Brown v. State

127 P.3d 837, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 5, 2006 WL 74179
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJanuary 13, 2006
DocketA-8793
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 127 P.3d 837 (Brown v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. State, 127 P.3d 837, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 5, 2006 WL 74179 (Ala. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Probation Officer Shawn Davies was looking for one of his probationers, Richard Wol-ters, so that he could confront Wolters about apparent violations of probation (failure to report and use of controlled substances). Davies took up an early morning surveillance outside Wolters’s residence. He saw a man emerge from the residence and get into a cab. Thinking that this man was Wolters, Davies called for police assistance in stopping the cab.

*839 A Fairbanks police officer stopped the cab, and Davies arrived on the scene moments later. But the passenger in the cab was not the sought-for Wolters, but rather Iliya Brown — who, coincidentally, was a felony parolee under Davies’s supervision.

Shortly after Davies arrived, Brown ran away from the scene of the traffic stop. But before he ran away, Brown dropped a bag containing packets of cocaine and items of drug paraphernalia.

Brown was indicted for possessing this cocaine with the intent to distribute (third-degree controlled substance misconduct under AS 11.71.030(a)(1)). He asked the superior court to suppress the evidence against him, arguing that the probation officer and the police officer had no authority to stop the cab. After the superior court denied this motion, Brown entered a Cooksey plea, reserving his right to renew his suppression arguments on appeal. 1

For the reasons explained here, we conclude that all of Brown’s arguments are either unpreserved or meritless. Accordingly, we affirm his conviction.

Underlying facts

In late December 2001, Probation Officer Shawn Davies was trying to make contact with one of his probationers, Richard Wol-ters. Wolters had apparently violated the conditions of his probation by not staying in contact with Davies and by using cocaine. (Wolters had recently submitted a urine sample that tested positive for cocaine.) Davies had been telephoning Wolters and leaving messages for him, but Wolters had not returned any of these calls.

In the early morning of December 28th (sometime after 7:00 a.m.), Davies again telephoned Wolters. A man answered the telephone, but he claimed that he was not Wol-ters. The man told Davies that Wolters had left for a doctor’s appointment.

Despite the man’s claim that he was not Wolters, Davies thought that he recognized Wolters’s voice. Suspecting that he was being tricked, Davies decided to drive over to Wolters’s residence to see whether Wolters was truly not at home. Davies arrived outside Wolters’s residence at approximately 7:40 a.m. A few minutes later, Davies observed a man emerge from the residence and get into a cab. Davies could not see this man’s face because the man was wearing a hooded outer garment and because the man was huddled over, apparently holding things in his arms. However, given the circumstances, Davies believed that this man was Wolters, and that Wolters was again trying to avoid contact with him.

Davies got into his car and began following the cab. According to his later testimony at the evidentiary hearing, Davies wished -to make contact with Wolters, ask him why he was avoiding Davies, and conduct a search of his person. Davies also testified that, based on Wolters’s violations of his probation— Wolters’s failure to report to Davies, and Wolters’s apparent use of cocaine (based on the test result of his urine sample) — Davies would have been authorized to arrest Wol-ters. See AS 33.05.070(a).

While Davies was following the cab, he used his cell phone to contact the Fairbanks Police Department and request their help in stopping the cab. In response to this request, Officer Perry J. Williamson performed a traffic stop of the cab. Davies was driving right behind Williamson when the traffic stop was made, so Davies arrived on the scene only seconds later.

Almost immediately, the passenger emerged from the cab unbidden. When the passenger got out of the cab and into the light, both Davies and Williamson saw that this passenger was not Richard Wolters. (Both men were acquainted with Wolters.) Instead, Davies recognized the passenger as Iliya Brown, a felony parolee under his supervision.

Brown began talking to Officer Williamson, but he also began backing up, with his right hand under his coat. Williamson directed Brown to take his hand out of his coat and to place his hands on the cab, but Brown did not obey. At this point, Williamson drew his *840 side arm and directed Brown to stand still. In response, Brown ran away.

Davies and Williamson chased Brown, but they could not catch him. However, when the two officers returned to the cab, they discovered a black knit bag containing packets of cocaine and items of drug paraphernalia.

Broum’s argument in the superior court and details of the superior court’s ruling

Following his indictment for controlled substance misconduct, Brown asked the superior court to suppress the black knit bag and its contents. In his memorandum in support of the suppression motion, Brown argued that even if Wolters had been the passenger in the cab, Davies would have had no authority to stop the cab (or to ask the police to stop the cab) unless Davies had a reasonable suspicion that “imminent public danger existed or [that] serious harm to persons or property ha[d] recently occurred”— the justification required for investigative stops under the Alaska Supreme Court’s decisions in Coleman v. State and Ebona v. State. 2

In other words, Brown argued that Davies (a probation officer) had no greater authority to conduct an investigative stop of Wolters (a probationer under his supervision) than the authority that any police officer would possess to conduct an investigative stop of any citizen. In the words of Brown’s memorandum, “Probation Officer Davies’ authority to supervise ... Wolters provided him with no broader right to direct [the police to stop the] cab ... than [the right] articulated by Coleman .... ” Brown further contended that if the Coleman test was applied to the circumstances of his case, there was no justification for the stop of the cab because Davies “had no suspicion that ... Wolters ... was engaged in any form of illegal conduct”.

In two isolated sentences of his superior court memorandum, Brown asserted that Davies “had [no] ability to identify ... the person he saw entering the cab”, and that Davies “could not have believed that the person he saw entering the cab was Richard Wolters”. But in both instances, immediately after asserting this, Brown told the superi- or court that the accuracy or reasonableness of Davies’s identification was not really the point:

But even assuming that [the] identification [was] properly made, ... the stop was not based [on] reasonable suspicion that [Wol-ters] was engaging in illegal conduct, [and thus] it was impermissible.
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[N]o basis existed for stopping the cab, even assuming that [Davies] legitimately believed that Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 P.3d 837, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 5, 2006 WL 74179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-state-alaskactapp-2006.