PA: Officer can’t impound a car just to avoid state automobile exception

Pennsylvania’s automobile exception is more stringent than the Fourth Amendment requiring exigency. The state can’t end run a refusal to consent by impounding a car to get into it. Commonwealth v. Rosario, 2025 PA Super 286 (Dec. 23, 2025).

“First, the stop was supported by reasonable suspicion based on the information relayed through dispatch and the officers’ own observations. The complainant described a contemporaneous assault with a gun and provided distinctive identifying information (an orange Hyundai Accent hatchback) together with information about the location and general direction-of-travel. Within minutes and in close proximity of the reported assault, Sergeant Ayres encountered a vehicle matching that distinctive description. Any imperfections in the radio description, including the absence of a detailed ‘flash’ and the fact that the complainant did not describe all occupants, did not undermine reasonable suspicion given the vehicle’s unique color, temporal proximity, and corroboration.” United States v. Thomas, 2025 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 265262 (E.D. Pa. Dec. 23, 2025).*

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