dissenting:
I must dissent from the majority’s holding, which I consider shows a misunderstanding of the important question involved here and which unrealistically interferes with booking procedures for persons under custodial arrest at police stations. The majority, in holding the drugs in the purse to have been illegally seized, says that a station inventory could be accomplished in a less intrusive way. That statement gratuitously and erroneously assumes that the search of the purse here was not to be considered as a part of the search of the person and of the inventory process. Too, our inquiry should be whether inventorying the contents of the purse was unreasonable as a matter of law and therefore unconstitutional. The question is not whether a search could be less intrusive. Talk of less intrusive inventory station searches following arrest has been advanced but not accepted. Professor LaFave in his treatise notes that it has been sometimes suggested that the purposes of an inventory could be accomplished by a less intrusive means, but he states: “Currently, such evidence is admissible, and this is generally so even when the inventory has been most thorough. It is customary for the booking inventory to involve an item-by-item examination of everything in the arrestee’s pockets or otherwise on his person, including looking into his wallet or into containers on the person; it may even extend to a strip search.” (2 W. LaFave, Search and Seizure sec. 5.3, at 307 (1978).) (I would observe that we, excepting Justice Simon, who did not participate, very recently held that strip searches at the police station may be reasonable. Following holdings of the Supreme Court, we held that a full search of a person incident to a lawful custodial search may be made without a warrant and that it may be made even if there is not probable cause to believe that the suspect may have a weapon or destroy evidence. People v. Seymour (1981), 84 Ill. 2d 24.)
If we were interested only in reducing the intrusiveness of inventory searches, while barring weapons and contraband from the interior of the jail, the practice of having persons under arrest empty pockets, turn over wallets and the like for purposes of inventory could be abolished. Instead pants, coats and other clothing and property could be sealed in garment bags and jail clothing provided. Pockets and wallets may contain possessions that are as private in character as possessions found in purses. The absurdity, however, of such a procedure is reflected in the practical comment of the court in People v. Walker (1975), 58 Mich. App. 519, 525, 228 N.W.2d 443, 446: “It would be naive and pointless to assume that law enforcement officials may store an arrestee’s personal effects without first determining what it is they are inventorying.”
I suspect that police and other law-enforcement officers will judge that the majority’s holding discloses an innocence of situations that police encounter on an everyday basis. The court in United States v. Berry (7th Cir. 1977), 560 F.2d 861, 864, made the common sense observation that a purse “might be characterized as ‘immediately associated with the person of the arrestee’ ***.” Who is able to say what a purse of one under arrest may contain? “Growing Up Underground,” an autobiographical reminiscence of Jane Alpert, who was described as a woman radical of the 1960’s, was reviewed in December 1981 in a Chicago newspaper. A portion of the review reads: “Several weeks later, as Alpert transported a purse full of dynamite to the New York City Federal Building, she felt, ‘as I imagined I would on my wedding day.’ ” In October 1981, in New York, a gun battle followed a robbery attempt on an armored truck. Two police officers and a security guard were murdered. Two women members of the so-called radical underground were among those arrested at the time. The public and police would be astonished to find that the search of the women’s purses incident to their arrest or when making an inventory at their booking at the police station might be held an unreasonable search and any evidence seized declared to be inadmissible.
The Supreme Court has made it clear that a full search of a person is authorized upon a custodial arrest. In United States v. Robinson (1973), 414 U.S. 218, 235, 38 L. Ed. 2d 427, 440-41, 94 S. Ct. 467, 477, the court stated: “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. It is the fact of the lawful arrest which establishes the authority to search, and we hold that in the case of a lawful custodial arrest a full search of the person is not only an exception to the warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment, but is also a ‘reasonable’ search under that Amendment.” In United States v. Edwards (1974), 415 U.S. 800, 803, 39 L. Ed. 2d 771, 775, 94 S. Ct. 1234, 1237, the court said that “searches and seizures that could be made on the spot at the time of arrest may legally be conducted later *** at the place of detention.” (See also 2 W. LaFave, Search and Seizure sec. 5.3 (1978).) When the arrested person has been taken to the place of the detention, there may be a search of his person without warrant, and no justification for the individual search is necessary other than that the person was lawfully arrested and is being lawfully detained. Such searches are conducted as searches incident to the arrest, as the taking of an inventory to protect the property of the arrestee, to insure the security of the place of detention and its occupants, and to protect police officers from false claims of appropriating property of the arrestee.' (See 2 W. LaFave, Search and Seizure sec. 5.3 (1978).) A purse may be searched in the course of a search under authority of Robinson and Edwards. The court in United States v. Berry (7th Cir. 1977), 560 F.2d 861, 864, noted that a purse “might be characterized as ‘immediately associated with the person of the arrestee’ because it is carried with a person at all times.” United States v. Chadwick (1977), 433 U.S. 1, 53 L. Ed. 2d 538, 97 S. Ct. 2476, does not restrict the force of Robinson and Edwards here. There it was held that the opening of a footlocker following the arrest of the defendants without a search warrant wa_s improper. The court said, “Once law enforcement officers have reduced luggage or other personal property not immediately associated with the person of the arrestee to their exclusive control *** a search of that property is no longer an incident of the arrest.” (Emphasis added.) (433 U.S. 1, 15, 53 L. Ed. 2d 538, 551, 97 S. Ct. 2476, 2485.) As we noted in United States v. Berry, it was said in discussing Chadwick that a purse may be characterized as being immediately associated with the person of the arrestee. A footlocker certainly is not immediately associated with the person and unlike a purse is not carried with a person at all times. Too, and importantly, in Chadwick the justification claimed for the search was that it was incident to the arrest. Here, the search of the defendant and her purse were part of an inventory process at the police station.
In State v. Sabater (1979), 3 Kan. App. 2d 692, 601 P.2d 11, the court held that a woman’s pocketbook is immediately associated with the person and the search of the pocketbook and wallet incident to her arrest was a lawful search. The court rejected the defendant’s contention that the search was improper under Chadwick. The court said: “The custodial arrest of defendant was a seizure of her person. The search of her pocketbook and wallet was lawful. United States v. Robinson (1973), 414 U.S. 218, 38 L. Ed. 2d 427, 94 S. Ct. 467. We do not view defendant’s pocketbook to have been a repository of personal property coming within the rule enunciated in Chadwick ***. We hold defendant’s pocketbook was immediately associated with the person of defendant, the arrestee, and the search of the pocketbook involved no greater reduction in her expectations of privacy than that caused by the arrest itself. Accord, Dawson v. State, 40 Md. App. 640, 395 A.2d 160, 164-67 (1978).” (3 Kan. App. 2d 692, 694, 601 P.2d 11, 13-14.) LaFave observes that in Dawson v. State the court adopted the reasoning of United States v. Berry (7th Cir. 1977), 560 F.2d 861. (2 W. LaFave, Search and Seizure sec. 5.5 (1978).) Other decisions upholding searches of purses even on incident-to-arrest grounds (as opposed to the inventory basis) include Daigger v. State (1980), 268 Ark. 249, 595 S.W.2d 653, and Sumlin v. State (1979), 266 Ark. 697, 587 S.W.2d 571.
The majority’s citation of People v. Bayles (1980), 82 Ill. 2d 128, and People v. Hamilton (1979), 74 Ill. 2d 457, simply misses the mark. What the appellate court in People v. Keath (1981), 101 Ill. App. 3d 652, 660, said of these decisions is particularly applicable here:
“Suffice to say that search in each case was not associated with searches of the person upon custodial arrest, or incident to booking for purposes of custodial detention. Those cases [Hamilton, Bayles] were concerned solely with the inventory of baggage obtained following motor accidents.”
In Keath the court, after an impressively reasoned discussion of the search question, held that drugs, found in a key case and cellophane bag in the defendant’s pockets during a routine inventory search at the jail, where the defendant’s property was to be stored in a locker, were admissible in evidence.
Though the record is not revealing in this regard, it is not inappropriate to observe that the case here may be of the sad type in which police are called by a friend or relative for the protection and welfare of the defendant. The defendant’s former husband complained to the police that the defendant had struck him with her fist. That the police would go to the defendant’s home at three o’clock in the morning and take her into custody would be remarkable if it were not for the purpose of seeking to protect the defendant possibly from the drugs she apparently routinely carried with her.
I respectfully submit that the majority has misapprehended and erred.
UNDERWOOD and MORAN, jj., join in this dissent.