GA: Impoundment of a car need only be reasonable, not the last resort

The inventory here was valid because it was reasonable. The state didn’t have to show that it was absolutely necessary. Here, there was nobody with defendant to take the car because all his companions fled the scene and the car would have been left for an indeterminate time on a residential street. An actual inventory did occur. Askew v. State, 2014 Ga. App. LEXIS 135 (March 12, 2014):

The ultimate test for the validity of the police’s conduct in impounding a vehicle is whether, under the circumstances then confronting the police, their conduct was reasonable within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. The determinative inquiry, therefore, is whether the impoundment was reasonably necessary under the circumstances, not whether it was absolutely necessary. A police seizure and inventory are not dependent for their validity upon the absolute necessity for the police to take charge of property to preserve it.

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