California v. Johnson
Annotate this CaseOn appeal, Defendant Dammar Johnson challenged the trial court’s denial of his renewed motion to suppress. He was parked on the side of a road when two police officers approached to investigate his car’s missing registration tag. Defendant ended up handcuffed in the patrol car for resisting an officer. After defendant was detained, one of the officers performed what was described as a tow inventory search. The officer smelled marijuana emanating from the car and found “[p]ossibly a couple grams” of marijuana in the center console; the search then purportedly transitioned from an inventory search into a probable cause search, which revealed a loaded handgun in the rear cargo area of the car. Defendant sought to suppress the evidence from the search, but the motion and his renewed motion were denied. The magistrate and trial judge found the search was not an inventory search, but upheld it based on probable cause. Defendant pled no contest to being a felon in possession of a firearm. The issue this case presented for the Court of Appeal's review was whether the odor of marijuana and visual observation of approximately two grams of marijuana in a plastic baggie knotted at the top in defendant’s parked car provided probable cause to justify the search conducted by the officers. The Court concluded the officers did not have probable cause, and therefore reversed.
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