State of Iowa v. Antonio Rayshaun Evans ( 2016 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 15-0616
    Filed September 28, 2016
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    ANTONIO RAYSHAUN EVANS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, David F.
    Staudt (motion to suppress) and Todd A. Geer (trial), Judges.
    Antonio Evans appeals the denial of his motion to suppress and
    subsequent drug-related convictions. AFFIRMED.
    Roger L. Sutton of Sutton Law Office, Charles City, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Bridget A. Chambers, Assistant
    Attorney General, for appellee.
    Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Vaitheswaran and Tabor, JJ.
    2
    DANILSON, Chief Judge.
    Antonio Evans was convicted of possession of cocaine with intent to
    deliver, a drug tax stamp violation, and possession of marijuana. He contends
    the two searches of his person followed by the detention and strip search that led
    to the discovery of drugs were unconstitutional and the evidence should have
    been suppressed. We conclude that only the challenge to the legality of the strip
    search was preserved on appeal and find it a lawful search incident to arrest.
    Therefore, we affirm the district court’s denial of Evans’ motion to suppress.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    On July 28, 2014, Antonio Evans was a passenger in a vehicle pulled over
    by Officers Nissen and Sullivan.        Officer Nissen recognized the vehicle’s
    occupants and knew the driver, Chantelle Bentley, had a revoked license. Also,
    while off duty two days prior, Officer Nissen had observed Evans driving—
    knowing Evans was without a valid license—and reported the incident to police
    dispatch at that time.
    Bentley and Evans’ vehicle pulled over twenty seconds after the officers,
    in an unmarked car, activated their lights and initiated the traffic stop. Officer
    Sullivan approached the vehicle on the driver’s side to talk with Bentley, and
    Officer Nissen approached Evans on the passenger’s side.            Officer Nissen
    immediately noticed the odor of burnt marijuana and Evans’ watery, glassy eyes.
    Officer Nissen asked Evans about the smell, and Evans admitted to smoking
    marijuana earlier in the evening.
    Based on the marijuana smell and Evans’ comments, Officer Nissen had
    Evans exit the vehicle to perform a search of Evans’ person. Another officer
    3
    searched the vehicle and found no drugs or drug paraphernalia. During this first
    pat-down of Evans, Officer Nissen found nearly $700.          Officer Nissen also
    noticed the strong smell of fresh marijuana emanating from below Evans’
    waistline and that Evans clenched his buttocks during part of the pat-down
    search. Another officer on the scene described the search:
    It was—like he [Officer Nissen] was wafting the waistline of his
    [Evans] pants, pulling them up and down. . . . As Officer Nissen
    was messing with the pants of Mr. Evans, I detected a very strong
    odor of unsmoked, raw marijuana coming from the waistline of Mr.
    Evans.
    Because of the smell and Evans’ behavior, Officer Nissen believed Evans had
    marijuana hidden in his buttocks or crotch region and performed another pat-
    down search. Still no drugs were found. At some point, Evans was handcuffed
    and read his Miranda rights. See Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 444-45
    (1966).
    Officer Nissen placed Evans, still handcuffed, in the back of the police car
    and sat next to him on the ride back to the police station. Officer Nissen testified
    that he told Evans he was being detained but “was not under arrest.” Instead, he
    “detained” Evans in order to go “down to the station for a strip-search.” At the
    station, Officer Nissen asked permission to conduct a strip search of Evans and a
    superior officer granted authorization. When Evans was asked to remove his
    underwear, he told the officer, “You got me.” The search within Evans’ buttocks
    area revealed a plastic bag containing crack cocaine and marijuana.
    Evans was charged with possession of cocaine with intent to deliver, in
    violation of Iowa Code section 124.401(1)(c) (2013); failure to affix a drug tax
    4
    stamp, in violation of section 453B.12; and possession of marijuana, in violation
    of section 124.401(5).
    Evans filed a motion to suppress, which was denied after a hearing. The
    court found Officer Nissen had probable cause to place Evans under arrest prior
    to the strip search.
    Evans’ case proceeded to a jury trial. He was found guilty as charged and
    was sentenced to a term of incarceration not to exceed thirty-one years.
    On appeal, Evans asserts the traffic stop and searches of his person were
    unconstitutional.      He claims that any evidence resulting from the stop and
    searches was illegally obtained because there was no search warrant or arrest
    and no probable cause or exigent circumstances to justify a warrantless search.
    II. Scope of Review.
    Because Evans’ challenge implicates his rights under the Fourth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 8 of the Iowa
    Constitution, our review is de novo. State v. Heminover, 
    619 N.W.2d 353
    , 356
    (Iowa 2000).
    This review requires us to independently evaluate the totality of the
    circumstances shown by the record.        State v. Lowe, 
    812 N.W.2d 554
    , 566
    (2012). Here, we consider both the evidence at the suppression hearing and the
    evidence at trial. See State v. Carter, 
    696 N.W.2d 31
    , 36 (Iowa 2005). “We are
    not bound by the district court’s determinations, but we may give deference to its
    credibility findings.” State v. Naujoks, 
    637 N.W.2d 101
    , 106 (Iowa 2001).
    5
    III. Error Preservation.
    The State argues Evans failed to preserve his challenge to the traffic stop
    and on-scene searches of Evans’ person. We agree Evans’ challenges to the
    “stop” and “double search” were not preserved for appeal. While these issues
    were raised before the district court, the court did not rule on these issues. Meier
    v. Senecaut, 
    641 N.W.2d 532
    , 537 (Iowa 2002) (“It is a fundamental doctrine of
    appellate review that issues must ordinarily be both raised and decided by the
    district court before we will decide them on appeal.” (emphasis added)); see also
    Lamasters v. State, 
    821 N.W.2d 856
    , 862 (Iowa 2012) (explaining error
    preservation allows the district court to avoid or correct an error and provides this
    court with an adequate record to review the errors purportedly committed); State
    v. Pickett, 
    671 N.W.2d 866
    , 869 (Iowa 2003). Evans did not seek an expanded
    ruling to address the legality of the stop and on-scene searches. See 
    Meier, 641 N.W.2d at 537-38
    . Therefore, the challenges to the stop and on-scene searches
    are waived. See 
    Pickett, 671 N.W.2d at 869
    (“[I]t is unfair to allow a party to
    choose to remain silent in the trial court in the face of error, taking a chance on a
    favorable outcome, and subsequently assert error on appeal if the outcome in the
    trial court is unfavorable.” (citation omitted)).
    Consequently, our review is confined to the legality of the strip search
    subsequent to Evans’ detention.
    The State also argues Evans failed to preserve his challenge to the strip
    search under article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution because he failed to cite
    the specific provision and the district court did not rule on it.      We find this
    unpersuasive. “When there are parallel constitutional provisions in the federal
    6
    and state constitutions and a party does not indicate the specific constitutional
    basis, we regard both federal and state constitutional claims as preserved.” King
    v. State, 
    797 N.W.2d 565
    , 571 (Iowa 2011) (citations omitted). Because the
    district court’s ruling, though sparse, indicates the court considered and ruled on
    the constitutional claim, we conclude Evans preserved his challenge under the
    Iowa Constitution. See 
    id. IV. Discussion.
    The issue before this court is whether the strip search of Evans violated
    his constitutional right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures. See
    U.S. Const. amend. IV; Iowa Const. art. I, § 8. Evans does not challenge the
    manner of the strip search but rather whether an exception to the warrant
    requirement existed. The search and seizure clause of the Iowa Constitution and
    the language of the Fourth Amendment are nearly identical, so cases interpreting
    the Fourth Amendment are persuasive on interpretations of the Iowa
    Constitution. State v. Hoskins, 
    711 N.W.2d 720
    , 725 (Iowa 2006).
    Any search conducted without a valid search warrant is per se
    unreasonable unless an established exception to the warrant requirement exists.
    State v. McGrane, 
    733 N.W.2d 671
    , 676 (Iowa 2007). Exceptions include: (1) a
    consent search; (2) a search based on probable cause and exigent
    circumstances; (3) a search of items in plain view; and (4) a search incident to a
    lawful arrest.    
    Naujoks, 637 N.W.2d at 107
    .       The State must prove by a
    preponderance of the evidence whether an exception applies. 
    Id. Any evidence
    obtained that violates the federal or state constitutional provisions against
    7
    unreasonable searches and seizures is inadmissible. State v. Christopher, 
    757 N.W.2d 247
    , 249 (Iowa 2008).
    Search Incident to Arrest. Here, the State claims the search at the police
    department was a lawful search incident to arrest in order to preserve evidence. 1
    The search-incident-to-arrest exception to the warrant requirement allows a
    police officer “to search a lawfully arrested individual’s person.” United States v.
    O’Connell, 
    408 F. Supp. 2d 712
    , 723 (N.D. Iowa 2005). Evans contends the
    search-incident-to-arrest exception is inapplicable because he was detained, not
    arrested.
    Our legislature has defined arrest as “the taking of a person into custody
    when and in the manner authorized by law, including restraint of the person or
    the person’s submission to custody.” Iowa Code § 804.5. The manner of arrest
    requires,
    A person making an arrest must inform the person to be
    arrested of the intention to arrest the person, the reason for arrest,
    and that the person making the arrest is a peace officer, if such be
    the case, and require the person being arrested to submit to the
    person’s custody, except when the person to be arrested is actually
    engaged in the commission of or attempt to commit an offense, or
    escapes, so that there is no time or opportunity to do so.
    
    Id. § 804.14.
    When an officer exceeds the scope of an investigatory stop, the detention
    may transform the initial stop into an arrest. State v. Bradford, 
    620 N.W.2d 503
    ,
    506 (Iowa 2000); see Centanni v. Eight Unknown Officers, 
    15 F.3d 587
    , 590-91
    1
    Alternatively, the State defends the search on grounds that it was based upon probable
    cause and exigent circumstances. This exception to the warrant requirement is not
    applicable due to our finding that a valid arrest took place.
    8
    (6th Cir. 1994); see also Peterson v. City of Plymouth, 
    945 F.2d 1416
    , 1419 (8th
    Cir. 1991).
    [I]t is clear that the line between an investigatory detention and an
    arrest is crossed “when the police, without probable cause or a
    warrant, forcibly remove a person from his home or other place in
    which he is entitled to be and transport him to the police station,
    where he is detained, although briefly, for investigative purposes.”
    
    Centanni, 15 F.3d at 590
    (citation omitted).
    Our supreme court recently reviewed when an arrest has occurred for
    purposes of our speedy indictment and speedy trial rules in State v. Wing, 
    791 N.W.2d 243
    , 247-49 (Iowa 2010). A vigorous dissent was filed in Wing, but it
    primarily related to the application of the speedy trial requirement to de facto
    arrests. 
    See 791 N.W.2d at 254-56
    (Cady, C.J., dissenting). The court in Wing
    concluded the notice provision in Iowa Code section 804.14 was significant
    unless the situation “is obvious to the arrestee that he or she is being arrested.”
    
    Id. at 249.
    The court stated,
    When an arresting officer does not follow the protocol for arrest
    outlined in section 804.14 and does not provide any explicit
    statements indicating that he or she is or is not attempting to effect
    an arrest, we think the soundest approach is to determine whether
    a reasonable person in the defendant’s position would have
    believed an arrest occurred, including whether the arresting officer
    manifested a purpose to arrest. Viewing the events surrounding an
    alleged arrest from this perspective is consistent with the way
    courts analyze whether a person has been seized for Fourth
    Amendment purposes.
    
    Id. We acknowledge
    Evans was detained by the police without a warrant,
    removed from a place in which he was entitled to be, and transported to a police
    station for investigative purposes.   The officers exceeded the bounds of the
    9
    investigatory stop, but Officer Nissen specifically informed Evans that he was
    being detained for a strip search and in fact was not under arrest.
    Prior to Wing we would have concluded Officer Nissen’s statement to
    Evans was not determinative. See State v. Turner, 
    630 N.W.2d 601
    , 607 (Iowa
    2001).     Rather, we would employ an objective test to determine whether a
    reasonable person in the subject’s position would have believed an arrest
    occurred. 
    Id. However, we
    interpret Wing to forego any objective test of what a
    reasonable person might believe—if the officer has specifically announced his or
    her intentions in respect to arrest.    And here, there is no dispute the officer
    informed Evans he was only being detained, not arrested.
    We acknowledge there is contrary authority concluding an officer’s
    statement at the scene does not change the objective analysis of the situation.
    For example, in United States v. Jackson, 
    377 F.3d 715
    , 717 (7th Cir. 2004), the
    court noted:
    Sapetti told him—even while slapping on the handcuffs—that he
    was not “under arrest” but was just being “detained” while more
    identity checking occurred. The officer’s language does not change
    the facts, however: there was probable cause to believe that
    Jackson had committed a crime, and he was (reasonably) taken
    into custody. It does not matter for current purposes what label the
    officer applied at the scene; analysis under the Fourth Amendment
    is objective . . . .
    But even if we have misconstrued the holding in Wing and must apply an
    objective analysis, we are not convinced the detention has been transformed into
    an arrest. We agree some of the facts strongly support a de facto arrest: Evans
    was handcuffed, read his Miranda warnings, placed in the back of a police
    vehicle, and taken to the police department. But no controlled substances were
    10
    found during the searches of the vehicle or individuals, nor any crime other than
    a traffic offense investigated or discussed.   We do not believe a reasonable
    person in Evans’ position would have believed the police restraint on his freedom
    amounted to an arrest when he was specifically informed he was not under arrest
    but rather being detained for a strip search and, at that point, no controlled
    substances had been found.
    Probable Cause. The warrant exception of a search incident to an arrest
    does not require that the arrest precede the search “if it is substantially
    contemporaneous with it, provided probable cause for the arrest existed at the
    time of the search.” State v. Peterson, 
    515 N.W.2d 23
    , 25 (Iowa 1994) (“Where
    [a] formal arrest followed 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.” (citation omitted)). Accordingly, we
    must determine if there was probable cause to arrest Evans at the time of the
    search and if his arrest was contemporaneous with the search.
    We first address the question whether probable cause existed to arrest
    because a search incident to arrest is only valid if there was a lawful arrest. An
    officer may make a warrantless arrest when there is a reasonable belief that an
    indictable public offense has been committed and a reasonable ground for
    believing the person to be arrested has committed it. Iowa Code § 804.7(3);
    State v. Freeman, 
    705 N.W.2d 293
    , 298 (Iowa 2005).           All of the evidence
    available to the police officer may be considered even though each factor might
    not support probable cause by itself. State v. Ceron, 
    573 N.W.2d 587
    , 592 (Iowa
    1997).
    11
    We find substantial evidence to support a finding of probable cause for
    arrest. Although the Iowa Supreme Court has not addressed such an issue, in
    United States v. Perdoma, 
    621 F.3d 745
    , 749 (8th Cir. 2010), the court found an
    officer had probable cause to arrest a suspect for marijuana possession when an
    odor of marijuana was determined to emanate from the specific person.            In
    
    Perdoma, 621 F.3d at 749
    , the court cited with approval United States v.
    Humphries, 
    372 F.3d 653
    , 659 (4th Cir. 2004), reaching the same conclusion. In
    Humphries, the court stated,
    While the odor of marijuana provides probable cause to
    believe that marijuana is present, the presence of marijuana does
    not of itself authorize the police either to search any place or to
    arrest any person in the vicinity. Additional factors must be present
    to localize the presence of marijuana such that its placement will
    justify either the search or the arrest. In the case of a search, when
    the odor emanates from a confined location such as an automobile
    or an apartment, we have held that officers may draw the
    conclusion that marijuana is present in the automobile or the
    apartment. But probable cause to believe that marijuana is located
    in an automobile or an apartment may not automatically constitute
    probable cause to arrest all persons in the automobile or
    apartment; some additional factors would generally have to be
    present, indicating to the officer that those persons possessed the
    contraband. See [Maryland v.] Pringle, 124 S. Ct. [795,] 800–01
    [(2003)] (holding that the presence of cocaine and a roll of money in
    the passenger area of an automobile gave officers probable cause
    to believe that the automobile’s occupants jointly committed the
    crime of possession of cocaine). Thus, if an officer smells the odor
    of marijuana in circumstances where the officer can localize its
    source to a person, the officer has probable cause to believe that
    the person has committed or is committing the crime of possession
    of 
    marijuana. 372 F.3d at 659
    (citation omitted).
    In this case, Officer Nissen localized the source of the marijuana smell to
    emanate to a specific person, Evans.         In trial testimony, Officer Nissen was
    asked: “[W]hat would you describe as far as the level of the smell of marijuana
    12
    that was coming from the defendant at that point? In what area of the defendant
    was it coming from?”     He responded, “It was inside the underwear of the
    defendant. While I searched his waistband the odor was intense to the point that
    I was 100 percent sure that he had marijuana down his pants.” The smell of
    burnt marijuana on Evans’ person, the scent of fresh marijuana coming from
    Evans’ undergarments, Evans’ statement he had smoked marijuana recently,
    and Evans’ behavior throughout the initial searches were sufficient to support
    probable cause for arrest. Probable cause need not rise to the level of proof
    required for conviction. State v. Horton, 
    625 N.W.2d 362
    , 365 (Iowa 2001).
    In respect to the second requirement—whether the arrest was
    contemporaneous with the search—after the marijuana and cocaine were found
    during the strip search, Evans was then informed by Officer Sullivan that he was
    being charged with possession with intent in respect to the cocaine, a drug tax
    stamp violation, and possession of marijuana.     We conclude the arrest was
    contemporaneous with the search.
    Because Officer Nissen arrested Evans and had probable cause for the
    arrest, the strip search performed after transportation to the police station was
    justified under the search-incident-to-arrest exception to the general warrant
    requirement rule. See Iowa Code § 804.30; State v. Gaskins, 
    866 N.W.2d 1
    , 15
    (Iowa 2015) (noting that a search incident to arrest remains a valid exception to
    article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution “when the arrested person is within
    reach of contraband and thus able to attempt to destroy or conceal it”); see also
    
    Bradford, 620 N.W.2d at 507
    .
    13
    Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s denial of Evans’ motion to
    suppress on grounds the strip search was a lawful search incident to arrest.
    AFFIRMED.
    Vaitheswaran, J., concurs; Tabor, J., dissents.
    14
    TABOR, Judge. (dissenting)
    I respectfully dissent. It is our job to “scrutinize closely those searches
    incident to arrest which involve inspections of or intrusions into the body.”
    See 3 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth
    Amendment § 5.3(c), at 216 (5th ed. 2012). The majority relies on the search-
    incident-to-arrest exception to the warrant requirement to uphold the district
    court’s denial of the motion to suppress. Because the officer assured Evans he
    was not under arrest, I do not believe the State may now rely on that exception to
    justify the strip search conducted after transporting Evans to the police station.
    Three Waterloo police cars arrived at the traffic stop of the Lexus SUV
    driven by Chantelle Bentley in the early morning hours of July 28, 2014. Evans
    was a passenger. Officer Mark Nissen testified they stopped Bentley because
    her license was revoked and because Officer Nissen had seen Evans, who also
    lacked a valid license, driving the vehicle the day before. After smelling burnt
    marijuana coming from the SUV, Officer Nissen “removed Evans from the
    vehicle, conducted a search of his person,” and “[w]hile searching him located a
    large sum of money.” Officer Nissen testified that while searching Evans “around
    his waistband area, [he] detected a very strong odor of fresh marijuana.” Officer
    Nissen further testified: “Evans began to flex his buttocks while searching him on
    the scene, which furthered my concerns that he had something in his pants.”
    As an initial matter, the majority uses the term “pat-down” to describe the
    roadside searches of Evans. But the record shows Officer Nissen conducted at
    least one full search of Evans, not just a pat-down. A pat-down is justified for
    officer safety if a suspect is considered armed and dangerous. Terry v. Ohio,
    15
    
    392 U.S. 1
    , 24 (1968); see also Sibron v. New York, 
    392 U.S. 40
    , 64 (1968).
    During a pat-down, an officer may only seize contraband if its incriminating
    nature is immediately apparent.       Minnesota v. Dickerson, 
    508 U.S. 366
    , 376
    (1993).
    Officer Nissen did not testify he considered Evans to be armed and
    dangerous, but rather, he believed Evans possessed marijuana, initially based on
    the smell of burnt marijuana coming from the car and his person and then from
    what the officer described as the smell of fresh marijuana coming from Evans’s
    underwear. The marijuana odors and Evans’s behavior during the search of his
    person prompted the officer to place Evans, who was already in handcuffs, in the
    back of the patrol car for a ride to the station.
    Because the district court’s ruling on the motion to suppress did not
    separately address the legality of the roadside searches, the majority holds
    Evans failed to preserve error on his challenge to them. While it is true Evans
    did not obtain a suppression ruling addressing those searches, the court cited his
    suspicious conduct during those searches (i.e., “flexing his buttocks”) as a
    contributing factor in deciding probable cause existed to place Evans under
    arrest even before finding any drugs.        Accordingly, we need to examine the
    propriety of those police interactions as part of our determination if the
    warrantless strip search was justified as a search incident to arrest.
    Officer Nissen testified he believed he had probable cause to arrest Evans
    for possession of marijuana: “I was 100 percent certain it was in his pants.” 2 But
    2
    When Officer Thomas Frein took the stand at the suppression hearing, he was less
    sure there was probable cause to arrest Evans for possession of marijuana before he
    16
    nevertheless Officer Nissen told Evans he was not under arrest but was merely
    being “detained.” Officer Nissen testified: “It was at that point when I Mirandized
    him that I was trying to talk to him to further the investigation or try to have some
    kind of admission or statement from him.” During the ride in the backseat of the
    squad car, the officer told Evans: “I’m giving you the opportunity to tell me about
    what’s down there. I know you at least have some high-grade marijuana down
    your pants.”
    It is troubling the officer would purposefully advise a suspect he was not
    under arrest in the hopes of obtaining admissions uninhibited by protections
    against self-incrimination afforded arrestees but later justify conducting a strip
    search of the suspect under the exception for searches incident to arrest. In my
    view, the State should not be able to have it both ways: claiming not to be
    making an arrest for purposes of the Fifth Amendment while at the same time
    claiming the suspect was “arrestable” for purposes of invoking the search-
    incident-to-arrest exception to the warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment.
    For police to search incident to arrest, it is not enough that the suspect is
    “arrestable.” See Knowles v. Iowa, 
    525 U.S. 113
    , 118–19 (1998) (reaffirming the
    “bright-line rule” of United States v. Robinson, 
    414 U.S. 218
    , 235 (1973), that
    “authority to conduct a full field search as incident to an arrest” depends on a
    custodial arrest rather than issuance of a citation in lieu of arrest); see also Cupp
    v. Murphy, 
    412 U.S. 291
    , 296 (1973) (upholding a limited search under suspect’s
    was transported to the station, saying: “That’s a tough question to answer. Believing
    that the marijuana was there without having retrieved it, I’d say there was enough—a
    reasonable suspicion to say there was marijuana in his underwear” but not probable
    cause.
    17
    fingernails as part of detention, but cautioning a full search under Chimel v.
    California, 
    395 U.S. 752
    , 763 (1969), would not have been justified without a
    formal arrest and without a warrant). The search-incident-to-arrest exception is
    viable only when the suspect has actually been arrested. Otherwise the ground
    for searching could be renamed the “search-incident-to-probable-cause-to-arrest
    exception.” See Butler v. United States, 
    102 A.3d 736
    , 746 (D.C. Ct. App. 2014)
    (Beckwith, J., dissenting); see also State v. Lee, ___ S.W.3d ___, ___, 
    2016 WL 2338427
    , at *7 (Mo. Ct. App. May 3, 2016) (agreeing with Butler dissent and
    holding warrantless search incident to arrest is not authorized when officers
    express no intention to arrest suspect). “To adopt the proposition that the search
    was valid because there was probable cause to arrest puts the cart before the
    horse.” People v. Evans, 
    371 N.E.2d 528
    , 531 (N.Y. 1977). An actual arrest is
    an essential requisite to a search incident to arrest. 
    Id. I recognize
    a valid search incident to arrest may precede the actual arrest;
    a search is reasonable if it is “substantially contemporaneous” with the arrest.
    See Rawlings v. Kentucky, 
    448 U.S. 98
    , 111 (1980). But the fruits of the search
    must not be necessary to support probable cause for the arrest. See 
    id. at 111
    n.6. Here, the majority decides Evans’s arrest was “contemporaneous with the
    search” because the police placed him under arrest after seizing the baggies of
    marijuana and cocaine from his underwear during the strip search. The lingering
    question is whether the police had probable cause to arrest Evans for possession
    of marijuana before they confirmed he did possess marijuana.
    The majority cites State v. Peterson for the proposition that “[w]here [a]
    formal arrest followed quickly on the heels of the challenged search” it was not
    18
    “particularly important that the search preceded the arrest rather than vice versa.”
    See 
    515 N.W.2d 23
    , 25 (Iowa 1994) (alterations in original) (quoting 
    Rawlings, 448 U.S. at 111
    ). But in Peterson, the court determined the defendant was under
    arrest for failure to have a driver’s license, not for possession of the cocaine he
    was in the process of swallowing when police searched his mouth. See 
    id. at 24.
    Here, Officer Nissen testified he did not arrest Evans on the night in question for
    failure to have a driver’s license the previous day. So the only offense for which
    the officers were arguably arresting Evans was possession of the raw marijuana
    that Officer Nissen believed he smelled around Evans’s waistband. And Officer
    Nissen affirmatively stated he had not arrested Evans for that offense during the
    transportation to the station. The fact Officer Nissen made a deliberate choice
    not to arrest Evans until after the strip search prevents justifying the strip search
    as incident to arrest. See 
    Evans, 371 N.E.2d at 531
    (“The State cannot have it
    both ways, they must choose. Here the police made a deliberate choice that the
    [undercover status of the buyer] was more important than the immediate arrest of
    the defendant and they must be bound by that choice.”).
    The majority also relies on two federal circuit cases—United States v.
    Perdoma, 
    621 F.3d 745
    , 749 (8th Cir. 2010), and United States v. Humphries,
    
    372 F.3d 653
    , 659–60 (4th Cir. 2004)—for the proposition that the odor of
    marijuana, the source of which can be traced to a particular person, provides
    probable cause for arresting that person for drug possession. This proposition
    has not yet been accepted by our supreme court. Our supreme court has held a
    trained officer’s detection of a sufficiently distinctive odor, by itself or when
    accompanied by other facts, may establish probable cause for a search. See
    19
    State v. Watts, 
    801 N.W.2d 845
    , 854 (Iowa 2011).            But “the inquiries about
    whether the facts justify a search are different from whether they justify a
    seizure.” See 
    Humphries, 372 F.3d at 659
    .
    Regardless of how our supreme court would decide this question, in the
    case before us, the Waterloo officers conducted the strip search as an
    investigatory tool to confirm their suspicion Evans possessed marijuana and not
    as an inspection of his person incident to placing him under arrest for possession
    of marijuana. The State’s revisionist treatment of the investigatory strip search
    as a search incident to arrest does not fit with the historical purposes of this
    warrant exception, namely to remove any weapons from the arrested person or
    to seize any evidence on the arrested person to prevent its concealment or
    destruction. See 
    Robinson, 414 U.S. at 235
    . The search could not be justified
    for officer safety because Evans was already handcuffed and transported to the
    station before the strip search. And the only evidence the officers sought to
    preserve was the drug evidence necessary to support probable cause for the
    arrest.
    Finally, the State raises an alternative argument that the strip search was
    justified on the existence of probable cause plus exigent circumstances. But the
    State does not delineate what exigent circumstances existed after the officers
    transported Evans to the police station that would have prevented them from
    obtaining a search warrant.
    Accordingly, I would reverse the district court’s denial of the motion to
    suppress.