Defendant appeals his conviction by the trial court for possession of a controlled substance.1 ORS 475.992. He assigns error to the admission of evidence seized from the glove compartment of his car. We affirm.
Defendant was stopped by a state police officer for failure to dim the headlights of his car. ORS 810.410(3). As the officer approached the car, she noticed a strong odor of alcohol. Defendant was unsteady on his feet when he got out of the car. The officer conducted a driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUII) investigation. Based on defendant’s admissions, physical condition, behavior and performance on the field sobriety tests, the officer determined that defendant was under the influence of both alcohol and a controlled substance.2 She arrested him for DUII pursuant to ORS *488133.310(l)(e). The officer returned to the vehicle to search it for evidence of the crime of DUII.
Defendant objected to the search.3 As the officer opened the car door, she noticed two empty cans of beer behind the driver’s seat. The officer testified that she looked for places ‘ ‘where people would put open containers of alcohol whether beer or alcohol.” When she opened the glove compartment, she detected the odor of methamphetamine.4 The odor appeared to be coming from “a small brown jewelry box.” She opened the box and found a spoon with methamphetamine residue on it.
Before trial, defendant moved to suppress the evidence of the methamphetamine on the basis of an illegal search incident to an arrest. The trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress. It found all the facts to be essentially as the officer testified and adopted the state’s analysis.5
“A search incident to arrest is not limited to situations where it is necessary to protect an officer’s safety or to prevent the destruction of evidence. The police may also *489search for evidence relevant to the crime for which the defendant is being arrested. However, such a search must be reasonable in time, scope and intensity.” State v. Vaughn, 92 Or App 73, 77, 757 P2d 441, rev den 306 Or 661 (1988). (Emphasis supplied.)
In this case, the officer conducted the search immediately after the arrest for DUII and limited her search to areas in the immediate vicinity of the driver’s seat where she thought it was likely the occupants may have stored evidence of intoxication. She found two empty cans of beer. Looking further for containers of alcohol, she opened the glove compartment and detected the “faint odor” of methamphetamine. Inside the glove compartment, she found a box containing methamphetamine-related drug paraphernalia.
This case is distinguishable from State v. Porter, 312 Or 112, 114, 817 P2d 1306 (1991), where an officer continued to search a car after finding an open container of beer and found four baggies of methamphetamine.6 The officer ran a records check on the car after the driver looked “furtively” away. The owner of the car was wanted on a Nevada fugitive warrant. During the stop, the officer noticed an open can of beer behind the driver’s seat. After the arrest, he confirmed that the can had beer in it. He then searched the car for more open beer cans. The court held that the officer had exceeded the scope of the investigation permitted by ORS 810.410(3),7 *490which was for an open container violation committed in his presence. Once he found evidence relevant to that crime, and because no statute provides that possession of a greater number of open containers is a more serious offense, he had to stop his search. Unlike in this case, the officer in Porter did not contend that he was searching for other evidence of intoxicants beyond open containers, and he testified that the driver did not show any signs of intoxication.
Here, the officer testified that she was investigating a DUII. Because the only beer cans she found were empty, she opened the glove compartment to search for alcohol. Inside the compartment, she found the intoxicant methamphetamine. The officer did not exceed the scope of her investigation. The trial court correctly ruled that the evidence was admissible.
Affirmed.
Defendant was also convicted of driving under the influence of intoxicants. He does not assign error to that conviction.
The officer specifically testified about defendant’s physical condition and behavior:
“Q: Now going back a moment to, to something that you mentioned earlier, and that is the size of the pupils of [defendant], I would first ask you, is that an indicator of whether someone is under the influence of a controlled substance?
“A: Yes, it is. * * * A person with large pupils can be under the influence of amphetamine or stimulants.
“Q: And were [defendant’s] pupils unnecessarily large?
“A: Yes, they were. Almost covering the entire iris of the eye. The questions I had asked him earlier, whether he was on medication and whether he had any injuries, they were questions to rule out any other cause for his large pupil size.
“Q: Did you shine a light in his eyes to determine whether his pupils were reactive?
“A: Yes, I did.
“Q: Were they?
“A: No, they didn’t constrict in light. They remained large. That’s another indication of someone being under the influence of a controlled substance.
“Q: Now, during your experience as a police officer, I assume you have arrested people who * * * have failed on the field sobriety test and that you have determined are simply under the influence of alcohol; is that right?
“A: Yes.
“Q: Okay, did you notice any differences between those persons and the behavior of [defendant]?
“A: Yes.
“Q: And what were the differences?
“A: He had no divided attention. As far as his being able to perform the tests as I asked him to, he could not. The tests, I explained and I demonstrated *488them to him and at times he would move quickly and would talk very quickly and then slow down extremely and mood changes even as I was talking to him while giving the field sobriety tests.
“Q: At the time you arrested [defendant] for DUII, did you believe that he was under the influence of alcohol, a controlled substance, or possibly both?
“A: I believed he was under the influence of both.”
Defendant’s passenger was outside the car and tried to keep the officer from opening the car door. A back-up officer arrived and took the passenger aside.
The officer testified:
“What I was looking for is places where people would put open containers of alcohol, whether it is beer or hard alcohol, and I looked under the seat and then I looked inside of the glove box, which is about the right size if you wanted to hide a can of beer or actually a fifth of whiskey or small bottle of whiskey, and I opened up the glove box and at that time when I opened it up I noticed there was a strong odor of methamphetamine coming from inside of the glove box.”
The court found:
“I first of all find the facts to be essentially as the officer testified. I have no basis to really find anything to the contrary. She testified in a very forthright manner and I don’t doubt but what things occurred in the way that she said they occurred.
“As to the motion itself, I really think the State has the better of the argument and rather than recite all those things * * * I am simply going to adopt [the State’s] analysis on both prongs and rule in favor of the State and against the defendant on the motion for the reasons set out by [the State].”
This case is also distinguishable from State v. Brody, 69 Or App 469, 686 P2d 451 (1984). In Brody, the officer noticed a marijuana cigarette burning in the ash tray after he stopped the defendant for driving erratically. The officer went to his car to get a tape recorder and, when he returned, the cigarette was gone. After his arrest, and at the officer’s request, the defendant retrieved the cigarette from underneath the driver’s seat. The officer found more marijuana in an unzipped attache case, black capsules in the glove compartment and a scale and more marijuana behind the seat. We ruled that the officer had probable cause to conduct a limited search incident to the arrest, but that the intensity of the search after the search of the attache case was beyond the scope jusitified by a DUII arrest. 69 Or App at 473. We characterized the search of the glove compartment and behind the seat as “unreasonable exploring, rummaging or ransacking.” 69 Or App at 473. The officer in this case articulated a clear reason why she reached over to open and inspect the glove compartment. She had not found any open containers around the driver’s seat and noted that the compartment “is about the right size if you want to hide a can of beer or actually a fifth of whiskey or a small bottle of whiskey.” Her search was reasonable in both its scope and intensity.
ORS 810.410(3) provides, in part:
“A police officer:
*490“(b) May stop and detain a person for a traffic infraction for the purposes of investigation reasonably related to the traffic infraction, identification and issuance of citation.”