State of Missouri v. Derrick L. Carrawell ( 2016 )


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  •                 SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
    en banc
    STATE OF MISSOURI,                                 )
    )
    Respondent,                       )
    )
    v.                                                 )     No. SC94927
    )
    DERRICK L. CARRAWELL,                              )
    )
    Appellant.                        )
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF ST. LOUIS
    The Honorable Steven Russell Ohmer, Judge
    Opinion issued January 12, 2016
    Derrick Carrawell appeals his conviction of the class C felony of possession of a
    controlled substance. § 195.202. 1 A police officer searched a plastic grocery bag that
    Carrawell was holding after he was already handcuffed and seated in the police car and
    discovered heroin. Carrawell argues the circuit court erred and abused its discretion in
    overruling his motion to suppress evidence of the heroin because: (1) the State failed to
    show police had probable cause to arrest him for a peace disturbance, making the arrest
    unlawful, and (2) even if the arrest was lawful, the subsequent search of his plastic bag
    was unlawful. The circuit court's judgment is affirmed.
    1
    Statutory citations are to RSMo Supp. 2013.
    Factual and Procedural History
    In April 2012, four City of St. Louis police officers went to investigate complaints
    of increased gang activity in a particular neighborhood. While the officers were speaking
    with several neighborhood residents outside an apartment building, Officer Curtis
    Burgdorf noticed a vehicle pull up nearby with the driver (Carrawell) staring at the
    officers for about 30 seconds before finally parking across the street. Carrawell then
    stepped out of the vehicle and, while staring at Officer Burgdorf, grabbed his crotch, spit
    in the officers' direction, and said, "What the fuck are you looking at, bitch?" Carrawell
    then went around to the passenger-side door of the vehicle, removed a white plastic
    grocery bag, and continued to utter vulgarities towards the officers.
    Noticing that Carrawell's language was bothering the group of neighborhood
    residents (which included a young girl), Officer Burgdorf approached Carrawell and
    notified him he was under arrest for peace disturbance. Carrawell, with plastic bag in
    hand, continued to walk away from the officer. Officer Burgdorf followed and, as
    Carrawell attempted to open an apartment door, grabbed ahold of Carrawell. A struggle
    ensued as Officer Burgdorf attempted to handcuff Carrawell and repeatedly asked him to
    drop the plastic bag. Eventually, Officer Burgdorf was able to rip the plastic bag from
    Carrawell's hands and it fell to the ground, producing a "breaking" sound. Officer
    Burgdorf then completed the handcuffing process, picked up the bag, and escorted
    Carrawell to the police car. Another struggle ensued while attempting to place Carrawell
    in the police car, at which point Officer Burgdorf set the plastic bag on top of the car's
    trunk. After securing Carrawell in the police car, Officer Burgdorf—for the first time—
    looked into the plastic bag. 2 Inside he discovered a broken ceramic plate and a smaller
    plastic bag containing a tan powder that Officer Burgdorf believed to be, and which was
    later confirmed to be, heroin.
    Carrawell was charged with the class C felony of drug possession. Prior to trial,
    he filed a motion to suppress evidence of the heroin arguing that neither the arrest nor
    search of his plastic bag was lawful. The circuit court held a hearing on the motion and
    subsequently overruled it.       The circuit court also overruled Carrawell's continuing
    objection, based on the reasons set forth in the motion to suppress, during trial. Carrawell
    was convicted and sentenced to 12 years' imprisonment. He then filed a motion for a new
    trial, which the circuit court also overruled. Carrawell now appeals, contesting the circuit
    court's ruling on his motion to suppress.
    Standard of Review
    "At a hearing on a motion to suppress, the state bears both the burden of producing
    evidence and the risk of nonpersuasion to show by a preponderance of the evidence that
    the motion to suppress should be overruled." State v. Grayson, 
    336 S.W.3d 138
    , 142
    (Mo. banc 2011) (internal quotations omitted).            "When reviewing the trial court's
    overruling of a motion to suppress, this Court considers the evidence presented at both
    2
    In its discussion of the facts, the concurring opinion asserts that Officer Burgdorf could not
    "reasonably bring [the bag] into the patrol car without knowing what was in it and (given the
    breaking sound when the bag was first dropped) what condition those contents were in." The
    record does not support this conclusion. At trial, Officer Burgdorf testified that he "overheard a
    breaking sound" when the bag fell to the ground. He further testified, "With his reluctance to let
    go of it or show me what was in there, I was concerned there may have been a weapon in there."
    There was no suggestion by Officer Burgdorf that he had any reason to believe the contents of
    the bag would have harmed the occupants of the patrol car while remaining in the bag.
    3
    the suppression hearing and at trial to determine whether sufficient evidence exists in the
    record to support the trial court's ruling." State v. Pike, 
    162 S.W.3d 464
    , 472 (Mo. banc
    2005). "The Court defers to the trial court's determination of credibility and factual
    findings, inquiring only whether the decision is supported by substantial evidence, and it
    will be reversed only if clearly erroneous." State v. Goff, 
    129 S.W.3d 857
    , 862 (Mo. banc
    2004) (internal quotations omitted). "By contrast, legal determinations of reasonable
    suspicion and probable cause are reviewed de novo." 
    Grayson, 336 S.W.3d at 142
    .
    Analysis
    Carrawell argues evidence of the heroin in his possession should have been
    suppressed because his arrest and the search of his plastic bag were unlawful under the
    Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 15 of the
    Missouri Constitution, both of which protect against unreasonable searches and seizures. 3
    "When evidence is obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment, the judicially
    developed exclusionary rule usually precludes its use in a criminal proceeding against the
    victim of the illegal search and seizure." Illinois v. Krull, 
    480 U.S. 340
    , 347 (1987).
    Carrawell asserts Officer Burgdorf did not have probable cause to arrest him for peace
    disturbance because Carrawell did not do anything calculated to provoke a "breach of the
    peace." He also asserts that the State failed to offer into evidence the city's peace
    disturbance ordinance under which Officer Burgdorf claimed to have arrested Carrawell.
    3
    This Court interprets the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and article I,
    section 15 of the Missouri Constitution to provide "the same guarantees against unreasonable
    search and seizures; thus, the same analysis applies to cases under the Missouri Constitution as
    under the United States Constitution." State v. Oliver, 
    293 S.W.3d 437
    , 442 (Mo. banc 2009).
    4
    He argues that, because a court cannot simply take judicial notice of a municipal
    ordinance, there was no definition of "peace disturbance" before the circuit court by
    which it could determine whether there was probable cause to arrest him for the crime.
    Carrawell also argues that, even if the arrest was lawful, the search of his plastic bag was
    unlawful because Carrawell had not abandoned the plastic bag and the search did not
    qualify as a search incident to arrest. He further asserts that the search could not be
    justified under the inventory-search exception because the State failed to produce
    evidence that the police department had standardized criteria or established routine for
    opening closed containers in an inventory search.
    Carrawell's Arrest Was Lawful
    "An arrest with or without a warrant requires probable cause, which simply means
    a knowledge of facts and circumstances sufficient for a prudent person to believe the
    suspect is committing or has committed [an] offense." State v. Heitman, 
    589 S.W.2d 249
    , 253 (Mo. banc 1979). Although Carrawell focuses on Officer Burgdorf's testimony
    that he arrested Carrawell for violating the city's peace disturbance ordinance, this Court
    need not determine whether there was probable cause to arrest Carrawell for peace
    disturbance. This is because there was certainly probable cause to arrest Carrawell for
    resisting arrest. See § 575.150.1(1) (stating that a person commits the crime of resisting
    arrest when the person knows or reasonably should know that a police officer is
    attempting to arrest the person and the person resists the arrest "by using or threatening
    the use of violence or physical force or by fleeing from such officer").
    5
    Here, there was testimony that when Officer Burgdorf told Carrawell he was under
    arrest, Carrawell kept walking away, and that when Officer Burgdorf caught up to
    Carrawell, Carrawell continued to try to pull away from the officer's grasp. Notably, it is
    no defense to resisting arrest "that the law enforcement officer was acting unlawfully in
    making the arrest." Section 575.150.4. In determining whether Carrawell committed the
    crime of resisting arrest, therefore, there is no need to determine whether Officer
    Burgdorf could have lawfully arrested Carrawell for peace disturbance under the facts
    presented. For such purpose, it only matters that Carrawell indeed resisted an arrest,
    lawful or not.    Because the evidence presented shows there was probable cause to
    conclude Carrawell resisted arrest, an arrest of Carrawell was lawful. 4
    The Search of Carrawell's Bag Was Not a Lawful Search Incident to Arrest,
    But the Exclusionary Rule Does Not Apply
    Because Carrawell's arrest was lawful, the next question is whether the search of
    his plastic bag was lawful. Warrantless searches are per se unreasonable under the
    Fourth Amendment, unless an "established and well-delineated" exception applies. Katz
    v. United States, 
    389 U.S. 347
    , 357 (1967). One such exception is a search incident to a
    lawful arrest. United States v. Robinson, 
    414 U.S. 218
    , 224 (1973). Incident to arrest,
    4
    This conclusion does not depend on which crime—peace disturbance or resisting arrest—
    Officer Burgdorf subjectively intended to arrest Carrawell. An officer's "subjective reason for
    making the arrest need not be the criminal offense as to which the known facts provide probable
    cause." Devenpeck v. Alford, 
    543 U.S. 146
    , 153 (2004). That is, "the fact 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." 
    Id. Although Officer
    Burgdorf may have intended to arrest
    Carrawell for peace disturbance, the circumstances that then arose, viewed objectively, justified
    an arrest based on Carrawell committing the crime of resisting arrest.
    6
    officers may lawfully search "the arrestee's person and the area 'within his immediate
    control'—construing that phrase to mean the area from within which he might gain
    possession of a weapon or destructible evidence." Chimel v. California, 
    395 U.S. 752
    ,
    763 (1969) (emphasis added).        Here, although there was a lawful arrest, Officer
    Burgdorf's first search of Carrawell's plastic bag occurred outside the police car, after
    Carrawell had already been handcuffed and placed into the back of the police car. Thus,
    the plastic bag was not within Carrawell's immediate control at the time of Officer
    Burgdorf's search.   However, the court of appeals has previously indicated that an
    arrestee's personal effects (e.g., a purse or backpack) may be searched even when they are
    not within the immediate control of the arrestee because such a search qualifies as a
    search of the person—i.e., the personal effects are part of the person. See, e.g., State v.
    Ellis, 
    355 S.W.3d 522
    , 524 (Mo. App. 2011); State v. Rattler, 
    639 S.W.2d 277
    , 278 (Mo.
    App. 1982). This reasoning is based on a misunderstanding of law and should no longer
    be followed.
    In United States v. Chadwick, the Supreme Court of the United States made clear
    the reasoning for the search-incident-to-arrest exception:
    The reasons justifying search in a custodial arrest are quite different. When
    a custodial arrest is made, there is always some danger that the person
    arrested may seek to use a weapon, or that evidence may be concealed or
    destroyed. To safeguard himself and others, and to prevent the loss of
    evidence, it has been held reasonable for the arresting officer to conduct a
    prompt, warrantless search of the arrestee's person and the area within his
    immediate control. . . .
    
    433 U.S. 1
    , 14 (1977) (internal quotations omitted). The Supreme Court then announced
    the general rule:
    7
    Once law enforcement officers have reduced luggage or other personal
    property not immediately associated with the person of the arrestee to their
    exclusive control, and there is no longer any danger that the arrestee might
    gain access to the property to seize a weapon or destroy evidence, a search
    of that property is no longer an incident of the arrest.
    
    Id. at 15.
    This principle was reaffirmed by the Supreme Court in Arizona v. Gant: "If
    there is no possibility that an arrestee could reach into the area that law enforcement
    officers seek to search, both justifications for the search-incident-to-arrest exception are
    absent and the rule does not apply." 
    556 U.S. 332
    , 339 (2009). In Gant, the Supreme
    Court held that police may lawfully search a vehicle incident to arrest in two situations:
    (1) "if the arrestee is within reaching distance of the passenger compartment at the time
    of the search" or (2) "it is reasonable to believe the vehicle contains evidence of the
    offense of arrest." 
    Id. at 351.
    Although Gant involved the search of a vehicle, the
    Supreme Court's holding is only unique to vehicles for the second category of situations.
    The first category is just a reiteration of Chimel and Chadwick—that general rule applies
    to all searches incident to arrest, vehicle or not. 5 That is, if the item searched is not
    within the arrestee's reaching distance (or "immediate control") at the time of the search,
    the justifications for a search incident to arrest are absent and there is no valid search
    incident to arrest. 6
    5
    Like the search of Carrawell's plastic bag, the unlawful search in Gant took place after the
    arrestee was handcuffed and placed in the back of a police 
    car. 556 U.S. at 336
    .
    6
    Despite what some cases may suggest, Chadwick was not abrogated by the Supreme Court's
    decision in California v. Acevedo, 
    500 U.S. 565
    (1991). Chadwick held that police need a
    warrant to search a container, unless an exception applies, like search incident to arrest—the
    exception addressed in 
    Chadwick. 433 U.S. at 15
    . Acevedo, in response to courts' confusion
    concerning containers found within vehicles searched under the automobile exception,
    essentially added an exception that may apply to a container, holding that "police may search an
    8
    A major source of the court of appeals' misunderstanding regarding this well-
    established rule appears to be based on language taken out of context from United States
    v. Edwards, in which the Supreme Court stated, "It is also plain that searches and seizures
    that could be made on the spot at the time of arrest may legally be conducted later when
    the accused arrives at the place of detention." 
    415 U.S. 800
    , 803 (1974). This broad
    statement that the court of appeals has relied upon was only dicta. The holding of
    Edwards was much narrower: the clothes that this particular arrestee was wearing at the
    time of arrest could be searched the next day at the station house because the police could
    automobile and the containers within it where they have probable cause to believe contraband or
    evidence is 
    contained." 500 U.S. at 580
    . Acevedo did not touch upon Chadwick's analysis of
    searches incident to arrest, but only expanded the automobile exception to include probable
    cause analysis for containers found therein. See 
    Acevedo, 500 U.S. at 579
    ("We conclude that it
    is better to adopt one clear-cut rule to govern automobile searches and eliminate the warrant
    requirement for closed containers . . . .") (emphasis added). Therefore, the two holdings co-exist.
    A container may be searched in the vehicle context applying the Acevedo rule, or, if within an
    arrestee's immediate control, the Chadwick rule. A container in the non-vehicle context may be
    searched applying the Chadwick rule.
    Similarly, some cases suggested Chimel, the basis for Chadwick's rule, was abrogated by the
    Supreme Court's decision in New York v. Belton, 
    453 U.S. 454
    (1981). See Davis v. United
    States, 
    131 S. Ct. 2419
    , 2424 (2011) ("Numerous courts read the [Belton] decision to authorize
    automobile searches incident to arrests of recent occupants, regardless of whether the arrestee in
    any particular case was within reaching distance of the vehicle at the time of the search."). The
    Supreme Court dispelled this notion in Gant:
    To read Belton as authorizing a vehicle search incident to every recent occupant's
    arrest would thus untether the rule from the justifications underlying the Chimel
    exception—a result clearly incompatible with our statement in Belton that it "in
    no way alters the fundamental principles established in the Chimel case regarding
    the basic scope of searches incident to lawful custodial 
    arrests." 556 U.S. at 343
    .
    9
    not conduct the search contemporaneous with the arrest as the arrestee was wearing the
    clothes and the police did not have a change of clothes for him. 
    Id. at 805.
    This was
    sound logic because "the person" of the arrestee in Edwards could not be separated from
    the arrestee's clothes at the time of the arrest, and the justification of preventing
    destruction of evidence (paint chips embedded in the clothes) remained the next day. In
    light of Chimel, Chadwick, and Gant, though, the Supreme Court's decision in Edwards
    should not be read to authorize the search of all personal effects incident to arrest
    regardless of whether the item searched is still within the immediate control of the
    arrestee at the time of the search. See United States v. Monclavo-Cruz, 
    662 F.2d 1285
    ,
    1289–90 (9th Cir. 1981) ("[T]his broad statement in Edwards, in contrast to its holding,
    has been circumscribed by Chadwick . . . [i]n light of these principles, we confine the
    Edwards exception to the person and clothing of an arrestee.").
    Therefore, the Edwards exception to the general rule requiring the item searched
    to be within the arrestee's immediate control applies only to items that are so intertwined
    with the arrestee's person that they cannot be separated from the person at the time of
    arrest.     The language in Chadwick—"or other personal property not immediately
    associated with the person"—appears to merely be a nod to this rare Edwards exception
    where the personal property searched is not separable from the person. See 
    Chadwick, 433 U.S. at 15
    (holding that luggage that was not within arrestee's immediate control
    could not be searched incident to arrest). Unlike the clothing in Edwards, the plastic bag
    in this case was easily separable from the arrestee's person. Indeed, the Supreme Court of
    the United States has made no distinction between the luggage in Chadwick that could
    10
    not be searched and other personal effects removed from a person, such as purses or
    shopping bags. Rather, the Supreme Court has lumped all of these items in the same
    category of "containers" that may be within an arrestee's immediate control, and therefore
    subject to a search incident to arrest. See New York v. Belton, 
    453 U.S. 454
    , 460 n.4
    (1981) (noting that "containers" that may be within an arrestee's reach include "luggage,
    boxes, bags, clothing, and the like"); see also State v. Perry, 
    499 S.W.2d 473
    , 475 (Mo.
    1973) ("[T]he officers had probable cause to make an arrest and in connection therewith
    to conduct a search of the person of appellant and the area within her immediate
    control (the purse).") (emphasis added). It is not that these items may be searched
    because they are part of the person; rather, they may be searched because they are within
    the arrestee's immediate control. When that fact is no longer true, they may not be
    searched incident to arrest because the justifications for conducting such a search no
    longer persist. 
    Gant, 556 U.S. at 339
    ; 
    Chadwick, 433 U.S. at 15
    . The court of appeals'
    distinction for purses and other similar personal effects is not consistent with Supreme
    Court precedent.
    The origin of this purse exception in the court of appeals appears to be State v.
    Woods, 
    637 S.W.2d 113
    (Mo. App. 1982). In Woods, the court of appeals held that a
    woman's purse could be searched after she had already been taken to the police station
    because the purse "was not so clearly distant from her at the police station as to make it
    impossible for her to gain access to it." 
    Id. at 116.
    The court of appeals then went on to
    state, "We further note that a woman's purse is, like the arrestee's clothes in Edwards,
    more immediately associated with the person of the accused than is other personal
    11
    property, such as luggage or an attache case." 
    Id. For support,
    the court of appeals cited
    United States v. Berry, which stated, "[U]nlike a purse that might be characterized as
    'immediately associated with the person of the arrestee' because it is carried with the
    person at all times, the attache case here was more like luggage . . . ." 
    560 F.2d 861
    , 864
    (7th Cir. 1977), vacated by United States v. Berry, 
    571 F.2d 2
    (7th Cir. 1978). Not only
    was the purse conclusion dicta, but the Berry court failed to compare a purse with the
    clothing in Edwards in terms of their differing qualities of separability from the person—
    the very quality that made the clothing in Edwards "immediately associated with the
    person." The Berry opinion was also later vacated. United States v. Berry, 
    571 F.2d 2
    (7th Cir. 1978).
    The court of appeals has also relied on United States v. Graham, 
    638 F.2d 1111
    (7th Cir. 1981), in support of its purse exception. See 
    Ellis, 355 S.W.3d at 525
    . The
    concurring opinion relies on Graham as well, but the Graham court held that "a shoulder
    purse carried by a person at the time he is stopped lies within the scope of a warrant
    authorizing the search of his 
    person." 638 F.2d at 1114
    (emphasis added). It is important
    to note that the Graham court did not hold a purse is part of the person for purposes of a
    search incident to arrest. In fact, it did the opposite and distinguished a search incident to
    arrest from a search pursuant to a warrant, noting that "defendant is also mistaken in his
    contention that the rationale used to define the scope of a search incident to an arrest is
    equally applicable in defining the scope of a search of the person authorized by a
    warrant." 
    Id. The Graham
    court then discussed an Illinois case that held "once the
    defendant was handcuffed and seated in the police squad car, and his purse was in the
    12
    possession of the police, the reasons justifying a search incident to his arrest no longer
    existed with respect to the purse." 
    Id. Thus, any
    reliance on Graham by the concurring
    opinion or court of appeals to say a purse is part of the person for a search incident to
    arrest misconstrues that case. If anything, Graham recognized the purse was not part of
    the person with respect to a search incident to arrest. 7
    The concurring opinion also suggests that under U.S. v. Robinson, 
    414 U.S. 218
    (1973), there is a "time of arrest" rule, meaning any personal effect in the arrestee's actual
    possession at the time of the arrest may be searched, regardless of whether the item is
    within the arrestee's immediate control at the time of the search, because a search of the
    arrestee's person (including personal effects) requires "'no additional justification' beyond
    the validity of the custodial arrest." This is not Robinson's holding. The concurring
    opinion seizes on Robinson's "no additional justification" language, but fails to provide
    context. In Robinson, the Supreme Court held:
    A police officer's determination as to how and where to search the person
    of a suspect whom he has arrested is necessarily a quick ad hoc judgment
    which the Fourth Amendment does not require to be broken down in each
    instance into an analysis of each step in the search. The authority to search
    the person incident to a lawful custodial arrest, while based upon the need
    to disarm and to discover evidence, does not depend on what a court
    may later decide was the probability in a particular arrest situation
    that weapons or evidence would in fact be found upon the person of the
    7
    While the Graham court stated that the search of the purse in that particular case would have
    also fallen within the scope of a search incident to arrest, the court made this determination—not
    because the purse was part of the person—but because it rejected the argument that the purse was
    within the "exclusive control" of the police when police searched the purse in the presence of an
    unsecured 
    arrestee. 638 F.2d at 1112
    –1114. In determining such, the Graham court cited United
    States v. Garcia, 
    605 F.2d 349
    (7th Cir. 1979). 
    Graham, 638 F.2d at 1113
    –114. The concurring
    opinion also curiously cites Garcia for support, although the search in Garcia occurred while the
    luggage was "within one foot" of an arrestee who was not handcuffed and, therefore, "the
    luggage continued to remain within her immediate 
    reach." 605 F.2d at 352
    , 356.
    13
    suspect. A custodial arrest of a suspect based on probable cause is a
    reasonable intrusion under the Fourth Amendment; that intrusion being
    lawful, a search incident to the arrest requires no additional justification.
    
    Id. at 235
    (emphasis added).        What the Supreme Court meant by "no additional
    justification" was that police officers need no prerequisite objective level of suspicion
    (e.g., probable cause) regarding the search itself—i.e., the officers need no reason to
    believe a person has, or an item contains, weapons or evidence in order to ensure their
    safety and the preservation of evidence in the flurry that is a custodial arrest. 
    Id. Such objective
    level of suspicion would be an unnecessary "additional justification" to the two
    built-in justifications, officer safety and preventing destruction of evidence, that are
    already present in a search incident to arrest. 
    Id. Notably, the
    concurring opinion recognizes that these two justifications underlie a
    search incident to arrest, even one it would call a search under the "time of arrest" rule:
    Accordingly, when police seize an arrestee, they necessarily also seize the
    arrestee's clothing and personal effects in the arrestee's actual possession,
    all of which may contain a weapon or evidence. . . . The time of arrest
    rule recognizes that the same exigencies that justify searching an arrestee's
    person under Robinson also justify searching the arrestee's clothes and other
    items in the arrestee's actual possession.
    (emphasis added). These "same exigencies," however, cannot support a "time of arrest"
    rule. The two exigencies, or justifications, hinge on the spatial location of an item to an
    arrestee at the time of the search, not at the time of arrest. That is, even if the item to be
    searched was within the arrestee's immediate control (or "on the person") at the time of
    arrest, police need not be concerned with the arrestee inflicting harm with a weapon or
    destroying evidence when the hypothetical weapon or evidence is contained in an item no
    14
    longer within the arrestee's immediate control at the time of the search. The fact that the
    item was once within the arrestee's immediate control at the time of arrest has no impact
    on whether the justifications, or "exigencies," still persist at the time of the search.
    The Supreme Court's clarification of Belton's holding in Gant should have
    dispelled any notion of a "time of arrest" rule:
    [Belton] has been widely understood to allow a vehicle search incident to
    the arrest of a recent occupant even if there is no possibility the arrestee
    could gain access to the vehicle at the time of the search. This reading may
    be attributable to Justice Brennan's dissent in Belton, in which he
    characterized the Court's holding as resting on the "fiction . . . that the
    interior of a car is always within the immediate control of an arrestee who
    has recently been in the car." Under the majority's approach, he argued,
    "the result would presumably be the same even if [the officer] had
    handcuffed Belton and his companions in the patrol car" before conducting
    the search.
    Since we decided Belton, Courts of Appeals have given different answers to
    the question whether a vehicle must be within an arrestee's reach to justify a
    vehicle search incident to arrest, but Justice Brennan's reading of the
    Court's opinion has predominated. As Justice O'Connor observed, "lower
    court decisions seem now to treat 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." . . . Indeed, some
    courts have upheld searches under Belton "even when . . . the handcuffed
    arrestee had already left the scene."
    Under this broad reading of Belton, a vehicle search would be authorized
    incident to every arrest of a recent occupant notwithstanding that in most
    cases the vehicle's passenger compartment will not be within the arrestee's
    reach at the time of the search. To read Belton as authorizing a vehicle
    search incident to every recent occupant's arrest would thus untether the
    rule from the justifications underlying the Chimel exception—a result
    clearly incompatible with our statement in Belton that it "in no way alters
    the fundamental principles established in the Chimel case regarding the
    basic scope of searches incident to lawful custodial arrests." Accordingly,
    we reject this reading of Belton and hold that the Chimel rationale
    authorizes police to search a vehicle incident to a recent occupant's arrest
    15
    only when the arrestee is unsecured and within reaching distance of the
    passenger compartment at the time of the search.
    
    Gant, 556 U.S. at 341
    –43 (internal citations omitted). Like the passenger compartment
    of an arrestee's vehicle, an arrestee's personal effects may no longer be within the
    arrestee's immediate control at the time of the search, negating the Chimel rationales for a
    search incident to arrest. The Chimel rationales are the only rationales for the search-
    incident-to-arrest exception. See, e.g., Riley v. California, 
    134 S. Ct. 2473
    , 2484 (2014)
    ("Gant, like Robinson, recognized that the Chimel concerns for officer safety and
    evidence preservation underlie the search incident to arrest exception."). Contrary to the
    concurring opinion's assertion, there simply is no separate rationale added by Robinson,
    which recognized that allowing searches incident to arrest is grounded solely in the need
    to protect officer safety and prevent destruction of evidence. See 
    id.; 414 U.S. at 234
    –35.
    As such, there is no Supreme Court authority for the concurring opinion's "time of arrest"
    rule. This "time of arrest" rule is just as misguided as the flawed readings of Belton that
    the Supreme Court rejected—it "untether[s] the [search incident to arrest] rule from the
    justifications underlying the Chimel exception" and treats the ability to search an
    arrestee's personal effects "as a police entitlement rather than as an exception justified by
    the twin rationales of Chimel." 8 See 
    Gant, 556 U.S. at 342
    –43 (internal quotations
    omitted).
    8
    The influence of the now-rejected broad reading of Belton on the concurring opinion's "time of
    arrest" rule is especially evident in the concurring opinion's reliance on United States v. Fleming,
    
    677 F.2d 602
    (7th Cir. 1982), and Curd v. City Court of Judsonia, Ark., 
    141 F.3d 839
    (8th Cir.
    1998). Although the Fleming court upheld the search of a bag after the arrestee had been
    handcuffed and removed from the immediate vicinity, it did so by analogizing the search to the
    16
    While there is no need for a "case-by-case adjudication" in every search incident
    to arrest concerning whether an officer had reason to believe an arrestee's personal effect
    contained a weapon or evidence, there certainly is a need for a case-by-case adjudication
    when the underlying justifications for searching that personal effect no longer persist
    because the item was no longer within the arrestee's immediate control. This principle
    was recently illuminated particularly well by the Supreme Court's discussion in Riley
    concerning whether officers could search a cell phone that was seized and not within the
    arrestee's immediate control:
    The United States and California both suggest that a search of cell phone
    data might help ensure officer safety in more indirect ways, for example by
    alerting officers that confederates of the arrestee are headed to the
    scene. . . .   The proposed consideration would also represent a
    broadening of Chimel's concern that an arrestee himself might grab a
    weapon and use it against an officer to "resist arrest or effect his
    escape." And any such threats from outside the arrest scene do not "lurk[]
    in all custodial arrests." Accordingly, the interest in protecting officer
    safety does not justify dispensing with the warrant requirement across the
    board. To the extent dangers to arresting officers may be implicated in a
    particular way in a particular case, they are better addressed through
    consideration of case-specific exceptions to the warrant requirement, such
    as the one for exigent circumstances. . . . And once law enforcement
    officers have secured a cell phone, there is no longer any risk that the
    arrestee himself will be able to delete incriminating data from the
    phone. . . . To the extent that law enforcement still has specific concerns
    about the potential loss of evidence in a particular case . . . . they may be
    able to rely on exigent circumstances to search the phone immediately.
    misinterpreted holding of Belton. See 
    Fleming¸ 677 F.2d at 605
    , 607 (noting that "when the
    occupant of an automobile is arrested, the entire passenger compartment of the car constitutes his
    'grabbing area' and can be searched as an incident of the arrest," and rejecting the argument that
    the arrestee "had no realistic chance to grab anything and therefore the need for a Chimel search
    no longer existed"). In Curd, the Eighth Circuit upheld the search of a purse after the arrestee
    had already been taken to a detention center, citing to Belton for the proposition that "[i]t matters
    not whether Curd was capable of reaching the purse at the time of the search." 
    Curd, 141 F.3d at 841
    , 842 n.9.
    
    17 134 S. Ct. at 2485
    –87 (internal citations omitted) (emphasis added). Likewise, with any
    other personal effect, officers may not conduct a search incident to arrest when the
    arrestee himself cannot obtain a weapon or evidence from the personal effect; rather, any
    search of that personal effect must be grounded in another exception to the warrant
    requirement, such as an inventory search or exigent circumstances. See 
    id. Relevant to
    exigent circumstances, the concurring opinion also appears to conflate
    the search-incident-to-arrest exception with the exigent-circumstances exception,
    implicitly suggesting that Officer Burgdorf's search was justified because Officer
    Burgdorf testified that he was concerned the bag may have contained a weapon and
    "Officer Burgdorf looked into the bag because it would have been unreasonable to leave
    it behind and unsafe to bring it into the police vehicle without knowing the nature and
    condition of the contents."     While the concurring opinion does not suggest the
    surrounding circumstances actually amounted to probable cause to believe the bag
    contained a weapon, concerns about the bag's contents go toward the officer's objective
    level of suspicion. As discussed above, level of suspicion, e.g., probable cause, plays no
    role in a search incident to arrest. 
    Robinson, 414 U.S. at 235
    . It does, however, factor
    into the exigent-circumstances exception. See, e.g., Florida v. Royer, 
    460 U.S. 491
    , 497
    (1983) ("[I]t is unquestioned that without a warrant to search Royer's luggage and in the
    absence of probable cause and exigent circumstances, the validity of the search
    depended on Royer's purported consent.") (emphasis added); Chambers v. Maroney, 
    399 U.S. 42
    , 51 (1970) ("Only in exigent circumstances will the judgment of the police as to
    18
    probable cause serve as a sufficient authorization for a search."). The state does not
    argue, and the record does not support the conclusion, that a warrantless search of
    Carrawell's bag was justified by exigent circumstances supported by probable cause.
    Here, Carrawell was handcuffed and locked in the back of a police car at the time
    Officer Burgdorf searched the plastic bag. It matters not whether this bag was more akin
    to luggage or more akin to a purse. Neither is part of the person. It matters only whether
    the bag was within Carrawell's immediate control. Because it was not, there was not a
    valid search incident to arrest. E.g., United States v. Matthews, 532 Fed. Appx. 211, 218
    (3d Cir. 2013); United States v. Maddox, 
    614 F.3d 1046
    , 1049 (9th Cir. 2010); People v.
    Redmond, 
    390 N.E.2d 1364
    , 1374 (Ill. App. 1979). The state has not demonstrated any
    other exception to the warrant requirement applies. 9
    9
    An exception for inevitable discovery via an inventory search—i.e, the police would have
    inevitably discovered the heroin through a lawful inventory search at the police station—does
    not apply here. Under the inevitable discovery doctrine,
    [I]llegally seized evidence may be admitted if the State proves by a
    preponderance of the evidence: (1) that certain standard, proper and predictable
    procedures of the local police department would have been utilized, and (2) those
    procedures inevitably would have led to discovery of the challenged evidence
    through the State's pursuit of a substantial, alternative line of investigation at the
    time of the constitutional violation. The inevitable discovery analysis cannot
    involve speculation and must focus on demonstrated historical facts capable of
    ready verification or impeachment.
    State v. Rutter, 
    93 S.W.3d 714
    , 726 (Mo. banc 2002) (internal citations omitted). Although there
    was testimony that the police department here routinely conducts inventory searches, there was
    no indication that the police department had a standard procedure of always taking arrestees (or
    those arrested for peace disturbance or resisting arrest) to the police station, where they would be
    subject to an inventory search. Thus, to apply the inevitable discovery doctrine here would
    impermissibly involve speculation, as there is no evidence Carrawell would have been subjected
    to an inventory search absent the discovery of heroin.
    19
    That the search here was unlawful is not dispositive, however. "[W]hen an officer
    conducts a search incident to arrest in 'objectively reasonable reliance' on binding
    appellate precedent that is later overturned, the exclusionary rule does not suppress the
    evidence obtained as a result of that search." State v. Johnson, 
    354 S.W.3d 627
    , 630
    (Mo. banc 2011). "[T]he exclusionary rule is triggered only when police practices are
    'deliberate enough to yield meaningful deterrence, and culpable enough to be worth the
    price paid by the justice system.'" 
    Id. at 633
    (quoting Davis v. United States, 
    131 S. Ct. 2419
    , 2428 (2011)). "[O]fficers act in good faith when they objectively rely on binding
    directives from the judiciary and the legislature even though these directives may be later
    overturned." 
    Id. at 634.
    At the time of Officer Burgdorf's search, there was court of
    appeals precedent authorizing officers to search an arrestee's personal effects as a search
    incident to arrest, even if such items were not within the arrestee's immediate control.
    See, e.g., 
    Ellis, 355 S.W.3d at 524
    –25. Although such searches should no longer be
    deemed lawful, the exclusionary rule will not apply to this case. Accordingly, the circuit
    court did not err or abuse its discretion in overruling Carrawell's motion to suppress
    evidence of the heroin discovered in Carrawell's plastic bag.
    Conclusion
    The warrantless arrest of Carrawell was lawful because there was probable cause
    to conclude Carrawell committed the crime of resisting arrest. The warrantless search of
    Carrawell's plastic bag was not a lawful search incident to arrest because the plastic bag
    was not within Carrawell's immediate control at the time of the search.          However,
    20
    because there was court of appeals authority for conducting such a search, the
    exclusionary rule does not apply to this case. The judgment is affirmed.
    Zel M. Fischer, Judge
    Stith, and Draper, JJ., concur;
    Wilson, J., concurs in separate opinion filed;
    Breckenridge, C.J., and Russell, J., concur in opinion of Wilson, J.;
    Teitelman, J., concurs in part and dissents in part in separate opinion filed.
    21
    SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
    en banc
    STATE OF MISSOURI,                                )
    )
    Respondent,                         )
    )
    v.                                                )       No. SC94927
    )
    DERRICK L. CARRAWELL,                             )
    )
    Appellant.                          )
    CONCURRING OPINION
    I concur with the result reached in the principal opinion, and I agree that
    Carrawell’s arrest was lawful. However, I write separately because the search of
    Carrawell’s bag was a lawful search incident to arrest.
    A full recitation of the facts is necessary for a proper analysis in this case. Officer
    Burgdorf and three other police officers were present in a neighborhood in the City of St.
    Louis talking with residents when the officers first came in contact with Carrawell. Upon
    exiting his car, Carrawell began yelling obscenities and making lewd gestures toward the
    officers. While continuing this outburst, Carrawell leaned back into his car and removed
    a white plastic grocery bag through the car window. Because the bag was opaque,
    Officer Burgdorf testified he could not see what was inside it but stated that he was
    concerned Carrawell was removing anything from his vehicle in such an agitated state.
    Officer Burgdorf noticed that Carrawell was upsetting the residents on the street,
    so he crossed the street toward Carrawell and notified him that he was under arrest for
    peace disturbance. Even though Carrawell was aware that he was under arrest, he walked
    away from Officer Burgdorf and moved toward the gated entrance to his apartment
    building.
    Because the gate was locked, Carrawell’s daughter let him into the gated area from
    the inside. Officer Burgdorf followed Carrawell through the gate, but the gate closed
    before the other officers could enter and assist Officer Burgdorf with the arrest. After
    stepping through the gate, Officer Burgdorf again advised Carrawell that he was under
    arrest. Carrawell still refused to cooperate and continued to walk away. Officer
    Burgdorf then grabbed Carrawell by his arm. Carrawell resisted and pulled free from
    Officer Burgdorf’s grasp. Acting alone, and separated from the other officers by a locked
    gate, Officer Burgdorf grabbed Carrawell again and struggled to move him toward the
    gate. Throughout this altercation, Carrawell maintained his grip on the bag.
    Once Officer Burgdorf maneuvered Carrawell toward the gate, the officers outside
    the gate were able to help restrain Carrawell by grabbing him through the openings in the
    gate. The officers succeeded in handcuffing Carrawell’s left wrist through the gate but
    could not gain control over Carrawell’s right arm because he continued to clutch the bag
    in his right hand. Carrawell refused to drop the bag even though the officers ordered him
    several times to do so. When Carrawell failed to comply with the officers’ requests,
    Officer Burgdorf pulled the bag from Carrawell’s hand and dropped it to the ground. As
    the bag hit the ground, the officers heard the sound of something breaking. No longer
    2
    impeded by Carrawell’s grip on the bag, the officers placed Carrawell in handcuffs.
    Officer Burgdorf reached down to pick up the bag as he began to move Carrawell back
    through the gate and toward the officers’ vehicles.
    Despite being handcuffed, Carrawell continued to struggle as he was moved to the
    police vehicle. When Officer Burgdorf got Carrawell to the vehicle, Carrawell resisted
    being placed into the vehicle. Needing both hands to control Carrawell, Office Burgdorf
    placed Carrawell’s bag on the trunk of the car and, with the help of the other officers, was
    able to put Carrawell into the vehicle. Immediately after seating Carrawell in the vehicle,
    Officer Burgdorf turned back to Carrawell’s grocery bag. Officer Burgdorf testified that
    he was concerned the bag may contain a weapon because of the way Carrawell had
    grabbed the bag from his car and refused to let go of it despite being ordered to do so
    several times. Moreover, Officer Burgdorf could not reasonably leave the bag on the
    ground at the scene of the arrest for fear it contained a weapon or other dangerous
    material. Nor could he reasonably bring it into the patrol car without knowing what was
    in it and (given the breaking sound when the bag was first dropped) what condition those
    contents were in. Looking inside the bag, Officer Burgdorf found pieces of a broken
    ceramic plate and a smaller plastic bag containing a tan powder that Officer Burgdorf
    believed to be heroin.
    The officers then transported Carrawell to the police station for booking. During
    the drive to the station, Carrawell continued to direct profanities at the officers. Due to
    Carrawell’s agitated state, the officers testified that they did not want to make further
    3
    contact with him until he was safely confined at the station. Upon arriving at the police
    station, Carrawell continued to be uncooperative throughout the booking process.
    Analysis
    The “search incident to arrest” exception encompasses two distinct rationales and
    a failure to distinguish between them accounts for the erroneous conclusion in the
    principal opinion. First, “a search may be made of the person of the arrestee by virtue of
    the lawful arrest.” United States v. Robinson, 
    414 U.S. 218
    , 224 (1973). The Supreme
    Court cited “the long line of authorities of this Court dating back to Weeks [v. United
    States, 
    232 U.S. 383
    (1914)]” and “the history of practice in this country and in England”
    in concluding that a search of the arrestee’s person – including clothing and personal
    effects – requires “no additional justification” beyond the validity of the custodial arrest.
    
    Robinson, 414 U.S. at 235
    . The Court held that a search of the arrestee’s person is “not
    only an exception to the warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment, but is also a
    ‘reasonable’ search under that Amendment.” 
    Id. Second, the
    “search incident to arrest” exception allows a warrantless search “of
    the area within the control of the arrestee.” 
    Id. at 224.
    Unlike the first application above,
    however, this second application requires additional justification which the first
    application does not. In Chimel v. California, 
    395 U.S. 752
    , (1969), the Supreme Court
    held that this application of the “search incident to arrest” exception must be justified by
    particularized concerns that the arrestee might otherwise access a weapon or destroy
    evidence. For some time, the Chimel requirement of additional justification was not
    enforced for searches within the interior of the arrestee’s car, see New York v. Belton, 453
    
    4 U.S. 454
    , 459–61 (1981), but the Supreme Court eventually overruled Belton and held
    that all searches of an arrestee’s surroundings – including the interior of a car – must be
    supported by some additional exigency or justification beyond the fact of the arrest.
    Arizona v. Gant, 
    556 U.S. 332
    , 335 (2009).
    But Gant and its zealous ratification of Chimel were limited only to the second
    application of the “search incident to arrest” exception, i.e., a search not of the arrestee’s
    person or effects but of items within the arrestee’s immediate reach or control. Nothing
    in Gant or Chimel purports to limit the first application of the “search incident to arrest”
    exception discussed in Robinson, i.e., a search of the arrestee’s person and effects.
    Unlike a search of the arrestee’s surroundings, the search of the arrestee’s person and
    effects does not require the “case-by-case adjudication” required by Gant and Chimel.
    
    Robinson, 414 U.S. at 235
    . Instead, these searches are justified solely by the fact that the
    officers were making a lawful arrest. 
    Id. at 232
    (“The peace officer empowered to arrest
    must be empowered to disarm. If he may disarm, he may search, lest a weapon be
    concealed.”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Accordingly, the question of whether a “search incident to arrest” must have the
    “case-by-case” justification required by Chimel – or whether no such justification is
    required under Robinson – turns on whether the item searched was an item of personal
    property immediately associated with the person of the arrestee. If so, then Robinson
    applies and no justification beyond the fact of a lawful arrest need be shown. See United
    States v. Chadwick, 
    433 U.S. 1
    , 15 (1977) (requiring Chimel justification only for
    searches of “personal property not immediately associated with the person of the
    5
    arrestee” (emphasis added)), overruled on other grounds by California v. Acevedo, 
    500 U.S. 565
    (1991).
    Prior to this case, courts have drawn a bright line between these two related, but
    very different, applications of the “search incident to arrest” exception. This line, often
    referred to as the “time of arrest” rule, provides that an item is “immediately associated”
    with the arrestee’s person such that it can be searched under Robinson without further
    justification under Chimel if the arrestee has actual possession of the item at the time of a
    lawful arrest. See United States v. Oakley, 
    153 F.3d 696
    , 697–98 (8th Cir.1998)
    (backpack); United States v. Tavolacci, 
    895 F.2d 1423
    , 1428–29 (D.C. Cir.1990)
    (luggage); Carter v. State, 
    788 A.2d 646
    , 655 (Md. 2002) (lunch bag); State v. Ellis, 
    355 S.W.3d 522
    , 524–25 (Mo. App. 2011) (backpack); People v. Brown, 
    828 N.Y.S.2d 550
    ,
    551 (2007) (backpack); People v. Boff, 
    766 P.2d 646
    , 651–52 (Colo.1988) (backpack).
    See generally Andrea G. Nadel, Annotation, Lawfulness of Warrantless Search of Purse
    or Wallet of Person Arrested or Suspected of Crime, 29 A.L.R.4th § 3[a], at 780 (1984 &
    2012 Supp.) (collecting cases).
    In other words, under Robinson, officers lawfully may search anything that an
    arrestee actually is holding or wearing at the time of the arrest. But, if the officers extend
    this search to items in the arrestee’s constructive possession, i.e., within the arrestee’s
    reach or control, the “case-by-case” justification of Chimel must be met.
    The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit provided the rationale
    for the bright-line “time of arrest” test in determining whether a search incident to arrest
    was a search of the arrestee’s person and effects under Robinson or a search of the
    6
    arrestee’s surroundings under Chimel: “The human anatomy does not naturally contain
    external pockets, pouches, or other places in which personal objects can be conveniently
    carried.” United States v. Graham, 
    638 F.2d 1111
    , 1114 (7th Cir.1981). 1 Accordingly,
    when police seize an arrestee, they necessarily also seize the arrestee’s clothing and
    personal effects in the arrestee’s actual possession, all of which may contain a weapon or
    evidence. 
    Id. See also
    United States v. Edwards, 
    415 U.S. 800
    , 806 (1974) (observing
    that “the police had lawful custody of [the suspect] and necessarily of the clothing he
    wore”). The time of arrest rule recognizes that the same exigencies that justify searching
    an arrestee’s person under Robinson also justify searching the the arrestee’s clothes and
    other items in the arrestee’s actual possession. This rule not only adheres to the
    distinctions drawn by the Supreme Court in Robinson and Chimel, it is the sort of simple
    and clear direction this Court should provide whenever possible.
    1
    The principal opinion states that Graham did not hold a purse is part of the person for purposes
    of a search incident to arrest because the Graham court’s decision involved the scope of a search
    authorized by a warrant and recognized that the purse was not part of the person with respect to a
    search incident to arrest. However, that is not an accurate representation of Graham. In
    Graham, the defendant was wearing a purse on his shoulder when he was approached by police
    officers with a warrant to search his 
    person. 638 F.2d at 1112
    . One of the officers removed the
    purse from the defendant and searched the bag. 
    Id. The defendant
    argued that the search of the
    bag was unlawful because once the bag “was removed from his person,” it was “held within the
    exclusive control of the police.” 
    Id. The defendant
    contended that the law governing searches
    incident to arrest applied, so the warrant authorized only the search of his person, not his purse.
    
    Id. at 1113.
    The court addressed the defendant’s mistaken understanding of the legitimate scope
    of a search incident to arrest:
    [E]ven if defendant was correct in his contention that the law governing searches
    incident to arrest applied, the search of his shoulder purse was clearly within the
    scope of such a search, and the seizure of the [evidence] would therefore not
    have been improper.
    
    Id. at 1114
    (emphasis added).
    7
    Applying the “time of arrest” rule, the grocery bag was in Carrawell’s actual
    possession at the time of his lawful arrest. Like a backpack on his shoulder or a pants
    pocket, this bag was “immediately associated with the person of the arrestee” and,
    therefore, subject to search incident to his arrest without any further justification under
    Chimel. 
    Chadwick, 433 U.S. at 15
    . Even if further justification were required, which it is
    not, it is present in this case. After Carrawell initiated his confrontation with the police,
    he reached back into his vehicle to retrieve the grocery bag. While Officer Burgdorf,
    who was separated from the other officers by a locked gate, was struggling with
    Carrawell, Carrawell was ordered several times to drop the bag. He refused.
    There was no material delay between the time Carrawell was secured and the time
    Officer Burgdorf looked inside the bag. In fact, the officers were unable to handcuff
    Carrawell until Officer Burgdorf wrested the bag from Carrawell’s hand. Under
    Robinson, Officer Burgdorf surely would have been able to look into the bag as he took it
    from Carrawell’s hand. Such a search would have been lawful but unreasonably
    dangerous because, even though Carrawell was cuffed, Officer Burgdorf and Carrawell
    were separated from the other officers by a locked gate. Officer Burgdorf managed to get
    both Carrawell and the bag through the gate and over to one of the police vehicles but
    again had to set the bag aside to gain enough control over Carrawell to get him safely into
    the back of the police vehicle. Immediately thereafter, Officer Burgdorf looked into the
    bag because it would have been unreasonable to leave it behind and unsafe to bring it into
    the police vehicle without knowing the nature and condition of the contents.
    8
    Carrawell argues that the search of the bag was unlawful because, at the time of
    the search, he was handcuffed in the patrol car, and the bag was in the exclusive control
    of the officers. Carrawell’s understanding of the scope of a search incident to arrest is
    mistaken:
    [T]o construe the term “exclusive control” as meaning it attaches
    immediately upon the seizure of an object located on the person or within
    the immediate vicinity of the arrestee, is a construction incapable of
    application consistent with fundamental principles of constitutional law.
    Under such a construction, for example, the warrantless search of an
    arrestee resulting in the seizure of a wallet, purse, or shoulder bag would
    prohibit an immediate search of the contents of that type of container, and
    this is plainly contrary to the law governing searches incident to arrest.
    United States v. Garcia, 
    605 F.2d 349
    , 355 (7th Cir. 1979).
    Carawell’s construction of exclusive control would swallow completely
    Robinson’s exception to the warrant requirement. Instead, exclusive control “must be
    construed in the context of its application in Chadwick.” 
    Id. In Chadwick,
    the Supreme
    Court found that the footlocker was within the exclusive control of officers because the
    search was conducted at the police station more than an hour after seizure of the
    footlocker and long after the defendants were securely in 
    custody. 433 U.S. at 15
    . Since
    Chadwick, lower courts have found the exclusive control analysis does not apply to cases
    in which the item searched was “immediately associated” with the arrestee at the time of
    the arrest. See Garcia, 
    605 F.2d 349
    (finding it lawful to search two hand-carried
    suitcases immediately upon arrest); see also 
    Graham, 638 F.2d at 1114
    (noting that a
    search of a shoulder purse was within the scope of a search incident to arrest). 2
    2
    The Graham court discussed an Illinois case, which the principal opinion mentions to indicate
    Graham cannot be relied on. However, as the Eighth Circuit stated: “We are not troubled by the
    9
    Further, to construe “exclusive control” to mean that it attaches the instant an
    arrestee loses physical contact with the item imposes a warrant requirement unless the
    search is absolutely contemporaneous with the seizure and both are absolutely
    contemporaneous with the arrest. Courts have rejected this argument because it is neither
    workable nor compelled by Robinson, Chadwick or Chimel. A post-Edwards case
    decided on remarkably similar facts, United States v. Fleming, 
    677 F.2d 602
    , 605 (7th
    Cir. 1982), upholds a warrantless search of a paper bag the arrestee had in his hand when
    the arrest was initiated. As with the present case, the arrest in Fleming involved a scuffle
    and the bag was removed from the defendant’s hand while the officer was attempting to
    make the arrest. 
    Id. The officer
    did not search the contents of the bag until the defendant
    was moved to the street and handcuffed. 
    Id. Noting that
    the case was not governed by
    Chadwick, the Fleming court holds that the warrantless search of the bag was lawful
    because it was incident to the arrest:
    [I]t does not make sense to prescribe a constitutional test that is entirely at
    odds with safe and sensible police procedures …, unless we intend to use
    the Fourth Amendment to impose on police a requirement that the search be
    absolutely contemporaneous with the arrest, no matter what the peril to
    themselves or to bystanders. It is surely possible for a Chimel search to be
    undertaken too long after the arrest and too far from the arrestee’s person.
    That is the lesson of Chadwick. … [A] five-minute delay between seizing
    [defendant’s] bag and opening it, occasioned by [officer’s] handcuffing
    [defendant] and moving with him to the street, [did not] defease[]
    [officer’s] right to search under Chimel principles.
    Graham court’s tacitly accepting and distinguishing an Illinois case that rejected a station-house
    search allegedly undertaken incident to an arrest. The Illinois case does not take into account the
    1981 decision in New York v. Belton, 
    453 U.S. 454
    , 
    101 S. Ct. 2860
    , 
    69 L. Ed. 2d 768
    . The Illinois
    courts are currently ruling as we do here.” Curd v. City Court of Judsonia, Arkansas, 
    141 F.3d 839
    , 843 n.11 (8th Cir. 1998).
    10
    
    Id. at 607-08.
    3
    In this case, Carrawell argues that exclusive control over the bag attached once he
    was put into the patrol car. As discussed in Garcia, this is “plainly contrary to the law
    governing searches incident to 
    arrest.” 638 F.2d at 1114
    . Had Carrawell left the grocery
    bag in his car, Chimel would have required additional justification to search it even if it
    was within his reach or control at the time of this arrest. But he did not. He grabbed the
    bag and held onto it throughout the ensuing confrontation and struggle. The grocery bag
    was as much a part of Carrawell’s body and effects as if Carrawell had jammed it into a
    jacket pocket and Officer Burgdorf had pulled it loose and thrown it to the ground while
    subduing him. In either case, the search is lawful under Robinson because the bag was in
    Carrawell’s actual possession at the time of the arrest. Nothing more is required. The
    Supreme Court of Washington summarized this law with admirable clarity:
    Gant did not enact special constitutional protections for belongings inside
    cars; it restored the same protections all searches of an arrestee’s
    surroundings enjoy under Chimel. 
    Gant, 556 U.S. at 343
    , 
    129 S. Ct. 1710
           (citing 
    Belton, 453 U.S. at 460
    , 
    101 S. Ct. 2860
    ). These protections are no
    broader than Chimel and do not include the arrestee’s person or her
    personal articles, even if the arrestee is in a car at the time of arrest. Police
    may not evade Gant by removing an article from a car before searching it,
    but this is not because the federal and state constitutions specially protect
    articles in cars. It is because, under Chimel, the State must justify the
    warrantless search of every article not on the arrestee’s person or closely
    associated with the arrestee’s person at the time of his or her arrest. The
    3
    The Eighth Circuit stated that when an item is seized from the arrestee’s person in the course
    of a lawful arrest, it does not matter whether the arrestee was capable of reaching the item at the
    time of the search. 
    Curd, 141 F.3d at 842
    n.9; see also 3 W. LaFave, Search and Seizure, §
    5.3(a) at 193(5th ed. 2012) (“The notion seems to be that Robinson recognized that anything on
    the person was “fair game” for a search, and that the opportunity of the police to search should
    not be more limited merely because there may have been reasons making a full search there
    impractical or because the police opted for the less humiliating alternative of a search in the
    privacy of the stationhouse.”) (footnotes omitted).
    11
    distinction does not turn on whether a person is arrested in a car, on the
    street, or at home, but on the relationship of the article to the arrestee. See
    
    Robinson, 414 U.S. at 220
    , 
    94 S. Ct. 467
    (search of the person or vehicle
    occupants); 
    Chimel, 395 U.S. at 753
    –54, 
    89 S. Ct. 2034
    (search of arrestee’s
    home).
    State v. Byrd, 
    310 P.3d 793
    , 799-800 (2013) (emphasis added).
    The principal opinion rejects the bright-line “time of arrest” rule and all the cases
    applying it because it concludes these cases are contrary to Edwards. This is a
    misapplication of Edwards, which, if anything, reinforces the holding of Robinson that a
    search incident to arrest may be made of the arrestee and those effects in the arrestee’s
    actual possession at the time of the arrest without the need for any further justification
    under Chimel. 4
    If, as the principal opinion suggests, Edwards requires the police to obtain a
    warrant to search a wallet or any other item taken from an arrestee’s person during the
    course of a lawful search, then Edwards must have overruled Robinson (albeit sub
    silentio) because the search of the cigarette package in Robinson would have been
    unlawful under such a rationale. Yet, in the 41 years since Edwards was decided, such a
    dramatic redrawing of the landscape of searches incident to lawful arrests has gone
    unnoticed and unenforced.
    4
    Far from supporting the unprecedented approach taken by the principal opinion, Edwards
    actually holds that the police’s authority to seize and search items within the arrestee’s
    “immediate possession” is measured at the time of arrest, it does not need to be exercised at that
    moment. 
    Edwards, 415 U.S. at 807
    . Effects in the arrestee’s “immediate possession” at the time
    of arrest may be searched after the arrestee is safely confined. 
    Id. at 801-802
    (search of the
    arrestee’s clothes was lawful even though search occurred approximately 10 hours after arrestee
    was in custody).
    12
    Even the Supreme Court’s most recent relevant decision does not ascribe such a
    sea change effect to Edwards. Instead, in Riley v. California, 
    134 S. Ct. 2473
    (2014), the
    Court reaffirmed its holding in Robinson that a lawful arrest – by itself – establishes the
    authority to search the person and effects of an arrestee even when there are no
    particularized Chimel concerns present at the time of the search. 
    Id. (citing Robinson
    ,
    414 U.S. at 236). “In doing so, the Court did not draw a line between a search of [the]
    person and a further examination of the cigarette pack found during that search.” 
    Id. at 2484
    (emphasis added).
    Once an officer gained control of the pack, it was unlikely that Robinson
    could have accessed the pack’s contents. But unknown physical objects
    may always pose risks, no matter how slight, during the tense atmosphere
    of a custodial arrest. The officer … testified that he could not identify the
    objects in the cigarette pack …. Given that, a further search was a
    reasonable protective measure.
    
    Id. (Emphasis added
    and internal citations omitted).
    If Edwards requires officers to obtain a warrant to search all items removed from
    the person of the arrestee during an arrest, as the principal opinion suggests it does, then
    the Court’s discussion in Riley of Robinson – and its careful efforts in Riley to create a
    cell-phone-sized exception to Robinson – would have been unnecessary. Instead, the
    Court noted that, because such technology was “nearly inconceivable … when Chimel
    and Robinson were decided,” it was required to re-weigh the arrestee’s and the
    government’s interests and – solely due to the unique properties of cell phones – to rule
    on the side of individual privacy where that is the item taken from the arrestee. 
    Id. But, in
    doing so, the Court specifically noted – and approved – that Robinson generally struck
    this balance in favor of allowing a warrantless search of the arrestee’s person and effects
    13
    with no particularized showing of need: “On the government interest side, Robinson
    concluded that the two risks identified in Chimel [i.e., officer safety and preservation of
    evidence] … are present in all custodial arrests.” 
    Id. at 2484
    -85 (emphasis added). As
    a result, Riley reaffirmed the Robinson-Chimel distinction, but created a singular
    exception to Robinson for cellphones seized from the person of the arrestee during a
    lawful arrest; an exception which would not have been necessary (or even logical) if
    Reynolds had the reach and breadth the principal opinion ascribes to it in this case.
    Here, Officer’s Burgdorf’s search of Carrawell’s bag occurred mere seconds – not
    hours – after Carrawell was confined in the back of the police vehicle, and long before
    Carrawell was safely detained at the police station. Even if Edwards does not permit an
    hours-long delay between the seizure and the search of an item that was taken from the
    arrestee’s actual possession at the time of the arrest, nothing in Edwards suggests that the
    momentary delay between when Officer Burgdorf wrested the bag from Carrawell’s grip
    and when Officer Burgdorf looked into the bag to see what Carrawell had been holding
    onto so doggedly rendered that search unconstitutional. This was one continuous and
    potentially dangerous course of action initiated by Carrawell, and the momentary delay
    between taking the bag from Carrawell and looking into that bag was more than justified
    by Officer Burgdorf’s more pressing obligations of protecting the bystanders, protecting
    himself and the other officers, and subduing Carrawell.
    14
    Conclusion
    Because the bag was in Carrawell’s immediate possession and seized at the time
    of the arrest, the search was a lawful search incident to arrest under Robinson. On this
    basis, I would affirm the circuit court’s judgment.
    Paul C. Wilson, Judge
    15
    SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
    en banc
    STATE OF MISSOURI,                               )
    )
    Respondent,                        )
    )
    v.                                               )       No. SC94927
    )
    DERRICK L. CARRAWELL,                            )
    )
    Appellant.                         )
    OPINION CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN PART
    I concur with the principal opinion to the extent it holds that the search was
    unlawful because it occurred while Mr. Carrawell’s belongings were beyond his
    immediate control. I respectfully dissent from the principal opinion’s holding that the
    exclusionary rule does not apply.
    The principal opinion makes a compelling case, based on binding authority from
    the United States Supreme Court, that the search was unlawful. After establishing that
    the search was unlawful, the principal opinion holds that the evidence seized from
    Mr. Carrawell’s personal belongings is nonetheless admissible because at least two
    Missouri court of appeals cases had erroneously held that an arrestee’s personal
    belongings may be searched even when they are not within the immediate control of the
    arrestee. See State v. Ellis, 
    355 S.W.3d 522
    , 524 (Mo. App. 2011); State v. Rattler, 
    639 S.W.2d 277
    , 278 (Mo. App. 1982). As the principal opinion notes, the reasoning in Ellis
    and Rattler misconstrues the individual constitutional right to be free from unreasonable
    searches. While it is true that the exclusionary rule does not apply when a search is
    conducted in a manner permitted by existing case law, as the principal opinion
    demonstrates, the overwhelming weight of authority from the United States Supreme
    Court establishes that the search was illegal.
    Given the overwhelming weight of authority holding that searches such as the one
    conducted in this case are illegal, the exclusionary rule should apply. The exclusionary
    rule incentivizes the government to exercise its considerable authority with due regard for
    constitutionally protected individual rights. If the government can justify illegal searches
    by parsing through volumes of court of appeals cases until locating an erroneously
    decided case supporting the desired result, then the incentives provided by the
    exclusionary rule are diluted. Although Mr. Carrawell’s alleged actions do not make
    him the most sympathetic figure, the fact remains that the constitutional limitations on the
    government’s authority to search and seize private property retain vitality only if those
    limits are applied rigorously and consistently. Therefore, I would hold that the illegally
    obtained evidence should have been excluded.
    _________________________________
    Richard B. Teitelman, Judge
    2