                   IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                             No. 3-1215 / 13-0520
                             Filed February 5, 2014


STATE OF IOWA,
     Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

TODD A. BITKER,
     Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________


      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Cerro Gordo County, Colleen D.

Weiland, Judge.



      Todd Bitker appeals his conviction for possession of a controlled

substance, third offense. AFFIRMED.



      Russell Schroeder Jr. of Schroeder Law Office, Charles City, for appellant.

      Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Kyle P. Hanson, Assistant Attorney

General, and Carlyle D. Dalen, County Attorney, for appellee.



      Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Vaitheswaran and Potterfield, JJ.
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POTTERFIELD, J.

       Todd Bitker appeals from his conviction for possession of a controlled

substance, third offense. He argues the impound of his vehicle was motivated by

an improper purpose and that officers were not allowed to open closed

containers in his vehicle during the inventory. We affirm, finding the district court

properly denied Bitker’s motion to suppress. We find Bitker’s argument regarding

the closed container was not preserved for our review.

   I. Facts and Proceedings.

       Bitker and a friend were pulled over for speeding by a Cerro Gordo County

police officer while Bitker was driving. Bitker was unable to produce proof of

insurance when requested by the officer. The officer asked the passenger for

identification, and then ordered Bitker back to his police vehicle, because he had

arrested the passenger for possession of methamphetamine shortly before. On

his way to the squad car, the officer patted Bitker down and asked if there was

anything illegal in the car. The officer requested to search Bitker’s vehicle; Bitker

declined the request. The officer pressed Bitker again to search the vehicle,

stating he wished to search because he had arrested the passenger for drugs

and Bitker’s name was “tossed around” during the investigation. Bitker again

declined, and the officer stated that his refusal was “raising a lot of red flags.”

The officer asked Bitker questions about drug use, and stated he needed to ask

the passenger some questions. The officer then questioned Bitker’s passenger,

asking whether the passenger had drugs on him and whether the officer could

search the passenger. The passenger denied the request to search.
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          The officer searched Bitker’s driving history and found he had a 2007

violation for failing to provide proof of insurance. The officer left the squad car to

confer with his fellow officer.1 When the officer returned, he told Bitker he was

going to tow his vehicle for failing to show proof of insurance. Bitker told the

officer he was positive there was insurance on the vehicle, he just could not

locate the certificate, and asked why the officer would not issue a ticket and allow

him to show proof the next day as was his previous experience. The officer

issued Bitker citations for speeding and failing to provide proof of insurance.

Bitker again searched his vehicle for the insurance card; the officer shined his

light around the vehicle while Bitker looked for the insurance card. At no point

did the officer ask if the passenger had a valid drivers’ license. Bitker retrieved

his cellular telephone to call his girlfriend for a ride home, and the officer promptly

searched the vehicle for an “inventory” and found a closed pouch containing pills.

The officer handcuffed both Bitker and the passenger. Bitker later admitted the

pills belonged to him.

          Bitker was arrested and charged with possession of a schedule three

controlled substance, third or subsequent offense. He filed a motion to suppress

evidence obtained by the inventory search on December 27, 2011. A hearing

was held on the motion, and the officer testified as to the events surrounding the

vehicle inventory. The motion to suppress was denied September 26, 2012. The

court found, “It is clear that the deputy’s primary motivation for impounding the

vehicle was to search for evidence of criminal activity” but concluded that

because the officer’s action was authorized by statute, it could not conclude the

1
    There is no audio in the recording for this portion of the stop.
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impoundment was for the sole purpose of investigation.         Bitker’s motion to

reconsider was also denied.      Trial on the minutes of testimony was held

November 20, 2012; Bitker was found guilty as charged.          He now appeals,

arguing the district court improperly denied the motion to suppress.

   II. Analysis.

      “We review the district court’s ruling on this Fourth Amendment issue de

novo.” State v. Huisman, 544 N.W.2d 433, 436 (Iowa 1996). When examining

whether the warrantless seizure of a vehicle for impoundment purposes is

reasonable, “we no longer examine the reasonableness of the officer’s decision

to impound; we look for the existence of reasonable standardized procedures

and a purpose other than the investigation of criminal activity.”      Id. at 437

(emphasis added).       We first look to the existence of a departmental

impoundment policy. Id.

      Our supreme court considered a more restrictive departmental policy in

Huisman:

             “The critical factor in determining whether too much
      discretion has been granted to police officers regarding
      impoundment of an arrested person’s automobile is the ability for
      arbitrary searches to be conducted by the police officers.” [State v.
      Toohey, 475 N.W.2d 16, 26 (Mich. 1991)]. The possibility of
      arbitrary searches is curtailed here because there are limited
      opportunities for the exercise of police discretion. The written
      policy mandates that police honor an operator’s reasonable request
      for accommodation. Absent such a request, the standard practice
      mandates impoundment if no licensed driver is available.
             ....
             Huisman asserts the police did not follow their departmental
      policy because they failed to explore alternatives to impoundment.
      Huisman’s argument fails because the policy does not require the
      police to provide for the safekeeping of the vehicle in some manner
      other than impoundment unless the operator requests an
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         accommodation. Huisman made no request for accommodation,
         so her argument is without merit.

Id. at 438. Our supreme court noted the policy upheld in Huisman was even

more restrictive than that upheld by our United States Supreme Court in

Colorado v. Bertine, 479 U.S. 367, 375–76 (1987). Id. The Court in that case

found:

                 Bertine finally argues that the inventory search of his van
         was unconstitutional because departmental regulations gave the
         police officers discretion to choose between impounding his van
         and parking and locking it in a public parking place. The Supreme
         Court of Colorado did not rely on this argument in reaching its
         conclusion, and we reject it.        Nothing in [South Dakota v.
         Opperman, 428 U.S. 364 (1976)] or [Illinois v. Lafayette, 462 U.S.
         640 (1983)] prohibits the exercise of police discretion so long as
         that discretion is exercised according to standard criteria and on the
         basis of something other than suspicion of evidence of criminal
         activity. Here, the discretion afforded the Boulder police was
         exercised in light of standardized criteria, related to the feasibility
         and appropriateness of parking and locking a vehicle rather than
         impounding it. There was no showing that the police chose to
         impound Bertine’s van in order to investigate suspected criminal
         activity.

Bertine, 479 U.S. at 375–76 (emphasis added). Our inquiry, then, is whether the

officer’s actions in this case complied with a policy which presented “limited

opportunities for the exercise of police discretion” with a purpose other than the

investigation of criminal activity. See Huisman, 544 N.W.2d at 438–439. “To

decide whether the officers were motivated solely by an investigatory purpose,

we examine whether, when viewed objectively, an administrative reason for the

impoundment existed.” Id. at 439.

         Upon our de novo review of the evidence, we agree with the district court

the officer used the impound and inventory process to get around Bitker’s denial

of his request to search the vehicle. The officer conducted an arbitrary search of
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Bitker’s car and paid mere lip service to conducting the inventory for the purpose

of impoundment.

      But his personal intent is not our inquiry—our law asks whether an

administrative purpose for the impoundment existed when viewed objectively.

See id. Iowa Code section 321.20B(4)(a)(4) (2011) allows for impoundment of a

vehicle for failure to produce evidence of insurance. In his motion to suppress,

Bitker did not challenge the constitutionality of this statute, nor the officer’s

compliance with the impoundment procedures under the statute. Because our

statute allows for impoundment where a driver cannot produce proof of

insurance, we find that when viewed objectively, the officer was allowed to

impound Bitker’s vehicle.

      Bitker also challenges the opening of the closed container in his vehicle.

This issue was not raised before the district court; we therefore do not consider

the issue for the first time on appeal. See State v. Rutledge, 600 N.W.2d 324,

325 (Iowa 1999) (“Nothing is more basic in the law of appeal and error than the

axiom that a party cannot sing a song to us [on appeal] that was not first sung in

trial court.”). Further, in State v. Jackson, 542 N.W.2d 842 (Iowa 1996), our

supreme court considered the issue of opening closed containers (a suitcase)

during an inventory search. It held that in evaluating the validity of an inventory

search, our law requires an officer to execute the search pursuant to

standardized criteria. Jackson, 542 N.W.2d at 846.

      In this case, the Cerro Gordo County police inventory policy reads, “[T]he

officer shall open all closed containers. However, the officer may exercise his

discretion in not opening such containers if . . . they would not likely contain
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valuable property.”   The officer “administered the department’s standardized

criteria in good faith when he inventoried the property located in the defendant’s

vehicle.” See id.

      AFFIRMED.
