Today's Opinion: A squeeze too far
State v. Garvin, No. 80941-1. His car had seen better days when, on October 21, 2005, Anthony Garvin was pulled over for a shattered windshield and inoperable brake lights. During the stop, Union Gap Police Officer Gregory Cobb noticed that the car's ignition was broken; Garvin had a knife on the passenger seat that he was using in place of a key. Officer Cobb and his partner removed Cobb from the car and performed a "pat-down" search, ostensibly a "Terry stop" according to Terry v. Ohio (a 1968 U.S. Supreme Court case permitting police to conduct a cursory, warantless search of a person who is believed to be "armed and presently dangerous.") During the search, a "dime bag" of methamphetamine was found in the coin pocket of Garvin's jeans. He was arrested and subsequently convicted for drug possession. Garvin appealed, challenging the legality of the search; the Court of Appeals held that the search was a legal Terry stop and affirmed the conviction. Justice Sanders, for a unanimous Court, holds that the search "exceeded the permissible scope of a limited Terry stop-and-frisk" and reverses the conviction. We hold it is unlawful for officers to continue squeezing -- whether in one slow motion or several -- after they have determined a suspect does not have a weapon, to find whether the suspect is carrying drugs or other contraband. If that were permissible, there would be little to distinguish a frisk incident to a Terry stop from a general search for contraband, and we strongly disapprove of such legal fiction. Indeed, one of the narrowly drawn exceptions to the warrant requirement would swallow the rule. (case briefs and argument)
