Just as police cannot randomly enter your home, police also cannot search your vehicle without lawful authority.
If police have lawfully obtained a search warrant, then they are permitted to search your car.
But what if police randomly stop your car whilst you are driving? Can they search your car?
The answer is no, unless they have reasonable grounds to carry out a search.
Section 36 of the Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002 (“LEPRA”) sets out the powers of police to search vehicles without a warrant.
Section 36(1) of LEPRA allows a police officer to search a vehicle if he suspects on reasonable grounds that a specified circumstance exists. Those circumstances are:
A separate limited power is given to police under section 36(2) of LEPRA relating to searching a class of vehicles.
In R v Rondo [2001] NSWCCA 540, the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal considered the phrase “reasonable suspicion”.
The facts that triggered criminal charges against Mr Rondo were as follows:
Upon searching the vehicle, police found $860 in cash in the console and some cannabis leaf in the glovebox.
“Reasonable suspicion” was explained in the seminal judgement of Spigelman CJ in Rondo as follows [at 53]:
“(i) A reasonable suspicion involves less than a reasonable belief but more than a possibility. There must be something which would create in the mind of a reasonable person an apprehension or fear of one of the state of affairs covered by s 357E (the predecessor to s 36 of LEPRA). A reason to suspect that a fact exists is more than a reason to consider or look into the possibility of its existence.
(ii) Reasonable suspicion is not arbitrary. Some factual basis for the suspicion must be shown. A suspicion may be based on hearsay material or materials which may be inadmissible in evidence. The materials must have some probative value.
(iii) What is important is the information in the mind of the police officer stopping the person or the vehicle or making the arrest at the time he did so. Having ascertained that information the question is whether that information afforded reasonable grounds for the suspicion which the police officer formed. In answering that question regard must be had to the source of the information and its content, seen in the light of the whole of the surrounding circumstances.”
Finding that the search was illegal, the appellate court in Rondo ruled that:
Police have a different power to stop a motor vehicle without a warrant for the purposes of undertaking a random breath test. This power is found in section 3 of Schedule 3 the Road Transport Act (“RTA”).
Under section 3(1), a police officer may require a person to submit to a breath test if the officer reasonably believes that:
(a) the person is or was driving a motor vehicle on a road,
(b) the person is, or was, occupying the driving seat of a motor vehicle on a road and attempting to put the motor vehicle in motion, or
(c) the person is or was occupying the seat in a motor vehicle next to a learner driver while the driver is, or was, driving the vehicle on a road.
It is a criminal offence to refuse to undergo a breath test.
The answer is no.
In R v Buddee [2016] NSWDC 422, the NSW District Court, sitting in its criminal law jusisdiction, dealt with the case of a driver who was stopped by police for a random breath test (“RBT”) and whose car was then searched.
The breath test was negative and the driver produced to the police a valid driver’s licence.
After observing a number of large photo frames containing memorabilia from the movie Scarface, the police officer asked the driver who owned the photo frames.
“Me I bought them, they are mine. I love the movie,” responded the driver.
There was also an “ice pipe” next to the driver’s seat.
Following a search of the vehicle, a small mints tin was found which contained 6.76 grams of methylamphetamine at an approximate purity of 80 per cent. The driver charged with the criminal offence of supplying a prohibited drug based on the drugs found in the car.
Judge McClintock SC excluded the evidence, finding that the search was illegal and improper.
In his judgement, his honour made the following pertinent observations:
If you need advice or representation relating to police searches, search warrants or any criminal offence, feel free to contact our expert criminal lawyers on 0433 847 892 or info@opallegal.com.au.
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