UPDATES & ANALYSIS

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Iowa Supreme Court approves warrantless search of fanny pack after it was removed by suspect

by Rox Laird | June 25, 2025

A police officer legally searched a fanny pack after a suspect had removed it and handed it to a companion, the Iowa Supreme Court held in a June 20 decision, because the fanny pack was removed at the moment the officer was attempting to handcuff and arrest the suspect.

Citing prior rulings that upheld the constitutionality of warrantless searches of a person that are contemporaneous with a lawful arrest, the Court held that the search did not violate the right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures under the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and its equivalent under the Iowa Constitution.

The decision was written by Justice Dana Oxley joined by five members of the Court. Justice Matthew McDermott filed a dissenting opinion.

A Waterloo police officer was in the process of arresting Patrick Scullark Jr. while responding to a domestic abuse call when Scullark removed the fanny pack from his waist and handed it to a companion. The officer told the companion to put down the fanny pack pending a search as he handcuffed Scullark behind his back. The fanny pack was later found to contain a baggie containing methamphetamine and Scullark was charged with possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver.

Scullark moved to suppress the evidence from the fanny pack search citing the U.S. and Iowa Constitutions, which was denied by the Black Hawk District Court. Scullark entered a conditional plea pending his appeal, which was transferred to the Iowa Court of Appeals. On further review, the Iowa Supreme Court vacated the Court of Appeals’ ruling in Scullark’s favor and affirmed the district court.

State and federal courts recognize a “search incident to arrest” exception to the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement in cases where the search is contemporaneous with an arrest, which allows officers to search the person being arrested or areas within the person’s immediate control to look for weapons or contraband that could otherwise be discarded.

Search-incident-to-arrest exceptions fall into three categories: searches of items within the arrestee’s immediate control; searches of the arrestee’s person; and searches of vehicles during an arrest. Because the vehicle exception does not apply in this case, the question was whether the search fell into the immediate-control or the personal-search category.

The U.S. Supreme Court has established a categorical rule that a search of an arrestee’s person and items immediately associated with the person is not only an exception to the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement but is also a “reasonable” search under the Fourth Amendment.

The Iowa Supreme Court has subsequently applied this categorical rule under the Iowa Constitution, and the Court applied it in this case.

As for whether the fanny pack was part of Scullark’s “person,” the Court said it was “physically attached around Scullark’s waist at the time [the police officer] initiated Scullark’s arrest by attempting to place him in handcuffs. It was only at this point that Scullark removed and handed the fanny pack to his companion. We believe this is sufficient to conclude that the fanny pack was immediately associated with Scullark. The fanny pack was an extension of his person, much like his pockets, the search of which requires no additional justification beyond lawful arrest.”

Writing in dissent, Justice McDermott said he would reverse the trial court’s ruling denying the motion to suppress because neither justification for the warrant exception–officer safety or preserving evidence–is met in this case. Scullark no longer had access to the fanny pack once he removed it, and the search occurred later, after Scullark was handcuffed in the back seat of a police cruiser.

“Once Scullark removed the fanny pack, it was no longer part of his ‘person.’” Justice McDermott wrote. “And when [his companion] walked into the adjoining room with the fanny pack, it was no longer within an area that Scullark could readily access. From that moment forward, neither of the rationales supporting the search-incident to-arrest exception—officer safety and evidence preservation—could justify the search of the fanny pack.”

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The Iowa Supreme Court entered opinions in ten cases in December 2024. At the links immediately below, you can read Rox Laird’s analysis of the following opinions:

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