State Of Washington, Resp-cross App v. A. S. App-cross Resp ( 2018 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                      )
    ) No. 76823-9-1                         1,-.3   ,c)
    Respondent,          )
    ) DIVISION ONE                         m        m
    v.                          )
    A.S.,                                     ) PUBLISHED OPINION                    Zat.     en RL,r7ri
    Appellant.           ) FILED: December 3, 2018              %9
    GO
    )                                               =17.5
    SMITH, J. —A.S. appeals her conviction for possession of drug
    paraphernalia and possession of a controlled substance. A.S. argues that the
    trial court erred by denying her motion to suppress evidence found by the vice
    principal of Meadowdale Middle School when he searched A.S.'s backpack on
    school grounds. Because the search of A.S.'s backpack was not reasonable
    under the circumstances, we reverse.
    FACTS
    On April 11, 2016, Meadowdale staff received information about an
    alleged threat involving then 14-year-old A.S., who was not a Meadowdale
    student. Meadowdale staff looked up A.S.'s picture using the district's computer
    system so that they would be able to identify her should she appear on campus.
    Later that day, Joseph Webster, Meadowdale's vice principal, saw A.S. walk by
    the school's office. Webster approached A.S., called out her name, and asked
    her to come with him to the office. Webster later testified that if he were to
    No. 76823-9-1/2
    encounter an individual he thought did not have a reason to be on campus, he
    ordinarily would ask that person to leave. He did not do so here because he
    believed A.S. was there for a "negative reason."
    A.S. complied with Webster's request to accompany him to the school
    office. Webster brought A.S. to Principal Jennifer Kniseley's office, where
    Kniseley began asking A.S. questions about why she was on the Meadowdale
    campus. A.S. was not very cooperative. After about five minutes, Kniseley
    remarked to Webster that A.S. was not being very cooperative and decided to
    call the police. A.S. was told that the police were being called. Webster later
    testified that had A.S. gotten up and decided to leave, she would have been
    allowed to do so. Webster also testified that because A.S. was not a student at
    Meadowdale, he and Kniseley did not have any ability to issue any discipline to
    A.S.
    At some point while A.S. was in Kniseley's office, Webster noticed an odor
    that he recognized as marijuana emanating from A.S. Webster then searched
    A.S.'s backpack, which was sitting next to her, and found suspected marijuana
    and drug paraphernalia. A.S. did not say or do anything to resist Webster's
    search of her backpack.
    A police officer responded at 2:29 p.m.—less than half an hour after
    Webster first observed A.S. on campus—and A.S. was later charged by
    information with possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a controlled
    substance. Prior to trial, A.S. moved to suppress the evidence of the suspected
    marijuana and drug paraphernalia found in her backpack, arguing that the
    2
    No. 76823-9-1/3
    evidence was the fruit of an unlawful search and seizure. Specifically, A.S.
    argued that the "school search exception" to the warrant requirement did not
    apply to her because she was not a Meadowdale student when Webster
    searched her backpack and even if the exception did apply, the search was not
    reasonable.
    The trial court denied A.S.'s motion and, following a stipulated bench trial,
    convicted A.S. of both possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a
    controlled substance. A.S. appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    Standard of Review
    The facts are not in dispute, and A.S. challenges only the trial court's
    conclusions of law. Accordingly, we review the issues de novo. State v.
    Meneese, 
    174 Wash. 2d 937
    , 942, 282 P.3d 83(2012).
    The School Search Exception
    Under both the state and federal constitutions, a government actor must
    obtain a warrant supported by probable cause to conduct a search unless an
    exception applies. U.S. CONST. amend. IV; WASH. CONST. art. I, § 7; 
    Meneese, 174 Wash. 2d at 943
    . The exceptions to the warrant requirement are "'jealously and
    carefully drawn." State v. McKinnon, 
    88 Wash. 2d 75
    , 79, 
    558 P.2d 781
    (1977)
    (quoting Coolidpe v. New Hampshire, 
    403 U.S. 443
    , 
    91 S. Ct. 2022
    , 
    29 L. Ed. 2d 564
    (1971)).
    One of these exceptions is the "school search exception," which allows
    school authorities to conduct a search of a student without probable cause if the
    3
    No. 76823-9-1/4
    search is reasonable under all the circumstances. State v. B.A.S., 
    103 Wash. App. 549
    , 553, 
    13 P.3d 244
    (2000). "A search is reasonable if it is: (1)justified at its
    inception; and (2) reasonably related in scope to the circumstances that justified
    the interference in the first place." 
    Id. (citing New
    Jersey v. T.L.O., 
    469 U.S. 325
    ,
    341, 
    105 S. Ct. 733
    , 
    83 L. Ed. 2d 720
    (1985)). "Under ordinary circumstances, a
    search of a student by a teacher or other school official will be 'justified at its
    inception' when there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that the search will
    turn up evidence that the student has violated or is violating either the law or the
    rules of the school." 
    T.L.O., 469 U.S. at 341-42
    (footnote omitted). And, a
    search will be permitted in scope "when the measures adopted are reasonably
    related to the objectives of the search and not excessively intrusive in light of the
    age and sex of the student and the nature of the infraction." jçj. at 342.
    Washington courts have established the following factors (McKinnon
    factors) as relevant in determining whether school officials had reasonable
    grounds for conducting a warrantless search:
    "[T]he child's age, history, and school record, the prevalence and
    seriousness of the problem in the school to which the search was
    directed, the exigency to make the search without delay, and the
    probative value and reliability of the information used as a
    justification for the search."
    State v. Brooks,43 Wn. App. 560, 567-68, 718 P.2d 837(1986)(quoting
    
    McKinnon, 88 Wash. 2d at 81
    ). Although all of the foregoing factors need not be
    found, their total absence will render the search unconstitutional. 
    Id. at 568.
    4
    No. 76823-9-1/5
    Warrantless Search of A.S.'s Backpack
    As an initial matter, A.S. urges this court to conclude that the school
    search exception cannot apply to searches of nonstudents. We decline to adopt
    such a bright-line rule because doing so would reach beyond the facts here:
    Even assuming that the exception applies to nonstudents, the search conducted
    by Webster does not pass muster under the McKinnon factors.
    Specifically, nothing in the record suggests that Webster, who guessed
    that A.S. was middle school aged, knew anything about A.S.'s history or school
    record. Indeed, Webster testified that when he looked up A.S. in the district
    database, he was only interested in her picture. Furthermore, there was no
    evidence that drug use was a problem at Meadowdale. Rather, when asked
    whether Meadowdale had a drug problem, Webster responded, "I don't believe
    so." He also testified that he did not deal with drugs on a regular basis as a
    school administrator and that Meadowdale had only "occasional incidents" on its
    campus involving students bringing drugs or drug paraphernalia on campus.
    Additionally, there was no exigency to conduct the search without delay, given
    that the police had been called, and A.S.—who had been told that the police
    were called—gave no indication that she was trying to leave the principal's office.
    And finally, the odor of marijuana alone did not create an exigent circumstance,
    particularly where Webster had no other reason to believe that A.S. used
    marijuana or that her backpack would contain marijuana. For these same
    reasons, the search of A.S.'s backpack was not justified at its inception.
    5
    No. 76823-9-1/6
    The State argues that the search of A.S.'s backpack was reasonable
    because courts have generally "'recognized students have a lower expectation of
    privacy because of the nature o[f] the school environment." Br. of Resp't at 13
    (quoting York v. Wahkiakum Sch. Dist. No. 200, 
    163 Wash. 2d 297
    , 308, 
    178 P.3d 995
    (2008)). But this quote from York is no more than a restatement of one of
    the justifications underlying the school search exception. See 
    York, 163 Wash. 2d at 308
    . That exception still demands that, consistent with both the federal and
    state constitutions, searches be reasonable, and "what is reasonable depends on
    the context within which a search takes place." 
    T.L.O., 469 U.S. at 337
    .
    To this end, the underlying rationale for the school search exception is that
    "teachers and administrators have a substantial interest in maintaining discipline
    in the classroom and on school grounds' which often requires swift action."
    
    Meneese, 174 Wash. 2d at 944
    (internal quotation marks omitted)(quoting State v.
    Slattery, 
    56 Wash. App. 820
    , 824, 
    787 P.2d 932
    (1990)). Here, Webster searched
    the backpack of A.S., a 14-year-old nonstudent he had no ability to discipline.
    He based his search solely on an odor of marijuana emanating from A.S. as she
    sat in the principal's office waiting for a police officer to arrive. A.S. gave no
    indication that she planned to leave, and her backpack was merely sitting next to
    her. Under these circumstances, no "swift action" was required, nor did the
    search further any interest in "maintaining discipline." Cf. 
    id. at 944-45
    (declining
    to extend the school search exception to a school resource officer acting in the
    capacity of a law enforcement officer and observing that(1) the school resource
    officer had no authority to discipline students and (2) there was no need for swift
    6
    No. 76823-9-1/7
    discipline because the student was already under arrest and about to be
    removed from campus at the time of the search).
    The facts at bar are readily distinguishable from cases where we have
    applied the McKinnon factors and concluded that a school search was
    reasonable. For example, in Brooks, where the vice principal had received
    information from a student that Steve Brooks was selling marijuana out of a
    school locker, we upheld the warrantless search of student Brooks' 
    locker. 43 Wash. App. at 561-62
    . There, the vice principal had received reports from three
    teachers that Brooks appeared to be under the influence. 
    Id. at 562.
    Indeed, the
    vice principal herself had confronted Brooks about drug use on three occasions
    and each time believed that Brooks was under the influence. 
    Id. Additionally, Brooks
    was known to spend time during school hours at a place believed by
    school authorities to be the site of drug trafficking. 
    Id. We reasoned
    that under
    those facts, there were reasonable grounds for school officials to suspect that a
    search of Brooks' locker would turn up evidence that Brooks was violating either
    the law or the rules of the school. 
    Id. at 565.
    Similarly, in Slattery, we upheld the search of a locked briefcase in student
    Mike Slattery's car where another student had notified the vice principal that
    Slattery was selling marijuana in the school parking 
    lot. 56 Wash. App. at 821-22
    .
    The vice principal believed this information to be reliable based on the vice
    principal's past experience with the informant and because the vice principal had
    received other reports that Slattery was involved with drugs. 
    Id. at 822.
    Additionally, Slattery was carrying $230 cash in small bills and his car also
    7
    No. 76823-9-1/8
    contained a notebook with names and dollar amounts, as well as a pager. 
    Id. In applying
    the McKinnon factors, we also observed that drug use was a "serious,
    ongoing problem" at the school and that an exigency existed because Slattery or
    a friend could have removed Slattery's car from school grounds. 
    Id. at 825-26.
    Here, unlike Brooks or Slattery, nothing in the record suggests that before
    his encounter with A.S., Webster had any information about A.S.'s prior conduct
    that would lead him to believe that A.S. used or possessed marijuana, or that a
    search of A.S.'s bag would reveal marijuana. Indeed, Webster testified that he
    did not do any investigation into the alleged threat involving A.S. and that when
    he looked up A.S. in the district computer system, he was only interested in her
    picture. Furthermore, there is no evidence that drug use was a serious, ongoing
    problem at Meadowdale. Rather, Webster testified that he did not believe that
    Meadowdale had a drug problem and that Meadowdale had only "occasional
    incidents" involving students bringing drugs on campus. Additionally, no
    exigency was present because unlike Slattery, there was no car involved. At the
    time of the search, A.S. was sitting in the principal's office, waiting for the police
    to arrive. The State argues that A.S. could have walked away and then school
    officials would have had no control over her, but this argument is not persuasive
    given that A.S. never indicated that she wanted to leave and given that she had
    been told that the police were being called. The facts in Brooks and Slattery are
    sufficiently dissimilar to the facts here that they do not control.
    The State next argues, citing State v. Brown, 
    158 Wash. App. 49
    , 
    240 P.3d 1175
    (2010), that in the context of a school search, the exigency component of
    8
    No. 76823-9-1/9
    the McKinnon factors is satisfied when there is "any threat to the order and
    discipline of the school." Br. of Resp't at 10. Although the State accurately
    quotes Brown, the State's reliance on Brown is misplaced. In Brown, a parent
    went to Moses Lake High School to look for her son, Taylor Duke, after he did
    not come home one 
    night. 158 Wash. App. at 53
    . There, she told the assistant
    principal that her son had been with his friend, Joshua Brown, the night before
    and that Brown's car was in the school parking lot. 
    Id. When the
    assistant
    principal did not find Brown or Duke in class, he and the school's resource officer
    checked Brown's car and found both boys asleep inside. 
    Id. The assistant
    principal knocked on the window, and both boys woke up and got out of the car.
    
    Id. The resource
    officer saw a knife on the floor behind the front passenger seat
    as Duke climbed out of the car and told the assistant principal what he had seen.
    
    Id. The assistant
    principal then asked Brown if he could retrieve the knife, and
    Brown agreed. 
    Id. The assistant
    principal searched Brown's car, where he
    found a shotgun and a .22 caliber pistol with bullets in a case. 
    Id. Brown was
    later arrested and convicted of firearms charges. 
    Id. at 54.
    In concluding that the
    search of Brown's car fell within the school search exception, the trial court
    wrote:
    "The presence of weapons in a school environment is a
    serious problem in schools throughout the country and has
    specifically impacted the Moses Lake School District (e.g., Barry
    Loukitas [sic]). That a Moses Lake school administrator would be
    concerned about the presence of weapons on the campus of a
    school in the Moses Lake School District is to be expected. There
    was an exigency in that lunch was fast approaching and students
    would be returning to the parking lot. A student could have
    removed the knife (or any other weapon)from the vehicle. The
    probative value and reliability of the information used to justify the
    9
    No. 76823-9-1/10
    search, i.e., Officer Lopez's visual observation of a weapon in
    Respondent Brown's vehicle, was high. Given these
    considerations and given the circumstances, the 'school search'
    exception to the warrant requirement applies in this case, and the
    school administrators' search of Respondent Brown's vehicle was
    reasonable."
    
    Id. at 55
    (alteration in original). On appeal, Division Three of this court upheld
    the search, noting again that "[t]his school district has had serious problems with
    weapons on campus in the past." 
    Id. at 57
    (citing State v. Loukaitis, 
    82 Wash. App. 460
    , 462-63, 
    918 P.2d 535
    (1996)). The court concluded that the threat a
    weapon posed to discipline and order was an exigency sufficient to support a
    school search. 
    Id. Brown is
    distinguishable from this case. The suspected possession of
    marijuana by a 14-year-old child sitting in the principal's office waiting for the
    police to arrive and giving no indication that she plans to leave—and who school
    officials have no reason to believe is selling drugs to other students—does not
    pose the same threat to the discipline and order of a school that is posed by a
    gun with bullets found in a high school student's car in the school parking lot just
    before the lunch hour.
    The State next argues that the search was justified because A.S. was
    acting suspiciously when she did not report to the main office as directed by
    signage at the school and when she refused to state her business on campus.
    The State urges that these circumstances indicate that A.S. was hiding
    something "and that something could include marijuana." Br. of Resp't at 15.
    The State also argues that A.S.'s presence at Meadowdale when she should
    have been in school was "alarming" and that "[t]he search of the bag was
    10
    No. 76823-9-1/11
    necessary to ensure that any additional marijuana would not be a factor in a
    potential conflict on campus." Br. of Resp't at 10-11. In short, the State attempts
    to draw a nexus between A.S.'s alleged truant status and Webster's search of
    A.S.'s bag.
    Even if A.S. was in fact truant and did in fact intend not to check in with
    the main office,1 the State's arguments are not persuasive. B.A.S., is instructive.
    B.A.S. involved Auburn Riverside High School, which had a "closed campus"
    
    policy. 103 Wash. App. at 551
    . That policy "prohibit[ed] students from leaving
    campus during school hours without permission from the school." 
    Id. The school
    also had a policy that "any student seen in the parking lot without permission or a
    valid excuse [would be] subject to search." 
    Id. at 55
    1-52. The purpose of the
    policy was to "promote safety by ensuring that students do not bring prohibited
    items, such as drugs and weapons, onto school grounds." 
    Id. at 55
    2. When a
    school attendance officer saw B.A.S. and three other students by the parking lot
    and concluded that they had been off campus without permission, the attendance
    officer invoked the school's search policy and asked B.A.S. to empty his pockets.
    
    Id. The contents
    of B.A.S.'s pockets included several plastic baggies filled with
    marijuana. 
    Id. In reversing
    B.A.S.'s subsequent conviction, we rejected the State's
    argument that by violating school rules, a student necessarily draws
    individualized suspicion on himself. 
    Id. at 55
    4. We reasoned:
    1 The record does not indicate whether A.S. had a valid excuse to be
    away from school that day. The record also does not indicate how long A.S. was
    on the Meadowdale campus before Webster approached her.
    11
    No. 76823-9-1/12
    There is no indication that B.A.S. habitually broke the law or school
    rules, or that he or his friends had ever brought contraband onto the
    school's campus. The record is also silent on whether B.A.S. had
    either academic or behavioral difficulties in school. In short, there
    was nothing about B.A.S.'s age, history or school record that
    justified the search. Finally, there were no exigent circumstances
    present here. In sum, there was no basis articulated in the record
    for suspecting B.A.S. was carrying proscribed items, and the
    search was therefore unreasonable.
    
    Id. at 55
    6.
    Here, as in B.A.S., nothing in the record suggests Webster believed that
    A.S. habitually broke the law or school rules, had ever brought contraband onto
    Meadowdale's campus, or had academic or behavioral difficulties. Indeed,
    Webster had only secondhand knowledge about the alleged threat involving A.S.
    and confirmed that he did not do any further investigation into the alleged threat.
    And, as discussed above, there were no exigent circumstances present.
    Furthermore, the fact that A.S. did not—or perhaps had not yet had time to—
    check in with Meadowdale's main office is not a justification for searching her bag
    for marijuana: Nothing in the record suggests that A.S. acted suspiciously or that
    she was questioned—much less deceptive—about any marijuana use. Cf. State
    v. E.K.P., 
    162 Wash. App. 675
    , 677, 255 P.3d 870(2011)(search of student's
    backpack upheld where student acted suspiciously by trying to hide her
    backpack and denied that the backpack contained "'anything [the assistant
    principal] need[ed] to know' about")(internal quotation marks omitted); 
    T.L.O., 469 U.S. at 325
    (search of student's purse upheld where teacher had seen
    student smoking in lavatory and student denied doing so when questioned about
    it). And although Webster recognized the smell of marijuana on A.S., that alone
    12
    No. 76823-9-1/13
    does not make the search reasonable given that as discussed above, none of the
    other McKinnon factors were present.
    This case is also distinguishable from United States v. Aguilera, 287 F.
    Supp. 2d 1204(E.D. Cal. 2003), the only case discussed by the parties in which
    the court evaluated the reasonableness of a school search involving a
    nonstudent. There, an informant who identified herself as the parent of a
    Franklin High School student called the secretary at Franklin from her car near
    the side entrance of the school. 
    Id. at 1206.
    The caller reported observing a
    group of young men pass close to her car on the way into campus and seeing
    one of them lift his T-shirt above his waist to reveal a weapon tucked into his
    shorts. 
    Id. The caller
    stayed on the phone with the school secretary and
    continued to update the secretary as to the group's location until the caller's view
    was obscured by the school gym. 
    Id. Meanwhile, the
    secretary relayed the
    caller's observations to the school principal, who in turn alerted campus security
    monitors. 
    Id. at 1207.
    Based on the information provided by the caller, including a description of
    the young man seen with a weapon, campus security monitors located Gustavo
    Aguilera with a group of young men on the school campus. 
    Id. A security
    monitor radioed the principal to let her know that the group had been located,
    and the principal directed the security monitor to search Aguilera. 
    Id. The security
    monitor ordered Aguilera to place his hands on the wall of a portable
    classroom, and the security monitor patted Aguilera's outer clothing and
    discovered a 20-gauge shotgun in the waistband area of Aguilera's shorts. 
    Id. 13 No.
    76823-9-1/14
    Aguilera argued to the trial court that the shotgun discovered in his
    waistband should be suppressed, contending, among other things, that
    Aguilera's status as a nonstudent took him outside the parameters of the school
    search exception. 
    Id. at 1209.
    The trial court disagreed, reasoning:
    [T]o extend the [school search exception] to non-student visitors
    who present a credible threat of physical harm to students on
    campus would seem a small and logical step. In short, the court
    finds that defendant's status as a non-student should not determine
    the response of school administrators to the threat of gun violence.
    Id.(emphasis added)(footnote omitted).
    Here, A.S., who was sitting in the principal's office—not roaming the
    campus as Aguilera was—did not present a credible threat of physical harm
    when she was searched. Indeed, Webster never indicated that he searched A.S.
    because he thought that her use or possession of marijuana presented a credible
    threat of physical harm. Aquilera is not persuasive here.
    If anything, Aquilera suggests that if the school search exception is to be
    extended to a nonstudent, it should be extended only when the nonstudent
    presents a credible threat of physical harm to students on campus and when the
    scope of the search conducted (in the case of Aquilera, a frisk for dangerous
    weapons) is directly related to that threat. That was not the case here, and
    Aquilera does not control. Cf. In re D.D., 
    146 N.C. App. 309
    , 
    554 S.E.2d 346
    (2001)(applying school search exception to nonstudents and upholding search
    for weapons after principal received information that nonstudent was part of
    group coming to school to fight and weapon was discovered in purse of another
    member of the group).
    14
    No. 76823-9-1/15
    As a final matter, the State cites State v. Marcum, 
    149 Wash. App. 894
    , 
    205 P.3d 969
    (2009), for the proposition that the odor of marijuana alone constitutes
    probable cause. But Marcum is distinguishable from this case. In Marcum, the
    detective detained the defendant based on a tip reliable informant that the
    defendant would be carrying a quarter pound of marijuana in his car. 
    Id. at 899-
    900. In contrast, Webster had no reason to believe that A.S. would have
    marijuana in her possession prior to detecting an odor of marijuana on A.S.
    Furthermore, Marcum is not a school search case, and "what is reasonable
    depends on the context within which a search takes place." 
    T.L.O., 469 U.S. at 337
    . We recognize that in the educational context, school officials have a
    substantial interest in maintaining discipline and order on school grounds. See
    
    id. at 339-40.
    But, the search conducted in this case did not promote that
    interest.
    We reverse.
    WE CONCUR:
    cs1.44,
    15