State v. Dargis ( 2021 )


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  •   NOT FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST'S HAWAI#I REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER
    Electronically Filed
    Intermediate Court of Appeals
    CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX
    28-JUN-2021
    09:23 AM
    Dkt. 53 MO
    NOS. CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX AND CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX
    IN THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF THE STATE OF HAWAI#I
    STATE OF HAWAI#I, Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    LAURIE A. DARGIS, Defendant-Appellee
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    (CR. NO. 1CPC-XX-XXXXXXX)
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    (By:    Ginoza, Chief Judge, Leonard and Wadsworth, JJ.)
    In this consolidated appeal, Plaintiff-Appellant State
    of Hawai#i (State) appeals from the "Findings of Fact and
    Conclusions of Law and Order Granting Defendant's Second Motion
    to Suppress Evidence" (Order Granting Motion to Suppress) entered
    on October 23, 2019,1 by the Circuit Court of the First Circuit
    (Circuit Court).2
    On January 11, 2019, the State charged Defendant-
    Appellee Laurie A. Dargis (Dargis) by Complaint with: Promoting a
    Dangerous Drug in the Third Degree in violation of Hawaii Revised
    1
    The Circuit Court filed an identical Order Granting Motion to
    Suppress on November 7, 2019 which the State appealed in CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX. This
    court consolidated the appeals under CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX.
    2
    The Honorable Trish K. Morikawa presided.
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST'S HAWAI#I REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER
    Statutes (HRS) § 712-1243 (2014)3 (Count I), and Promoting a
    Detrimental Drug in the Third Degree in violation of HRS § 712-
    1249 (2014)4 (Count II).5
    On appeal, the State contends the Circuit Court erred:
    (1) by suppressing the "ice pipe" found in open view and the
    container of marijuana found in plain view in Dargis's vehicle
    because the seizure of that evidence did not require a search
    warrant, and even if it did, that evidence would have been
    inevitably seized pursuant to a valid warrant; and (2) in its
    Conclusions of Law (COL) 4, COL 5, COL 10, COL 11, and COL 12.
    For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the Circuit
    Court's Order Granting Motion to Suppress.
    I. Background
    On May 28, 2019, Dargis filed a Motion to Suppress
    Evidence (First Motion to Suppress) arguing that there had been a
    lack of reasonable suspicion for the stop of her vehicle. On
    June 28, 2019, Honolulu Police Department Officer Jarrett Atkins
    (Officer Atkins) testified at the hearing on Dargis's First
    Motion to Suppress, after which the Circuit Court denied the
    motion, finding there was reasonable suspicion for the stop of
    the vehicle.
    On August 5, 2019, Dargis filed a Second Motion to
    Suppress Evidence (Second Motion to Suppress). In her memorandum
    3
    HRS § 712-1243 provides, in relevant part:
    Promoting a dangerous drug in the third degree. (1) A
    person commits the offense of promoting a dangerous drug in the
    third degree if the person knowingly possesses any dangerous drug
    in any amount.
    4
    HRS § 712-1249 provides, in relevant part:
    Promoting a detrimental drug in the third degree. (1)
    A person commits the offense of promoting a detrimental drug
    in the third degree if the person knowingly possesses any
    marijuana or any Schedule V substance in any amount.
    5
    Dargis's co-defendant Gerry K. Kawaguchi ( Kawaguchi), who is not a
    party in this appeal, was charged with Promoting a Dangerous Drug in the First
    Degree in violation of HRS § 712-1241(1)(a)(i) ( Count III).
    2
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    in support of her Second Motion to Suppress, Dargis argued, inter
    alia, that Officer Atkins illegally searched her vehicle without
    first obtaining a warrant because there were no exigent
    circumstances to justify the warrantless search. The parties
    stipulated to the June 28, 2019 testimony by Officer Atkins and
    no witnesses testified at the hearing on Dargis's Second Motion
    to Suppress.
    After a hearing on September 18, 2019, the Circuit
    Court entered its Order Granting Motion to Suppress, in which it
    held there were no exigent circumstances and a search warrant was
    required to seize the evidence from Dargis's vehicle. The
    Circuit Court thus suppressed the evidence. The Circuit Court's
    findings of fact in its Order Granting Motion to Suppress are not
    challenged and are therefore binding on appeal. Okada Trucking
    Co. v. Bd. of Water Supply, 97 Hawai#i 450, 458, 
    40 P.3d 73
    , 81
    (2002). The unchallenged findings state in pertinent part:
    8. The following information was provided by Officer Atkins
    in his previous testimony on June 28, 2019:
    a. On January 6, 2019, at approximately 3:[5]4 a.m., 6
    Officer Atkins was on duty and on patrol in his marked
    blue and white vehicle traveling on Kamehameha
    Highway.
    b. While on patrol, Officer Atkins noticed a vehicle
    parked along the area of 56-565 Kamehameha Highway and
    approached the vehicle.
    c. When Officer Atkins was approximately 15 feet away
    from the vehicle he noticed that the vehicle was a
    green Honda that he had observed a few days prior at
    Kahana Bay.
    d. Officer Atkins related that a few days prior while
    he had been transporting a prisoner to the Kaneohe
    Police Station, Officer Atkins had observed a green
    Honda parked at Kahana Bay. Per Officer Atkins there
    were a number of abandoned cars in the area of Kahana
    Bay. Officer Atkins was familiar with Defendant Dargis
    and observed her next to the green Honda. Officer
    Atkins slowed down and ran the license plate of the
    green Honda. Officer Atkins learned that the green
    Honda had an expired safety check and vehicle tax.
    6
    The Circuit Court's findings incorrectly state the time was
    approximately 3:24 a.m., which the parties concede is a typographical error.
    3
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    e. On January 6, 2019, after Officer Atkins realized
    that the green Honda was the same that he had seen and
    run the plate a few days prior, Officer Atkins pulled
    his vehicle to a stop approximately 10 feet from the
    green Honda. Officer Atkins car was parked facing the
    front of the green Honda. Officer Atkins headlights
    were on as his car approached the green Honda and his
    headlights remained on and were facing the driver’s
    door area when he parked his vehicle.
    f. Prior to getting out of his vehicle, Office Atkins
    confirmed that the green Honda had expired vehicle tax
    and safety. Officer Atkins then got out of his car and
    approached the green Honda. As he approached the green
    Honda, Officer Atkins observed Defendant Dargis in the
    driver seat of the vehicle ignite a lighter with her
    right hand and put the lighter to the bulbous end of a
    glass pipe that was pressed to her lips and in her
    left hand. Officer Atkins further observed white
    residue in the pipe and smoke emit from the bulbous
    end of the pipe.
    g. Upon becoming aware of Officer Atkins, Defendant
    Dargis dropped the pipe to the floor of the vehicle.
    h. Officer Atkins reached the door of the vehicle and
    order [sic] Defendant Dargis out of the vehicle. He
    took Defendant Dargis to the rear of the vehicle and
    arrested her for Promoting a Dangerous Drug in the
    Third Degree.
    i. After Defendant Dargis exited the vehicle, Officer
    Atkins observed the pipe on the floor of the vehicle
    where Defendant Dargis's feet had been in the vehicle.
    j. Officer Atkins then ordered the passenger, co-
    Defendant Gerry Kawaguchi, out of the vehicle.
    k. After the defendants were out of the vehicle,
    Officer Atkins retrieved the pipe that he had observed
    Defendant Dargis drop onto the floor of the vehicle.
    l. As he was retrieving the pipe, Officer Atkins
    observed and recovered two other items from the floor
    of the vehicle: a clear glass tube with a broken
    bulbous end and a jar that contained a green leafy
    substance which Officer Atkins identified as
    marijuana.
    II.   Standard of Review
    We review the circuit court's ruling on a motion to suppress
    de novo to determine whether the ruling was right or wrong.
    The circuit court's conclusions of law underlying its ruling
    on a motion to suppress are also reviewed de novo under the
    right/wrong standard. Under the right/wrong standard, we
    examine the facts and answer the question without being
    required to give any weight to the trial court's answer to
    it.
    State v. Vinuya, 96 Hawai#i 472, 480, 
    32 P.3d 116
    , 124 (App.
    2001) (quotation marks and citations omitted).
    4
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    However, findings of fact are reviewed under
    the clearly erroneous standard, and will not be set aside on
    appeal unless they are determined to be clearly erroneous. A
    finding of fact is clearly erroneous when (1) the record
    lacks substantial evidence to support the finding, or (2)
    despite substantial evidence in support of the finding, the
    appellate court is nonetheless left with a definite and firm
    conviction that a mistake has been made.
    Id. at 480-81, 
    32 P.3d at 124-25
     (quotation marks and citations
    omitted) (format altered).
    III. Discussion
    A. Warrant Requirement and Legally Recognized Exceptions
    The United States Supreme Court and the Hawai#i Supreme
    Court have recognized that although an automobile, because of its
    mobility, may be treated less stringently than a private
    residence for Fourth Amendment purposes, a search and seizure
    involving a motor vehicle is still subject to the warrant
    requirement. State v. Elliott, 
    61 Haw. 492
    , 494, 
    605 P.2d 930
    ,
    932 (1980) (citing Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 
    403 U.S. 443
    (1971)). Further, it is well established that any warrantless
    search of a constitutionally protected area, such as an
    automobile, is presumptively unreasonable unless there is both
    probable cause and a legally recognized exception to the warrant
    requirement. State v. Jenkins, 93 Hawai#i 87, 102, 
    997 P.2d 13
    ,
    28 (2000).
    There is no dispute that probable cause was present in
    this case. The dispute in this case centers on whether a search
    warrant for the Honda was required before the subject items were
    seized from the vehicle. In support of its contention that a
    warrant was not required, the State relies on State v. Chong, 
    52 Haw. 226
    , 
    473 P.2d 567
     (1970) and argues that the facts in Chong
    and this case are similar. Specifically, the State argues that
    in Chong, the police knew that the defendants had a reputation
    for being narcotic users. 52 Haw. at 228, 
    473 P.2d at 569
    . The
    police spotted the defendants and when they pulled up alongside
    the defendants' vehicle, Mrs. Chong was holding an eyedropper.
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    Id.
     A few seconds later, Mrs. Chong threw the eyedropper out of
    the vehicle and swallowed something she had in her hand. 
    Id.
    The police then arrested the defendants, searched the vehicle,
    and found heroin and drug paraphernalia. Id. at 229, 
    473 P.2d at 570
    . The exception to the warrant requirement articulated in
    Chong was that a limited warrantless search is constitutionally
    permissible incident to an arrest based upon probable cause.7
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    In this case, the State did not assert the warrant
    exception that is articulated in Chong. Instead, in its
    opposition to Dargis's Second Motion to Suppress, the State
    argued that the police action was justified at its inception
    (apparently referring to Officer Atkins' investigation of
    Dargis's vehicle on the side of the road), and that "the search
    was reasonably related in scope to the circumstances that
    justified the interference in the first place." The State's
    opposition then appears to make an argument based on Officer
    Atkins seeing Dargis in the vehicle with drug paraphernalia and
    making confusing references to both "open view" and "plain view"
    without distinguishing between the two.8 Similarly, at the
    hearing on September 18, 2019, the State argued that, after
    Officer Atkins saw Dargis through a vehicle window, lighting what
    appeared to be a methamphetamine pipe, he had observed a crime,
    and had probable cause "to intrude upon the defendant's
    7
    The State mentions, for the first time on appeal, that a search
    conducted incident to a proper arrest is constitutional, but does not argue
    that exception as being applicable in this case. Thus, we do not address
    whether the search of Dargis's vehicle was constitutionally valid as a search
    conducted incident to a proper arrest. See Hawai #i Rules of Appellate
    Procedure (HRAP) Rule 28(b)(7) ("Points not argued may be deemed waived"); see
    also, State v. Moses, 102 Hawai#i 449, 456, 
    77 P.3d 940
    , 947 (2003) ("[a]s a
    general rule, if a party does not raise an argument at trial, that argument
    will be deemed to have been waived on appeal").
    8
    In its Memorandum in "Opposition to [Dargis's Second Motion to
    Suppress]," the State referred to the open and plain view doctrines
    interchangeably. Although the State provided a brief explanation of the open
    view doctrine, it did not explain the plain view doctrine or how the two
    doctrines differ.
    6
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    situation," order her out of the vehicle and search for the pipe
    he saw her drop. The State also attempted to address the open
    and plain view exceptions to the warrant requirement, apparently
    arguing that the open view doctrine allowed Officer Atkins to
    search the vehicle, without a warrant, for the pipe he had seen
    Dargis drop, and that the marijuana was found based on the
    officer's plain view. The State also asserted Chong allowed
    Officer Atkins to search the car without a warrant, arguing that
    in Chong, officers were allowed to make a vehicle search without
    a warrant based only on observing furtive suspicious behavior.
    On appeal, the State continues to argue the pipe was found based
    on the open view doctrine, the marijuana was found in plain view,
    and that Chong supports its position that Officer Atkins did not
    require a warrant.
    Although the underlying facts in Chong may be somewhat
    similar to the facts of this case, Chong is inapposite because
    the Hawai#i Supreme Court did not consider the open or plain view
    doctrines in Chong. Further, the State argues for an incorrect
    reading of Chong. During the September 18, 2019 hearing, the
    State argued that:
    the facts in -- Chong is not a plain view, it's acting --
    it's talking about whether it's okay to conduct a
    warrantless search.
    And in Chong, they were acting furtive, they were
    acting suspicious, and they were dropping, like, eye drops
    in their eyes, and based just on those -- that basis, they
    were permitted to go inside the car and do a search of the
    car.
    . . . .
    [The State:] Okay, but for the initial going into the car to
    retrieve what [the police] just observed was a crime in the
    commission under Chong, a warrantless search is permitted,
    going into the car without a warrant if you see what -- what
    they just saw. And again, in Chong, they were permitted to
    go into the car without a warrant based on furtive
    suspicion.
    On appeal, the State argues for a similarly incorrect reading of
    Chong, that a warrantless search of a constitutionally protected
    area is permitted based solely on suspicion by the police that a
    crime had been committed or to retrieve suspected contraband.
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    This argument is contrary to the holding in Chong and is without
    merit.
    The State also argues the search of Dargis's vehicle is
    valid based on Hawai#i Supreme Court decisions in State v.
    Elliott, 
    61 Haw. 492
    , 
    605 P.2d 930
     (1980), State v. Agnasan, 
    62 Haw. 252
    , 
    614 P.2d 393
     (1980), and State v. Powell, 
    61 Haw. 316
    ,
    
    603 P.2d 143
     (1979). However, these cases are distinguishable.
    In both Elliot, 61 Haw. at 497-98, 
    605 P.2d at 934
    , and Agnasan,
    62 Haw. at 255-56, 
    614 P.2d at 395-96
    , the Hawai#i Supreme Court
    held that both probable cause and exigent circumstances were
    present to justify the immediate warrantless search of a
    defendant's vehicle. The Hawai#i Supreme Court did not consider
    the open or plain view doctrines in Elliott or Agnasan. In
    Powell, the Hawai#i Supreme Court held that the plain view
    doctrine justified the seizure of evidence from the defendant's
    vehicle. 61 Haw. at 325, 
    603 P.2d at 149-50
    . Here, however, the
    State does not explain how Powell is relevant to this case.
    Powell is inapplicable in supporting the State's position that
    the open view doctrine allowed Officer Atkins to initially search
    the vehicle for the ice pipe. Thus, Powell is unhelpful to the
    State in justifying Officer Atkins initially searching the
    vehicle, such that the plain view doctrine could apply to his
    discovery of the marijuana. Accordingly, Elliott, Agnasan, and
    Powell are inapposite.
    B. Plain View and Open View
    The Hawai#i Supreme Court has distinguished between the
    plain view doctrine and open view doctrine as follows:
    In the plain view situation, the view takes place after an
    intrusion into activities or areas as to which there is a
    reasonable expectation of privacy. The officer has already
    intruded, and, if his or her intrusion is justified, the
    objects in plain view, sighted inadvertently, will be
    admissible.
    In the open view situation, however, the observation takes
    place from a non-intrusive vantage point. The governmental
    agent is either on the outside looking outside or on the
    outside looking inside at that which is knowingly exposed to
    the public. The object under observation is not within the
    scope of the constitution.
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    State v. Meyer, 78 Hawai#i 308, 312-13, 
    893 P.2d 159
    , 163-64
    (1995) (brackets and citation omitted).
    The Hawai#i Supreme Court also explained that for open
    view sightings:
    the warrantless seizure of the evidence in question depends
    on whether the item is in a constitutionally protected area.
    If the evidence is not in an area where there is a
    reasonable expectation of privacy, that is, if it is located
    in a common space, such evidence is subject to seizure by
    the governmental agent who spots it, without the necessity
    of a warrant or exigent circumstances. . . .
    However, if the evidence in question is in open view in an
    area in which the evidence retains its constitutional
    protection, a warrant is required or exigent circumstances
    must exist before the object may be seized.
    Id. at 313, 
    893 P.2d at 164
     (emphasis added).
    With respect to seizure of evidence under the plain
    view doctrine, three factors are required: "(1) prior
    justification for the intrusion; (2) inadvertent discovery; and
    (3) probable cause to believe the item is evidence of a crime or
    contraband." Id. at 314, 
    893 P.2d at 165
    . Under the plain view
    doctrine, once a warrantless intrusion is justified and the
    police are placed in plain view of the evidence, exigent
    circumstances are not necessary to seize the evidence. Id. at
    316, 
    893 P.2d at 167
    .
    Here, the Circuit Court correctly concluded that the
    open view doctrine applies to the "ice pipe" in Dargis's hand,
    which Officer Atkins observed while outside the vehicle. Dargis
    then dropped the pipe, Officer Atkins ordered her to exit the
    vehicle, took her to the rear of the vehicle and arrested her.
    At some point after Dargis exited the vehicle, Officer Atkins
    observed the pipe on the floor of the vehicle where Dargis's feet
    had been.9 Under the open view doctrine, exigent circumstances
    9
    Among its various positions on appeal, the State claims the pipe on
    the floor was "easily visible through the driver's-side window or the
    windshield to any passerby that had bothered to look into the car[,]" and that
    the pipe had been discovered in open view. The State apparently agrees that
    the open view doctrine applies to the pipe and, in any event, does not
    challenge COL 2 in which the Circuit Court concluded that the open view
    doctrine applies given Officer Atkins being outside of the vehicle when he
    observed the pipe with residue in Dargis's hand. Further, the State does not
    argue that Officer Atkins saw the pipe in plain view while Dargis exited the
    (continued...)
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    were required before seizing the pipe from Dargis's vehicle
    without a warrant. See State v. Kapoi, 
    64 Haw. 130
    , 141, 
    637 P.2d 1105
    , 1114 (1981) ("even the 'open view' of possible
    contraband, without more, furnished no basis for its seizure
    without a warrant. For 'no amount of probable cause can justify a
    warrantless search or seizure absent exigent circumstances.'"
    (quoting Coolidge, 
    403 U.S. at 468
    )).
    For purposes of the open view doctrine, the State had
    the burden to establish exigent circumstances to seize items
    without a search warrant. State v. Ramos-Saunders, 135 Hawai#i
    299, 306, 
    349 P.3d 406
    , 413 (App. 2015). The State failed to
    provide any evidence or argument to the Circuit Court that
    exigent circumstances existed to allow the warrantless search of
    the vehicle. At the hearing on Dargis's Second Motion to
    Suppress, the parties stipulated to the testimony by Officer
    Atkins from the hearing on Dargis's First Motion to Suppress,
    during which Officer Atkins mainly testified as to whether there
    had been reasonable suspicion for the stop of the vehicle.
    During the hearing on Dargis's Second Motion to Suppress, the
    Circuit Court asked the State whether Officer Atkins should have
    obtained either a warrant or needed exigent circumstances to
    seize the pipe under the open view doctrine and the State
    replied, "[it] would not agree with that under the Chong case."
    The State then continued to rely on an incorrect reading of
    Chong, as discussed above, and argued that neither a search
    warrant nor exigent circumstances were required to search the
    vehicle. Thus, the State waived any argument that there were
    exigent circumstances. See Moses, 102 Hawai#i at 456, 
    77 P.3d at 947
     ("[a]s a general rule, if a party does not raise an argument
    at trial, that argument will be deemed to have been waived on
    appeal").
    9
    (...continued)
    vehicle. Therefore, we consider the pipe under the open view doctrine. See
    HRAP Rule 28(b)(7).
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    Similarly, the State's contention that the evidence
    from Dargis's vehicle would have been inevitably seized was not
    raised before the Circuit Court and is waived on appeal.                
    Id.
    C. The Circuit Court's Conclusions of Law
    Finally, the State argues that the Circuit Court erred
    in concluding there were no exigent circumstances and challenges
    the Circuit Court's COLs 4, 5, 10, 11, and 12.10 The State
    10
    The Circuit Court numbered its COLs from 1 through 5, included
    subsections "a" through "e" for COL 5, then resumed numbering the remaining
    COLs starting from 10. The challenged COLs state:
    4. In regard to exigent circumstances, no testimony was
    provided by Officer Atkins that Defendant Dargis's car may
    be moved or that the pipe observed by Officer Atkins might
    be removed or destroyed before a warrant could be obtained.
    5. The following supported Defendant's argument that no
    exigent circumstances existed:
    a. The car was parked along Kamehameha Highway in
    Kahuku, which is arguably a rural area of the island of Oahu
    which limited the risk of the car or the evidence being
    removed.
    b. At approximately 4 a.m. in the morning there was
    not a lot of traffic or people in the area who could have
    disturbed the car.
    c. The defendants were alone in the vehicle and both
    were arrested. No one else at the time had access to the
    car.
    d. There was no testimony presented that the pipe was
    visible in the car such that someone would be tempted to
    remove it.
    e. No evidence was presented that an officer could not
    have been posted to watch over the car while a warrant was
    obtained.
    10. There was no realistic threat that the evidence would be
    lost while Officer Atkins sought a warrant to search the
    car.
    11. While it may have been inconvenient to obtain a warrant,
    such inconvenience does not justify a violation of
    Defendant's right to be free from an illegal search and
    seizure.
    12. The pipe was illegally seized and therefore is excluded
    from evidence. The marijuana that was located during the
    seizure of the pipe is "fruit of the poisonous tree" and is
    also excluded from evidence.
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    contends that there is no evidence to support the majority of the
    Circuit Court's COLs and that the COLs are speculative.11
    We note that the Circuit Court's determinations in COLs
    5 and 10 appear to be more akin to findings of fact.
    Nevertheless, even if we assume the record lacks substantial
    evidence to support the Circuit Court's findings in this regard,
    it was the State's burden to prove exigent circumstances. As the
    Hawai#i Supreme Court has explained, an exigent circumstance
    exists when the demands of the occasion reasonably call for
    an immediate police response. More specifically, it includes
    situations presenting an immediate danger to life or serious
    injury or an immediate threatened removal or destruction of
    evidence. However, the burden, of course, is upon the
    government to prove the justification, and whether the
    requisite conditions exist is to be measured from the
    totality of the circumstances. And in seeking to meet this
    burden, the police must be able to point to specific and
    articulable facts from which it may be determined that the
    action they took was necessitated by the exigencies of the
    situation.
    Ramos-Saunders, 135 Hawai#i at 306, 349 P.3d at 413 (emphases
    added) (ellipses omitted) (quoting Jenkins, 93 Hawai#i at 103,
    
    997 P.2d at 29
    ). As discussed above, the State waived its
    arguments in the Circuit Court whether exigent circumstances were
    present in this case. The State did not offer any argument that
    exigent circumstances were present at the time Officer Atkins
    conducted a warrantless search of Dargis's vehicle and Officer
    Atkins did not provide any testimony that his search was
    necessitated by the exigencies of the situation.
    Thus, the State did not meet its burden of establishing
    exigent circumstances to justify the warrantless search of the
    vehicle. Therefore, even if the record lacks evidence in support
    of COLs 5 and 10, the pertinent rulings in COLs 4, 11, and 12 are
    not wrong.
    11
    For example, the State argues there is no evidence to support the
    Circuit Court's COL 5.c., that after Dargis and Kawaguchi were arrested, no
    one else at the time had access to the car and thus, COL 5.c. is "pure
    speculation and is clearly erroneous."
    The State also argues COL 5.a. is erroneous because the State of Hawai #i
    has a higher motor vehicle theft rate than the rest of the United States on
    average and that an automobile in a less populated area is arguably easier to
    break into.
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    IV.   Conclusion
    Based on the foregoing, the Order Granting Motion to
    Suppress entered on October 23, 2019, by the Circuit Court of the
    First Circuit, is affirmed.
    DATED: Honolulu, Hawai#i, June 28, 2021.
    On the briefs:                        /s/ Lisa M. Ginoza
    Chief Judge
    Brian R. Vincent,
    Deputy Prosecuting Attorney,          /s/ Katherine G. Leonard
    for Plaintiff-Appellant.              Associate Judge
    Phyllis J. Hironaka,                  /s/ Clyde J. Wadsworth
    Deputy Public Defender,               Associate Judge
    for Defendant-Appellee.
    13