Saepharn v. State ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •                                              NOTICE
    The text of this opinion can be corrected before the opinion is published in the
    Pacific Reporter. Readers are encouraged to bring typographical or other formal
    errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts:
    303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501
    Fax: (907) 264-0878
    E-mail: corrections @ akcourts.us
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    STEVEN SAEPHARN,
    Court of Appeals No. A-11170
    Appellant,               Trial Court No. 3AN-08-9468 CR
    v.
    O P I N I O N
    STATE OF ALASKA,
    Appellee.                   No. 2467 — August 7, 2015
    Appeal from the Superior Court, Third Judicial District,
    Anchorage, Michael L. Wolverton, Judge.
    Appearances: Megan Webb, Assistant Public Defender, and
    Quinlan Steiner, Public Defender, Anchorage, for the Appellant.
    Diane L. Wendlandt, Assistant Attorney General, Office of
    Criminal Appeals, Anchorage, and Michael C. Geraghty,
    Attorney General, Juneau, for the Appellee.
    Before: Mannheimer, Chief Judge, Allard, Judge, and Hanley,
    District Court Judge. *
    Judge MANNHEIMER.
    *
    Sitting by assignment made pursuant to Article IV, Section 16 of the Alaska
    Constitution and Administrative Rule 24(d).
    Steven Saepharn appeals his conviction for fourth-degree controlled
    substance misconduct (possession of methamphetamine). 1 The police found Saepharn’s
    methamphetamine in a plastic bag in his pocket, while the police were conducting a pat-
    down search of Saepharn’s clothing for weapons.
    Saepharn argues that the officer exceeded the proper scope of the pat-down
    search when the officer felt and then removed the plastic bag from Saepharn’s pocket.
    For the reasons explained in this opinion, we conclude that by the time the officer patted
    Saepharn’s pocket and felt a bag or pouch of crystalline substance, the officer had
    probable cause to believe that the substance was methamphetamine. The officer could
    therefore lawfully remove the bag from Saepharn’s pocket.
    Underlying facts
    On August 21, 2008, while Anchorage police officer Jack Carson was
    patrolling the Mountain View area of Anchorage, he observed a Honda Civic with a
    cracked windshield and a defective taillight. Carson activated his patrol vehicle’s
    overhead lights, signaling the driver of the Honda to stop.         The driver did not
    immediately pull over, but continued driving slowly until he turned onto another street
    and finally stopped.
    Another police officer, Sergeant Christopher Sims, was also patrolling in
    the area and happened to see Carson attempting to stop the Honda. Sims saw the Honda
    make the turn onto the other street. As the Honda made this maneuver, Sims saw the
    front passenger door of the Honda open slightly, then close again — as if someone were
    1
    AS 11.71.040(a)(3)(A).
    –2–                                        2467
    preparing to leave the vehicle, or as if someone were discarding something out the door.
    Sims told Carson about what he had seen.
    Once the Honda came to a stop, Carson approached the car and spoke with
    the driver. Saepharn was a passenger in the front seat, and there was a second passenger
    in the rear of the car.
    The driver of the Honda asked Carson for permission to callhis mother, and
    Carson agreed. When the driver pulled his mobile phone from his pocket, Carson saw
    a cut-off straw in the pocket. When the driver saw that the straw was visible, he tried to
    push the straw back into his pocket.
    Carson later testified that a cut-off straw is “probably the classic piece of
    drug paraphernalia”. These straws are used to ingest controlled substances such as
    methamphetamine and cocaine in their powder form. Carson relayed his observation of
    the cut-off straw to Sims.
    Because the driver of the Honda had apparently been initially reluctant to
    pull over when Carson activated his overhead lights, and because the driver had the cut­
    off straw in his pocket, and because Sims had informed Carson about the quick opening
    and closing of the front passenger door just before the Honda stopped, Carson decided
    to obtain more information from the other occupants of the Honda. Carson asked
    Saepharn to provide his name to Sims, who had positioned himself on the passenger side
    of the Honda. Saepharn rolled down the window and told Sims his name.
    In the meantime, other officers were arriving on the scene. Once this
    backup arrived, Carson ordered the driver to get out of the car. The driver initially
    refused, declaring that he had done nothing wrong. When Carson told the driver that
    either he could exit the vehicle voluntarily or Carson would pull him out of the car, the
    driver stepped out.
    –3–                                        2467
    After the driver got out of the Honda, Carson frisked him for weapons.
    During this frisk, the driver tried to pull away from Carson. After a brief struggle,
    Carson handcuffed the driver and walked him away from the car.
    During Carson’s brief struggle with the driver, Sims looked away from the
    Honda to watch the struggle. While Sims’s attention was diverted, Saepharn put his left
    hand into his left pants pocket. One of the backup officers, Charles Reynolds, saw what
    Saepharn had done; he drew his pistol and yelled at Saepharn to take his hand out of his
    pocket. Sims then looked, saw that Saepharn had his hand in his left pocket, and saw
    that Saepharn was doing something with his hand in the pocket.
    Concerned that Saepharn might have a weapon or that he was trying to
    conceal something, Sims grabbed Saepharn’s right arm through the open window and
    pinned it outside the Honda. Another officer entered the Honda through the driver’s
    door and grabbed Saepharn’s left arm. The officers then handcuffed Saepharn and
    removed him from the Honda.
    Once Saepharn was outside the Honda, Sims conducted a pat-down search
    of Saepharn’s clothing for weapons. Saepharn was wearing nylon shorts made from a
    “pretty thin material.”
    Sims first patted Saepharn’s right shorts pocket. He felt a lighter and cut­
    off straws as he patted the material against Saepharn’s leg.
    Next, Sims patted Saepharn’s left pocket. In that left pocket, Sims felt a
    “baggie of some kind” filled with a substance that was “crystalline in nature” — like
    “brown coarse sugar that you get at the store”. When Sims was asked at the evidentiary
    hearing whether he had to manipulate the bag “a lot” to feel its contents, Sims answered
    no — that he could easily tell, from its feel, that the baggie contained a crystalline
    substance.
    –4–                                        2467
    Sims removed the item from Saepharn’s left pocket. It was a small plastic
    bag containing a crystalline substance — what later proved to be 3.1 grams of
    methamphetamine.
    Sims arrested Saepharn for unlawful possession of a controlled substance.
    During a more complete search incident to this arrest, Sims found another smaller baggie
    in Saepharn’s right pocket. This baggie contained 0.3 grams of methamphetamine —
    about a tenth of the amount that was in Saepharn’s left pocket. Sims had not detected
    this baggie during the earlier pat-down search.
    Following his indictment, Saepharn moved to suppress this evidence.
    Saepharn claimed that Sims had exceeded his authority when he removed the first baggie
    from Saepharn’s left pocket, since this baggie did not reasonably appear to be a weapon.
    After holding an evidentiary hearing, the superior court denied this motion.
    Later, after Saepharn hired a different attorney, he filed a second
    suppression motion, again challenging the pat-down search. The superior court held a
    second evidentiary hearing and, based on the testimony given at both hearings, the court
    denied the new suppression motion.
    Specifically, the superior court found that the materialof Saepharn’s shorts
    was thin, and that when Sims conducted the pat-down search of Saepharn’s pockets, the
    officer could identify the items he felt — the lighter, the cut straws, and the packet of
    crystalline substance — simply by patting, without improper manipulation. The court
    concluded that, based on this knowledge, Sims could lawfully remove the baggie of
    crystalline substance from Saepharn’s pocket.
    –5–                                       2467
    Why we uphold the superior court’s ruling
    Saepharn does not challenge Sergeant Sims’s authority to pat down
    Saepharn’s clothing for weapons, but Saepharn argues that this authority to conduct a
    pat-down did not include the authority to search and remove the baggie of
    methamphetamine — i.e., an item that was obviously not a weapon — from Saepharn’s
    left pocket.
    The law that applies to this situation is set forth in Minnesota v. Dickerson,
    
    508 U.S. 366
    , 
    113 S.Ct. 2130
    , 
    124 L.Ed.2d 334
     (1993).
    In Dickerson, the Supreme Court re-affirmed the principle that when the
    police conduct a pat-down search during an investigative stop, the purpose of the pat-
    down is to ensure officer safety, and the scope of this search must be limited to “[what]
    is necessary for the discovery of weapons”. 2 It is unlawful for the police to expand the
    scope of the pat-down beyond this limit in an effort to discover evidence of a crime. 3
    Nevertheless, if the police conduct a pat-down search of lawful scope and,
    during this pat-down, they detect contraband through their sense of touch, they may seize
    the contraband. 4 As we are about to explain, the crucial question is whether the physical
    characteristics of the object, felt through the suspect’s clothing, provide probable cause
    to believe that it is contraband. If so, then the contraband can lawfully be seized.
    The Dickerson decision described the test as whether the results of the pat-
    down make the object’s identity “immediately apparent”. 5 But this is a misleading
    2
    
    Id.,
     
    508 U.S. at 373
    , 
    113 S.Ct. at 2136
    .
    3
    
    Ibid.
    4
    
    Id.,
     
    508 U.S. at 375
    , 
    113 S.Ct. at 2137
    .
    5
    
    Ibid.
    –6–                                         2467
    phrasing of the rule. The real test is whether the results of the pat-down establish
    probable cause to believe that the object is contraband. See the United States Supreme
    Court’s explanation of this point in Texas v. Brown, 
    460 U.S. 730
    , 741-42; 
    103 S.Ct. 1535
    , 1542-43; 
    75 L.Ed.2d 502
     (1983), and the Alaska Supreme Court’s explanation of
    this same point in Klenke v. State, 
    581 P.2d 1119
    , 1123 (Alaska 1978).
    If the typical act of “patting” does not reveal the object as contraband —
    if its identity as contraband is revealed “only after squeezing, sliding[,] and otherwise
    manipulating the contents of the [suspect’s] pocket”, then the seizure of the contraband
    is unlawful. 6
    On the other hand, when a court assesses whether there was probable cause
    for the police to remove and seize an object from a suspect’s pockets, the court is not
    limited to the tactile information revealed by the officer’s patting. The court can also
    consider the surrounding circumstances.
    As Professor LaFave explains in his work on the law of search and
    seizure, “although grass-like substances are not per se contraband”, the police can
    justifiably rely on the fact that “[a particular] grass-like substance ... is precious enough
    to be collected and placed in plastic containers”. 7 Similarly, the police can rely on other
    circumstances such as a suspect’s attempted concealment of the item, or a suspect’s other
    reactions upon seeing the police nearby, or the fact that the suspect is in possession of
    implements that are used for ingesting the suspected drug. 8
    6
    
    Id.,
     
    508 U.S. at 378
    , 
    113 S.Ct. at 2138
    .
    7
    Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure: ATreatise on the Fourth Amendment (5th ed.
    2012), § 3.6(b), Vol. 2, pp. 389-390 (quoting People v. Symmonds, 
    310 N.E.2d 208
     (Ill. App.
    1974)).
    8
    Id. at pp. 391-95.
    –7–                                        2467
    Although these types of surrounding circumstances are most often
    considered when deciding whether the seizure of an item was justified by “plain view”,
    these same circumstances can also be considered when the government contends that the
    seizure of an item was justified by “plain feel” or “plain touch”. 9
    In Saepharn’s case, the superior court found that Saepharn’s shorts were
    made of a thin material, and that the items in Saepharn’s pockets — the lighter, the cut
    straws, and the bag filled with a crystalline substance — were sufficiently distinctive that
    the officer was able to identify them through patting, without additional improper
    manipulation. Saepharn challenges this finding, but he has the burden of showing that
    the finding is clearly erroneous. 10
    Here, the record does not leave us with a “definite and firm conviction” that
    the superior court’s finding is mistaken. 11 Rather, the record affirmatively supports the
    superior court’s conclusion that the patting in this case did not exceed lawful limits.
    We note, in particular, that Sims failed to discover the smaller plastic
    baggie that was in Saepharn’s right pocket — the same pocket that contained the lighter
    and the cut straws. The fact that Sims identified the presence of the lighter and the cut
    straws, but failed to identify the presence of the baggie, supports the superior court’s
    finding that Sims was merely patting Saepharn’s pocket, and not squeezing, sliding, or
    otherwise manipulating the objects within the pocket.
    In addition to Sims’s tactile perception of the bag (i.e., his perception that
    it contained a crystalline substance), there were the other circumstances known to the
    9
    Id. at pp. 403-04.
    10
    See Booth v. State, 
    251 P.3d 369
    , 373 (Alaska App. 2011) (explaining that a trial
    court’s findings of historical fact are reviewed under the “clearly erroneous” standard of
    review).
    11
    
    Ibid.
    –8–                                         2467
    police at the time: the behavior of the driver before and during the stop, the quick
    opening and closing of the passenger door just before the car stopped, the presence of
    cut-off straws in the pockets of both the driver and Saepharn, and Saepharn’s refusal to
    remove his hand from his pocket (until the officers used force). Given the combination
    of these factors, we conclude that Sims had probable cause to believe that the crystalline
    substance he felt in Saepharn’s pocket was contraband. Sims was therefore authorized
    to remove the baggie from Saepharn’s pocket.
    Conclusion
    The judgement of the superior court is AFFIRMED.
    –9–                                        2467
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2467 A-11170

Judges: Mannheimer, Allard, Hanley

Filed Date: 8/7/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/13/2024