Assuming that the officer is permitted to go into the house in search of friends of the cuffed suspect that he reasonably suspects of wishing him ill (and that is one helluvan assumption; it would seem that the wisest thing to do in the event that the officer believes there may be folks inside who present a danger to him would be to take the suspect and leave, not to go into the danger zone), the officer should only be able to look where he could reasonably expect to find a person. That would not include inside small drawers in desks or under toilet-tank lids, where one might find a baggie of leafy stuff.
In each of the situations below, a police officer does not need a search warrant to conduct a search.
■If an individual voluntarily consents (agrees to) a search, no warrant is needed. The key question in this kind of search is what counts as a voluntary agreement? In order for a consent search to be legal, the individual must be in control of the area to be searched and cannot have been pressured or tricked into agreeing to the search.
■A police officer that spots something in plain view does not need a search warrant to seize the object. In order for a plain view search to be legal, the officer must be in a place he has the right to be in and the object he seizes must be plainly visible in this location.
■If a suspect has been legally arrested, the police may search the defendant and the area within the defendant's immediate control. In a search incident to arrest no warrant is necessary as long as a spatial relationship exists between the defendant and the object.
■Following an arrest, the police may make a protective sweep search if they reasonably believe that a dangerous accomplice may be hiding in an area near where the defendant was arrested. To do so, police are allowed to walk through a residence and complete a "cursory visual inspection" without a warrant. If evidence of or related to a criminal activity is in plain view during the search, the evidence may be legally seized.
■If the police stop a car based on probable cause, they can search for objects related to the reason for the stop without obtaining a warrant. During a car search, the police are also allowed to frisk the subject for weapons, even without a warrant if they have reasonable suspicion that the suspects may be involved in illegal activities.