Sabresfansince1980 wrote:
"THIS
"# the officer reasonably believes that he must search the vehicle for his or her own protection.""
That sentence is full of holes. There would have to be more reason to do that, such as what DC described, but only if occupants of the vehicle are still free to move around. An officer can conduct a "protective frisk" of a vehicle if he has reasonable suspicion that a weapon may have been within reach of an occupant. This "frisk" based on Terry vs. Ohio, only covers the suspect's wingspan or area within reach, not the entire vehicle.
If the driver is handcuffed only for the purpose of an investigative detention, a frisk could still be necessary since that person may be placed back in the vehicle soon. If they are arrested that safety concern is eliminated, and the officer will have to develop probable cause or gain consent for a more thorough search, since the Gant ruling.
Even before Gant though, police have never been able to search a car simply based on their safety concerns.
Please bro, you're a cop(as far as I know). Have you never searched a car w/o exigency? NM, you probably won't want to answer that.
As for the frisk, I wasn't covering that point, but that it describes what probable cause is. If an officer feels you're a suspicious person, he can frisk you. The same way your car will be searched if the cop feels your a suspicious character. You know this is true. The funny part is the cop is wrong over 90% of the time, and that doesn't include the hundreds of thousands of searches conducted, yet not reported.
This article sums it all up pretty good.
http://www.associatedcontent.com/articl ... tml?cat=17