State of Washington v. AA ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                  FILED
    APRIL 30, 2015
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    W A State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                             )            No. 31587-8-111
    )
    Respondent,               )
    )
    v.                               )            PUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    A.A)1]                                           )
    )
    Appellant.                )
    LAWRENCE-BERREY, J. -          Warrantless searches of constitutionally protected areas
    are presumptively unreasonable absent proof by the State that one of the well-established
    exceptions apply. In this case, a police officer detained A.A., a runaway juvenile, under
    the Family Reconciliation Act, chapter 13.32A RCW, and then conducted a pat-down
    search before placing him in his patrol car. The officer did not feel anything resembling a
    weapon, but searched inside A.A.' s pants pockets and found methamphetamine and
    marijuana. On appeal, A.A. argues that the trial court erred in denying his CrR 3.6
    suppression motion because the State failed to establish that the search fell under any
    1 For   purposes of this opinion, we shall use initials for the appellant's name.
    No. 31587-8-II1
    State v. A.A.
    exception to the warrant requirement. We agree, and reverse.
    FACTS
    On the morning of February 25,2013, A.A.'s mother called Yakima police to
    report that her 15-year-old son, A.A., had run away from home. She told the responding
    police officer, Cesar Escamilla, that she believed A.A.'s probation officer would issue a
    warrant for A.A.'s arrest, and asked the officer to transport A.A. to a Crisis Residential
    Center (CRC), a secure facility for juveniles, if police found him. Later that day, Officer
    Escamilla found A.A. walking down an alley a few blocks north of his mother's house.
    The officer stopped and detained A.A., intending to take him to the CRC. Aware that the
    CRC had a policy of searching all youth before admitting them to the facility, 2 Officer
    Escamilla searched A.A. near his patrol car. During the search, the officer found
    methamphetamine in a coin pocket of A.A.'s pants and marijuana in another pocket. The
    officer then transported A.A. to a juvenile detention center, rather than the CRC. The
    State charged A.A. with two counts of unlawful possession of a controlled substance.
    A.A. moved to suppress the evidence as the product of an unlawful search. At the
    CrR 3.6 hearing, Officer Escamilla testified that A.A. was "[j]ust walking down an alley"
    2A sign posted at the CRC provides: "All youth entering the [CRC] must be
    thoroughly searched and patted down in front of the OHANA staff by Law Enforcement."
    Clerk's Papers (CP) at 35. The officer did not follow this policy because the search
    2
    No. 31587-8-III
    State v. A.A.
    and appeared "upset," but that he was not engaged in criminal activity and did not appear
    dangerous to himself or others. Report of Proceedings (RP) at 12-13. He testified that
    the Yakima police department policy requires police to search a passenger for weapons
    prior to transport in a patrol car, but admitted that his search of A.A. was more intrusive
    because the eRe does not allow narcotics. He explained: "I'm searching for any objects,
    any items that-youth may have either in his pockets, hidden, anything besides clothing."
    RP at 9. Officer Escamilla admitted that he did not feel anything resembling a weapon
    during the pat-down search and that no eRe staff member was present.
    A.A. argued that the officer could lawfully conduct a pat-down search for weapons
    prior to transporting A.A. to the eRe, but that the search into his pockets exceeded the
    scope of a reasonable pat down for weapons. He argued, 'just because the eRe has a
    policy regarding searches does not mean that that trumps the-my client's constitutional
    rights. [1]f they want to do whatever they need to do to keep their facility safe, they can
    do that. However, to require law enforcement to do that is clearly unconstitutional
    because that does not fit an exception of the-the requirement to have a warrant before
    searching my client's person." RP at 23. The State countered that "a second search
    would happen anyway" and that "[t]he justification for the search was in existence at the
    occurred before reaching the eRe and was not performed in front of OHANA staff.
    3
    No. 31587-8-III
    State v. A.A.
    time respondent was taken into custody. He was going someplace secure; he needed to be
    searched." RP at 28, 26.
    The trial court denied A.A.'s motion to suppress. Its written conclusions of law
    provided in part, (1) a civil commitment search is not limited to patting the detained
    person for weapons, (2) the pat-down search was authorized under Terry,3 (3) a civil
    commitment search has the purpose of protecting both the police officer and the affected
    individual, (4) it was reasonable to search A.A. knowing he was going to be transported
    to the CRC where drugs and weapons are contraband and not allowed, and (5) the search
    was conducted as a result of a civil detention, not as a search incident to arrest. The court
    ultimately concluded that "it was reasonable to conduct the search, either at the time
    [A.A.] was taken into custody or at the time of admission at the CRC." Clerk's Papers at
    55.
    In a stipulated facts bench trial, the trial court found A.A. guilty as charged. A.A.
    appeals the denial of his suppression motion.
    ANALYSIS
    The sole issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred when it concluded Officer
    Escamilla's search of A.A. was reasonable under the Family Reconciliation Act (the Act),
    3 Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    ,88 S. ct. 1868,
    20 L. Ed. 2d 889
     (1968).
    4
    No. 31587-8-111
    State v. A.A.
    chapter 13.32A RCW, because A.A. was going to be transported to the CRC, a secure
    facility for juveniles, which requires a search ofjuveniles before admission. This
    question appears to be one of first impression in this state and requires us to evaluate
    what search and seizure standards apply to a civil protective custody detainee under the
    Act.
    A.A. does not dispute that Officer Escamilla had the authority to detain him under
    the Act or that the officer had the authority to conduct a pat-down search for weapons;
    rather, he argues that the State failed to establish that the search of his pockets fell under
    any of the prescribed exceptions to the search warrant requirement. A.A. focuses his
    argument on the emergency exception, maintaining that it does not apply because A.A.
    was not a danger to himself or others. He contends it is improper to "extend[] the
    emergency situation exception to the warrant requirement to searches ofjuveniles
    following civil detention pursuant to RCW 13.32A.050." Br. of Appellant at 10.
    The State counters that the search was impliedly authorized under the Act because
    the purpose of the statute is to protect children who present a danger to themselves. It
    contends that the "timing of the search is of no consequence" because "[A.A.] was going
    to go to the crisis residential center which requires this officer to search [A.A.] before he
    would be allowed to enter." Br. ofResp't at 7. The State analogizes the search to a
    5
    No. 31587-8-III
    State v. A.A.
    search incident to arrest that'" can occur prior to the arrest, so long as a sufficient basis
    for the arrest existed before the search commenced.'" Br. of Resp't at 9 (quoting State v.
    Chavez, 
    138 Wn. App. 29
    , 33,
    156 P.3d 246
     (2007)).
    Standard ofReview
    We review a trial court's decision on a motion to suppress for substantial evidence.
    State v. Schultz, 
    170 Wn.2d 746
    , 753,
    248 P.3d 484
     (2011). We review conclusions of
    law de novo. 
    Id.
     Evidence seized during an illegal search must be suppressed under the
    exclusionary rule. State v. Gaines, 
    154 Wn.2d 711
    , 716-17, 
    116 P.3d 993
     (2005).
    Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution
    The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 7 of
    the Washington Constitution prohibit unreasonable searches and seizures. State v.
    Williams, 
    102 Wn.2d 733
    ,736,
    689 P.2d 1065
     (1984). Under these provisions,
    warrantless searches are "per se" unreasonable. State v. Walker, l36 Wn.2d 678,682,
    965 P .2d 1079 (1998). However, a search incident to a lawful arrest is a recognized
    exception to the warrant requirement. State v. Boursaw, 
    94 Wn. App. 629
    , 632, 976 P.2d
    l30 (1999) (quoting State v. Smith, 
    119 Wn.2d 675
    , 678,
    835 P.2d 1025
     (1992)). The
    exception allows an officer to search an arrestee for weapons as a measure to protect the
    officer or to search for evidence that may be destroyed. State v. McKenna, 
    91 Wn. App. 6
    No. 31587-8-III
    State v. A.A.
    554, 560-61, 
    958 P.2d 10
     17 (1998). The community caretaking function, which allows
    for limited searches when it is necessary for police officers to render emergency aid or
    assistance, is also a recognized exception to the warrant requirement. State v. Thompson,
    
    151 Wn.2d 793
    , 802,
    92 P.3d 228
     (2004). These are "divorced" from a criminal
    investigation. 
    Id.
     The State bears the burden of establishing an exception to the warrant
    requirement. Schultz, 
    170 Wn.2d at 754
    .
    Civil Protective Custody Situation
    Washington's Family Reconciliation Act authorizes a police officer to take a
    juvenile into civil custody "[i]f a law enforcement agency has been contacted by the
    parent of the child that the child is absent from parental custody without consent."
    RCW 13.32A.050(1)(a). The Family Reconciliation Act "clearly is designed to promote
    the public interest in the safety of children." State v. Kinzy, 
    141 Wn.2d 373
    ,389, 
    5 P.3d 668
     (2000). Under the Act, "[l]aw enforcement custody shall not extend beyond the
    amount of time reasonably necessary to transport the child to a destination authorized by
    law and to place the child at that destination." RCW 13.32A.050(2)(a). The statute does
    not contain provisions specifYing how, when, or to what extent searches may be
    conducted.
    7
    No. 31587-8-III
    State v. A.A.
    Relying primarily on State v. Dempsey, 
    88 Wn. App. 918
    , 
    947 P.2d 265
     (1997), the
    State argues that the search was justified under the "community caretaking" exception to
    the warrant requirement. In Dempsey, a police officer detained the defendant after
    receiving a call that he had threatened his parents and they feared for their safety. Id. at
    920. Police observed that the defendant was paranoid, volatile, and physically aggressive.
    He had to be restrained from assaulting his father. Before transporting the defendant to
    Sacred Heart Medical Center for an involuntary civil commitment for a mental health
    evaluation under chapter 71.05 RCW, police conducted a pat-down search for weapons
    and felt a large knife in his pants pocket. A police officer reached into the pocket to
    remove the knife and recognized a large bindle that contained methamphetamine.
    Id. at 921.
    The defendant challenged the search, arguing that his civil detention was
    pretextual because officers knew he had recently used drugs. We initially noted
    that the officers properly detained Mr. Dempsey under chapter 71.05 RCW
    because it was reasonable to believe that "Mr. Dempsey was a substantial and
    imminent threat to himself and others." Id. at 923-24. We stated that "[a] search
    incident to a civil detention is not limited by Terry considerations" because the
    only purpose of a Terry search is officer safety, whereas, a civil custody search has
    8
    No. 31587-8-111
    State v. A.A.
    the "primary purpose of protecting, not the officer, but the affected individual and
    others who may come into contact with him while rendering aid." Id. at 924
    (footnote omitted). Thus, in view of Mr. Dempsey's acutely paranoid state, this
    court held that a search incident to a civil commitment detention is not limited to a
    weapons pat down because the arresting officer has a duty "to identity and remove
    anything with which [a defendant] might harm himself or others, including street
    drugs." Id. at 924. This court concluded:
    The search here falls into the "emergency situation" exception to the
    warrant requirement. This exception permits a warrantless search to
    whatever extent is objectively reasonable to carry out the police caretaking
    function, given the circumstances reasonably perceived by the officer at the
    scene at the time. During an intervention, the officer may search for any
    dangerous instrumentality. There need be only "some reasonable basis to
    associate the emergency with the place to be searched."
    Id. at 924 (citations omitted) (quoting State v. Lynd, 
    54 Wn. App. 18
    , 21, 771 P .2d
    770 (1989)).
    This case is distinguishable from Dempsey. First, Washington's involuntary
    treatment act (ITA), chapter 71.05 RCW, and the Family Reconciliation Act, chapter
    13.32A RCW, serve different purposes and, therefore, lend themselves to different search
    standards. The purpose of the ITA is to protect persons who present an imminent risk of
    harm to themselves or others. RCW 71.05.153(1). Thus, the purpose ofa search
    9
    No. 31587-8-III
    State v. A.A.
    impliedly authorized under the statute is the protection of the unstable individual, police
    officers, or others from imminent harm. By its very language, the statute encompasses
    the emergency exception, and therefore police are generally not limited to a protective
    pat-down search for weapons under Terry, which is focused on the protection of the
    officer. Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    ,
    88 S. Ct. 1868
    ,
    20 L. Ed. 2d 889
     (1968). Chapter
    13.32A RCW-the Family Reconciliation Act-in contrast, is designed to protect
    runaway children, and thus implicates different search standards, which will be discussed
    below.
    Here, in contrast to Dempsey, the detainee did not pose an imminent threat of harm
    to himself or others. Officer Escamilla testified that A.A. was simply walking down the
    street and did not appear dangerous. In fact, the officer admitted that the search was
    conducted for the purpose of finding weapons or street drugs because CRC prohibited
    contraband at its facility. Thus, unlike Dempsey, the initial pat-down for weapons was
    sufficient to protect the officer.
    Kinzy is helpful to our analysis. In that case, at around 10:00 p.m. on a
    school night, police officers saw a young female who appeared to them to be
    between 11 and 13 years old. Kinzy, 141 Wn.2d at 378. She was standing on a
    public sidewalk in a high narcotics area with several others, including an older
    10
    No. 31587-8-III
    State v. A.A.
    person police believed to be associated with narcotics. ld. at 378-79. Officers
    decided to approach her. As they did so, Ms. Kinzy put her head down and started
    to walk away. One officer grabbed her by the arm to keep her from leaving. ld. at
    380. Police patted her down for weapons and saw flecks of cocaine on her coat.
    Ms. Kinzy then admitted that she had more cocaine in her bra.
    At the suppression hearing, a police officer testified that he stopped Ms.
    Kinzy out of concern for her safety, not suspicion of criminal activity. Division
    One of this court concluded that the initial seizure of Ms. Kinzy was valid under
    the community caretaking function, the protective frisk was valid under Terry and
    the plain view observation, and "seizure" of the cocaine flecks was valid under the
    plain view exception. ld. at 381-82.
    Our Supreme Court reversed, noting that the community caretaking function
    involves a situation of lesser urgency and searches resulting in less intrusion than the
    emergency exception. ld. at 386. The court noted that "a person may encounter police
    officers in situations involving not only emergency aid, but also involving a routine check
    on health and safety." ld at 387. It stated that once the exception applies, "police
    officers may conduct a noncriminal investigation so long as it is necessary and strictly
    relevant to performance ofthe community caretakingfunction. The noncriminal
    11
    No. 3 I 587-8-III
    State v. A.A.
    investigation must end when reasons for initiating an encounter are fully dispelled."
    Id. at 388 (footnote omitted) (emphasis added).
    Applying these principles to the facts of that case, the court held that the initial
    preseizure encounter was reasonable under the community caretaking function exception,
    but that police should have allowed Ms. Kinzy to walk away because their interest in
    maintaining the safety of children did not outweigh Ms. Kinzy's privacy interest in
    freedom from police intrusion. Id. at 392. The court held that once a person is seized
    under the community caretaking function, "[b]alancing the interests will not necessarily
    favor action by police." Id. at 394. The court concluded, "[w]hen in doubt, the balance
    should be struck on the side of privacy because the policy of the Fourth Amendment is to
    minimize governmental intrusion into the lives of citizens. The community caretaking
    function exception should be cautiously applied because of its potential for abuse."
    Id. at 394-95.
    Cases from other jurisdictions discuss search standards in the context of civil
    protective detentions. In R.A.S. v. Florida, 
    141 So. 3d 687
     (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2014),
    police detained R.A.S., a juvenile, because he had been reported absent from school.
    
    Id. at 689
    . When the police officer found R.A.S., he offered R.A.S. a ride to school,
    which R.A.S. accepted. The police officer then asked R.A.S. to empty his pockets before
    12
    No. 31587-8-III
    State v. 	A.A.
    entering the patrol car. 
    Id.
     R.A.S. emptied all but one pocket. The officer asked ifhe
    could '" do a weapons patdown'" and R.A.S. agreed. 
    Id.
     While patting a back pocket,
    the officer felt a small'" squishy bulge.'" 
    Id.
     He asked what the packet contained, and
    R.A.S. removed a baggy containing marijuana. 	 
    Id.
    The court held that the search was illegal, stating "an officer may conduct a pat-
    down for weapons before placing a truant in his vehicle, but he is not authorized to
    conduct a full search." 
    Id.
     The court noted that the detention of a truant was authorized
    under Florida law, but emphasized that "truancy is not a crime, and a custodial detention
    for this purpose is not an arrest." 
    Id.
     Because this was not a search incident to arrest, the
    court held that the officer, at most, was authorized to conduct a pat-down search for
    weapons before placing R.A.S. in his patrol car. 
    Id.
     The court also held that once the
    officer performed the pat-down search and determined that R.A.S. was not carrying a
    weapon or contraband, the officer had no legal basis to continue the search. The court
    reasoned:
    [W]hen taking a truant into custody, the only concern is for officer safety­
    no crime has been committed and, accordingly, there is no need to preserve
    evidence of a crime. The deputy here knew that the "squishy object" in
    R.A.S.'s pocket was not a weapon. Therefore, he had no legal basis for
    questioning R.A.S. further about the contents of the pocket.
    
    Id. at 690
    .
    13
    No. 3 I 587-8-III
    State v. A.A.
    The Supreme Court of Colorado discussed search standards in the context of
    detention under its Alcoholism and Intoxication Treatment Act, a civil statute that allows
    law enforcement to take a person incapacitated by alcohol into protective custody if that
    person is "'clearly dangerous to the health and safety of himself or others.'" People v.
    Dandrea, 
    736 P.2d 1211
    , 1214 (Colo. 1987) (quoting COLO. REv. STAT. 25-1-310(1)). In
    that case, police searched the pocket of the defendant prior to transporting him to an
    alcohol detoxification facility under the act. ld. at 1212. Police were unable to determine
    if the defendant possessed a weapon due to the thickness of his jacket and, therefore,
    began removing the contents of his pockets. ld. at 1213. During the search, police found
    a packet of heavy folded paper the size of a razor blade. ld. Officers opened the packet
    and found cocaine. At the suppression hearing, the trial court ruled that the act, a civil
    statute, only empowered police officers to conduct a pat-down search of the person taken
    into civil custody, and that police should have quarantined the packet without any further
    search of its contents. ld. The State appealed, arguing that the act should be construed to
    authorize police officers to conduct as complete a search as would be permitted if the
    individual was arrested on probable cause that the person committed a criminal act.
    The Colorado Supreme Court rejected the State's argument, finding the intent of
    the act was to prevent harm to the detainee resulting from the detainee's intoxication, and,
    14
    No. 31587-8-II1
    State v. A.A.
    therefore, the act could not be used to justifY an arrest comparable to a criminal arrest. Id.
    at 1215. The court analyzed the search under constitutional principles, stating "[t]he
    constitutional test of a warrantless search ... is reduced to the question of whether the
    search was reasonable under all the relevant attendant circumstances." Id at 1216. The
    court then noted that the primary justification for warrantless searches incident to
    custodial arrests is the preservation of evidence and the protection of arresting officers.
    Noting that only the latter is at issue in civil protective custody cases, the court stated,
    "[w]hile the goal of assuring officer safety is admittedly important, the legislative
    emphasis on the noncriminal nature of the contact between government officials and
    private citizens in civil protective custody settings requires that in such settings the
    individual's privacy interest must be accorded maximum weight in determining the
    reasonableness of police conduct." Id at 1217. The court suggested a "case-by-case"
    evaluation, rather than a rigid formula due to the different degrees of potential danger in
    any given civil protective custody detention. Id The court ultimately held:
    It would appear, therefore, that in most cases involving detention of a
    private citizen for the sole purpose of placing that person in civil protective
    custody, a pat-down search for weapons at the scene would fully satisfY the
    need to assure officer safety and the safety of the individual while
    simultaneously according sufficient weight to the detainee's status as a
    noncriminal and attendant interest in personal privacy. Thus the discovery
    of an item believed to be or to contain a weapon would in most
    circumstances require nothing more than the isolation of that item at the
    15
    No. 3 1587-8-III
    State v. A.A.
    scene of the detention. Once the detainee's access to the item is denied, any
    further search of the item would have to be justified on some other basis.
    ld. at 1218.
    In view of the principles enunciated above, we believe that a case-by-case
    approach as set forth in Dandrea best balances the constitutional rights of the detainee
    with safety considerations of third persons. Generally, in cases involving civil detentions
    under the act, only a protective pat-down search for weapons is appropriate. However,
    when police are faced with emergency situations in which the detainee poses a threat to
    himself or others, a more intrusive search is justified. Dempsey, 88 Wn. App. at 924-25.
    Thus, if A.A. had exhibited signs of acute mental instability and presented a risk of
    imminent or substantial harm to himself or others, the search of his pockets would have
    been justified.
    Under the act, a law enforcement officer is unquestionably fulfilling his or her role
    as a community caretaker when he or she encounters a child runaway or a child beyond
    the control of his parents. Under the act, the police have an obligation to transport the
    child to the appropriate secure facility. This implies authority to conduct an initial pat-
    down search for weapons before placing the child in the patrol car. However, we must be
    cautious in applying the community caretaking function exception and satisfY ourselves
    that the claimed function was not a pretext for an evidentiary search. Thus, in the context
    16
    No. 31587-8-111
    State v. A.A.
    of a warrantless search stemming from noncriminal conduct, the search must be limited in
    scope by the circumstances of the particular encounter and "strictly" relevant to the
    community caretaking function. Kinzy, 141 Wn.2d at 388.
    Here, the particular circumstances did not justifY the search of A.A.'s pockets.
    Once the officer conducted the pat-down search and determined that A.A. did not have a
    weapon, the search should have stopped. A.A. had not committed a crime and, therefore,
    there was no need to preserve evidence of a crime. A.A. did not exhibit signs of
    dangerousness to himself or others. The only concern was for officer safety.
    The State's argument that the search was justified because the eRe requires a
    search ofjuveniles before admission is not persuasive nor is it relevant. Notably, the
    officer did not perform this search at the eRe according to   eRC policy.   We express no
    view regarding potential search issues at the CRe facility performed according to eRe
    policy. Under our facts, this was a noncriminal protective custody situation, which
    requires us to accord maximum weight to A.A.'s privacy interest in evaluating the
    reasonableness of the search. Unless the State can establish that the search fell under an
    exception to the warrant requirement, we must reverse. The State has failed to establish
    an exception.
    17
    No. 31587-8-111
    State v. A.A.
    Reversed.
    Lawrence-Berrey, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    Siddoway, C.J.
    Brown, J.
    18