Tyrin Malik Gillis v. State of Alaska ( 2023 )


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    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    TYRIN MALIK GILLIS,
    Court of Appeals No. A-13567
    Appellant,                Trial Court No. 4FA-19-02379 CR
    v.
    OPINION
    STATE OF ALASKA,
    Appellee.                  No. 2767 — December 8, 2023
    Appeal from the District Court, Fourth Judicial District,
    Fairbanks, Matthew C. Christian, Judge.
    Appearances: Jay A. Hochberg, Attorney at Law, under
    contract with the Public Defender Agency, and Samantha
    Cherot, Public Defender, Anchorage, for the Appellant.
    Renner J. St. John, Assistant District Attorney, Fairbanks, and
    Treg R. Taylor, Attorney General, Juneau, for the Appellee.
    Before: Allard, Chief Judge, and Wollenberg and Terrell,
    Judges.
    Judge ALLARD.
    A jury convicted Tyrin Malik Gillis of fifth-degree weapons misconduct
    for failing to immediately inform a peace officer that he possessed a concealed firearm
    on his person when he assisted his friends in removing possessions from a car that was
    being impounded.1 At sentencing, Gillis received a conviction of record but no jail or
    probation time. He now appeals his conviction and his sentence.
    Gillis’s challenge to his sentence was resolved through an earlier remand.
    At sentencing, Gillis (who had no prior convictions) requested a suspended imposition
    of sentence. A defendant who receives a suspended imposition of sentence is entitled
    to have their conviction set aside if they successfully complete a specified term of
    probation.2 The prosecutor and the district court agreed that a suspended imposition of
    sentence would be appropriate in this case, but they both believed that Gillis was
    ineligible for one because AS 12.55.085(f) prohibits the court from suspending the
    imposition of a sentence of a person who “uses a firearm in the commission of the
    offense for which the person is convicted.”3
    On appeal, however, the State conceded that AS 12.55.085(f) does not
    apply to Gillis because Gillis “possessed” a firearm but did not “use” it in the
    commission of the offense. Because this concession was well-founded,4 we issued an
    unpublished order temporarily returning jurisdiction to the district court so that a
    resentencing could occur.
    On remand, the district court imposed a 1-day of probation suspended
    imposition of sentence, and then set aside Gillis’s conviction. We now memorialize our
    holding that the statutory prohibition against suspended impositions of sentence under
    1
    AS 11.61.220.
    2
    AS 12.55.085(d)-(e).
    3
    AS 12.55.085(f) (exempting persons convicted of certain criminal offenses from
    receiving a suspended imposition of sentence).
    4
    See Marks v. State, 
    496 P.2d 66
    , 67-68 (Alaska 1972) (explaining that appellate
    courts must independently assess whether a concession of error by the State in a criminal
    case is supported by the record on appeal and has legal foundation).
    –2–                                       2767
    AS 12.55.085(f) applies only to persons who actively use a firearm in the commission
    of the offense; it does not apply to persons who merely possess a firearm.
    Although Gillis’s conviction has been set aside, we must still address his
    challenge to the conviction and determine whether the original conviction was lawful.
    A person commits the offense of fifth-degree weapons misconduct under
    AS 11.61.220(a)(1)(A)(i) if the person
    (1)    is 21 years of age or older and knowingly possesses a
    deadly weapon, other than an ordinary pocket knife or
    a defensive weapon,
    (A)    that is concealed on the person, and, when
    contacted by a peace officer, the person fails to
    (i)    immediately inform the peace officer of
    that possession[.]
    “[C]ontacted by a peace officer” is defined statutorily as “stopped, detained, questioned,
    or addressed in person by the peace officer for an official purpose.”5
    On appeal, Gillis argues that the evidence used to convict him at trial was
    legally insufficient because, according to Gillis, “contacted by a peace officer” is
    limited to situations in which a person has been seized under the Fourth Amendment.
    After reviewing the legislative history, we conclude that the term “contacted by a peace
    officer” was intended to apply to Fourth Amendment seizures and to interactions with
    the police that are akin to a seizure in terms of formality and purpose. We further
    conclude that Gillis was not “stopped, detained, questioned, or addressed in person by
    [a] peace officer for an official purpose” within the intended meaning of those terms.
    We therefore reverse Gillis’s original conviction for fifth-degree weapons misconduct.
    5
    AS 11.61.220(i).
    –3–                                        2767
    Relevant facts and prior proceedings
    In the early morning hours of Saturday, August 17, 2019, Fairbanks Police
    Officer Jason Pace was on patrol when he encountered a vehicle that was driving on
    four flat tires. Officer Pace initiated a traffic stop, which evolved into an investigation
    for driving under the influence based on his contact with the driver. Because the driver
    was initially uncooperative, Officer Pace asked for back-up, and eventually several
    officers responded, including Officer Lane Bonham and Sergeant Nathan Werner.
    While Officer Bonham was arresting the driver, a white vehicle drove up
    near the investigation scene and dropped Gillis off. Officer Pace and Sergeant Werner
    considered it unusual that a person would be dropped off at the scene of a driving under
    the influence investigation, so they approached Gillis, with Sergeant Werner asking
    him, “What’s up, man?” Gillis asked if he could drive the stopped vehicle away from
    the scene, and Sergeant Werner said that he could not because it had four flat tires and
    was going to be impounded.
    Gillis stated that the driver and passengers in the stopped vehicle were his
    friends. Sergeant Werner explained that the driver had been arrested for driving under
    the influence, and that the vehicle could be recovered from impound. The officer
    indicated that the passengers were taking off to a nearby gas station. Gillis asked if he
    could just talk to the driver and tell him to “chill out.” Sergeant Werner indicated that
    that was unnecessary because the driver had been “pretty cool.”
    Gillis then walked around the front of the car to see his friends. After
    receiving permission to assist his friends in removing their possessions from the car,
    Gillis leaned into the vehicle to get an object in the front seat. As Gillis was leaning into
    the vehicle, Sergeant Werner noticed what appeared to be a pistol in Gillis’s right front
    pocket. Sergeant Werner alerted Officer Pace that Gillis had a gun. Officer Pace shined
    his flashlight on Gillis’s pocket and verified this. Officer Pace then grabbed Gillis’s arm
    and reached into his pocket and retrieved the firearm. Officer Pace asked Gillis, “What’s
    with the firearm in your pocket?” Gillis responded, “That’s mine, that’s mine.”
    –4–                                         2767
    When the police checked Gillis’s name in the Alaska Public Safety
    Information Network (APSIN), they discovered that he had been advised by a military
    police officer four months earlier about his duty to “immediately inform” law
    enforcement of any concealed handgun on his person “when contacted by a peace
    officer.”
    Based on the foregoing, Gillis was arrested and charged by complaint with
    one count of fifth-degree weapons misconduct in violation of AS 11.61.220(a)(1)(A)(i),
    which makes it a class B misdemeanor for a person who is twenty-one years of age or
    older to “knowingly possess[] a deadly weapon . . . that is concealed on the person, and,
    when contacted by a peace officer, the person fails to immediately inform the peace
    officer of that possession.” “[C]ontacted by a peace officer” is defined statutorily as
    “stopped, detained, questioned, or addressed in person by the peace officer for an
    official purpose.”6
    At trial, Fort Wainwright Police Officer Jenny Kaiser testified that, four
    months earlier, Gillis had come to the visitor center near the post’s main gate to report
    that a friend was being harassed. While taking the report, Officer Kaiser asked Gillis if
    he had a weapon on him. Gillis stated that he did not, but that he had one in his vehicle.
    Officer Kaiser testified that she informed Gillis about Alaska’s law on carrying a
    concealed weapon:
    Officer Kaiser: I said that if he has a weapon on him
    . . . that he needs to talk to — or tell the officer that it’s there,
    not to reach for it. And if the officer’s in the process of
    talking to him, while he knows that, just go ahead and
    interrupt the officer and just tell them where it is.
    Gillis’s defense at trial was two-fold. First, he argued that the handgun
    was not “concealed” because it was in his front pocket and readily identifiable as a
    firearm by both police officers. Second, he argued that his interaction with the police
    6
    AS 11.61.220(i).
    –5–                                      2767
    did not qualify as being “stopped, detained, questioned, or addressed in person by [a]
    peace officer for an official purpose” because Gillis was not the subject of the
    investigation or even a participant in or witness to the investigation.
    In her opening statement, Gillis’s defense attorney analogized his situation
    to one where a person with a concealed weapon is trying to find a restaurant. While
    walking, the person comes across some police officers and asks for directions to the
    restaurant. During the interaction, the person bends over to pick something up, and only
    then does the officer notice the concealed weapon.
    At the close of the State’s evidence, Gillis moved for a judgment of
    acquittal, arguing that the firearm was not concealed and that the situation where he was
    helping the passengers remove their effects did not meet the statutory definition of
    “contacted by a peace officer” because he was not “stopped or detained,” was not
    “questioned,” and was not “asked for any ID” or even his name.
    The trial judge concluded that the officers’ initial interaction with Gillis
    did not meet the statutory criteria for being “contacted by a peace officer” because it
    was too casual and involved only chit-chat between Gillis and the officers. The judge
    therefore granted a judgment of acquittal as to the initial interaction with the officers
    and prohibited the prosecutor from arguing that this conduct constituted being
    “contacted by a peace officer.”
    However, the judge concluded that a jury could reasonably find that Gillis
    had been “addressed in person by the peace officer for an official purpose” at the point
    in his interaction when Gillis obtained permission to help his friends remove their
    personal effects from the vehicle. The judge also concluded that there was sufficient
    evidence of concealment to permit the issue to go to the jury.
    The jury subsequently convicted Gillis. This appeal followed.
    –6–                                      2767
    Why we reverse Gillis’s conviction for fifth-degree weapons misconduct
    On appeal, Gillis argues that the evidence presented at trial was
    insufficient to convict him of fifth-degree weapons misconduct. Although framed as a
    sufficiency issue, Gillis’s challenge to his conviction ultimately rests on a question of
    statutory interpretation: what does “contacted by a peace officer” mean? That is, when
    is a person considered “stopped, detained, questioned, or addressed in person by the
    peace officer for an official purpose” for purposes of triggering a person’s legal duty
    under AS 11.61.220(a)(1)(A)(i) to “immediately inform” the peace officer of a
    concealed deadly weapon on their person?
    The proper interpretation of a statute is a question of law to which we
    apply our independent judgment.7 “When ‘interpreting a statute, we consider its
    language, its purpose, and its legislative history, in an attempt to give effect to the
    legislature’s intent, with due regard for the meaning the statutory language conveys to
    others.’”8 “We do not mechanically apply the plain meaning rule, using instead a sliding
    scale approach to statutory interpretation, in which the plainer the statutory language is,
    the more convincing the evidence of contrary legislative purpose or intent must be.”9
    Thus, before analyzing the meaning of the specific language at issue, we
    first review the legislative history of AS 11.61.220(a)(1). As we are about to explain,
    AS 11.61.220(a)(1)’s affirmative disclosure requirement for concealed carry weapons,
    as originally enacted, only applied to individuals who had received permits to possess
    concealed firearms. Those individuals had been specifically informed of their
    obligation to affirmatively disclose their possession of a concealed firearm to police
    officers as part of the permitting process. But the legislature ultimately removed the
    7
    Kohlhaas v. State, 
    518 P.3d 1095
    , 1103-04 (Alaska 2022).
    8
    State v. Planned Parenthood of the Great Nw., 
    436 P.3d 984
    , 992 (Alaska 2019)
    (internal quotations omitted).
    9
    State v. Fyfe, 
    370 P.3d 1092
    , 1095 (Alaska 2016) (internal quotations omitted).
    –7–                                        2767
    requirement that a permit be obtained before carrying a concealed firearm and, at the
    same time, extended the affirmative disclosure requirement to essentially all individuals
    in possession of a concealed weapon who are “contacted by a peace officer,” as the
    legislature intended that term to be understood.
    The history of AS 11.61.220(a)(1)
    Prior to 1994, Alaska law prohibited all persons who were not peace
    officers from carrying a concealed deadly weapon unless the person was (1) on their
    own property; or (2) engaged in lawful outdoor activity, such as hunting.10
    In 1994, the Alaska legislature created a concealed carry permit system
    that allowed non-law enforcement individuals to carry a concealed firearm if they
    completed a rigorous permitting process.11 The permitting process required various
    background checks and mandatory gun safety trainings.12
    As part of the new concealed carry permit system, the legislature enacted
    a provision that required a permittee, if stopped by a peace officer, to “immediately
    inform” the peace officer that they were carrying a concealed handgun “under the
    10
    Former AS 11.61.220(a)(1) (1991) (prohibiting people from knowingly possessing
    a deadly weapon other than a pocket knife or defensive weapon concealed on the person);
    former AS 11.61.220(c) (1991) (exempting peace officers from the restrictions under
    (a)(1)); former AS 11.61.220(b) (1980) (providing for affirmative defenses including that
    the person was on their own land or “engaged in lawful hunting, fishing, trapping, or other
    lawful outdoor activity that necessarily involves the carrying of a weapon for personal
    protection”); see also Commentary to Alaska’s Revised Criminal Code, 1978 Senate
    Journal Supp. No. 47 (June 12), at 103 (explaining that the affirmative defense of being on
    one’s own land “recognizes that the privacy right of Alaska’s citizens to carry concealed
    weapons in their dwelling or on property appurtenant to their dwelling outweighs law
    enforcement’s interest in regulating such activity”).
    11
    See SLA 1994, ch. 67, § 4.
    12
    See id.
    –8–                                      2767
    permit.”13 Initially, the bill used the word “stopped” rather than “contacted.” 14 But the
    bill was later amended to use the term “contacted by a peace officer” which was defined
    as “stopped, detained, questioned, or addressed in person by the peace officer for an
    official purpose.”15
    This definition appears to have received little discussion in the official
    committee hearings. The only substantive discussion of the provision appears to be from
    the bill sponsor, Representative Jeannette James, who described two examples of
    circumstances in which permittees would be expected to inform law enforcement of
    any concealed handguns. The first example involved a traffic stop or similar type of
    seizure — “if you were speeding down a highway or for any other reason a policeman
    stopped you.”16 The second example involved a situation where the person found
    themselves as a witness or participant in the middle of an active police investigation
    even though they were not the target of the investigation:
    There are other times when you might be just in the crowd
    of something that happened and there was a skirmish of
    some sort, you’re totally an innocent person, you have the
    obligation to let that policeman know that you have a permit
    for concealed carry.[17]
    13
    Id.
    14
    See C.S.H.B. 351, 18th Leg., 1st Sess. (Version B) (as offered by H. Stan., Mar. 2,
    1994) (stating that “[w]henever a permittee who is carrying a concealed weapon is stopped
    by a peace officer, the permittee shall immediately inform the peace officer that the
    permittee is carrying a concealed weapon under the permit”).
    15
    See C.S.H.B. 351, 18th Leg., 1st Sess. (Version C) (as offered by H. Jud., Mar. 25,
    1994).
    16
    Audio of Senate Finance Committee, House Bill 351, statement of Representative
    Jeannette James, Tape SFC-94, #78, at 1:13:34 - 1:13:40 (Apr. 29, 1994).
    17
    Id. at 1:13:48 - 1:14:01.
    –9–                                        2767
    Notably, the duty to “immediately inform” police about a concealed handgun applied
    only to concealed carry permittees who were educated about this duty as part of the
    permitting process.18
    This system changed in 2003, when the legislature enacted legislation that
    retained a voluntary permit system but legalized the permitless carrying of concealed
    deadly weapons for essentially everyone over the age of twenty-one who was not
    otherwise prohibited by law from carrying such weapons.19 In creating this new
    permitless system, the legislature extended the duty to “immediately inform” police
    officers about concealed deadly weapons to anyone who carried a concealed weapon
    on their person, including persons on their own property or engaged in hunting or other
    outdoor activities.20 The legislature accomplished this by repealing AS 18.65.750, the
    18
    Former AS 18.65.750(b) (1994) (“Whenever a permittee who is carrying a
    concealed handgun is contacted by a peace officer, the permittee shall immediately inform
    the peace officer that the permittee is carrying a concealed handgun under the permit.”);
    former AS 18.65.715(a)(1) (1994) (requiring that applicants take an approved handgun
    course, which included “knowledge of Alaska law relating to firearms and the use of deadly
    force”); see also SLA 1994, ch. 67, § 4.
    19
    SLA 2003, ch. 62, §§ 1-7. See Sponsor Statement from Representative Eric Croft,
    regarding House Bill 102 (Apr. 10, 2003) (“HB 102 does not eliminate the state’s
    concealed carry permit program for two reasons. First, a person may want a permit to allow
    reciprocity, i.e. traveling to a reciprocity state for a hunt. Second, a concealed carry permit
    is useful for purchasing because it allows permit holders to bypass the required waiting
    period because the FBI background checks have already been completed during the
    permitting process.”).
    See also Letter from Brian Judy, Alaska State Liaison of the National Rifle
    Association, to Representative Eric Croft, regarding House Bill 102 (Apr. 4, 2003) (“Law-
    abiding citizens should not be required to obtain permission to provide a means of self
    protection for themselves or their family. Indeed, Article I, Section 19 of the Alaska State
    Constitution provides that ‘The individual right to keep and bear arms shall not be denied
    or infringed by the state…’ Alaska’s prohibition on concealed carry essentially puts a
    pricetag on those Alaskan’s natural right to self-defense for whom carrying a firearm in
    plain view is not a reasonable nor responsible option.”).
    20
    SLA 2003, ch. 62, §§ 1-2; Audio of Senate Judiciary Committee, House Bill 102,
    statement of Mark Enoft, staff member to Representative Eric Croft, Tape 03-44, at 2:33 -
    – 10 –                                        2767
    prior concealed carry permitting statute, and placing its language about “immediately
    inform[ing]” a peace officer when “contacted” in AS 11.61.220, the statute defining the
    class B misdemeanor offense of fifth-degree weapons misconduct. Alaska
    Statute 11.61.220(a)(1) was therefore amended to its current form, which provides:
    (a)    A person commits the crime of misconduct involving
    weapons in the fifth degree if the person
    (1)    is 21 years of age or older and knowingly
    possesses a deadly weapon, other than an
    ordinary pocket knife or a defensive weapon,
    (A)    that is concealed on the person, and,
    when contacted by a peace officer, the
    person fails to
    (i)    immediately inform the peace
    officer of that possession; or
    (ii)   allow the peace officer to secure
    the deadly weapon, or fails to
    secure the weapon at the direction
    of the peace officer, during the
    duration of the contact[.][21]
    The legislature also inserted the definition of “contacted by a peace officer” in the fifth-
    degree weapons misconduct statute. Alaska Statute 11.61.220(i) now states: “In (a)(1)
    3:33 (May 12, 2003) (saying that HB 102 will expand the reporting requirement to hunters
    and individuals who are on private property); Sponsor Summary from Representative Eric
    Croft, regarding House Bill 102 (2003), at 8 (“Section 1(a)(1)(A) requires anyone carrying
    a concealed deadly weapon to inform a peace officer that they are carrying a concealed
    weapon when contacted by an officer, to secure the weapon when directed by the officer,
    and to allow the officer to secure the weapon if requested to do so by the officer. Under the
    changes brought by this bill, these requirements apply even if the person is on their own
    property when contacted by the officer. This is not currently required in statute.”).
    21
    AS 11.61.220(a)(1)(A)(i)-(ii); see also SLA 2003, ch. 62, § 1.
    – 11 –                                       2767
    of this section, ‘contacted by a peace officer’ means stopped, detained, questioned, or
    addressed in person by the peace officer for an official purpose.”22
    However, the addition of this statutory language and the creation of a new
    criminal offense was not without controversy. At the second meeting of the House State
    Affairs Committee, Representative Eric Croft, the bill’s sponsor, explained that the
    intent of these changes to AS 11.61.220 was to extend the “affirmative obligation” to
    inform police of concealed weapons beyond concealed carry permittees to anyone
    carrying a concealed weapon.23
    Later in the hearing, Representative Ethan Berkowitz raised due process
    and notice concerns regarding the obligation to “immediately inform” police officers of
    any concealed weapon. He suggested that when the police make contact with a person,
    the officer should affirmatively tell the person of their obligation to inform the officer
    about any concealed weapons, likening this advisement to Miranda warnings.24
    Representative Berkowitz also asked what the culpable mental state would be if the
    person failed to immediately inform the police of a concealed weapon,25 and expressed
    22
    SLA 2003, ch. 62 § 4. Compare id. with former AS 18.65.750(d) (1994) (“In this
    section, ‘contacted by a peace officer’ means stopped, detained, questioned, or addressed
    in person by the peace officer for an official purpose.”).
    23
    Audio of House State Affairs Standing Committee, House Bill 102, statement of
    Representative Eric Croft, Tape 03-38, at 10:28 - 11:20 (Apr. 8, 2003) (“[The 1994 law]
    also said that if you were a permittee and an officer stopped you, you were under an
    affirmative obligation to tell them that you had the weapon. And, if they felt it necessary,
    allow them to secure it while you’re talking. . . . You say ‘Hi, officer, I have my .45 with
    me’ [and the officer could then seize the weapon if they want]. . . . But the way it was
    written, that was a requirement of permittees and if you were on your own land or hunting
    or fishing, you escaped that requirement. . . . We have made that a general requirement.”).
    24
    Audio of House State Affairs Standing Committee, House Bill 102, statement of
    Representative Ethan Berkowitz, Tape 03-38, at 24:08 - 24:32 (Apr. 8, 2003).
    25
    Id. at 25:13 - 25:45 (“What’s the mens rea, if you don’t immediately inform? What’s
    the culpable mental state? . . . There’s no intent to not inform the officer, it’s not reckless
    because you don’t know about it, you’re not negligent because you don’t know about it . . .
    – 12 –                                        2767
    concern about “imposing an affirmative duty on people to inform the police of
    anything.”26 As he explained, “If people are unaware of that affirmative duty, it seems
    to me problematic to try and prosecute them for a violation of that section.”27
    In response to Representative Berkowitz’s due process and notice
    concerns, Representative Max Gruenberg suggested that a person should only be
    subject to prosecution if they failed to immediately inform the police officer about a
    concealed weapon when “asked if they had a weapon.”28 However, the sponsor of the
    bill, Representative Croft, expressed reluctance to put the burden of asking about a
    weapon on the police.29 The committee then heard public testimony in response to the
    bill, without resolving the due process or notice issues raised by Representative
    Berkowitz.30 At the end of the discussion, Chairman Bruce Weyhrauch requested that
    Representative Croft work with the committee on addressing the questions raised during
    the hearing.
    so it almost seems that you’ve devolved into a situation where . . . there’s no mental state
    required at all. And that runs counter to most components of the criminal code.”).
    26
    Id. at 28:22 - 28:30.
    27
    Id. at 28:33 - 28:44.
    28
    Audio of House State Affairs Standing Committee, House Bill 102, statement of
    Representative Max Gruenberg, Tape 03-38, at 29:03 - 29:16 (Apr. 8, 2003).
    29
    Audio of House State Affairs Standing Committee, House Bill 102, statement of
    Representative Eric Croft, Tape 03-38, at 29:17 - 29:30 (Apr. 8, 2003).
    30
    During the public testimony, Lauree Hugonin, the Executive Director of the Alaska
    Network on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault, who testified against the bill, echoed
    Representative Berkowitz’s concerns about notice, noting that under the permit system,
    permittees were given “a packet of information” so that they knew what the statutes and
    regulations were and were therefore aware of their affirmative obligation to inform police
    about any concealed firearm. Audio of House State Affairs Standing Committee, House
    Bill 102, testimony of Lauree Hugonin, Executive Director, Alaska Network on Domestic
    Violence & Sexual Assault, Tape 03-38, at 33:50 - 34:36 (Apr. 8, 2003).
    – 13 –                                      2767
    At the next House State Affairs Committee meeting, held two days later,
    Representative Croft began his remarks by noting that there had been some issues with
    the definition of “contacted by a[] [peace] officer,” and that he had distributed a
    memorandum from Legislative Counsel Gerald Luckhaupt, the attorney who drafted
    the legislation, addressing the origin and meaning of that phrase.31 The Luckhaupt
    memo indicated that the statutory language had been taken from AS 18.65.750 (the
    former concealed carry permitting statute) and that it had been “designed to reach
    situations when a concealed handgun permittee is contacted by a peace officer and the
    peace officer is entitled to do a protective frisk of the person under the authority of
    Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
     (1968).”32 The memo indicated that the language had been
    developed in 1994 “after much discussion” and the attorney was unaware of any
    problems in the application of the statute.33
    After distributing the Luckhaupt memo, Representative Croft indicated
    that he did not intend to alter the definition of “contacted by a[] [peace] officer” since
    31
    Audio of House State Affairs Committee, House Bill 102, statement of
    Representative Eric Croft, Tape 03-39, at 53:50 - 53:59 (Apr. 10, 2003).
    32
    Memorandum from Gerald P. Luckhaupt, Legislative Counsel, to Representative
    Eric Croft, regarding House Bill 102 (Apr. 9, 2003). The memo states:
    You have asked about the origin of the term ‘contacted by a peace officer’
    which is used in sec. 1 of CSHB 102() and defined in sec. 4 of that bill. This
    term exists in the Alaska statutes in AS 18.65.750. It currently governs the
    conduct of concealed handgun permittees when those permittees are
    ‘contacted by a peace officer.’ This language was developed after much
    discussion in 1994 when the concealed handgun permit system was first
    adopted. I have not been informed of any problems in the application of this
    statute in the concealed handgun permit system. It was designed to reach
    situations when a concealed handgun permittee is contacted by a peace
    officer and the peace officer is entitled to do a protective frisk of the person
    under the authority of Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
     (1968).
    33
    
    Id.
    – 14 –                                         2767
    that statutory language had “worked well” in the old permit system.34 The bill then
    moved out of committee without any further amendments or discussion on this
    definition.
    Subsequently, the House Judiciary Committee held two hearings on the
    bill. The bill file for those hearings included the same Luckhaupt memo. The memo
    was identified in the bill file’s table of contents as “Legal Opinion: Definition of
    ‘contacted by a peace officer.’”35 There were no substantive discussions of the meaning
    of “contacted by a peace officer” in the hearings. Instead, the discussion focused on
    whether it was good public policy to eliminate the mandatory training that the concealed
    carry permitting system had.
    The final two committee hearings were before the Senate Judiciary
    Committee. The Luckhaupt memo was again included as part of the packet of
    information the committee members received about the bill, and was again identified
    as “Legal Opinion: Definition of ‘contacted by a peace officer.’”36 At the first Senate
    Judiciary Committee hearing, a staff member to Representative Croft explained that the
    bill “eliminates some of the confusion” about when a person must tell a peace officer
    about a concealed weapon because that duty would now apply to everyone, not just to
    permit holders.37
    In the second Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, an officer from the
    Anchorage Police Employees Association testified in response to the bill. The officer
    initially testified in support of the bill, stating that “peace officers . . . support the
    34
    Audio of House State Affairs Committee, House Bill 102, statement of
    Representative Eric Croft, Tape 03-39, at 54:02 - 54:45 (Apr. 10, 2003).
    35
    Bill File Table of Contents, House Judiciary Committee, House Bill 102 (2003).
    36
    Bill File Table of Contents, Senate Judiciary Committee, House Bill 102 (2003).
    37
    Audio of Senate Judiciary Committee, House Bill 102, statement of Mark Enoft,
    staff member to Representative Eric Croft, Tape 03-44, at 2:34 - 3:33 (May 12, 2003).
    – 15 –                                     2767
    changes that are being proposed” and generally support any changes that provide “a
    more detailed instruction about what to do when contacted by peace officers.”38 But
    when Senator Hollis French asked the officer who would be educating the public about
    the affirmative duty to inform a police officer about any concealed handgun, the officer
    responded by pointing out that this was part of the mandatory concealed carry permit
    training, and he suggested that “some public forum of TV or municipal channels” could
    also assist in educating the public.39
    Once the officer realized that the mandatory permit training was being
    eliminated as part of this legislation, he indicated that he was less in favor of the bill,
    emphasizing that the police relied on the concealed carry permitting program to know
    who had a permit and who could legally be carrying a concealed firearm.40 There was
    no further discussion of how the public would be educated about the duty to inform a
    peace officer that they were carrying a concealed weapon if the mandatory concealed
    carry permit training was eliminated.
    The bill was subsequently passed out of committee over Senator French’s
    objection. The bill then became law without any further committee hearings.
    38
    Audio of Senate Judiciary Committee, House Bill 102, testimony of Officer Mike
    Couturier, Anchorage Police Employees Association, Tape 03-46, at 48:05 - 48:48
    (May 13, 2003).
    39
    Audio of Senate Judiciary Committee, House Bill 102, statement of Senator Hollis
    French, Tape 03-46, at 48:57 - 49:16 (May 13, 2003); Audio of Senate Judiciary
    Committee, House Bill 102, testimony of Officer Mike Couturier, Anchorage Police
    Employees Association, Tape 03-46, at 49:19 - 51:15 (May 13, 2003).
    40
    Audio of Senate Judiciary Committee, House Bill 102, testimony of Officer Mike
    Couturier, Anchorage Police Employees Association, Tape 03-46, at 54:30 - 55:56, 57:16
    - 57:30 (May 13, 2003).
    – 16 –                                      2767
    Our analysis of AS 11.61.220(a)(1)
    As just discussed, the legislative history of AS 11.61.220(a)(1)(A)(i)
    contains a memorandum from Legislative Counsel Gerald Luckhaupt in which
    Luckhaupt opines that the term “contacted by a peace officer” was “designed to reach
    situations when a concealed handgun permittee is contacted by a peace officer and the
    peace officer is entitled to do a protective frisk of the person under the authority of
    Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
     (1968).”41
    In Terry v. Ohio, the United States Supreme Court held that a police
    officer’s authority to make an on-the-street “stop and frisk” is bounded by the
    protections of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments.42 The Court therefore ruled that
    a police officer could “seize a person and subject him to a limited search for weapons”
    only if the police officer had “reasonable suspicion” that “criminal activity may be
    afoot” and that the person “may be armed and presently dangerous.”43
    Gillis argues that the Luckhaupt memo’s reference to the Terry v. Ohio
    “stop and frisk” standard demonstrates that the Alaska legislature intended “contacted
    by a peace officer” to be limited to circumstances in which a seizure under the Fourth
    Amendment has occurred. As a general matter, a Fourth Amendment seizure occurs
    only when an officer “by means of physical force or a show of authority, in some way
    restrains the liberty of a citizen.”44 “A person is ‘seized’ within the meaning of the
    41
    Memorandum from Gerald P. Luckhaupt, Legislative Counsel, to Representative
    Eric Croft, regarding House Bill 102, (Apr. 9, 2003).
    42
    Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 8, 30-31 (1968).
    43
    
    Id. at 15, 30
    .
    44
    Barrows v. State, 
    814 P.2d 1376
    , 1378 (Alaska App. 1991).
    – 17 –                                 2767
    Fourth Amendment only if, in light of all the circumstances, a reasonable person would
    believe that he or she was not free to leave or to break off the questioning.” 45
    In response, the State argues that the plain language of the statute suggests
    that the legislature intended “contacted by a peace officer” to be defined more broadly
    and to include essentially any contact with an officer who is acting in their official
    capacity.
    As already explained, Alaska applies a sliding scale approach to statutory
    interpretation, in which “the plainer the statutory language is, the more convincing the
    evidence of contrary legislative purpose or intent must be.”46
    Here, the plain language of the statute is susceptible to multiple meanings.
    Alaska Statute 11.61.220(a)(1)(A)(i) requires a person carrying a concealed weapon to,
    “when contacted by a peace officer,” “immediately inform the peace officer” that they
    are in possession of a concealed weapon. The phrase “contacted by a peace officer” is
    defined to mean “stopped, detained, questioned, or addressed in person by the peace
    officer for an official purpose.”47
    “Stopped” and “detained” are both legal terms used to describe a person
    who has been temporarily seized for Fourth Amendment purposes. Thus, one possible
    interpretation of the duty imposed by AS 11.61.220(a)(1)(A)(i) is that it applies only to
    Fourth Amendment seizures and to no other police-citizen contacts (i.e., the
    interpretation suggested by the Luckhaupt memo). But in interpreting a statute, we
    presume that “the legislature intended every word, sentence, or provision of a statute to
    have some purpose, force, and effect, and that no words or provisions are
    45
    
    Id.
    46
    Muller v. BP Expl. (Alaska) Inc., 
    923 P.2d 783
    , 788 (Alaska 1996).
    47
    AS 11.61.220(i).
    – 18 –                                      2767
    superfluous.”48 If the legislature only intended to cover Fourth Amendment seizures, it
    is difficult to explain the inclusion of the words “questioned” and “addressed” in
    addition to “stopped” and “detained.” In other words, the plain language suggests the
    legislature did not necessarily intend to limit “contacted by a peace officer” solely to
    situations in which a person could be considered “seized” for purposes of the Fourth
    Amendment.
    At the same time, the tools of statutory construction suggest that
    “questioned” and “addressed” were nevertheless intended to have meanings similar to
    “stopped” or “detained.” Under the rule of statutory construction known as noscitur a
    sociis (literally, “it is known by its associates”), “the meaning of a word in a statute can
    be gleaned from the words associated with it.”49 Thus, while “questioned” or
    “addressed” could potentially be interpreted broadly to encompass a wide variety of
    interactions between police and citizens, this canon of statutory interpretation strongly
    suggests that “questioned” and “addressed” should be interpreted more narrowly to
    include only the sort of police-citizen interactions that are consonant with the same sort
    of exercise of formal authority or official investigative action that is characteristic of an
    investigative stop or seizure.
    Interpreting the statutory language in this narrow manner is consistent
    with language in the statute specifying that the contact must be “for an official
    purpose.”50 It is also consistent with the use of the word “addressed,” which connotes a
    level of formality not typically present in regular speech.51
    48
    Johnson v. State, 
    380 P.3d 653
    , 656 (Alaska 2016).
    49
    Dawson v. State, 
    264 P.3d 851
    , 858 (Alaska App. 2011).
    50
    AS 11.61.220(i).
    51
    See Bryan A. Garner, Garner’s Modern English Usage 21 (5th ed. 2022) (describing
    “address” as “a FORMAL WORD”).
    – 19 –                                       2767
    Interpreting the statutory language in this narrow manner is also consistent
    with the legislative history. As just explained, the 2003 Luckhaupt memo indicates that
    the language was “designed” to reach situations in which a Fourth Amendment seizure
    has taken place. However, the 1994 legislative history suggests that the term was also
    intended to include circumstances that closely resemble Fourth Amendment seizures.
    In addressing legislative concerns regarding when the duty to inform would apply,
    Representative Jeannette James provided two examples in which permittees would be
    expected to inform a peace officer that they had a permit and were carrying a concealed
    firearm pursuant to that permit. The first example involved a traditional investigative
    stop; the second example involved a situation where a person witnesses a “skirmish”
    and then finds themselves involved in an active police investigation, even though they
    are not the target of the investigation.52 Thus, the examples noted by Representative
    James suggest, consistent with our interpretation of the plain language, that
    AS 11.61.220(a)(1) was intended to apply primarily to Fourth Amendment seizures and
    to additional police-citizen interactions that closely resemble Fourth Amendment
    seizures in terms of formality and purpose.
    Lastly, we note that the doctrine of constitutional avoidance favors this
    narrow interpretation of the statute. As a general matter, “[i]f an ambiguous text is
    susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation, of which only one is
    constitutional, the doctrine of constitutional avoidance directs us to adopt the
    interpretation that saves the statute.”53 There are at least two serious constitutional
    problems with interpreting AS 11.61.220(a)(1) to encompass a broad array of citizen-
    police interactions.
    52
    Audio of Senate Finance Committee, House Bill 351, statement of Representative
    Jeannette James, Tape SFC-94, #78, at 1:13:48 - 1:14:01 (Apr. 29, 1994).
    53
    State v. Planned Parenthood of the Great Nw., 
    436 P.3d 984
    , 992 (Alaska 2019).
    – 20 –                                     2767
    In Ford v. State, an unpublished decision, we discussed some of the
    potential constitutional problems posed by an overly broad reading of “contacted by a
    peace officer.”54 As we noted in Ford, a person has an absolute right to walk away and
    terminate contact with a police officer if they have not been seized.55 This right to walk
    away was recognized by the United States Supreme Court in Florida v. Royer, and is
    one of the cornerstones of our liberty rights.56 If the legal requirement to “immediately
    inform” an officer of a concealed weapon “when contacted by a peace officer” is
    defined too broadly, there will be an obvious tension between that legal obligation and
    a person’s general right to terminate an unwanted contact with the police. It is inevitable
    that informing the police of a concealed weapon will extend the duration of the contact,
    particularly given the concomitant obligation to “allow the peace officer to secure the
    deadly weapon.”57 Applying the duty to inform primarily to circumstances where a
    person has been seized and is no longer free to walk away eliminates some of these
    underlying constitutional concerns with the statute. It also confirms that “questioned,
    or addressed in person by the peace officer for an official purpose” should be interpreted
    narrowly as applying to circumstances where the person is aware that their interaction
    with the police will be of some duration.
    In addition to the constitutional concerns we raised in Ford, there are also
    the constitutional concerns raised by Representative Berkowitz in the 2003 legislative
    54
    Ford v. State, 
    2018 WL 3166882
    , at *4-5, n.17 (Alaska App. June 27, 2018)
    (unpublished).
    55
    
    Id.
     at *4 & n.15.
    56
    See Florida v. Royer, 
    460 U.S. 491
    , 497-98 (1983) (holding that when an officer
    approaches an individual, and identifies himself as a police officer “[t]he person
    approached [ ] need not answer any question put to him; indeed, he may decline to listen
    to the questions at all and may go on his way”).
    57
    AS 11.61.220(a)(1)(A)(ii).
    – 21 –                                     2767
    history.58 Alaska Statute 11.61.220(a)(1)(A)(i) is unusual because, unlike most criminal
    statutes, it does not prohibit certain unlawful behavior; instead, it imposes an
    affirmative obligation to act.59 And it is the failure to act — i.e., the failure to
    “immediately” inform a peace officer of a concealed weapon upon being contacted by
    the officer — that is criminalized under the statute.
    When a crime is defined in terms of a failure to act, “the prevailing view
    is that [one] may not be held liable if [one] does not know the facts indicating a duty to
    act.”60 Moreover, where the failure to act involves conduct that is not otherwise illegal
    and not inherently viewed by society as wrongful, the State is required to prove that the
    defendant acted culpably with respect to the inculpating circumstance — they must
    demonstrate some consciousness of wrongdoing.61 Here, the conduct at issue —
    58
    Audio of House State Affairs Standing Committee, House Bill 102, statement of
    Representative Ethan Berkowitz, Tape 03-38, at 25:13 - 25:45, 28:22 - 28:44 (Apr. 8,
    2003).
    59
    AS 11.61.220(a)(1)(A)(i).
    60
    Steve v. State, 
    875 P.2d 110
    , 122 (Alaska App. 1994) (citing 1 Wayne R. LaFave,
    Substantive Criminal Law § 3.3(b), at 289-90 (1st ed. 1986)) (alterations in original)
    (abrogated on other grounds by Jeter v. State, 
    393 P.3d 438
     (Alaska App. 2017)); see also
    Speidel v. State, 
    460 P.2d 77
    , 78 (Alaska 1969) (“It is said to be a universal rule . . . that
    conduct cannot be criminal unless it is shown that one charged with criminal conduct had
    an awareness or consciousness of some wrongdoing.”); Yang v. State, 
    107 P.3d 302
    , 309
    (Alaska App. 2005) (“In crimes of omission, the State must prove that the defendant failed
    to perform the required act, but the State must also prove that the defendant was aware of
    the circumstance that created their legal duty to act. More specifically, . . . the State must
    show that the defendant was aware of the circumstance that triggered the duty to act[.]”
    (internal quotations omitted)).
    61
    See, e.g., Lambert v. California, 
    355 U.S. 225
    , 229-30 (1957) (holding that it is not
    consistent with due process to convict a person who failed to timely register as a felon if
    the person did not know of the duty to register and there was no proof of the probability of
    such knowledge); Hentzner v. State, 
    613 P.2d 821
    , 826 (Alaska 1980) (holding that
    consciousness of wrongdoing was an element of the offense of willfully failing to register
    securities); Speidel, 460 P.2d at 80 (holding that the statute punishing failure to return a
    rented motor vehicle was invalid to the extent that it punished a person who had no
    awareness of wrongdoing); Yang, 
    107 P.3d at 310
     (“[T]he breath test refusal ordinance did
    – 22 –                                        2767
    carrying a concealed firearm — is not inherently wrongful; indeed, as a general matter,
    an individual’s right to bear arms is constitutionally protected conduct under the federal
    and state constitutions.62
    The constitutional concerns raised by Representative Berkowitz were
    therefore proper. How is a person to learn of the affirmative duty to “immediately”
    inform a peace officer of any concealed weapon now that there is no longer a mandatory
    permitting system educating them on that affirmative duty? And how is a person to
    know when such a duty is triggered in the absence of the peace officer asking the person
    if they have any weapons?
    In the current case, these due process concerns are lessened because Gillis
    was advised by a military police officer four months earlier about the general duty to
    inform a peace officer of any concealed firearms. But this advisement took place in the
    context of Gillis reporting a crime to the police officer, and the question still remains
    whether he could reasonably be expected to know that his interaction with the police
    during the events in this case constituted being “stopped, detained, questioned, or
    addressed in person by the peace officer for an official purpose” for purposes of
    triggering his affirmative duty to inform the police of the firearm he was carrying.
    not prescribe a culpable mental state, [and therefore] we concluded that, at the least, the
    ordinance required [the government to show] proof of the motorist’s negligence — i.e.,
    that the motorist ‘knew or reasonably should have known’ of their obligation to take the
    test.” (citing Svedlund v. Anchorage, 
    671 P.2d 378
    , 385-86 (Alaska App. 1983))).
    62
    See U.S. Const. amend. II; Alaska Const. art. I, § 19; see also District of Columbia
    v. Heller, 
    554 U.S. 570
    , 595 (2008) (explaining that “the Second Amendment conferred an
    individual right to keep and bear arms”); N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n, Inc. v. Bruen, 
    597 U.S., 142
     S. Ct. 2111, 2122 (2022) (holding that the Second and Fourteenth Amendments
    “protect an individual’s right to carry a handgun for self-defense outside the home.”);
    Gibson v. State, 
    930 P.2d 1300
    , 1301 (Alaska App. 1997) (explaining that the Alaska
    Constitution was amended in 1994 to make clear the right to bear arms is an individual
    right rather than a purely militia right).
    – 23 –                                       2767
    As the superior court found, Gillis’s interaction with the police was
    extremely casual. It consisted of the police asking Gillis “what’s up” and engaging in
    “chit chat” about what was happening. At no point did the police engage in any show
    of authority or suggest that Gillis was not free to leave and terminate the encounter. The
    police did not ask Gillis if he had any weapons, and at no point did the police question
    Gillis, ask for his name or identification, or otherwise treat him as a witness or
    participant in the driving under the influence investigation. Indeed, by the time Gillis
    arrived on the scene, the investigation was essentially over — the driver had been
    arrested and the car was being impounded.
    The plain language and legislative history of the statute indicate that
    “contacted by a peace officer” was designed to reach Fourth Amendment seizures and
    other police-citizen encounters that closely resemble Fourth Amendment seizures in
    terms of formality and investigative purpose. Given that Gillis was never seized, never
    became a target or a participant in the investigation, and was never asked any questions
    or even asked his name, we conclude that the evidence presented at trial was insufficient
    to establish that Gillis was “stopped, detained, questioned, or addressed in person by
    the peace officer for an official purpose” when he assisted his friends in removing their
    possessions from a car that was being impounded.
    Conclusion
    The judgment of the district court is REVERSED.
    – 24 –                                     2767
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A13567

Filed Date: 12/8/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/8/2023