlocutory appeal.
    II. Jurisdiction
    ¶12   In limited circumstances, the People may lodge an interlocutory appeal of a
    district court’s order. As relevant here, section 16-12-102(2), C.R.S. (2019), and
    C.A.R. 4.1(a) authorize the People to do so when a district court grants a
    defendant’s motion to suppress evidence and they certify both that the appeal is
    not taken for purposes of delay and that the evidence is a substantial part of the
    proof of the charges pending against the defendant. We conclude that the People
    have met these threshold requirements here.
    III. Standard of Review
    ¶13   We have made clear that review of a district court’s order regarding a
    defendant’s motion to suppress involves “a mixed question of law and fact.”
    People v. Threlkel, 
    2019 CO 18
    , ¶ 15, 
    438 P.3d 722
    , 727 (quoting People v. Gothard,
    
    185 P.3d 180
    , 183 (Colo. 2008)). We defer to the district court’s factual findings and
    do not disturb them if they are supported by competent evidence in the record. 
    Id. But we
    review de novo the district court’s legal conclusions. 
    Id. IV. Analysis
    ¶14   In urging us to reverse the order suppressing the handgun and
    methamphetamine, the People renew the claims they advanced in front of the
    7
    district court. We address each in turn after setting forth some pertinent general
    principles of law related to searches and seizures.
    A. Pertinent General Principles of Law
    ¶15   Both the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article II,
    section 7 of the Colorado Constitution prohibit unreasonable searches and
    seizures. People v. Bailey, 
    2018 CO 84
    , ¶ 18, 
    427 P.3d 821
    , 826. While neither
    provision spells out when a police officer is required to obtain a warrant in order
    to conduct a reasonable and constitutional search and seizure, the Supreme Court
    has inferred from the text of the Fourth Amendment that “a warrant must
    generally be secured.”2 Kentucky v. King, 
    563 U.S. 452
    , 459 (2011). There is a
    presumption that a warrantless search is unreasonable and thus unconstitutional.
    People v. Zuniga, 
    2016 CO 52
    , ¶ 14, 
    372 P.3d 1052
    , 1056. Nevertheless, the warrant
    requirement is subject to certain well-delineated exceptions because the
    touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness. Brigham City v. Stuart,
    
    547 U.S. 398
    , 403 (2006). The prosecution bears the burden of establishing that a
    warrantless search falls within one of the exceptions to the warrant requirement.
    People v. Pate, 
    71 P.3d 1005
    , 1010 (Colo. 2003).
    2  The rulings under challenge relied exclusively on Fourth Amendment
    jurisprudence. We limit our analysis accordingly.
    8
    ¶16   One such exception allows an officer to seize a vehicle and inventory its
    contents in furtherance of community caretaking functions.           People v. Brown,
    
    2018 CO 27
    , ¶ 8, 
    415 P.3d 815
    , 817–18. Another permits an officer who has an
    articulable and objectively reasonable belief that a motorist is armed and
    dangerous to conduct a protective search for weapons (hereinafter “protective
    search”) in the vehicle’s passenger compartment. People v. Delacruz, 
    2016 CO 76
    ,
    ¶ 14, 
    384 P.3d 349
    , 352–53. Yet another, known as the automobile exception,
    authorizes an officer to perform a search of an automobile if he has “probable
    cause to believe that the automobile contains evidence of a crime.” Zuniga, ¶ 
    14, 372 P.3d at 1056
    (quoting People v. Hill, 
    929 P.2d 735
    , 739 (Colo. 1996)).
    ¶17   When an officer obtains evidence in violation of the Fourth Amendment,
    “the exclusionary rule ordinarily bars the prosecution from introducing that
    evidence against the defendant in a criminal case.” People v. Vaughn, 
    2014 CO 71
    ,
    ¶ 10, 
    334 P.3d 226
    , 229. The Supreme Court has repeatedly reminded us that the
    only purpose of the exclusionary rule “is to deter future Fourth Amendment
    violations.” Davis v. United States, 
    564 U.S. 229
    , 236–37 (2011).
    B. Inventory Search
    ¶18    The People first maintain that the officers’ seizure and inventory of the
    Cadillac were reasonable and constitutional. We disagree.
    9
    ¶19   Just last year we recognized that it is axiomatic that an officer’s seizure of a
    vehicle and subsequent inventory of its contents for “caretaking purposes” can
    amount to a reasonable seizure and search within the meaning of the Fourth
    Amendment “without regard for either probable cause or a warrant.” Brown, ¶ 
    8, 415 P.3d at 817
    –18. As the Supreme Court has explained, “[t]he policies behind
    the warrant requirement are not implicated” in such seizures and searches, “nor
    is the related concept of probable cause.” Colorado v. Bertine, 
    479 U.S. 367
    , 371
    (1987) (citation omitted). Rather, the reasonableness of seizures and inventory
    searches conducted pursuant to a community caretaking function is rooted in the
    purposes those seizures and searches serve—to protect against danger, loss, and
    even false claims of loss—and in “the routine or standardized nature of the
    procedures by which they are carried out.” Brown, ¶ 
    8, 415 P.3d at 818
    .
    ¶20   In Bertine, the Supreme Court explained that its cases do not preclude “the
    exercise of police discretion” in determining whether to impound a vehicle, “so
    long as that discretion is exercised according to standard criteria and on the basis
    of something other than suspicion of evidence of criminal 
    activity.” 479 U.S. at 375
    . In so doing, “the Court implied, or simply accepted as inherent in the notion
    of caretaking functions, that a determination of the constitutionally required
    reasonableness of seizing a vehicle” and subsequently inventorying its contents
    “is dependent upon standardized criteria limiting police discretion.” Brown, ¶ 10,
    
    10 415 P.3d at 818
    .    In other words, the Court clarified that the existence of
    standardized legislative or departmental criteria constitutes a necessary condition
    of the community caretaking exception to the warrant requirement. 
    Id. While such
    criteria or policies need not be in writing, they must be in existence.
    People v. Gee, 
    33 P.3d 1252
    , 1257 (Colo. App. 2001).
    ¶21   Here, the officers seized and inventoried the Cadillac because, in the
    exercise of their discretion, they decided to impound it. But the People did not
    present any evidence at the motions hearing to establish that the officers did so in
    accordance with any written or oral standardized criteria or policies. In fact, the
    People did not introduce any evidence that such criteria or policies existed.
    Because the existence of standardized criteria or policies is a necessary condition
    of the community caretaking exception to the warrant requirement, we conclude
    that the seizure and subsequent inventory of the Cadillac were not reasonable and
    violated Allen’s constitutional rights under the Fourth Amendment.3
    3The People contend that there is no record support for a few of the district court’s
    factual findings related to its conclusion regarding the inventory search exception.
    Our analysis of this exception differs from the district court’s, see Moody v. People,
    
    159 P.3d 611
    , 615 (Colo. 2007) (noting that “appellate courts have the discretion to
    affirm decisions . . . on any basis . . . even though they may be on grounds other
    than those relied upon by the trial court”), and renders this claim irrelevant.
    11
    C. Protective Search for Weapons
    ¶22   The People also assert that the district court erred in rejecting their claim
    that the officers were entitled to conduct a protective search of the Cadillac’s
    passenger compartment. We are not persuaded.
    ¶23   In Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 24 (1968), the Supreme Court concluded that
    when an officer has a reasonable, articulable suspicion that an individual is armed
    and dangerous, he may conduct a pat-down search for weapons for the purpose
    of his protection and that of others in the surrounding area. The following year,
    the Court recognized that a suspect may harm an officer with a weapon even when
    the weapon is not on the suspect’s person and is instead in the area within his
    immediate control. Chimel v. California, 
    395 U.S. 752
    , 763 (1969), abrogated in part by
    Arizona v. Gant, 
    556 U.S. 332
    (2009), as recognized by 
    Davis, 564 U.S. at 229
    .
    Consequently, the Court in Chimel held that it is reasonable for an arresting officer
    to perform a protective search of the immediate area within an arrestee’s control.
    
    Id. ¶24 By
    the time 1983 rolled around, some fourteen years later, the Supreme
    Court had established that: (1) the protection of officers and others can justify
    limited searches for weapons when there is a reasonable belief that the suspect
    poses a danger; (2) roadside encounters between officers and suspects are
    particularly hazardous; and (3) a weapon in the area surrounding a suspect may
    12
    give rise to a safety risk. Michigan v. Long, 
    463 U.S. 1032
    , 1049 (1983). These
    principles, considered jointly, compelled the Court in Long to conclude that,
    during a lawful roadside encounter, an officer is entitled to conduct a protective
    search of the areas in a vehicle’s passenger compartment where a weapon may be
    placed or concealed, so long as the officer possesses an articulable and objectively
    reasonable belief that an occupant of the vehicle may be dangerous and may gain
    immediate control of a weapon. 
    Id. A furtive
    movement by an occupant of a
    vehicle during an investigatory stop can suffice to support a protective search of
    the passenger compartment. People v. Brant, 
    252 P.3d 459
    , 462 (Colo. 2011).
    ¶25   We have cautioned that the purpose of a protective search of the passenger
    compartment of a stopped vehicle “is not to discover evidence of crime”; rather,
    the purpose of such a search is to afford an officer the opportunity “to pursue an
    investigation without fear of violence.” Delacruz, ¶ 
    16, 384 P.3d at 353
    . It follows
    that the scope and character of a protective search must be reasonably related to
    the purpose of ensuring the safety of the officer and others who may be present.
    
    Id. at ¶
    14, 384 P.3d at 353
    .
    ¶26   Officer Vaughn’s protective search of the area around the Cadillac’s front
    passenger seat, which he conducted while Allen and Cross were still at the scene,
    was justified by Cross’s furtive movements and the information regarding the
    13
    possibility that Cross was carrying a handgun.4 But the question we confront is
    whether the officers were subsequently authorized to conduct a protective search
    of the passenger compartment of the Cadillac after Allen and Cross had left and
    walked into the hotel. Leaning heavily on Delacruz, the People argue that the
    answer is yes. In our view, though, Delacruz is distinguishable.
    ¶27    Delacruz involved a traffic stop in a Quality Inn parking lot. 
    Id. at ¶
    3,
    384 P.3d at 351
    . We concluded there that the circumstances the patrol officer faced
    during the stop gave him an objectively reasonable basis to check for weapons in
    the passenger compartment of the SUV Delacruz was riding in, even though
    Delacruz and the driver had been removed from the vehicle and Delacruz had
    been detained and handcuffed. 
    Id. at ¶
    ¶ 22, 
    24, 384 P.3d at 354
    –55. We reasoned
    that an officer’s physical control of a vehicle’s occupants “does not necessarily
    negate the threat to officer safety” because “a suspect can still break away from
    police control and retrieve [a] weapon, or, if the suspect is not ultimately arrested,
    he may access weapons if permitted to return to his car.” 
    Id. at ¶
    24, 384 P.3d at
    355
    .   Considering those possibilities, we held that the officer’s actions were
    justified. 
    Id. 4 Officer
    Vaughn limited his protective search to the area around the front
    passenger seat and did not include the rest of the passenger compartment.
    14
    ¶28     In stark contrast, when the officers conducted the search in question here,
    they had completed their investigation, issued a traffic citation to Allen, and
    allowed Allen and Cross to leave and walk into the hotel. All that remained was
    the towing of the Cadillac, which is what prompted the inventory search. Not only
    were Allen and Cross no longer at the location of the stop at that point in time,
    they weren’t even in the officers’ visible vicinity. They had been released and were
    no longer around. Indeed, after recovering the handgun, the officers had to go
    look for Allen to question him and they could not question Cross because he was
    gone.    Whatever danger the officers may have faced during this roadside
    encounter, it had clearly dissipated by the time they inventoried the Cadillac.
    ¶29     Moreover, some of the other circumstances that supported our decision in
    Delacruz are absent here. For example: Delacruz appeared to have been deceitful
    as to his identity; the investigatory stop took place in an area known to law
    enforcement for frequent criminal activity; the officer had already observed one
    weapon within the immediate reaching distance of one of the vehicle’s occupants
    before the protective search was conducted; and neither of the vehicle’s occupants
    had alerted the officer to the presence of that weapon when he questioned them
    separately. These circumstances paint a markedly different picture from the one
    depicted by the circumstances Officers Snyder and Vaughn were staring at when
    they inventoried the Cadillac.
    15
    ¶30      We conclude that after Allen and Cross were allowed to leave and walk into
    the hotel, the officers did not have an objectively reasonable basis to conduct a
    protective search of the passenger compartment of the Cadillac. Therefore, the
    district court correctly ruled that the People’s protective search argument lacked
    merit.
    D. Automobile Exception
    ¶31      Finally, the People take issue with the district court’s finding that the
    challenged search was not justified by the automobile exception. They contend
    that the officers had probable cause to believe that the Cadillac contained evidence
    of a crime—namely, a handgun. Though this may seem like a fairly debatable
    point at first glance, a closer examination convinces us to side with the district
    court.
    ¶32      The Supreme Court has made clear that, while the automobile exception
    requires probable cause, it “does not have a separate exigency requirement: ‘If a
    car is readily mobile and probable cause exists to believe it contains contraband,
    the Fourth Amendment . . . permits police to search the vehicle without more.’”
    Maryland v. Dyson, 
    527 U.S. 465
    , 466–67 (1999) (quoting Pennsylvania v. Labron,
    
    518 U.S. 938
    , 940 (1996)). “A police officer has probable cause to conduct a search
    when the facts available to him would warrant a person of reasonable caution in
    the belief that contraband or evidence of a crime is present.” Bailey, ¶ 20, 
    427 P.3d 16
    at 827 (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted) (quoting Florida v. Harris,
    
    568 U.S. 237
    , 243 (2013)). In analyzing probable cause, we consider “the totality of
    the circumstances.” 
    Id. (quoting Mendez
    v. People, 
    986 P.2d 275
    , 280 (Colo. 1999)).
    ¶33   “The probable cause standard does not lend itself to mathematical
    certainties and should not be laden with hypertechnical interpretations or rigid
    legal rules.” 
    Id. at ¶
    21, 427 P.3d at 827 
    (quoting People v. Altman, 
    960 P.2d 1164
    ,
    1167 (Colo. 1998)). Instead, we are required to “make a practical, common-sense
    decision whether a fair probability exists that a search of a particular place will
    reveal contraband or evidence of a crime.” 
    Id. (quoting Altman,
    960 P.2d at 1167).
    Thus, we have explained that probable cause is “based on factual and practical
    considerations of everyday life on which reasonable and prudent people, not legal
    technicians, act.” 
    Id. (quoting Mendez
    , 986 P.2d at 280).
    ¶34   While certain facts, considered alone, may not suffice to establish probable
    cause, “those same facts may support a finding of probable cause when considered
    in combination.” 
    Id. at ¶
    22, 427 P.3d at 827 
    (quoting Grassi v. People, 
    2014 CO 12
    ,
    ¶ 23, 
    320 P.3d 332
    , 338).      Even lawful circumstances, when considered in
    conjunction with one another, may “lead to a legitimate inference of criminal
    activity.” 
    Id. (quoting Altman,
    960 P.2d at 1171).
    ¶35   Applying these legal precepts, we concentrate attention on the totality of the
    relevant circumstances here:
    17
    • As Officer Snyder pursued the Cadillac at a slow speed in the hotel
    parking lot, he observed Cross duck his head down several times, so as
    to possibly hide something under his seat.
    • Allen did not immediately pull over and could not provide the Cadillac’s
    registration or proof of insurance.
    • Officer Snyder had been told by other officers in the days or weeks
    preceding the stop that Cross was possibly carrying a handgun.
    • Shortly after conducting a pat-down of Cross for weapons, Officer
    Vaughn found a live bullet under the front passenger seat of the Cadillac.
    • When asked if there were guns or illegal drugs in the Cadillac, Allen
    replied that he was a convicted felon and was not allowed to own a gun.
    The People posit that these circumstances gave the officers probable cause to
    believe there was a handgun in the Cadillac.             Were the analysis that
    straightforward, the People’s contention might possibly carry the day. But, as is
    often the case in the law, things are not as simple as they seem.
    ¶36   A handgun would only have been evidence of a crime if it had been in
    Allen’s possession. After all, Allen was admittedly a convicted felon who could
    not legally possess a handgun. But the record is barren of any evidence that Cross
    could not legally possess a handgun. Indeed, one of the officers admitted at the
    motions hearing that he had no indication that Cross was prohibited from carrying
    a handgun. Yet, Officer Snyder saw only Cross duck his head down to possibly
    hide something. Further, whatever Cross may have been attempting to conceal,
    he appeared to be storing it under his seat, not Allen’s seat, and Officer Vaughn
    18
    had already searched under Cross’s seat for weapons and had located none,
    though he had recovered a live bullet from that area. And, while Officer Snyder
    had been told in the preceding days or weeks that Cross was possibly carrying a
    handgun, no officer had received such information about Allen.
    ¶37   When we consider all the circumstances together and view them in a
    practical and common-sense manner, we reach the same determination the district
    court did: At the time of the officers’ inventory search, there was not a fair
    probability that the Cadillac contained evidence of a crime. Therefore, the district
    court correctly rejected the People’s automobile exception argument.
    V. Conclusion
    ¶38   We conclude that the district court did not err in granting Allen’s request to
    suppress the handgun and methamphetamine seized from the Cadillac.
    Therefore, we affirm its suppression order.
    19