Caleb Aaron Campbell

2014 WY 156, 339 P.3d 258, 2014 Wyo. LEXIS 179, 2014 WL 6871434
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 2014
DocketS-14-0049
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2014 WY 156 (Caleb Aaron Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caleb Aaron Campbell, 2014 WY 156, 339 P.3d 258, 2014 Wyo. LEXIS 179, 2014 WL 6871434 (Wyo. 2014).

Opinion

DAVIS, Justice.

[T1] Appellant Caleb Campbell entered a conditional guilty plea to felony possession of marijuana, reserving his right to appeal the district court's denial of his motion to suppress evidence under Wyoming Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(a)(2). We remand to the district court for further consideration of that motion in accordance with this opinion.

ISSUES

[¶ 2] Campbell raises three questions relating to his underlying claim that police officers obtained evidence against him in violation of his rights under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. 1 We restate and reorder those questions as follows:

1. Did the initial entry into Appellant's home fall within the "emergency assistance" exception to the Fourth Amendment's warrant requirement?

2. Did Appellant voluntarily consent to the search of the bedrooms and bathrooms in his home?

8. If the initial entry into Appellant's home violated the Fourth Amendment, did that illegality impermissibly taint any consent to a later search?

FACTS

[¶3] On February 24, 2018, the Laramie Police Department received a telephone call from Shannon Homolka, who asked that an officer check on her son, Sean. She had not heard from him for several weeks. 2 Sergeant Austin and a patrol officer were dispatched to the apartment building that was the young man's last known residence. They observed interior coverings on the windows of the apartment and saw footprints in the snow at the entrance. Lights were on inside, and when the officers stepped to the door, they could hear a television and the barking of what they perceived to be an excited dog. No one responded when Sergeant Austin knocked and rang the doorbell.

[¶4] Austin tried the door and found that it was unlocked, opened it approximately two to three feet, called out for Sean Homolka, and identified himself as a police officer. He saw a blue glass bong 3 on a counter top that *261 separated the apartment's living room and kitchen. When no one answered or appeared, he closed the door, knocked on it, rang the bell a few more times, and then decided to phone Ms. Homolka to obtain more information.

[T5] She informed him that she had not spoken to her son since mid-November of 2012, and that a gift sent to him by his grandparents had been returned because he failed to pick it up from the post office. She had phoned Campbell, who shared the apartment with her son, but he refused to give her any information about Sean or his whereabouts. She suggested that the sergeant might find Campbell at the local Pizza Hut where he and her son had worked together.

[T6] The officers proceeded to the restaurant, where they encountered a young man who told them he had been snowboarding with Sean Homolka earlier that day, and that Campbell was expected to return shortly from a pizza delivery. When Campbell arrived, he told the officers that Homolka had moved to Casper, but that he was visiting Laramie and staying at Campbell's apart ment at the time. Sergeant Austin mentioned that he had seen bongs in the apartment and cautioned Campbell to "clean up his act" and get rid of them, but he also advised him that they intended to overlook that violation and that they only wanted to speak to Homolka about his mother's concerns. Campbell agreed to get in touch with Homolka, and the officers asked Campbell to meet them with Homolka at the apartment.

[¶ 7] When the officers reached the apartment, Campbell met them on the sidewalk and told them Homolka would arrive shortly. Sergeant Austin asked him if he had gotten rid of the drug paraphernalia. Campbell said that he had, retrieved a white trash bag, and broke its contents in front of the officers. However, when Austin examined the contents, he saw no trace of the blue glass bong that had been in the apartment and asked Campbell about it. Campbell became nervous, told the sergeant he had not been completely honest, brought that bong outside and broke it. Sergeant Austin then asked if he had anything else, and when Campbell said he had a little marijuana, Austin asked, "Want to get rid of it?" Campbell responded affirmatively and, from Sergeant Austin's vantage point just outside the open apartment door, appeared to take the drug to the bathroom and flush it down the toilet.

[¶ 8] The sergeant asked if he could enter the apartment to confirm that Campbell had gotten rid of everything, assuring him that this was his only concern and that he did not want to charge Campbell with anything. Campbell consented to the entry and to an examination of an unused bedroom and its attached bathroom. This occurred approximately thirty minutes after the sergeant had first opened the front door and observed the blue bong. Austin found nothing in either room, but he saw still more bongs in another adjoining bedroom through an open door. Campbell consented to a search of that room, but despite the sergeant's reassurances that he did not intend to charge him with anything, continued to display what Austin viewed as undue nervousness.

[¶ 9] When Sergeant Austin then inquired about looking into two bedrooms and a bathroom on the opposite end of the apartment, Campbell at first denied him permission to do so. Austin grew frustrated by Campbell's repeated deceit in the face of his expressed lack of interest in prosecuting him, and he indicated that he should perhaps just go and get his ticket book after all. Campbell then said something to the effect that, "You'll find it anyway," and told Austin he could search the remaining rooms.

[¶ 10] The officers discovered a psilocy-bin mushroom-growing and dehydration operation inside of one of the bedrooms. A subsequent search of the kitchen, to which Campbell agreed, found over three ounces of marijuana. Campbell admitted that he had been extracting THC from marijuana and that he had been selling psilocybin mushrooms. The officers obviously could not overlook eriminal conduct of this magnitude.

[¶ 11]l On March 8, 2018, the State charged Campbell with four felonies: manufacturing psilocybin, possessing psilocybin with the intent to distribute it, possessing marijuana with the intent to distribute it, and *262 felony possession of marijuana. 4 Following his arraignment on May 21, the district court set trial for September 19, 2018. On June 17 and June 20, 2018, Campbell filed a motion and an amended motion to suppress evidence and dismiss the case.

[¶ 12] Campbell argued that when Sergeant Austin first opened the front door to his apartment and peered inside, he conducted an impermissible warrantless search of the constitutionally protected area of his residence. Anticipating that the State would attempt to justify that conduct under the "community caretaking" exception to the Fourth Amendment's warrant requirement, he also argued that exception did not apply, and that all evidence gathered should be excluded as the tainted fruit of the initial unlawful search. Finally, Campbell argued that his consent to Sergeant Austin's second entry into his apartment and his search of various rooms in the apartment was involuntary.

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Bluebook (online)
2014 WY 156, 339 P.3d 258, 2014 Wyo. LEXIS 179, 2014 WL 6871434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caleb-aaron-campbell-wyo-2014.