IN: Failure to prove dept’l inventory policy fatal to inventory search; officer calling search one thing but DA not arguing it is waiver

The state didn’t support the departmental inventory policy at trial, and that was error. Also, what the officer calls a search (here “search incident”) the prosecutor didn’t, and that argument was waived for appeal. Smith v. State, 2019 Ind. App. LEXIS 350 (Aug. 7, 2019):

Officer Trotter’s testimony regarding impoundment is at best a generalized assertion that the impoundment and search were conducted pursuant to the department’s procedure; however, it fails to specially describe how the impoundment decision adhered to the department’s procedure. Moreover, the State acknowledges that “there was not sufficient evidence of the [Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department] inventory policy admitted at trial.” Appellee Br. p. 14. Given the conclusory nature of Officer Trotter’s testimony and the State’s concession, we conclude that the trial court erroneously admitted the evidence obtained from the inventory search.

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