UNITED STATES v. DAVID D. LEWIS , 2016 D.C. App. LEXIS 369 ( 2016 )


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  •                                District of Columbia
    Court of Appeals
    No. 13-CO-1456
    SEP 29 2016
    UNITED STATES,
    Appellant,
    v.                                                            CF2-10190-13
    DAVID D. LEWIS,
    Appellee.
    On Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia
    Criminal Division
    BEFORE: WASHINGTON, Chief Judge; and GLICKMAN, FISHER, BLACKBURNE-
    RIGSBY, THOMPSON, BECKWITH, EASTERLY and MCLEESE, Associate Judges.
    OPINION FOR THE COURT BY MCLEESE, Associate Judge; joined by
    GLICKMAN, FISHER, BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY and THOMPSON, Associate Judges.
    DISSENTING OPINION BY BECKWITH, Associate                        Judge;   joined   by
    WASHINGTON, Chief Judge; and EASTERLY, Associate Judge.
    JUDGMENT
    This case came to be heard on the transcript of record and the briefs filed,
    and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, and as set forth in the opinion
    filed this date, it is now hereby
    ORDERED and ADJUDGED that the matter on appeal is reversed and
    remanded for further proceedings.
    For the Court:
    Dated: September 29, 2016.
    Opinion by Associate Judge Roy W. McLeese.
    Dissenting opinion by Associate Judge Corinne Beckwith.
    Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the
    Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound
    volumes go to press.
    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 13-CO-1456
    9/29/16
    UNITED STATES, APPELLANT,
    V.
    DAVID D. LEWIS, APPELLEE.
    Appeal from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    (CF2-10190-13)
    (Hon. Robert I. Richter, Trial Judge)
    (Argued En Banc June 30, 2015                        Decided September 29, 2016)
    David B. Goodhand, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Ronald
    C. Machen Jr., United States Attorney at the time the brief was filed, and Elizabeth
    Trosman and Christian Natiello, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on the
    brief, for appellant.
    Joshua Deahl, Public Defender Service, with whom James Klein and Samia
    Fam, Public Defender Service, were on the brief, for appellee.
    Before WASHINGTON, Chief Judge, and GLICKMAN, FISHER, BLACKBURNE-
    RIGSBY, THOMPSON, BECKWITH, EASTERLY, and MCLEESE, Associate Judges.
    Opinion for the court by Associate Judge MCLEESE, joined by GLICKMAN,
    FISHER, BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY, and THOMPSON, Associate Judges.
    Dissenting opinion by Associate Judge BECKWITH, joined by WASHINGTON,
    Chief Judge, and EASTERLY, Associate Judge, at page 38.
    2
    MCLEESE, Associate Judge: The United States seeks review of the trial
    court‘s pretrial order suppressing evidence as fruit of an unlawful search under the
    Fourth Amendment. 
    D.C. Code § 23-104
     (a)(1) (2012 Repl.). We reverse and
    remand for further proceedings.
    I.
    The evidence presented at the suppression hearing indicated the following.
    At approximately 2 a.m. on June 16, 2013, United States Park Police Officer
    Michael Alto was driving on Ingraham Street NW when he saw appellee David
    Lewis driving a car with a non-functioning headlight. While following the car,
    Officer Alto determined that the car was registered to Mr. Lewis and that Mr.
    Lewis had a suspended license. Mr. Lewis drove a couple of blocks, pulled over
    into a parking spot, and started to get out of the car. Officer Alto pulled up and
    asked Mr. Lewis for his license and registration. Mr. Lewis opened the car door,
    enabling Officer Alto to see an open bottle of Patrón tequila in the center-console
    cup holder. The bottle was half full. Mr. Lewis‘s passenger, Brittney Gibbs, said
    that the bottle was hers. Officer Alto told Ms. Gibbs to bring him the bottle, which
    Ms. Gibbs did by walking around the car and handing the bottle to Officer Alto.
    3
    After confirming that Mr. Lewis‘s license had been suspended, Officer Alto
    put Mr. Lewis in handcuffs. Officer Alto did not smell any alcohol coming from
    Mr. Lewis or Ms. Gibbs. A second officer, Officer Brown, arrived on the scene,
    and Officer Alto asked her to search the car for additional open containers of
    alcohol. In Officer Alto‘s experience, ―the majority of times when there is a
    tequila or liquor type of beverage in a vehicle, they‘ll be drinking through cups.‖
    Similarly, in Officer Brown‘s experience, people very rarely drink directly out of
    Patrón bottles and instead usually use cups. The officers decided to search the car,
    both for additional evidence of the offense of possession of an open container of
    alcohol (POCA) and because it was possible that Ms. Gibbs could have been
    permitted to drive the car away afterward, and the officers therefore wanted to
    make sure that there was no additional alcohol or other contraband in the vehicle.
    At the time Officer Brown arrived, Ms. Gibbs was outside the vehicle,
    saying that she needed to go to the bathroom. Officer Brown told Ms. Gibbs that
    she could not leave. Officer Brown opened the driver-side door and smelled
    marijuana. Officer Brown found a cup containing liquid that smelled like alcohol
    on the floor of the front passenger seat, and Ms. Gibbs said that the cup was hers.
    4
    Officer Brown also found a loaded handgun and a box of ammunition in a bag on
    the back seat. Finally, Officer Brown found a cigarette containing a green plant-
    like substance in the passenger-side door.
    According to Officer Brown, Ms. Gibbs was not under arrest at the time the
    search of the car began. Once Officer Brown found the gun, she placed Ms. Gibbs
    in handcuffs. A subsequent search revealed a bag of marijuana in Ms. Gibbs‘s bra.
    Ms. Gibbs was arrested for POCA and possession of marijuana. Mr. Lewis was
    arrested for carrying a pistol without a license, possession of an unregistered
    firearm, possession of unregistered ammunition, and operating a vehicle with a
    suspended license.
    The trial court granted Mr. Lewis‘s motion to suppress evidence of the gun,
    the ammunition, and the marijuana, concluding that the officers did not have
    reasonable, articulable suspicion to search the vehicle for evidence of POCA. A
    division of this court concluded to the contrary that the officers had reasonable,
    articulable suspicion that there was evidence of POCA in the car. United States v.
    5
    Nash, 
    100 A.3d 157
    , 164-65 (D.C. 2014).1 The division further concluded that the
    search of the car was lawful as incident to Ms. Gibbs‘s arrest, even though the
    officers did not place Ms. Gibbs under arrest until after the search and it was not
    clear whether the officers had at the time of the search intended to arrest Ms.
    Gibbs. 
    Id. at 165-68
    . The en banc court granted rehearing limited to the question
    whether the search was lawful as incident to Ms. Gibbs‘s arrest. United States v.
    Lewis, 
    107 A.3d 603
     (D.C. 2015) (en banc).
    II.
    When reviewing a trial court‘s denial of a motion to suppress, we ―view the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party.‖ Bennett v. United
    States, 
    26 A.3d 745
    , 751 (D.C. 2011) (internal quotation marks omitted). We draw
    all reasonable inferences in favor of upholding the trial court‘s ruling. Milline v.
    United States, 
    856 A.2d 616
    , 618 (D.C. 2004). We review the trial court‘s legal
    conclusions de novo. United States v. Taylor, 
    49 A.3d 818
    , 819 (D.C. 2012).
    1
    Before the division, Mr. Lewis‘s case was consolidated with a factually
    unrelated case, United States v. Nash, No. 13-CO-1299. United States v. Nash,
    100 A.3d at 159-60. The division affirmed the trial court‘s suppression order in
    Mr. Nash‘s case. Id. at 162-64. The current proceeding before the en banc court
    involves only Mr. Lewis‘s case.
    6
    ―A search conducted without a warrant is per se unreasonable under the
    Fourth Amendment unless it falls within a few specific and well-established
    exceptions.‖ Taylor, 
    49 A.3d at 821
     (internal quotation marks omitted). Under
    one such exception, police officers may conduct a warrantless search of a vehicle,
    incident to an arrest, if they have reasonable, articulable suspicion to believe that
    the vehicle contains evidence of the offense of arrest. Arizona v. Gant, 
    556 U.S. 332
    , 351 (2009). The issue before this court en banc is whether such a search,
    which we will refer to as a Gant evidence search, is lawful if (a) the search
    precedes the arrest for the offense at issue; and (b) it is unclear whether the officers
    intended to arrest the suspect before conducting the search. Although the issue has
    not yet arisen with much frequency, as far as we are aware every court to have
    considered the issue has upheld the validity of such searches. See, e.g., State v.
    Fizovic, 
    770 S.E.2d 717
    , 720-22 (N.C. Ct. App. 2015) (Gant evidence search of
    suspect‘s car was lawful even though suspect was not arrested until after search
    and officer did not intend to arrest at time of search). The same issue has arisen in
    the context of other types of search incident to arrest, and the overwhelming
    weight of authority upholds the legality of such searches even when conducted
    before an arrest and in the absence of evidence that the officers subjectively
    intended to arrest the defendant at the time of the search. See, e.g., State v. J.J.,
    
    143 So. 3d 1050
    , 1052 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2014) (per curiam) (upholding search as
    7
    lawful incident to arrest where search preceded arrest and where officer explained
    search as based on officer safety; no indication that officer intended to arrest at
    time of search); People v. Nguyen, 
    854 N.W.2d 223
    , 232-34 (Mich. Ct. App. 2014)
    (police lawfully searched suspect‘s person incident to arrest, even though search
    preceded arrest and officers did not believe they had probable cause to arrest at
    time of search), appeal denied, 
    863 N.W.2d 327
     (Mich. 2015); State v. Sykes, 
    695 N.W.2d 277
    , 282-87 (Wis. 2005); Moffitt v. State, 
    817 N.E.2d 239
    , 246 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2004); United States v. Anchondo, 
    156 F.3d 1043
    , 1045 (10th Cir. 1998) (―In
    order to be a legitimate ‗search incident to arrest,‘ the search need not take place
    after the arrest. A warrantless search preceding an arrest is a legitimate ‗search
    incident to arrest‘ as long as (1) a legitimate basis for the arrest existed before the
    search, and (2) the arrest followed shortly after the search. Whether or not the
    officer intended to actually arrest the defendant at the time of the search is
    immaterial to this two-part inquiry.‖) (citations omitted). But see People v. Reid,
    
    26 N.E.3d 237
    , 239-40 (N.Y. 2014) (search of suspect‘s person was not lawful
    incident to arrest because, at time of search, suspect had not been arrested and
    officer had no intent to arrest suspect).
    We hold that a Gant evidence search is lawful if (a) the police have probable
    cause to arrest the suspect for an offense; (b) the suspect recently occupied a
    8
    vehicle; (c) the police have reasonable, articulable suspicion to believe that the
    vehicle contains evidence of the offense; (d) at the time of the search, the police
    have not released the suspect or issued the suspect a citation for the offense; and
    (e) the suspect‘s formal arrest for the offense follows quickly on the heels of the
    search.2
    A.
    We turn first to whether a Gant evidence search may precede the arrest of
    the suspect. The Supreme Court did not decide that question in Gant. In Rawlings
    v. Kentucky, 
    448 U.S. 98
     (1980), however, the Supreme Court addressed the same
    question in connection with the search of a defendant‘s person incident to arrest,
    stating that ―[w]here the formal arrest follow[s] quickly on the heels of the
    challenged search of [a suspect‘s] person, we do not believe it particularly
    2
    By upholding the legality of Gant evidence searches in the circumstances
    stated in text, we do not mean to imply that all other Gant evidence searches would
    necessarily be unlawful. For example, we express no view on the question whether
    an otherwise lawful Gant evidence search would be rendered unlawful if the
    suspect fled from the police after the search and before the police placed the
    suspect under arrest. On a separate point, the dissent asserts that we decide the
    case on a basis ―which neither party meaningfully briefed.‖ To the contrary, the
    parties extensively briefed the issues we decide.
    9
    important that the search preceded the arrest rather than vice versa.‖ 
    448 U.S. at 111
    . Although Rawlings refers to both ―formal arrest‖ and ―arrest,‖ 
    id.,
     the lower
    courts, including this court, have consistently understood the rule announced in
    Rawlings to apply without regard to any distinction between formal arrest and
    arrest. See, e.g., Millet v. United States, 
    977 A.2d 932
    , 935 (D.C. 2009) (―A search
    incident to arrest may precede the actual arrest if probable cause exists,
    independent of the search, to justify the arrest, and if the arrest follows quickly on
    the heels of the search.‖) (internal quotation marks omitted); United States v.
    Powell, 
    376 U.S. App. D.C. 30
    , 32-33, 
    483 F.3d 836
    , 838-39 (2007) (en banc)
    (―where police had probable cause to arrest before search, it was of no import that
    the search came before the actual arrest‖) (internal quotation marks omitted; citing
    cases).
    The Supreme Court in Rawlings did not explain its reasons for holding that a
    search incident to arrest may permissibly precede arrest, but the lower courts have
    identified at least three. First, permitting search to precede arrest will in some
    cases benefit innocent suspects, because if the results of the search negate probable
    cause or persuade the officer not to arrest, the suspect will be spared the greater
    intrusion and collateral consequences of an arrest. See, e.g., State v. Overby, 
    590 N.W.2d 703
    , 706 (N.D. 1999) (―[I]f the person searched is innocent and the search
    10
    convinces the officer that his reasonable belief to the contrary is erroneous, it is to
    the advantage of the person searched not to be arrested.‖) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Second, in cases in which arrest is inevitable, whether search precedes or
    follows arrest does not affect the degree of the intrusion on the suspect. 
    Id.
     Third,
    courts are reluctant to micromanage the precise order in which officers who have
    probable cause to arrest conduct searches and arrests, particularly given the safety
    and other tactical considerations that can be involved. See, e.g., Anderson v. State,
    
    553 A.2d 1296
    , 1301-02 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1989).
    Lower courts, including this court, have applied Rawlings broadly,
    upholding searches that preceded arrest in cases involving Gant evidence searches,
    searches to protect officer safety or prevent destruction of evidence, searches of a
    suspect‘s person, and searches of a vehicle. See, e.g., Powell, 376 U.S. App. D.C.
    at 33, 
    483 F.3d at 839
     (upholding search of car incident to arrest where suspect had
    not been arrested at time of search; ―Indeed, every circuit that has considered the
    question-save one-has concluded that a search incident to arrest may precede the
    arrest.‖) (citing cases); State v. Smith, 
    266 P.3d 1220
    , 1224 (Idaho Ct. App. 2011)
    (upholding Gant evidence search of car where suspect had not been arrested at
    time of search); Adams v. State, 
    815 So. 2d 578
    , 582 (Ala. 2001) (upholding search
    of person incident to arrest where suspect had not been arrested at time of search
    11
    but probable cause existed and arrest was ―sufficiently contemporaneous‖);
    Minnick v. United States, 
    607 A.2d 519
    , 525 n.11 (D.C. 1992) (search of purse
    taken from car lawful as search incident to arrest even though search preceded
    arrest; citing Rawlings); cf., e.g., Waters v. United States, 
    311 A.2d 835
    , 836 (D.C.
    1973) (―It is well settled, however, that a search or seizure may precede an arrest,
    provided the officer at that point already has probable cause to arrest the possessor
    of the items in question.‖).
    Mr. Lewis does not appear to dispute that a Gant evidence search can be
    lawful even if the search is conducted before arrest, as long as an arrest is under
    way. Some of Mr. Lewis‘s arguments, however, seem to imply more broadly that
    a completed arrest must precede a Gant evidence search. In any event, we hold
    that, as the Supreme Court concluded in Rawlings, it is sufficient that the arrest
    follows quickly after the search.
    Most broadly, Mr. Lewis relies on the Supreme Court‘s statements that ―[i]t
    is the fact of the lawful arrest that establishes the authority to search‖ incident to
    arrest. E.g., United States v. Robinson, 
    414 U.S. 218
    , 235 (1973). For several
    reasons, we do not understand this language to establish a rule that the arrest must
    precede a search incident to arrest. First, in the cases relied upon by Mr. Lewis the
    12
    Supreme Court was not actually addressing the question whether a lawful search
    incident to arrest must follow the arrest. See, e.g., Robinson, 
    414 U.S. at 234-35
    (holding that police may lawfully conduct full search of arrestee‘s person incident
    to arrest, even in absence of case-specific basis for search). Both the Supreme
    Court and this court have cautioned against treating such language as a dispositive
    holding. See, e.g., United States v. Debruhl, 
    38 A.3d 293
    , 298 (D.C. 2012) (―We
    have stressed, however, that stare decisis is never properly invoked unless in the
    decision put forward as precedent the judicial mind has been applied to and passed
    upon the precise question.‖) (internal quotation marks omitted); Porter v. United
    States, 
    37 A.3d 251
    , 265 n.20 (D.C. 2012) (―Questions which merely lurk in the
    record, neither brought to the attention of the court nor ruled upon, are not to be
    considered as having been so decided as to constitute precedents.‖) (quoting
    Webster v. Fall, 
    266 U.S. 507
    , 511 (1925)). Second, as previously noted, Mr.
    Lewis himself appears to concede that, despite the language upon which he relies,
    a completed arrest need not precede a search incident to arrest, as long as an arrest
    is under way. Third, interpreting that language to require an arrest to precede the
    search would contradict Rawlings.3
    3
    For similar reasons, we are unpersuaded by Mr. Lewis‘s reliance on language
    in Justice Scalia‘s concurring opinion in Thornton v. United States, 
    541 U.S. 615
    (2004), stating that permitting searches for evidence incident to arrest is justified
    because the ―fact of prior lawful arrest‖ distinguishes arrestees from society at
    (continued…)
    13
    On the last point, Mr. Lewis argues that the Supreme Court‘s statement in
    Rawlings is dictum. It is true, as Mr. Lewis points out, that the defendant in
    Rawlings did not argue in the Supreme Court that a lawful search incident to arrest
    must follow arrest. Brief and Reply Brief for Petitioner, Rawlings v. Kentucky, 
    448 U.S. 98
     (1980) (No. 79-5146), 
    1980 WL 339599
    , 339603.              Nevertheless, the
    Supreme Court‘s statement in Rawlings is now deeply entrenched in the law. It
    has been cited, and treated as a holding, in many lower-court decisions, including
    several decisions of this court. See, e.g., Minnick, 
    607 A.2d at
    525 n.11; United
    States v. Montgomery, 
    377 F.3d 582
    , 586 (6th Cir. 2004) (―[A]s the Supreme Court
    held in [Rawlings], the search-incident-to-a-lawful-arrest rule also permits an
    officer to conduct a full search of an arrestee‘s person before he is placed under
    lawful custodial arrest as long as the formal arrest follows quickly on the heels of
    the challenged search of his person and the fruits of that search are not necessary to
    sustain probable cause to arrest him.‖) (brackets, ellipses, and internal quotation
    (…continued)
    large and distinguishes searches for evidence of the crime of arrest from general
    rummaging. 
    541 U.S. at 630
    . Moreover, although the opinion for the Court in
    Gant did adopt the general approach advocated by Justice Scalia in his concurring
    opinion in Thornton, see Gant, 
    556 U.S. at 343-44
    , the opinion for the Court in
    Gant did not use the word ―prior‖ in stating its holding. 
    Id.
     On that point, we take
    our guidance from the opinion for the Court in Gant rather than the concurrence in
    Thornton.
    14
    marks omitted).    We have located no case in which a court has treated the
    statement as dictum. Moreover, well before the decision in Rawlings, the courts in
    this jurisdiction had adopted the principle that ―a search or seizure may precede an
    arrest, provided the officer at that point already has probable cause to arrest the
    possessor of the items in question.‖ Waters, 
    311 A.2d at
    836 (citing Bailey v.
    United States, 
    128 U.S. App. D.C. 354
    , 357, 
    389 F.2d 305
    , 307 (1967)). Taken
    together, these considerations preclude this court from disregarding the principle
    announced by the Supreme Court in Rawlings. Cf., e.g., State v. Rose, 
    19 A.3d 985
    , 1012 n.21 (N.J. 2011) (―Without exploring the intricate distinctions between
    dictum and language necessary to decision, we conclude that we must recognize
    the clear, direct, explicit, and unqualified statement of the Supreme Court.‖)
    (quoting Public Serv. Co. v. General Elec. Co., 
    315 F.2d 306
    , 310 n.6 (10th Cir.
    1963)); Majette v. New London Hous. Auth., No. X094CV0450000090S, 
    2005 WL 3112738
    , *5 (Conn. Super. Ct. Nov. 3, 2005) (although plaintiff argued that
    language from decision of Connecticut Supreme Court was dictum, ―the ‗dictum‘
    has become more or less entrenched as black letter law‖); Tony Andreski, Inc. v.
    Ski Brule, Inc., 
    475 N.W.2d 469
    , 473 (Mich. Ct. App. 1991) (Griffin, J.,
    concurring) (―While one could argue that the statements in [an earlier decision of
    the Michigan Supreme Court] were mere dicta, the doctrine is too firmly
    entrenched to be overruled by this intermediate appellate court.‖).
    15
    Somewhat more narrowly, Mr. Lewis argues that the Supreme Court‘s
    statement in Rawlings must be understood in context. Specifically, Mr. Lewis
    argues that an arrest was under way at the time of the search in Rawlings, and that
    Rawlings thus should not be read to authorize searches incident to arrest unless an
    arrest is at least under way. We conclude otherwise. Although it is not entirely
    clear what Mr. Lewis means by the term ―under way,‖ Mr. Lewis appeared to take
    the position at oral argument that an arrest is under way as long as, at the time of
    the search, the officers intend to transport the suspect to the police station for the
    purpose of charging the suspect with a crime, even if the officers have not
    communicated their intent in any way. On that view, the question whether an
    arrest was under way collapses into the question whether the officers subjectively
    intended to place the suspect under arrest. For reasons that we explain infra,
    however, we conclude that such an inquiry into officers‘ subjective intent is
    foreclosed by controlling decisions of the Supreme Court.
    Mr. Lewis also suggests in a footnote that the temporal flexibility provided
    by Rawlings should not be extended to Gant evidence searches. We disagree. As
    we have already noted, every court of which we are aware to have addressed the
    question has applied Rawlings to Gant evidence searches. See, e.g., Smith, 266
    16
    P.3d at 1224. Moreover, each of the justifications for the Rawlings rule applies to
    Gant evidence searches:      permitting such searches to precede arrest in some
    instances will benefit suspects, because the results of the search may lead to release
    rather than the arrest that otherwise would have occurred; as to suspects who are
    going to be both searched and arrested, the order of those events does not affect the
    degree of the intrusion; and tactical considerations may lead officers to reasonably
    prefer to conduct a Gant evidence search before completing an arrest.
    In sum, we hold that a Gant evidence search can be lawful even if the search
    precedes arrest.
    B.
    We turn next to the question whether the search in this case was lawful even
    though it is unclear whether, at the time of the search, the officers intended to
    arrest Ms. Gibbs. Based on controlling Supreme Court authority, we conclude that
    the search was lawful.
    The Supreme Court‘s ―Fourth Amendment cases have repeatedly rejected a
    subjective approach. Indeed, [the Supreme Court has] never held, outside limited
    17
    contexts such as an inventory search or administrative inspection, that an officer‘s
    motive invalidates objectively justifiable behavior under the Fourth Amendment.‖
    Fernandez v. California, 
    134 S. Ct. 1126
    , 1134 (2014) (citation, ellipses, and
    internal quotation marks omitted); see also, e.g., Ashcroft v. Al-Kidd, 
    131 S. Ct. 2074
    , 2080-81, 2083 (2011) (Supreme Court has ―rejected every request to
    examine subjective intent‖ in Fourth Amendment setting, with exception of (a)
    special-needs searches, (b) administrative searches, and (c) searches conducted in
    absence of individualized suspicion); Brigham City v. Stuart, 
    547 U.S. 398
    , 404
    (2006) (―An action is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment, regardless of the
    individual officer‘s state of mind, as long as the circumstances viewed objectively,
    justify the action.   . . .   The officer‘s subjective motivation is irrelevant.‖)
    (brackets, emphasis, and internal quotation marks omitted); Devenpeck v. Alford,
    
    543 U.S. 146
    , 154 (2004) (―As we have repeatedly explained, the fact that the
    officer does not have the state of mind which is hypothecated by the reasons which
    provide the legal justification for the officer‘s action does not invalidate the action
    taken as long as the circumstances, viewed objectively, justify that action. The
    Fourth Amendment‘s concern with ‗reasonableness‘ allows certain actions to be
    taken in certain circumstances, whatever the subjective intent. Evenhanded law
    enforcement is best achieved by the application of objective standards of conduct,
    18
    rather than standards that depend upon the subjective state of mind of the officer.‖)
    (brackets, citations, and internal quotation marks omitted).
    Gant evidence searches rest on particularized suspicion, because they
    require not only probable cause to arrest but also reasonable, articulable suspicion
    to believe that the vehicle to be searched contains evidence of the offense of arrest.
    Gant, 
    556 U.S. at 351
    . Under controlling Supreme Court law, the legality of such
    searches thus must be determined based on the objective circumstances, not on
    whether at the time of the search the officers subjectively intended to arrest the
    suspect. Cf. Peters v. New York, 
    392 U.S. 40
    , 66-68 (1968) (upholding search as
    lawful search incident to arrest; no direct evidence that officers subjectively
    intended to arrest suspect at time of search); 
    id. at 68-69
     (Douglas, J., concurring);
    
    id. at 70
     (Fortas, J., concurring); 
    id. at 79
     (Black J., concurring).
    We are not persuaded by Mr. Lewis‘s arguments to the contrary. First, Mr.
    Lewis argues that Gant evidence searches necessarily require inquiry into officers‘
    subjective intent, because the legality of such searches depends on the offense of
    arrest, which in turn depends on the subjective decision of a particular officer. The
    Supreme Court did not explain in Gant how courts should determine the offense of
    arrest for purposes of assessing the legality of a Gant evidence search. We need
    19
    not delve into that issue in the present case, because Mr. Lewis does not dispute
    that there was a prompt arrest for POCA. We do note, however, that it is not clear
    that the inquiry must be subjective in character. Cf., e.g., Devenpeck, 
    543 U.S. at 154
     (in determining whether there was probable cause to support arrest, courts are
    not limited to subjective grounds stated by officer). We thus do not understand
    Gant to have implicitly required a subjective inquiry into whether the officers
    intend to arrest at the time they conduct a Gant evidence search.
    Second, contrary to Mr. Lewis‘s contention, Knowles v. Iowa, 
    525 U.S. 113
    (1998), is consistent with an objective approach. In Knowles, a police officer
    stopped Mr. Knowles for speeding. 
    525 U.S. at 114
    . The officer issued Mr.
    Knowles a citation even though the officer could have arrested Mr. Knowles under
    Iowa law. 
    Id.
     The officer then searched Mr. Knowles‘s car, recovered a bag of
    marijuana and a pipe, arrested Mr. Knowles, and charged Mr. Knowles with drug
    offenses. 
    Id.
     The Supreme Court ruled that the officer had conducted an illegal
    ―search incident to citation‖ rather than a search incident to arrest. 
    Id. at 116-19
    .
    Knowles turned on two objective circumstances. First, at the time of the search at
    issue, the suspect had been issued a citation rather than arrested. Second, ―no
    further evidence of excessive speed was going to be found either on the person of
    the offender or in the offender‘s car.‖ 
    Id. at 118
    . The Knowles Court never
    20
    mentioned the officer‘s subjective intent and in no way suggested that the Court
    was adopting a novel exception to its general rule against consideration of
    subjective intent in determining the Fourth Amendment reasonableness of searches
    based on particularized suspicion.
    We recognize that, under an objective approach, officers who have probable
    cause to arrest for a minor crime for which they would not ordinarily make an
    arrest might be tempted to conduct a Gant evidence search and then decide,
    depending on the results of the search, whether in fact to arrest. On the other hand,
    under the approach advocated by Mr. Lewis, officers who want to conduct a Gant
    evidence search might be tempted to arrest suspects for petty crimes, when they
    would not otherwise have done so, in order to permit such a search. It thus is
    unclear that the approach advocated by Mr. Lewis would be more protective of
    suspects‘ interests. In any event, the Supreme Court has held that comparable
    ―concerns about improper motives and pretext do not justify subjective inquiries‖
    in the context of searches and seizures resting on particularized suspicion. Al-
    Kidd, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2082
    . For example, the Court held in Al-Kidd that federal
    officials had lawfully detained terrorism suspects under the federal material-
    witness statute even if those officials did not intend to call the suspects as
    witnesses, as long as there was an objective basis for the detention. 
    131 S. Ct. at
    21
    2082-84. And in Brigham City, the Court held that officers may enter a home, the
    most protected area under the Fourth Amendment, if they have a reasonable belief
    that someone is in danger inside, even if the officers‘ subjective intent is to gather
    evidence or arrest suspects rather than to provide aid. 
    547 U.S. at 405-06
    .
    In sum, we hold that the legality of a Gant evidence search does not depend
    on whether the officers intended to arrest the suspect at the time of the search at
    issue.
    C.
    Mr. Lewis makes four additional arguments, which we address in turn.
    First, Mr. Lewis relies on the Supreme Court‘s statements that ―an incident search
    may not precede an arrest and serve as part of its justification.‖ Sibron v. New
    York, 
    392 U.S. 40
    , 63 (1968). Under the approach we adopt, however, the search
    does not provide any part of the legal justification for the arrest. Rather, the arrest
    must be justified by preexisting probable cause.
    Second, Mr. Lewis argues that a search cannot be incident to an arrest if the
    search is the cause of the arrest. See State v. Funkhouser, 
    782 A.2d 387
    , 409 (Md.
    22
    Ct. Spec. App. 2001) (decision to arrest cannot be a ―consequence of what was
    found in the search‖). The Supreme Court, however, has never suggested such a
    principle. Moreover, such a principle would be inconsistent with the objective
    approach that the Supreme Court has required in contexts involving particularized
    suspicion.
    Third, Mr. Lewis argues that, because a search must be justified at its
    inception, it is impermissible for subsequent events to affect the lawfulness of a
    search. It is true that, under the approach we adopt, the admissibility of evidence
    obtained during a Gant evidence search may depend on events that take place after
    the search. But that is not unique to the current setting. For example, if officers
    executing a search warrant act within the warrant at first but then flagrantly exceed
    the scope of the warrant, all of the evidence seized may be subject to suppression.
    Cf., e.g., In re 650 Fifth Ave. & Related Props., No. 14-2027, 
    2016 WL 3913403
    ,
    *22 n.32 (2d Cir. July 20, 2016) (―[W]hen items outside the scope of a valid
    warrant are seized, the normal remedy is suppression and return of those items, not
    invalidation of the entire search, unless it is shown that those executing the warrant
    acted in flagrant disregard of the warrant‘s terms.‖) (internal quotation marks
    omitted); State v. Rindfleisch, 
    857 N.W.2d 456
    , 465 (Wis. Ct. App. 2014) (same).
    Thus, evidence obtained during a course of conduct that is lawful at its inception
    23
    can become inadmissible based on subsequent events. That is the situation with
    Gant evidence searches.     They are lawful at their inception if supported by
    probable cause to arrest and reasonable, articulable suspicion that evidence of the
    offense of arrest is in the vehicle being searched, but the evidence obtained in such
    searches may become inadmissible based on subsequent events.
    Finally, Mr. Lewis argues that his approach would give clearer guidance to
    law enforcement than the approach we adopt. We disagree. Mr. Lewis‘s approach
    raises many questions. At the most basic level, it is unclear when an arrest should
    be viewed as under way or what it would mean to require that the officers intend to
    arrest the suspect. On the latter topic, for example, it is unclear whether under Mr.
    Lewis‘s approach a Gant evidence search would be lawful if the police plan to
    transport the suspect to the station to then be released on citation. See generally
    
    D.C. Code § 23-584
     (b) (2016 Cum. Supp.) (authorizing certain officials to grant
    citation release to arrestees after appearance at law-enforcement agency). To take
    another example relating to a separate topic, it is unclear how Mr. Lewis‘s
    approach would be applied if different officers on the scene had different intents.
    In light of these and other similar questions, we conclude that Mr. Lewis‘s
    approach would not provide a significantly clearer framework for police than the
    objective approach that we adopt.
    24
    III.
    A.
    A central theme of the dissent is that permitting a search incident to arrest to
    precede formal arrest would contradict ―the traditional requirement of a completed
    formal arrest to justify a search.‖ Post at 72. The Supreme Court, however, has
    held that the search-incident-to-arrest exception contains no such requirement.
    Rawlings, 
    448 U.S. at 111
     (―Where the formal arrest follow[s] quickly on the heels
    of the challenged search of [a suspect‘s] person, we do not believe it particularly
    important that the search preceded the arrest rather than vice versa.‖).
    Notwithstanding the dissent‘s reservations about Rawlings, we are bound by
    Rawlings‘s holding. See generally, e.g., Mercer v. United States, 
    864 A.2d 110
    ,
    114 n.4 (D.C. 2004).
    As part of its implicit critique of Rawlings, the dissent states that the
    ―search-incident-to-arrest exception that existed at common law‖ was limited to
    25
    instances in which formal arrest preceded the search. Post at 49. That does not
    appear to be the case. The dissent cites no common-law authority holding or
    explicitly stating that a lawful search incident to arrest cannot precede the formal
    arrest. 
    Id.
     The Supreme Court has pointed out that the historical underpinnings of
    the search-incident-to-arrest doctrine are ―sparse.‖ United States v. Robinson, 
    414 U.S. 218
    , 230 (1973). But the Court in Rawlings relied on a number of decisions
    holding that a search incident to arrest can lawfully precede the arrest. Rawlings,
    
    448 U.S. at
    111 (citing, e.g., United States v. Brown, 
    150 U.S. App. D.C. 113
    , 114-
    15, 
    463 F.2d 949
    , 950-51 (1972) (per curiam) (approving search incident to arrest
    where officer, who had probable cause to believe defendant was in possession of
    narcotics, introduced himself and then searched defendant; no indication officer
    had seized defendant before search or intended to arrest defendant before search;
    ―Even though a suspect has not formally been placed under arrest, a search of his
    person can be justified as incident to an arrest if an arrest is made immediately
    after the search, and if, at the time of the search, there was probable cause to
    arrest.‖)). Although one can also find contrary decisions, the line of authority on
    which Rawlings relied reaches back nearly a hundred years. See, e.g., United
    States v. Gorman, 
    355 F.2d 151
    , 160 (2d Cir. 1965) (Friendly, J.) (dicta) (―We do
    not understand just what values would be served by a rule that would force the
    police to impose a justifiable restraint on the person as a condition to making a
    26
    search which, if fruitless, might cause them to decide against it; on the other hand,
    if the search does lead them to make an arrest for which reasonable cause
    previously existed, the search would seem ‗incident to arrest,‘ in any normal use of
    language, and the dilemma of seeking to justify the arrest by the search and at the
    same time to justify the search by the arrest is obviously not presented.‖) (citations
    and internal quotation marks omitted); People v. Simon, 
    290 P.2d 531
    , 533 (Cal.
    1955) (Traynor, J.) (in case where officer stopped defendant, searched defendant,
    found marijuana, and arrested defendant, court concluded that ―search [was] not
    unlawful merely because it precede[d] rather than follow[ed] the arrest‖); State v.
    McDaniel, 
    237 P. 373
    , 376 (Or. 1925) (―It is urged that the arrest followed, and did
    not precede, the search. In our opinion it is immaterial whether the arrest preceded
    or followed the search, if such acts were practically simultaneous, and if, in fact,
    the defendant was guilty of committing a crime in the presence of the officers for
    which he might have been arrested. In many instances it is dangerous for an
    officer to go through the formality of stating that the accused is under arrest, and
    the law does not require him to do so. It is oftentimes safer to act first and talk
    afterward.‖).
    The dissent also attempts to marginalize Rawlings by describing Rawlings as
    presenting ―rare circumstances‖ or ―unusual facts.‖ Post at 54-55 & notes 5-6, 62.
    27
    To the contrary, the issue presented in Rawlings arises with great frequency. Many
    published appellate decisions apply Rawlings to uphold searches conducted
    incident to, but before, arrest. See supra at 9-10. Although the dissent could be
    read to suggest that Gant indicated that lawful searches incident to arrest that
    precede formal arrest will be ―rare,‖ post at 55 note 6, in fact, Gant used the word
    ―rare‖ to describe one particular type of search incident to arrest: a justifiable
    search of a vehicle, to protect officer safety, occurring before an officer can
    adequately secure the suspect. 
    556 U.S. at
    343 n.4. Nothing in Gant suggests that
    it would be unusual for lawful searches incident to arrest generally, or Gant
    evidence searches specifically, to precede formal arrest.
    B.
    Although the dissent somewhat tentatively suggests that Rawlings is
    inapplicable to Gant evidence searches, post at 59-60, the dissent ultimately
    concludes more narrowly that, at a minimum, an arrest must be under way for a
    Gant evidence search to be lawful. Post at 56-59. We disagree.
    28
    The dissent correctly notes that Justice Scalia‘s concurrence in Thornton v.
    United States, 
    541 U.S. 615
     (2004), spoke in terms of searches incident to arrests
    that had already occurred. Post at 48-53. According to the dissent, this language
    reflects a considered judgment that evidentiary searches incident to arrest should
    be limited in conformity with the common-law rule that formal arrest must precede
    a search incident to arrest. 
    Id.
     Moreover, the dissent reasons, the Supreme Court
    in Gant adopted the reasoning of Justice Scalia‘s concurrence in Thornton. 
    Id.
    Therefore, the dissent suggests, Gant should be understood as implicitly precluding
    Gant evidence searches that precede formal arrest. 
    Id.
     Our analysis differs from
    that of the dissent in a number of respects.
    First, as we have already noted, supra at 24-26, there does not appear to
    have been a settled common-law rule that the formal arrest must precede a search
    incident to arrest. Second, the defendant in Thornton had been placed under
    formal arrest before the search at issue. 
    541 U.S. at 618
    . Justice Scalia thus had
    no occasion to address whether evidence searches incident to arrest may, in
    conformity with Rawlings, precede the formal arrest. Although Justice Scalia
    expressed his conclusion in terms reflecting the circumstances of Thornton, that
    cannot reasonably be understood to reflect a considered intent to implicitly carve
    out an exception to Rawlings. The dissent itself recognizes the applicable general
    29
    principle. Post at 57-58 (quoting Armour & Co. v. Wantock, 
    323 U.S. 126
    , 132-33
    (1944) (―It is timely again to remind counsel that words of our opinions are to be
    read in the light of the facts of the case under discussion. To keep opinions within
    reasonable bounds precludes writing into them every limitation or variation which
    might be suggested by the circumstances of cases not before the Court. General
    expressions transposed to other facts are often misleading.‖)). Third, Gant does
    not itself impose a requirement that Gant evidence searches must follow the formal
    arrest. In Gant too the defendant had been formally arrested before the search at
    issue, 
    556 U.S. at 336
    , so the Court had no occasion to consider the applicability of
    Rawlings. But the Supreme Court‘s language in Gant suggests that the Court in
    Gant understood and intended that Rawlings would continue to permit searches
    incident to arrest to be conducted before the formal arrest.          For example, in
    explaining the basis for Gant evidence searches, the Court states that in some cases
    ―the offense of arrest‖ -- not, as the dissent would have it, the fact of arrest -- ―will
    supply a basis for searching the passenger compartment of an arrestee‘s vehicle
    and any containers therein.‖        Gant, 
    556 U.S. at 344
    ; see also 
    id. at 335
    (―[C]ircumstances unique to the automobile context justify a search incident to
    arrest when it is reasonable to believe that evidence of the offense of arrest might
    be found in the vehicle.‖); 
    id.
     at 343 & n.4 (indicating that searches incident to
    arrest for safety purposes may be conducted before officers ―fully effectuate an
    30
    arrest‖). Fourth, we are doubtful that as a lower court we could appropriately infer
    that Gant implicitly intended to carve out an exception to the holding of Rawlings
    that searches incident to arrest may precede the formal arrest. See, e.g., Agostini v.
    Felton, 
    521 U.S. 203
    , 237 (1997) (rejecting proposition ―that other courts should
    ever conclude that [the Supreme Court‘s] more recent cases have, by implication,
    overruled an earlier precedent‖). Fifth, as we have already noted, supra at 6, every
    court of which we are aware to have decided the issue has held that Rawlings
    applies to Gant evidence searches.
    In light of the foregoing considerations, it is not surprising that the dissent
    itself does not appear to rest on the idea that Gant implicitly carved out an
    exception to Rawlings. Rather, the dissent primarily takes the view that at a
    minimum an arrest must be under way before a Gant evidence search may lawfully
    be conducted. Post at 56-59. That view does not withstand analysis.
    First, the Supreme Court in Rawlings suggested no such limitation. To the
    contrary, the Court stated its holding more broadly: it suffices if ―formal arrest
    follow[s] quickly on the heels of the challenged search.‖ 
    448 U.S. at 111
    . Second,
    the overwhelming weight of authority interprets Rawlings to permit searches
    31
    incident to arrest to precede the formal arrest, without any indication that arrest
    must in some sense be under way at the time of search. Supra at 6-7, 9-11, 13; see
    also, e.g., Brown, 150 U.S. App. D.C. at 114-15, 
    463 F.2d at 950-51
     (approving
    search incident to arrest where officer, who had probable cause to believe
    defendant was in possession of narcotics, introduced himself and then searched
    defendant; no indication officer had seized defendant before search or intended to
    arrest defendant before search). In contrast, there is virtually no support in the case
    law for the dissent‘s novel limitation on Rawlings. Third, the concept of an arrest
    being ―under way‖ is remarkably opaque. As previously noted, supra at 15,
    counsel for Mr. Lewis indicated at oral argument that an arrest is under way as
    long as the officers subjectively intend to make an arrest. On that view, the term
    ―under way‖ is simply another way of requiring a subjective intent to arrest. The
    dissent does not explain whether it agrees with Mr. Lewis that subjective intent to
    arrest suffices, or whether instead the dissent believes that officers must take some
    unspecified action objectively manifesting their intent to arrest before an arrest will
    be deemed under way. Post at 55-57. Given these fundamental uncertainties, we
    are not persuaded by the dissent‘s vague assurance that the term ―under way‖ is not
    ambiguous. Id. at 58. Relatedly, it is difficult to understand the dissent‘s assertion
    that Ms. Gibbs‘s arrest in this case was ―not under way—under any definition of
    the term—when the police searched Mr. Lewis‘s car.‖ Id. at 59. To the contrary,
    32
    at the time of the search, Ms. Gibbs had been seized, the police had probable cause
    to arrest her, and she was arrested promptly after the search. Her arrest thus can be
    understood to have been ―under way‖ in an ordinary sense of the term. Merriam-
    Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 1364 (11th ed. 2012) (defining ―under way,‖ inter
    alia, as ―in progress‖ or ―afoot‖). Finally, the dissent‘s conclusion that an arrest
    was not under way in this case necessarily rests on the view that a Gant evidence
    search is unlawful unless the police subjectively intend to arrest the defendant at
    the time of the search. As we have already explained, supra at 16-21, controlling
    Supreme Court authority forecloses such an approach. The search of the car in this
    case was based on particularized suspicion that the car contained evidence of a
    crime.   The Supreme Court has repeatedly and unequivocally held that such
    searches may not be invalidated on the basis of officers‘ subjective intent. Id. at
    16-17 (citing cases). The dissent‘s response to this controlling authority is to
    suggest that there may be an exception permitting consideration of subjective
    intent where ―the government wishes to deviate from objective, existing warrant
    exceptions.‖ Post at 72. For the reasons already stated, this case does not involve
    a ―deviat[ion] from objective, existing warrant exceptions.‖ In any event, the
    Supreme Court could not have been clearer: searches based on particularized
    suspicion may not be invalidated based on the officer‘s subjective intent. Given
    33
    our obligation to follow the holdings of the Supreme Court, we see no room for the
    dissent‘s approach.
    C.
    According to the dissent, upholding the legality of the search in this case
    will ―eviscerate[] the limits‖ imposed in Gant on searches incident to arrest, will
    permit ―rummaging at will‖ during searches ―untethered in every respect from an
    actual arrest,‖ ―asks almost nothing of police officers before they conduct a search
    of a car incident to arrest,‖ and ―invites‖ discriminatory law enforcement. Post at
    47, 41 (brackets omitted), 65, 69. These would be very serious objections if they
    were well founded, but they are not well founded.
    The Supreme Court in Gant precluded a particular type of search incident to
    arrest: searches justified neither by a need to protect officer safety nor by a
    particularized reason to believe that there would be evidence of crime in the area
    searched. E.g., 
    556 U.S. at 344
     (―Neither the possibility of access [to a weapon]
    nor the likelihood of discovering offense-related evidence authorized the search in
    34
    this case.‖). The search in the present case differs critically from the type of search
    precluded in Gant, because the search of the car in the present case rested on
    particularized reason to believe that the car contained evidence of the POCA
    offense.   Upholding the legality of the search in the present case in no way
    undermines Gant‘s rejection of suspicionless searches.         For the same reason,
    upholding the search in this case will not permit officers to ―rummag[e] at will.‖
    Post at 41. The Supreme Court used the term ―rummage‖ in Gant to refer to
    searches not based on particularized suspicion.       
    Id. at 345
     (permitting search
    ―when there is no basis for believing evidence of the offense might be found in the
    vehicle‖ ―implicates the central concern underlying the Fourth Amendment—the
    concern about giving police officers unbridled discretion to rummage at will
    among a person‘s private effects‖); see also, e.g., Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate
    Dictionary 1089 (11th ed. 2012) (defining ―rummage,‖ inter alia, as ―to engage in
    an undirected or haphazard search‖). Because it was based on reason to believe
    that the car contained evidence of POCA, the search in this case cannot reasonably
    be described as involving ―rummaging at will.‖ Post at 41 (brackets omitted).
    The search in this case occurred after Ms. Gibbs had been seized and at a
    time when the police had probable cause to arrest Ms. Gibbs for POCA. The
    search rested on particularized reason to believe that the car would contain
    35
    evidence of POCA. After the search, Ms. Gibbs was promptly arrested for POCA.
    Far from being ―untethered in every respect from an actual arrest,‖ post at 41, the
    search was very closely tethered to Ms. Gibbs‘s arrest. And far from ―ask[ing]
    almost nothing of police officers before they conduct a search of a car incident to
    arrest,‖ post at 65, Gant evidence searches, as we understand them, require both
    probable cause to arrest for an offense and particularized reason to believe that the
    vehicle that is searched will contain evidence of that offense.
    We turn finally to the dissent‘s view that upholding the legality of the search
    in this case will invite discriminatory law enforcement.          Post at 68-69.   As
    previously noted, many courts have upheld searches incident to arrest where the
    search preceded the formal arrest and where officers were not shown to have
    intended to arrest at the time of the search. Supra at 6-7. Nevertheless, the dissent
    has pointed to no evidence that such rulings have contributed to abusive or
    discriminatory law enforcement. Although the dissent cites materials describing
    discriminatory law-enforcement tactics, including the use of racial profiling and
    ―baseless[]‖ stops, post at 68 note 14, the dissent does not identify any material
    linking those problems to the particular issue in this case.
    36
    We share the dissent‘s more general concerns about discriminatory law
    enforcement. Post at 68-69. But the dissent fails to explain how the approach it
    favors would materially reduce the incentive to conduct searches of suspects whom
    officers would otherwise not be inclined to arrest. It is true, as the dissent states,
    that ―arrests consume law enforcement resources.‖ Post at 64. Because it is
    unclear what steps the dissent would require officers to take before searches would
    be permitted, supra at 35, it is unclear what practical consequences the dissent‘s
    approach would have. In any event, officers who wanted to conduct searches
    might well decide to devote the necessary additional resources. As we and other
    courts have noted, supra at 8-9, 29, the approach advocated by the dissent might
    well be worse for suspects in some circumstances than an approach that permits
    searches that precede formal arrest. In any event, whatever the possible policy
    implications of the various approaches, we conclude that binding Supreme Court
    doctrine precludes the approach advocated by the dissent.
    In sum, the dissent in our view rests on a novel and vague limitation of the
    Supreme Court‘s holdings in Rawlings and Gant.              Moreover, the dissent‘s
    approach is incompatible with the Supreme Court‘s repeated holdings that searches
    based on particularized suspicion may not be invalidated based on officers‘
    37
    subjective motivation or intent.      We therefore respectfully disagree with the
    dissent.
    IV.
    To reiterate, we hold that, under the applicable Supreme Court decisions, a
    Gant evidence search is lawful if (a) the police have probable cause to arrest the
    suspect for an offense, Maryland v. King, 
    133 S. Ct. 1958
    , 1970 (2013)
    (―[P]robable cause provides legal justification for arresting [a suspect], and for a
    brief period of detention to take the administrative steps incident to arrest. . . . The
    validity of the search of a person incident to a lawful arrest [is settled].‖) (internal
    quotation marks omitted); (b) the suspect recently occupied a vehicle, Gant, 
    556 U.S. at 343
    ; (c) the police have reasonable, articulable suspicion to believe that the
    vehicle contains evidence of the offense, id.; (d) at the time of the search, the
    police have not released the suspect or issued the suspect a citation for the offense,
    Knowles, 
    525 U.S. at 118-19
    ; and (e) the suspect‘s formal arrest for the offense
    follows quickly on the heels of the search, Rawlings, 
    448 U.S. at 111
    .
    In this case, Mr. Lewis does not dispute that the police had probable cause to
    arrest Ms. Gibbs for POCA. Ms. Gibbs was a recent occupant of the car. The
    38
    division has already ruled that the police had reasonable, articulable suspicion to
    believe that the car contained evidence of POCA, and the en banc court left that
    ruling undisturbed. Nash, 100 A.3d at 164-65; Lewis, 
    107 A.3d at 603
    . Ms. Gibbs
    had not been released or issued a citation at the time of the search. Finally, Mr.
    Lewis does not dispute that officers made a prompt formal arrest of Ms. Gibbs for
    POCA. We therefore reverse the trial court‘s order of suppression and remand for
    further proceedings.
    So ordered.
    BECKWITH, Associate Judge, with whom WASHINGTON, Chief Judge, and
    EASTERLY, Associate Judge, join, dissenting: By the time Officer Brown arrived at
    the scene on Ingraham Street, Officer Alto had already detained appellant David
    Lewis for driving with a suspended license, and Brittney Gibbs, Mr. Lewis‘s
    passenger, had already handed over and claimed ownership of the half-full bottle
    of tequila Officer Alto spotted in the car‘s center console. Though the officers had
    probable cause to arrest Ms. Gibbs for possession of an open container, they did
    not arrest her. They searched the car instead. Officer Alto was considering letting
    Ms. Gibbs drive the car away, so he wanted Officer Brown ―to check the vehicle
    39
    for other open containers of alcohol‖ and to ―make sure there‘s no other
    contraband in the vehicle.‖
    While Ms. Gibbs sat unrestrained on the police cruiser‘s bumper, Officer
    Brown opened the front passenger door and began her search. After she smelled
    marijuana, saw a plastic cup with alcohol in it on the floor, and found a marijuana
    cigarette in the passenger door handle, she kept searching. It was not until Officer
    Brown unzipped a Nike bag in the back seat and discovered a handgun that she
    decided to arrest Ms. Gibbs, who was still unrestrained and ―standing outside the
    car.‖ Officer Brown then conducted a true search incident to Ms. Gibbs‘s actual
    arrest, recovering ―a bag of marijuana that she had stuffed in her bra.‖
    The search of Mr. Lewis‘s car was not a search incident to arrest as this
    court or the Supreme Court has ever conceived of that exception to the warrant
    requirement.
    The search was not incident to Mr. Lewis‘s arrest: he was handcuffed at the
    time of the search and the police had no reason to think they would find evidence
    40
    of the offense of driving with a suspended license in the car. See Chimel v.
    California, 
    395 U.S. 752
    , 763 (1969) (identifying the rationales justifying the
    search-incident-to-arrest exception—disarming the suspect and securing evidence
    related to the offense of arrest that the suspect might destroy); Arizona v. Gant, 
    556 U.S. 332
    , 343 (2009) (holding that ―circumstances unique to the vehicle context
    justify a search incident to a lawful arrest when it is ‗reasonable to believe
    evidence relevant to the crime of arrest might be found in the vehicle‘‖) (citation
    omitted).
    Nor was the search somehow incident to Ms. Gibbs‘s eventual arrest. If
    anything, it was the officers‘ decision not to arrest Ms. Gibbs that gave rise to their
    need to search Mr. Lewis‘s car, because, as Officer Brown testified, Ms. Gibbs
    ―wasn‘t under arrest and the car wasn‘t impounded,‖ so ―she could have driven
    away‖ with contraband in the car. The search had nothing to do with disarming an
    arrestee or preventing her from destroying evidence related to an offense of arrest,
    see Chimel, 
    395 U.S. at 763
    , and it was only after the search turned up a gun that
    Officer Brown decided to arrest Ms. Gibbs after all.
    41
    Such an investigative search, untethered in every respect from an actual
    arrest, runs contrary to the basic Fourth Amendment principle that ―conducting a
    Chimel search is not the Government‘s right; it is an exception—justified by
    necessity—to a rule that would otherwise render the search unlawful.‖ Thornton v.
    United States, 
    541 U.S. 615
    , 627 (2004) (Scalia, J., concurring). Officer Brown‘s
    wait-and-see approach to Ms. Gibbs‘s arrest involved the type of ―rummag[ing] at
    will‖ that the Supreme Court has sought to protect against, see Chimel, 
    395 U.S. at 767
    , and this search of Mr. Lewis‘s car, ―conducted outside the judicial process,
    without prior approval by judge or magistrate,‖ was not reasonable under the
    Fourth Amendment, Katz v. United States, 
    389 U.S. 347
    , 357 (1967).
    And yet the majority opinion upholds Officer Brown‘s investigative pre-
    arrest search because, in its view, it is a ―Gant evidence search‖ that satisfies the
    majority‘s new five-part test governing the constitutionality of vehicle searches
    incident to arrest. Ante at 7-8. Under this test, a Gant evidence search is ―incident
    to arrest‖ and thus constitutionally permissible even where the search precedes the
    arrest for the offense at issue and even where it is clear the officers did not intend
    to arrest the suspect. Ante at 7-8. Because Ms. Gibbs was ultimately arrested, the
    majority concludes, Officer Brown‘s search of the car was a permissible search
    42
    incident to arrest, even though it was doubtful Officer Brown intended to arrest
    Ms. Gibbs before she found the gun.
    The majority justifies this reading of Gant—which neither party fairly
    anticipated would be the basis for resolving this case and which neither party
    meaningfully briefed1—largely on the ground that it has not found a case holding
    to the contrary. Ante at 6. That no court has held to the contrary, however, cannot
    justify crafting a new Gant rule that flouts the very premise of Gant and that
    transforms the search-incident-to-arrest exception into a search-incident-to-
    probable-cause-to-arrest exception to the warrant requirement. Such an exception,
    neither specifically established nor well delineated, cannot be squared with
    Supreme Court precedent or the Fourth Amendment.
    I.
    1
    In their briefs as in their respective statements of the issue presented for
    review, the parties focus on whether a Fourth Amendment search incident to arrest
    requires the government to prove more than just probable cause to arrest at the
    time of the search.
    43
    Arizona v. Gant is the beginning and end of the majority‘s analysis—
    specifically, the exception to the warrant requirement Gant recognizes in
    circumstances where officers stop a vehicle, arrest its occupant, and search the car
    for evidence of the offense of arrest. Given its reliance on Gant, then, the majority
    opinion is striking in two ways:       (1) in the extent to which the opinion, by
    upholding what amounts to an investigatory search that cannot be justified by the
    rationales underlying the exception to the warrant requirement it is invoking,
    repeats the same kind of mistake the Supreme Court in Gant sought to stop lower
    courts from making, and (2) in the extent to which the majority must stray from the
    very precepts of Gant‘s vehicle exception to apply it to the facts of this case.
    In Arizona v. Gant, 
    556 U.S. 332
     (2009), the Supreme Court set out to
    address a problem in Fourth Amendment doctrine that stemmed from its decision
    in New York v. Belton, 
    453 U.S. 454
     (1981). In Belton, the Court applied Chimel
    to the automobile context and held that when the police have lawfully arrested a
    recent occupant of a car they may search the passenger compartment ―as a
    contemporaneous incident of that arrest.‖ 
    Id. at 460
    . Applying the principles of
    Chimel, the Court predicated its decision on the ―generalization‖ that articles in the
    passenger compartment ―are in fact generally, even if not inevitably, within ‗the
    area into which an arrestee might reach in order to grab a weapon or evidentiary
    44
    items.‘‖ 
    Id.
     (quoting Chimel, 
    395 U.S. at 763
    ). Although the Court in Belton
    cautioned that its holding ―in no way alter[ed] the fundamental principles
    established in the Chimel case regarding the basic scope of searches incident to
    lawful custodial arrests,‖ id. at n.3, the Court in Gant acknowledged that in
    practice Belton searches had come to exceed their permissible scope under Chimel
    and were being conducted solely for investigative purposes, Gant, 
    556 U.S. at
    341–43.    On this expansive reading of Belton, vehicle searches would be
    authorized incident to every recent occupant‘s arrest even if the passenger
    compartment were not in the arrestee‘s reach at the time of the search.2 
    Id. at 343
    .
    The lower courts, in construing Belton so broadly, were ―treat[ing] the ability to
    search a vehicle incident to the arrest of a recent occupant as a police entitlement
    rather than as an exception justified by the twin rationales of Chimel.‖ 
    Id. at 342
    (quoting Thornton, 
    541 U.S. at 624
     (O‘Connor, J., concurring in part)).
    In seeking to curtail these investigative searches under Belton, the Supreme
    Court in Gant began by reaffirming the axiom that a warrantless search is ―per se
    unreasonable‖ absent justification under one of the ―few specifically established
    2
    As Justice Scalia observed in his Thornton concurrence, in some cases
    lower courts had upheld searches under Belton ―even when . . . the handcuffed
    arrestee has already left the scene.‖ Thornton, 
    541 U.S. at 628
    .
    45
    and well-delineated exceptions‖ to the warrant requirement. Id. at 338 (quoting
    Katz v. United States, 
    389 U.S. 347
    , 357 (1967)). One such exception, established
    by Chimel, is for searches of a suspect that are incident to the suspect‘s arrest and
    that are intended to ensure that the suspect does not have the ability to access
    weapons or destroy evidence. 
    Id.
     (citing Chimel, 
    395 U.S. at 763
    ). The Gant
    Court held that this Chimel exception, which had been impermissibly broadened
    for vehicle searches under Belton, authorized the search of a car incident to a
    recent occupant‘s arrest ―only when the arrestee is unsecured and within reaching
    distance of the passenger compartment at the time of the search.‖ Id. at 343. With
    this holding, the Court made clear that Chimel cannot be construed to authorize the
    investigative vehicle searches then being conducted under Belton. Id. at 347
    (―Construing Belton broadly to allow vehicle searches incident to any arrest would
    serve no purpose except to provide a police entitlement, and it is anathema to the
    Fourth Amendment to permit a warrantless search on that basis.‖). The Court also
    held that separate and apart from Chimel‘s two traditional justifications for the
    warrant exception, ―circumstances unique to the vehicle context justify a search
    incident to a lawful arrest when it is ‗reasonable to believe evidence relevant to the
    crime of arrest might be found in the vehicle.‘‖ Id. at 343 (quoting Thornton, 
    541 U.S. at 632
     (Scalia, J., concurring)).
    46
    The Gant Court then applied Chimel and the new vehicle exception to the
    facts of the case, in which Mr. Gant, after getting out of a parked car, was arrested
    for driving with a suspended license, handcuffed, and placed in the back seat of a
    police cruiser before officers searched his car and found a gun and cocaine. Id. at
    336. In the Court‘s view, the officers‘ search was unreasonable. Id. at 344. The
    two Chimel rationales for a search incident to arrest did not apply because Mr.
    Gant was handcuffed and secured in the back of a police car. Id. The rationale
    underlying the vehicle exception also did not apply, as there was no chance of
    finding evidence of the ―crime of arrest‖—driving without a license—in Mr.
    Gant‘s car. Id.
    No one here disputes that the police had probable cause to make an arrest for
    possession of an open container of alcohol (POCA). It is also undisputed that at
    the time of the search the police had not arrested Ms. Gibbs for POCA or for any
    other crime. Yet unlike in Gant itself, which explicitly allows only a search of a
    car for evidence ―incident to a lawful arrest‖ for a ―crime of arrest,‖ 
    556 U.S. at 343
     (emphasis added), the majority concludes that a Gant car search has a broader
    investigatory rationale that is implicated simply by probable cause to believe the
    suspect has committed an arrestable offense, not by the fact of arrest itself.
    47
    At the outset, the argument for expanding the Gant vehicle exception to
    searches incident to probable cause to arrest forgets the fundamental context in
    which Gant arose. The Supreme Court in Gant was intent on reining in the purely
    investigative searches that had been occurring under Belton, and to that end the
    Court expressly rejected the notion of a ―police entitlement‖ to search a car
    whenever a recent occupant has been arrested. Gant, 
    556 U.S. at 342
     (citation
    omitted). By permitting a search of the vehicle incident to probable cause to arrest
    as part of a Gant vehicle search, the majority interprets Gant as authorizing law
    enforcement to conduct a broad investigatory search of the vehicle before making a
    decision about whether to arrest. This reading of Gant eviscerates the limits the
    Court sought to impose on Belton car searches, and in fact would give the police
    more latitude to search than they had under lower courts‘ pre-Gant reading of
    Belton, which authorized a search incident to arrest only if there had been ―a lawful
    custodial arrest‖ and the search was ―a contemporaneous incident of that arrest.‖
    Belton, 
    453 U.S. at 460
    . We cannot fairly read Gant as professing to scale back
    Belton‘s investigatory searches while at the same time authorizing a search-
    incident-to-probable-cause-to-arrest exception that by definition invites such
    investigatory searches.
    48
    The majority‘s reading of Gant also ignores the principles underlying the
    vehicle exception, including, in particular, the exception‘s textual origins in Justice
    Scalia‘s concurrence in Thornton. Although this exception ―d[id] not follow from
    Chimel,‖ Gant, 
    556 U.S. at 343
    , the Court made clear that it was still a category of
    search incident to arrest, one whose rationale—securing offense-related evidence
    that might be found in the vehicle—is informed by the same concerns as those that
    inform the evidence-preservation rationale underlying Chimel. Like the traditional
    Chimel exception, then, this Gant vehicle search was in no way intended to
    authorize the type of open-ended investigative searches of which the Gant Court
    expressly disapproved in curbing Belton‘s excesses. Rather, the Gant search was
    conceived as a narrow exception that would allow the police to search a car for
    additional evidence of the crime for which the arrestee will be charged. This
    search was designed only to address ―circumstances unique to the vehicle
    context‖—a car that could be driven away from the scene with relevant evidence
    still inside. See id.; Wyoming v. Houghton, 
    526 U.S. 295
    , 304 (1999) (noting that
    ―in all car-search cases, the ‗ready mobility‘ of an automobile creates a risk that the
    evidence or contraband will be permanently lost while a warrant is obtained‖).
    The language in Gant adopting this vehicle exception was taken from Justice
    Scalia‘s concurrence in Thornton, 
    541 U.S. at 632
    . In Justice Scalia‘s view, even
    49
    in the absence of Chimel-like concerns, officers should be able to search a vehicle
    for evidence of a crime of arrest. On the facts of Thornton, where the police
    arrested Mr. Thornton on narcotics charges after finding marijuana and cocaine on
    his body in a lawful patdown, officers should also have been able to search his car
    for drugs, even though he was handcuffed and seated in a patrol car, with no access
    to weapons and no way of destroying any evidence.
    The reasons Justice Scalia gave for this position had everything to do with
    the fact of arrest. He made clear that the position was not novel or radical, but
    merely a reflection of the search-incident-to-arrest exception that existed at
    common law. Thornton, 
    541 U.S. at 629
    . He cited pre-Chimel cases from 1914
    through 1950 in which the Court had approved of searches for evidence ―relevant
    to the crime for which the suspect had been arrested.‖ 
    Id.
     In every one of these
    cases, a suspect had been formally arrested.3 Justice Scalia then quoted at length
    an 1872 common law treatise discussing the reasons for allowing such searches,
    calling such reasoning ―typical‖:
    3
    These cases include United States v. Rabinowitz, 
    339 U.S. 56
    , 58, 60–64
    (1950); Harris v. United States, 
    331 U.S. 145
    , 148, 151–52 (1947); Marron v.
    United States, 
    275 U.S. 192
    , 198–99 (1927); Agnello v. United States, 
    269 U.S. 20
    ,
    30–31 (1925); Weeks v. United States, 
    232 U.S. 383
    , 392 (1914).
    50
    The officer who arrests a man on a criminal charge
    should consider the nature of the charge; and, if he finds
    about the prisoner‘s person, or otherwise in his
    possession, either goods or moneys which there is reason
    to believe are connected with the supposed crime as its
    fruits, or as the instruments with which it was committed,
    or as directly furnishing evidence relating to the
    transaction, he may take the same, and hold them to be
    disposed of as the court may direct.
    
    Id.
     at 630 (citing 1 J. Bishop, Criminal Procedure § 211, p. 127 (2d ed. 1872)).
    ―There is nothing irrational,‖ Justice Scalia added, ―about broader police authority
    to search for evidence when and where the perpetrator of the crime is lawfully
    arrested,‖ and it is this ―fact of prior lawful arrest‖ that ―distinguishes the arrestee
    from society at large, and distinguishes a search for evidence of his crime from
    general rummaging.‖ Id. He even appeared to suggest that the police might in
    some sense be obligated to search for such evidence relevant to a charge of arrest.
    See id. at 632 (quoting Smith v. Jerome, 
    93 N.Y.S. 202
    , 203 (Sup. Ct. 1905) (―This
    right and duty of search and seizure extend, however, only to articles which furnish
    evidence against the accused.‖ (emphasis added))).
    Even as he endorsed these searches, Justice Scalia acknowledged that an
    evidence-gathering justification for a search is ―far less compelling‖ than a Chimel
    rationale, where ―officer safety or imminent evidence concealment or destruction is
    51
    at issue‖ and where ―officers should not have to make fine judgments in the heat of
    the moment.‖ 
    Id. at 632
    . Justice Scalia therefore indicated that the exception
    should be carefully circumscribed to apply only to ―relevant‖ evidence against the
    accused, and that the search of Mr. Thornton‘s car was legal because Mr. Thornton
    ―was lawfully arrested for a drug offense‖ and the police had reason ―to believe
    that further contraband or similar evidence relevant to the crime for which he had
    been arrested might be found in the vehicle from which he had just alighted and
    which was still within his vicinity at the time of arrest.‖ 
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    The reasoning of Justice Scalia‘s concurrence, upon which Gant exclusively
    relied in adopting an evidence-gathering search-incident-to-arrest exception, for
    the most part does not apply in the absence of a formal arrest. First, while a person
    who has been formally arrested undoubtedly has a lowered expectation of privacy
    in his body and effects, see, e.g., Maryland v. King, 
    133 S. Ct. 1958
    , 1978 (2013),
    the government cites no case, and we are aware of none, suggesting that a person
    the police have probable cause to believe committed an offense, but who has not
    yet been subject to arrest for that offense, has a lowered expectation of privacy on
    52
    that basis alone.4 Second, Justice Scalia‘s concurrence—and the common law
    exception it resurrects—makes reference to the right and duty of officers to collect
    relevant evidence against the accused. This right and duty arise presumably
    because formal arrest reflects an anticipation of formal charges and a formal
    criminal proceeding against the suspect. The very concepts of ―relevant evidence‖
    and the ―accused‖ presuppose a criminal proceeding of some kind. See, e.g., Am.
    Tobacco Co. v. United States, 
    328 U.S. 781
    , 787 (1946) (―The verdict in a criminal
    case is sustained only when there is ‗relevant evidence from which the jury could
    properly find or infer, beyond a reasonable doubt,‘ that the accused is guilty.‖
    (quoting Mortensen v. United States, 
    322 U.S. 369
    , 374 (1944))); Wheeler v.
    United States, 
    930 A.2d 232
    , 249 (D.C. 2007) (in cases ―where the evidence
    requires careful weighing, the need for unfettered jury adjudication is at its zenith,
    and requires that each juror have considered all relevant evidence and be firmly
    4
    In a footnote, the majority asserts that unlike Justice Scalia‘s statement in
    Thornton that the ―fact of prior lawful arrest distinguishes the arrestee from society
    at large,‖ Gant made reference only to searches as being incident to ―lawful
    arrest,‖ omitting the word ―prior.‖ Ante at 12 note 3. But Gant in no way
    purported to augment Justice Scalia‘s reasoning, much less to radically alter it by
    authorizing an evidence search incident to arrest that precedes the arrest. Gant‘s
    discussion of Justice Scalia‘s approach was brief and unequivocal; it adopted the
    approach and moved on. Reading Gant‘s omission of ―prior‖ in this way also
    appears at odds with the Gant Court‘s purpose of narrowing the search-incident-to-
    arrest exception to address the problems Belton engendered. If the Court had also
    intended to broaden the exception by authorizing a search without the predicate of
    an arrest, it would have said so.
    53
    convinced that there is no reasonable doubt as to the accused‘s guilt‖). The duty to
    collect relevant evidence against a person who officers have reason to believe will
    be formally accused of a crime has no meaningful application in a scenario in
    which officers objectively have probable cause to arrest but have chosen not to do
    so. Any argument that the common law would accommodate the type of search
    conducted in Mr. Lewis‘s case is in no way suggested by Gant, by the concurrence
    in Thornton, or by the cases and treatises Justice Scalia relied upon. To the
    contrary, these authorities all suggest that so novel an argument is at odds with the
    rationales underlying the common law exception.
    At bottom, the majority‘s argument under Gant—that a search of a car
    incident to probable cause to arrest is justified because the police might arrest the
    person—appears no stronger than the argument the Supreme Court rejected in
    Gant: that a search of a car incident to arrest under Chimel is justified even when
    the arrestee is already secured because the police might have conducted the search
    earlier. Both arguments assume that, ―one way or another, the search must take
    place.‖ Thornton, 
    541 U.S. at 627
    . Yet both arguments overlook the fact that
    searching without a warrant ―is not the Government‘s right; it is an exception—
    justified by necessity—to a rule that would otherwise render the search unlawful.‖
    
    Id.
    54
    II.
    The majority justifies allowing pre-arrest Gant vehicle searches incident to
    arrest on two main grounds: (1) that no Supreme Court precedent explicitly states
    the opposite—that pre-arrest Gant searches are impermissible—and (2) that
    requiring a formal arrest to be either completed or under way would contradict the
    Supreme Court‘s opinion in Rawlings v. Kentucky, 
    448 U.S. 98
     (1980). Ante at 9,
    12–13. But these justifications in turn get the warrant requirement backwards and
    derive from a strained reading of Rawlings that disregards Supreme Court
    precedent predicating the search-incident-to-arrest exception—whether under
    Chimel or Gant—on a formal arrest or perhaps, in rare circumstances like in
    Rawlings, an imminent and inevitable arrest.5
    5
    Contesting the notion that Rawlings presents ―rare circumstances,‖ the
    majority argues that ―the issue presented in Rawlings arises with great frequency‖
    and that ―[m]any published appellate decisions apply Rawlings to uphold searches
    conducted incident to, but before, arrest.‖ Ante at 27. But the fact that lower
    courts have cited Rawlings in trying to justify a search-incident-to-probable-cause-
    to-arrest rule does not mean that the facts of Rawlings—where officers were in the
    process of arresting the suspect but had not yet formally done so—arise with great
    frequency.
    55
    That no Supreme Court case explicitly holds that pre-arrest Gant searches
    are unconstitutional is true as far as it goes. But the Fourth Amendment does not
    give the police unfettered power to conduct searches and seizures unless judges tell
    them not to, and this court is not creating policing policy on a blank slate. Rather,
    we start from the premise that a warrantless search is per se unreasonable, subject
    only to exceptions that have been defined clearly by the Supreme Court. See
    Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 
    403 U.S. 443
    , 455 (1971) (general warrant
    requirement is ―subject only to a few specifically established and well delineated
    exceptions . . . [that] are jealously and carefully drawn‖ (internal quotation marks
    and citations omitted)). With the exception of Rawlings, the Supreme Court‘s
    cases on the search-incident-to-arrest exceptions of Chimel and Gant involve
    circumstances in which a formal arrest was completed and explicitly state the
    exception in terms of a search incident to a lawful arrest.6 In the absence of
    6
    The footnote from Gant that the majority cites in suggesting that the Court
    ―understood and intended that Rawlings would continue to permit searches
    incident to arrest to be conducted before the formal arrest,‖ ante at 29, makes clear,
    consistent with Rawlings, that certain pre-arrest searches would be permissible in
    the ―rare case‖ where an officer has not ―fully effectuate[d] an arrest.‖ Gant, 
    556 U.S. at
    343 n.4.
    56
    precedent establishing a broader exception, the warrantless search of Mr. Lewis‘s
    car is presumed unreasonable.7
    With respect to the majority‘s second justification for allowing pre-arrest
    searches, requiring that a completed or underway arrest precede a Chimel search is
    entirely consistent with Rawlings. In Rawlings, six police officers entered a house
    with an arrest warrant for a suspect and, not finding the suspect but spotting
    marijuana seed, detained the house‘s occupants, including Mr. Rawlings, for forty-
    five minutes, while two of the officers left to get a search warrant for the house.
    
    448 U.S. at 100
    . Later, the occupants were read their Miranda rights8 and a
    woman was ordered to empty her purse. 
    Id. at 100-01
    . When it became clear that
    the purse contained drugs, the woman turned to Mr. Rawlings and told him ―to
    take what was his.‖ 
    Id. at 101
    . Mr. Rawlings confessed that the drugs belonged to
    him, and the officers searched his person, finding $4,500 in cash and a knife, and
    then immediately placed him under formal arrest. 
    Id.
     In three sentences at the
    very end of its opinion, after addressing at length whether Mr. Rawlings had
    7
    That Gant was decided so recently also blunts the force of the majority‘s
    argument that pre-arrest Gant vehicle searches are permissible because the
    Supreme Court has never held them unconstitutional.
    8
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    57
    standing to challenge the search of his companion‘s purse, the Court rejected Mr.
    Rawlings‘s contention that the search of his person was not incident to a valid
    arrest, stating that ―[w]here the formal arrest follow[s] quickly on the heels of the
    challenged search of petitioner‘s person, we do not believe it particularly important
    that the search preceded the arrest rather than vice versa.‖ Id. at 111.
    This language in Rawlings reflects a commonsense acknowledgment that
    where a formal arrest is under way at the time a suspect‘s wingspan is searched, as
    it surely was on the facts of Rawlings, a hypertechnical insistence upon excluding
    evidence uncovered in such a search would unnecessarily constrain the discretion
    of law enforcement. The majority casts this reading of Rawlings as reflecting an
    ―implicit critique‖ of the case, ante at 24, but the opposite is true. Rawlings
    reaches the right result. The objective circumstances there—Mr. Rawlings was
    detained by four police officers for forty-five minutes while two other officers
    went to get a warrant—were such that there was never any question that Mr.
    Rawlings was going to be arrested at the time he was searched, and given that fact,
    the Court sensibly did not believe it ―particularly important‖ that the search
    preceded the ―formal arrest,‖ because such an arrest had already been set in
    motion. Read in light of these facts, Rawlings cannot be construed as endorsing
    pre-arrest Chimel searches where an arrest is not at least under way. See Armour
    58
    & Co. v. Wantock, 
    323 U.S. 126
    , 132–33 (1944) (―remind[ing] counsel that words
    of [the Court‘s] opinions are to be read in the light of the facts of the case under
    discussion‖ and that ―[g]eneral expressions transposed to other facts are often
    misleading‖).9 And while the majority suggests that it is unclear what such an
    ―underway‖ arrest means, ante at 15, the meaning is not ambiguous. If the arrest
    has not begun, there is no reasonable dispute that it is about to begin. It is
    9
    In suggesting otherwise, the majority observes that Rawlings ―relied on a
    number of decisions holding that a search incident to arrest can lawfully precede
    the arrest.‖ Ante at 25. But the cases cited in Rawlings do not endorse a search-
    incident-to-probable-cause-to-arrest exception to the warrant requirement, and they
    were wrongly decided if they do. The officers involved in those cases were
    conducting the searches with a conditional intent to arrest for the offense for which
    they had probable cause if the searches were fruitful. See, e.g., United States v.
    Brown, 
    463 F.2d 949
    , 950 (D.C. Cir. 1972) (where the officer‘s search was clearly
    intended to confirm or dispel that the envelope ―protruding from appellant‘s shirt
    pocket‖ contained narcotics—as the appellant‘s eyes were ―glassy,‖ he was
    behaving suspiciously in an area where the officer had ―frequently observed‖
    narcotics transactions, and the envelope was ―of the type in which [the officer] had
    found narcotics on previous occasions‖—the court upheld the search even though
    the suspect had ―not formally been placed under arrest‖ at the time the officer
    seized the envelope); Bailey v. United States, 
    389 F.2d 305
    , 307–09 (D.C. Cir.
    1967) (holding that where the government conceded that ―in law the arrest of the
    car‘s [occupants] took place at the time [the officer] approached the car, perhaps
    with gun drawn, and told appellants to sit still and keep their hands in plain sight,‖
    that officer could, as a search incident to arrest, confiscate a wallet that he saw on
    the car floor, even though he had not yet conducted the formal arrest). For this
    reason, and because the circumstances of those cases triggered no concerns about
    pretextual searches, the cases also do not control this case. See Wayne R. LaFave,
    Search and Seizure § 5.4 (a) (5th ed. 2012) (noting that it is ―particularly
    unsettling‖ to interpret Rawlings to permit pre-arrest searches where there is
    probable cause to arrest and ―when the offense for which pre-search probable
    cause existed was so trivial that it otherwise would likely have been ignored‖).
    59
    imminent and inevitable. The concept of an ―underway‖ arrest distills, in a word,
    the concern at the end of Rawlings.
    In any event, Ms. Gibbs‘s arrest was not under way—under any definition of
    that term—when the police searched Mr. Lewis‘s car. Officer Alto decided not to
    arrest Ms. Gibbs after confiscating the open bottle of tequila, and so Ms. Gibbs
    remained sitting unrestrained on the bumper of the police cruiser while Officer
    Brown searched the vehicle to see what other contraband she might find. Unlike in
    Rawlings, the circumstances here showed that Ms. Gibbs was unlikely to be
    arrested before Officer Brown found the gun at the end of her search. Officer
    Brown‘s investigatory search of the vehicle, with no arrest of Ms. Gibbs imminent
    or inevitable, bears little resemblance to the search incident to an underway arrest
    in Rawlings.
    Of course, this case involves a Gant vehicle search, and it is not clear that
    Rawlings applies at all in this context. For his part, Mr. Lewis argues that while
    concerns for officer safety may sometimes justify pre-arrest Chimel searches when
    the arrest is under way, those concerns are not present when the police conduct
    Gant vehicle searches. It may make sense not to stand on formalities when an
    60
    arrest is already under way and there is a real danger that the suspect might gain
    access to a weapon or destroy evidence, but the same beat-him-to-the-draw logic
    does not apply so clearly to searches of vehicles for evidence relevant to a crime of
    arrest. The majority‘s only direct response to this point—that other courts have
    applied Rawlings to Gant evidence searches, ante at 15-16—is less than
    compelling.
    Even if the Rawlings logic does apply to pre-arrest Gant searches, the
    resulting rule should then be that Gant vehicle searches incident to arrest are lawful
    only where a formal arrest is completed or under way. But the majority rejects this
    modest approach and suggests instead that under Rawlings, Gant vehicle searches
    should be permissible whenever officers have probable cause to arrest for an
    offense and where the vehicle may contain evidence of that offense (along with the
    majority‘s other conditions).
    Recognizing that the Supreme Court in Rawlings ―did not explain [the]
    reasons‖ of its fleeting analysis, the majority looks to other state court decisions
    and gleans from them three policy rationales that it says underlie Rawlings and that
    support a search-incident-to-probable-cause-to-arrest approach to Gant. Ante at
    61
    10, 16. But imported policy rationales cannot create a well-delineated exception to
    the warrant requirement where none exists. And in any event, the majority‘s
    policy grounds for a pre-arrest Gant exception fall short on the merits.
    As its first policy rationale, the majority asserts that a pre-arrest Gant search
    based on probable cause might benefit an innocent suspect if it negates such
    probable cause and leads to a decision not to arrest. Under a bright-line approach
    requiring a formal arrest to justify a search incident to arrest, the argument goes,
    the police will simply arrest more people, including some people they may not
    have arrested had they searched them first and found nothing incriminating.
    But determining how a search-incident-to-probable-cause-to-arrest rule
    would affect innocent suspects involves a series of complex empirical questions.
    The precarious assumptions that emerge from such an inquiry are not persuasive
    grounds for engaging in an otherwise counterintuitive interpretation of Supreme
    Court precedent to allow a search incident to arrest in the absence of an arrest.
    Indeed, while the majority cites State v. Overby, 
    590 N.W.2d 703
    , 706 (N.D.
    1999), for the proposition that ―if the person searched is innocent and the search
    convinces the officer that his reasonable belief to the contrary is erroneous, it is to
    62
    the advantage of the person searched not to be arrested,‖ ante at 10, the Overby
    court was itself divided in that regard. Chief Justice VandeWalle, joined by
    another justice, wrote that ―[t]he insult remains,‖ adding, ―[m]ore importantly,‖
    that
    the reality is that an officer who is suspicious may be
    subconsciously tempted to conduct a search before
    making the arrest with the expectation or hope that the
    search will produce such irrefutable evidence of the
    commission of a crime that a lack of probable cause to
    arrest prior to the search will be overlooked, or such
    suspicion as did exist will be viewed more favorably in
    light of the evidence discovered in the search if, in fact,
    there is evidence discovered.
    
    Id. at 708
     (VandeWalle, C.J., concurring specially).
    The majority‘s second policy rationale, that a pre-arrest Gant search adds no
    further intrusion where an arrest is already ―inevitable,‖ ante at 10, 16, may well be
    true. The difficulty, however, is in determining when an arrest is truly inevitable.
    Sometimes a set of unusual facts, like those in Rawlings, will objectively indicate
    the inevitability of an arrest at the time of a pre-arrest search. An approach that
    attempts to extract from Rawlings and Gant an administrable rule—that a search
    incident to arrest is legal only in the face of a completed or ―underway‖ arrest—
    provides a workable proxy for inevitability. The majority‘s proposed conditions to
    63
    the legality of a pre-arrest Gant search, in contrast, are not proxies for the
    inevitability of an arrest. The circumstances of the five-factor test—that officers
    have probable cause to arrest, that the suspect has just come from a car, that the
    police have reason to believe the car might contain evidence of the arrestable
    offense, that the police have not released the suspect or issued a citation, and that
    the suspect‘s arrest for the offense follows quickly on the heels of the search—in
    no way imply that the suspect inevitably would have been arrested for that offense.
    Indeed, there are strong indications that the officers had no intent to arrest Mr.
    Lewis or Ms. Gibbs for POCA, at least before their pre-arrest search uncovered
    evidence of more serious crimes.
    As to the majority‘s final policy rationale for pre-arrest Gant searches,
    courts do appear ―reluctant to micromanage the precise order in which officers
    who have probable cause to arrest conduct searches and arrests‖ in the context of a
    Chimel search where, as in Rawlings, the arrest is under way. Ante at 10. And the
    majority‘s citation on this point, Anderson v. State, 
    553 A.2d 1296
     (Md. Ct. Spec.
    App. 1989), says nothing beyond that unremarkable truism. See 
    id.
     (noting that it
    would be an ―absurdity‖ to require officers in a ―combat situation‖ right before
    arrest to ―lose critical seconds,‖ and lose the chance to ―beat[] his opponent to the
    64
    draw,‖ in order to ―say the operative words, you are under arrest‖).10 Requiring
    that an arrest be completed or under way is entirely consistent with judges‘
    concerns about micromanaging police.           This approach does not seek to
    micromanage the conduct of officers acting in what are often stressful situations,
    but rather to force these officers to verify at the front end that their searches are
    tethered to an actual arrest supported by probable cause, rather than mere general
    rummaging that may or may not lead to an arrest depending on what the officers
    find.   And because arrests consume law enforcement resources, predicating a
    search incident to arrest upon an actual arrest has the added benefit of prompting
    police officers to think more critically about whether the offense for which
    probable cause exists—and which provides the basis for the search—is serious
    enough to justify the costs associated with an arrest. Such an approach could also
    foster trust and respect between police officers and community members.11
    10
    The government argues in its brief that mere probable cause to arrest
    creates a combustible arrest situation because the suspect will know he is in
    trouble. In circumstances that are devoid of other objective indications of an intent
    to arrest, however, it is far from clear that a suspect would realize an officer has
    probable cause to arrest him. And that same logic could be used to justify a search
    incident to any traffic stop of a vehicle on the theory that reasonable suspicion to
    stop the vehicle creates a combustible stop situation.
    11
    Cf. U.S. Dep‘t of Justice, Investigation of the Baltimore City Police
    Department      8     (2016),   https://www.justice.gov/opa/file/883366/download
    (reporting that ―[i]n some cases, [Baltimore City Police Department] supervisors
    (continued…)
    65
    The majority‘s test, by contrast, asks almost nothing of police officers before
    they conduct a search of a car incident to arrest, and relies instead on a judicial
    officer‘s after-the-fact determination of probable cause to ensure the lawfulness of
    the search—a determination that will of course be made only if the suspect is
    arrested.   Requiring an underway or completed arrest—and accordingly a
    probable-cause-to-arrest determination—before searching a car provides an
    additional safeguard against abuses in one of the few circumstances where we
    allow the police to search a vehicle ―without prior approval by judge or magistrate‖
    in the form of a search warrant. See Coolidge, 
    403 U.S. at 454
    ; see also Riley v.
    California, 
    134 S. Ct. 2473
    , 2482 (2014) (recognizing that ―a warrant ensures that
    (…continued)
    have ordered officers to specifically target African Americans for stops and
    arrests,‖ that ―[t]hese failures [in policing] contribute to the large racial disparities
    in BPD‘s enforcement that undermine the community‘s trust in the fairness of the
    police,‖ and that ―BPD leadership has acknowledged that this lack of trust inhibits
    their ability to forge important community partnerships‖); U.S. Dep‘t of Justice,
    Investigation      of    the    Ferguson      Police    Department       5–6     (2015),
    https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/opa/press-releases/attachments/2015/
    03/04/ferguson_police_department_report.pdf (highlighting ―the lack of trust
    between the Ferguson Police Department and a significant portion of Ferguson‘s
    residents, especially African Americans,‖ and concluding that this ―distrust . . . is
    longstanding and largely attributable to Ferguson‘s approach to law enforcement,‖
    which ―results in patterns of unnecessarily aggressive and at times unlawful
    policing; reinforces the harm of discriminatory stereotypes; discourages a culture
    of accountability; and neglects community engagement‖).
    66
    the inferences to support a search are ‗drawn by a neutral and detached magistrate
    instead of being judged by the officer engaged in the often competitive enterprise
    of ferreting out crime‘‖ (quoting Johnson v. United States, 
    333 U.S. 10
    , 14
    (1948))).
    It is true that the conditions the majority places on pre-arrest searches avert
    some of the possible abuses. An officer could not, for example, simply pull over a
    motorist for an extralegal reason (such as his race) on the basis of probable cause
    for an arrestable but pretextual traffic offense like reckless driving, search his car
    for evidence of some other crime, and expect to have the search upheld. But
    despite the majority‘s insistence that its test will not lead to abuses because Gant
    evidence searches must rest on ―particularized suspicion,‖ ante at 18, 20–22, 32–
    36, the majority‘s approach does nothing to stop officers from searching a car if the
    arrestable but pretextual offense is something like POCA, where evidence of the
    offense may well be in the car, but where officers have no intent to arrest for the
    minor offense if they fail to find evidence of other crimes. In such a case, the fact
    that there is particularized suspicion to believe the car contains evidence of that
    offense provides no comfort to a citizen whom the police want to stop and search
    67
    for evidence of other unrelated crimes, using POCA as a pretext.12 See Wayne R.
    LaFave, Search and Seizure § 5.4 (a) (5th ed. 2012).           Under the majority‘s
    approach, moreover, an officer who does not intend to arrest but conducts a search
    anyway will inevitably look for evidence that will firm up probable cause or justify
    an arrest on grounds other than those that formed the basis of the probable cause—
    a consequence that, besides defying the rationale of a Gant search, will effectively
    lower the bar to probable cause and make investigative searches more common.13
    12
    The government contends that such concerns are unfounded because there
    is no evidence of abuse in the more than 25 years since Rawlings was issued. As
    an initial matter, not all courts have construed Rawlings to allow searches incident
    to probable cause to arrest. See, e.g., People v. Reid, 
    26 N.E.3d 237
    , 239 (N.Y.
    2014) (―It is irrelevant that, because probable cause existed, there could have been
    an arrest without a search. A search must be incident to an actual arrest, not just to
    probable cause that might have led to an arrest, but did not.‖); State v. Funkhouser,
    
    782 A.2d 387
    , 406 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2001) (―It is axiomatic that a search
    incident to lawful arrest is absolutely dependent on the fact of an actual arrest.‖).
    And even where courts have so construed Rawlings, we are aware of no data from
    1980 to the present indicating the absence of such abuses. Indeed, it is far from
    clear how such discriminatory pretextual searches would make their way into
    published judicial decisions in the first place. These searches will receive judicial
    scrutiny where they fortuitously uncover evidence of a more serious crime and thus
    lead to an arrest, but will not in the many cases in which the police find nothing of
    interest.
    13
    See supra note 10.
    68
    These concerns are by no means hypothetical and carry with them serious
    implications for disparate enforcement in policing practices.14 By allowing the
    police to conduct a search of a car in the absence of an underway or completed
    arrest based on probable cause to believe a specific offense has been committed,
    14
    See generally, e.g., Complaint, Wilkins v. Maryland State Police, No. 93-
    468 (D. Md. Feb. 12, 1993), http://www.clearinghouse.net/chDocs/ public/PN-
    MD-0003-0007.pdf. In this class-action lawsuit, Robert Wilkins, an African-
    American attorney who now serves as a federal appellate judge, successfully
    challenged the racial profiling practices of the Maryland State Police after the
    police baselessly stopped and detained him and three relatives and searched their
    car on a highway in Maryland because the police believed they fit the state‘s drug
    courier profile. The litigation exposed the prevalence of pretextual stops and
    ultimately led to a consent decree in which the Maryland State Police agreed to
    revise and update its policies and procedures against racial profiling, retrain its
    troopers on proper traffic stops, develop a Police-Citizen Advisory Committee to
    address ongoing concerns about racial profiling, as well as take other measures to
    combat this problem. See Consent Decree, Wilkins v. Maryland State Police, No.
    93-468 (D. Md. Apr. 22, 2003), http://www.clearinghouse.net/chDocs/public/ PN-
    MD-0003-0012.pdf; see also Baltimore Report, supra note 11, at 7 (noting that
    ―BPD stopped African-American [pedestrians] three times as often as white
    residents after controlling for the population of the area in which the stops
    occurred,‖ that ―African Americans accounted for 82 percent of all BPD vehicle
    stops, compared to only 60 percent of the driving age population in the City,‖ and
    that ―BPD searched African Americans more frequently during pedestrian and
    vehicle stops, even though searches of African Americans were less likely to
    discover contraband‖); Ferguson Report, supra note 11, at 4 (―Data collected by
    the Ferguson Police Department from 2012 to 2014 shows that African Americans
    account for 85% of vehicle stops, 90% of citations, and 93% of arrests made by
    FPD officers, despite comprising only 67% of Ferguson‘s population. African
    Americans are more than twice as likely as white drivers to be searched during
    vehicle stops even after controlling for non-race[-]based variables such as the
    reason the vehicle stop was initiated, but are found in possession of contraband
    26% less often than white drivers, suggesting officers are impermissibly
    considering race as a factor when determining whether to search.‖).
    69
    the majority‘s rule dispenses with an important mechanism—an arrest—that makes
    it harder for officers to target individuals because of race or ethnicity and conduct
    wide-ranging investigatory searches of their vehicles even though the officers have
    no intent to arrest at the start of the search. An arrest requirement does just the
    opposite: it ties permissible police conduct to the fact of an arrest, authorizing a
    Gant search of the vehicle only if ―evidence relevant to th[at] crime of arrest‖
    might reasonably be found inside. Gant, 
    556 U.S. at 343
    . In light of the well-
    publicized concerns about racial profiling in some major cities, see, e.g., Floyd v.
    City of New York, 
    959 F. Supp. 2d 540
     (S.D.N.Y. 2013), keeping the focus on the
    arrest properly mitigates a risk that the majority‘s approach actually invites—that
    officers will use an arrestable offense as a pretext to rummage through the cars of
    people from marginalized communities in order to look for evidence of other
    crimes.
    III.
    In its final argument in favor of broadly construing Rawlings to implicitly
    allow pre-arrest Gant searches, the majority contends that any alternative
    approach, such as a rule that Gant searches are permissible only if a formal arrest
    70
    is completed or under way, would inevitably require an inquiry into the subjective
    motivations of the arresting officers—an inquiry the Supreme Court has
    discouraged in cases like Whren v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 806
     (1996). See ante at
    16–18. This argument pervades the section of the majority‘s opinion defending its
    conclusion that a pre-arrest Gant vehicle search is permissible even where the
    officers had no intention of executing a formal arrest.
    As a threshold matter, the approach most consistent with Gant and with
    Justice Scalia‘s Thornton concurrence—a bright-line rule that Gant vehicle
    searches are impermissible absent a completed formal arrest—would require no
    inquiry into the subjective intent of the officers. It is solely by virtue of the
    majority‘s insistence that the Rawlings logic apply to Gant searches that this
    question of subjective inquiry arises at all.
    And in any event, the majority misapprehends Supreme Court precedent like
    Whren and Ashcroft v. Al-Kidd, 
    563 U.S. 731
     (2011), in insisting that the Court‘s
    ―repeated[] reject[ion]‖ of ―a subjective approach,‖ ante at 16-17 (quoting
    Fernandez v. California, 
    134 S. Ct. 1126
    , 1134 (2014)), bolsters the conclusion
    that pre-arrest searches are permissible where officers subjectively do not intend to
    71
    arrest. As the Supreme Court made clear in Florida v. Jardines, ―those cases
    merely hold that a stop or search that is objectively reasonable is not vitiated by
    the fact that the officer‘s real reason for making the stop or search has nothing to
    do with the validating reason.‖ 
    133 S. Ct. 1409
    , 1416 (2013). Thus in Whren, the
    Court held that a traffic stop based upon probable cause for a traffic offense, even
    where the officer might have an invidious subjective motivation for the stop, is
    lawful under the Fourth Amendment.            Whren, 
    517 U.S. at 813
     (―Subjective
    intentions play no role in ordinary, probable-cause Fourth Amendment analysis.‖);
    see also Jardines, 
    133 S. Ct. at 1416
     (―defendant will not be heard to complain that
    although he was speeding the officer‘s real reason for the stop was racial
    harassment‖); Devenpeck v. Alford, 
    543 U.S. 146
    , 153 (2004) (―arresting officer‘s
    state of mind (except for the facts that he knows) is irrelevant to the existence of
    probable cause‖); Reid, 26 N.E.3d at 240 (―[Whren and Devenpeck] hold that a
    stop or arrest is valid where it is supported by the necessary level of suspicion or
    probable cause, whatever the actual motive for the officer‘s action.‖).
    But there is a difference between a defendant‘s delving into an officer‘s
    subjective intent to invalidate a search that is clearly otherwise legal under
    72
    objective, existing warrant exceptions15 and a defendant‘s insisting that, if the
    government wishes to deviate from objective, existing warrant exceptions, it
    should do so only where that subjective intent aligns with the rationales underlying
    such existing exceptions.     In a Whren-like situation, the government might
    reasonably be concerned that a valid traffic stop, objectively justified under well-
    established Supreme Court precedent, would be invalidated because of the vagaries
    of trial courts‘ credibility assessments about officers‘ subjective intentions in
    stopping a motorist.    But here, the search of Mr. Lewis‘s vehicle was not
    objectively justified under existing and well-established exceptions to the warrant
    requirement, and thus the concerns expressed in Whren and its progeny do not
    apply with equal force. It is the government, not the defense, that hopes to
    persuade the court to deviate from the traditional requirement of a completed
    formal arrest to justify a search.16 To do so, the government should have to show
    15
    See Brigham City v. Stuart, 
    547 U.S. 398
    , 403–06 (2006) (officers‘
    subjective motivations in entering a house were irrelevant where police were
    providing assistance under the emergency aid exception to the warrant
    requirement).
    16
    Counsel for the government actually appeared to concede at oral
    argument that the subjective intent of the officer will sometimes be relevant to
    determining the legality of a search when he acknowledged that he would not want
    the judge to exclude an officer‘s testimony that he had made a definite decision to
    arrest.
    73
    that the arrest was under way, even if that requires a subjective inquiry into officer
    intent.
    Any subjective inquiry into an officer‘s intent to arrest, moreover, would
    rarely require the type of extensive examination into an officer‘s state of mind that
    the Supreme Court has generally guarded against in the Fourth Amendment
    context.17 In the vast majority of cases involving searches incident to arrest, that
    an officer subjectively intended to arrest a suspect will be readily discernible based
    on the objective circumstances of the encounter. See, e.g., Jardines, 
    133 S. Ct. at
    1416–17 (analyzing whether officers had ―a purpose to conduct a search‖ based on
    what ―their behavior objectively reveals‖); Devenpeck, 
    543 U.S. at 154
     (arresting
    officer‘s ―subjective intent is always determined by objective means‖). Before Mr.
    Rawlings was ―placed [] under formal arrest,‖ for example, he was detained for
    forty-five minutes, was administered Miranda warnings, and had confessed to
    17
    Even if it did, at least one case binding on this court examined an
    officer‘s subjective intent in the form of his trial testimony in concluding that a
    search was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment. See White v. United
    States, 
    271 F.2d 829
    , 831 (D.C. Cir. 1959) (―According to the officer‘s own
    testimony . . . the search did not turn upon an arrest for vagrancy, and to attribute it
    to such an arrest would be to take an unrealistic view of the evidence. The arrest
    for vagrancy was incidental to the search, rather than the converse. . . . We have
    more than once excluded evidence obtained by a search which in truth was not
    incidental to an arrest, but when in fact the arrest was incidental to a search. This
    is such a case.‖ (citations omitted)).
    74
    possessing drugs found in a companion‘s purse—circumstances objectively
    indicating the officers‘ intent to arrest him. See Rawlings, 
    448 U.S. at
    100–01.
    The officers‘ intent to arrest was similarly evident in Millet v. United States, 
    977 A.2d 932
     (D.C. 2009), where, by the time the police searched Mr. Millet, officers
    had already lawfully recovered a bag of marijuana from his car, had arrested Mr.
    Fountain, the driver, for driving under the influence of marijuana, and had ―told
    Millet and Fountain that they would both be charged in connection with the
    marijuana found in the bag.‖ 
    Id. at 934
    .18
    18
    The majority relies heavily on broad statements from cases such as
    Devenpeck that subjective intent has no place in a Fourth Amendment setting. And
    yet the Supreme Court has expressly endorsed subjective inquiries into an officer‘s
    state of mind in certain Fourth Amendment contexts, including inquiries that seem
    very similar to the question of an officer‘s intent to arrest. In Murray v. United
    States, 
    487 U.S. 533
     (1988), for example, the Court held that under the
    independent source doctrine, an unlawful warrantless entry into a warehouse would
    not require suppression of evidence obtained during a subsequent warrant-based
    search of the warehouse if the government could establish (1) that the warrant was
    based on information independent of what the officers saw during the warrantless
    entry and (2) that the officers would have sought a warrant even if they had not
    previously entered the warehouse. 
    Id.
     at 541–43; see also 
    id. at 547
     (Marshall, J.,
    dissenting) (stating that the majority opinion in Murray ―makes the application of
    the independent source exception turn entirely on an evaluation of the officers‘
    intent‖); United States v. Jadlowe, 
    628 F.3d 1
    , 9–10 (1st Cir. 2010) (in
    independent-source case where officer testified that he ―would have sought a
    warrant even had the officers not seen the bricks of cocaine in the garage,‖ the
    court explained that the ―police officers‘ subjective intent to seek a warrant is a
    factual determination subject to clear error review‖); United States v. Restrepo, 
    966 F.2d 964
    , 972 (5th Cir. 1992) (explaining that ―the core judicial inquiry before the
    (continued…)
    75
    Of course, discerning an officer‘s subjective intent to arrest may in some
    cases prove less clear-cut, and officers may be understandably reluctant to subject
    themselves and the validity of their searches and seizures to the uncertainty of trial
    courts‘ credibility determinations.        In such instances, officers have a
    straightforward and objectively verifiable alternative available to them: they can
    make the arrest.
    IV.
    The rule the majority crafts for evaluating the constitutional validity of a
    pre-arrest Gant vehicle search is ostensibly narrow, but its five-part test cannot
    mask what is, at bottom, a profound departure from the essential moorings of the
    Supreme Court‘s well-established exceptions to the warrant requirement for both
    Chimel-style searches incident to arrest and Gant vehicle searches alike. The
    majority opinion is no mere application of Gant to a new set of facts. On the
    (…continued)
    district court on remand is a subjective one: whether information gained in the
    illegal search prompted the officers to seek a warrant to search [the residence]‖).
    76
    contrary, in upholding the pre-arrest search in this case under Gant even in the
    absence of any indication the police intended to arrest Ms. Gibbs before the search,
    the majority spurns Justice Scalia‘s unmistakable view that such an exception to
    the warrant requirement is justified by the ―fact of prior lawful arrest.‖ 
    541 U.S. at 630
    . The weakness of the majority‘s holding in this regard is underscored by its
    unsupportable and largely unexplained contention that the Gant Court, while
    expressly adopting the exception Justice Scalia proposed in Thornton, nevertheless
    rejected its analytic roots.
    There are undeniable costs to expanding existing exceptions to the warrant
    requirement beyond their well-established bounds. Most notably, investigative
    searches will become more commonplace. Such searches, as the Supreme Court
    has repeatedly emphasized, ―implicate[] the central concern underlying the Fourth
    Amendment—the concern about giving police officers unbridled discretion to
    rummage at will among a person‘s private effects.‖ Gant, 
    556 U.S. at 345
    . With
    its new anomalous conception of the Gant vehicle search, the majority opinion
    downplays this central concern, discarding a key limiting principle in the
    foundation of Gant itself that is designed to address precisely this problem—―the
    fact of prior lawful arrest.‖ Thornton, 
    541 U.S. at 630
    .
    77
    I respectfully dissent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-CO-1456

Citation Numbers: 147 A.3d 236, 2016 D.C. App. LEXIS 369, 2016 WL 5539892

Judges: Washington, Glickman, Fisher, Blackburne-Rigsby, Thompson, Beckwith, Easterly, McLeese

Filed Date: 9/29/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/26/2024

Authorities (52)

United States v. Lewis , 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 17 ( 2015 )

Bennett v. United States , 2011 D.C. App. LEXIS 507 ( 2011 )

Maryland v. King , 133 S. Ct. 1958 ( 2013 )

Devenpeck v. Alford , 125 S. Ct. 588 ( 2004 )

Rawlings v. Kentucky , 100 S. Ct. 2556 ( 1980 )

New York v. Belton , 101 S. Ct. 2860 ( 1981 )

Knowles v. Iowa , 119 S. Ct. 484 ( 1998 )

Fernandez v. California , 134 S. Ct. 1126 ( 2014 )

State v. Funkhouser , 140 Md. App. 696 ( 2001 )

Johnson v. United States , 68 S. Ct. 367 ( 1948 )

Waters v. United States , 1973 D.C. App. LEXIS 398 ( 1973 )

Marron v. United States , 48 S. Ct. 74 ( 1927 )

Benjamin E. White Alias William W. Blakey v. United States , 271 F.2d 829 ( 1959 )

Agostini v. Felton , 117 S. Ct. 1997 ( 1997 )

Florida v. Jardines , 133 S. Ct. 1409 ( 2013 )

Murray v. United States , 108 S. Ct. 2529 ( 1988 )

public-service-company-of-new-mexico-v-general-electric-company , 315 F.2d 306 ( 1963 )

Brigham City v. Stuart , 126 S. Ct. 1943 ( 2006 )

Coolidge v. New Hampshire , 91 S. Ct. 2022 ( 1971 )

Porter v. United States , 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 66 ( 2012 )

View All Authorities »