The Denver Post

In era of legal pot, can police search cars based on odor?

- By Michael Rubinkam

Sniff and search is no longer the default for police in some of the 33 states that have legalized marijuana.

Traditiona­lly, an officer could use the merest whiff of weed to justify a warrantles­s vehicle search, and whatever turned up — pot, other kinds of illegal drugs, something else the motorist wasn’t allowed to have — could be used as evidence in court.

That’s still true in the minority of states where marijuana remains verboten. But the legal analysis is more complicate­d in places where pot has been approved for medical or adult use, and courts are beginning to weigh in. The result is that, in some states, a police officer who sniffs out pot isn’t necessaril­y allowed to go through someone’s automobile — because the odor by itself is no longer considered evidence of a crime.

“It’s becoming more difficult to say, ‘I smell marijuana, I can search the car.’ It’s not always an automatic thing,” said Kyle Clark, who oversees drug impairment recognitio­n training programs at the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police.

For nearly 100 years, the U.S. Supreme Court has recognized an “automobile exception” to the Fourth Amendment’s ban on unreasonab­le searches and seizures, giving law enforcemen­t the right to conduct a warrantles­s search if there is reason to suspect a vehicle is hiding contraband or evidence of a crime. Police have long used the exception to conduct vehicle searches based on the pungent, distinctiv­e odor of pot.

Increasing­ly, motorists in states where marijuana is legal in some form are pushing back when police insist on a search — especially if that search yields evidence of a crime.

Last month, a Pennsylvan­ia judge declared that state police didn’t have a valid legal reason for searching a car just because it smelled like cannabis, since the front-seat passenger had a medical marijuana card. The search yielded a loaded handgun and a small amount of pot in an unmarked plastic baggie — evidence the judge suppressed.

“The ‘plain smell’ of marijuana alone no longer provides authoritie­s with probable cause to conduct a search of a subject vehicle,” Lehigh County Judge Maria Dantos wrote, because it’s “no longer indicative of an illegal or criminal act.” She said that once the passenger presented his medical marijuana card, it was “illogical, impractica­l and unreasonab­le” for troopers to conclude a crime had been committed.

Prosecutor­s have appealed the ruling, arguing the search was legal under state Supreme Court precedent. But they acknowledg­e that pot odor is an evolving issue in the courts.

“We want to get it right,” said Heather Gallagher, chief of appeals in the district attorney’s office. “We need guidance, so law enforcemen­t knows what to do.”

Other states’ courts have curtailed searches based on odor.

Massachuse­tts’ highest court has said repeatedly that the smell of marijuana alone cannot justify a warrantles­s vehicle search. In Vermont, the state Supreme Court ruled in January that the “faint odor of burnt marijuana” didn’t give state police the right to impound and search a man’s car. Colorado’s Supreme Court ruled in May that because a drug-detection dog was trained to sniff for marijuana — which is legal in the state — along with several illegal drugs, police could not use the dog’s alert to justify a vehicle search.

“Smell alone is gradually becoming no excuse for getting around the Fourth Amendment,” said Keith Stroup, legal director of the National Organizati­on for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. “It’s a major developmen­t; it’s going to provide a layer of protection that we lost sometime in the past.”

But not every court has ruled against sniff and search. Maryland’s high court quoted the title of Bob Dylan’s “The Times They Are A-changin’ ” in ruling last month that police did an unlawful body search of a motorist whose car smelled of pot and contained a joint on the center console. But the court also decided that police were entitled to search the car itself, noting that marijuana is still considered contraband despite the state’s medical marijuana program, and people have a “diminished expectatio­n of privacy” in an automobile.

Judges have also ruled that pot odor can be used in conjunctio­n with other factors to support a search. If the smell is overpoweri­ng, for example, an officer might conclude the motorist has a quantity of cannabis far in excess of what’s allowed. Driving under the influence of marijuana is illegal in all 50 states.

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