Carter v. State

910 P.2d 619, 1996 Alas. App. LEXIS 4, 1996 WL 53815
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedFebruary 9, 1996
DocketA-5493
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 910 P.2d 619 (Carter 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
Carter v. State, 910 P.2d 619, 1996 Alas. App. LEXIS 4, 1996 WL 53815 (Ala. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Judge.

Phillip C. Carter, Jr., pled no contest to one count of misconduct involving a controlled substance in the fourth degree, for growing marijuana. See AS *621 11.71.040(a)(3)(F). In entering the plea, Carter reserved the right to appeal Superior Court Judge Beverly W. Cutler’s denial of a motion to suppress evidence. On appeal, Carter asserts that the evidence against him was obtained by a search of his residence that was conducted pursuant to a warrant issued without probable cause. We reverse.

On October 6, 1993, Investigator Jeannine Santora of the Alaska State Troopers applied for a warrant to search Carter’s residence for evidence of a marijuana growing operation. Palmer Magistrate David L. Zwink conducted a hearing on the application. In support of the warrant, Santora submitted two affidavits: the first dealt with anonymous tips alleging Carter’s involvement in drug-related activity in the vicinity of Houston, Alaska; the second dealt with Matanus-ka Electric Association (MEA) records purportedly showing a suspicious pattern of electrical consumption by Carter. 1

In her first affidavit, Santora described four anonymous tips, called in to the police over a period of approximately three and one-half years. Each tip alleged Carter’s involvement in drug-related activities. San-tora’s affidavit provided nothing to indicate whether the tips came from the same person or involved multiple tipsters.

According to Santora, the first tip, received by Anchorage Crimestoppers on March 19,1990, reported that Carter and his sixteen-year-old daughter Julie were living in a residence in Houston, where they were “selling ‘just about everything,’ ” and had “other people ‘growing for them.’ ” The second tip, received by the Anchorage Drug Enforcement Unit (DEU) on January 27, 1992, asserted that Carter “has an indoor grow and is dealing cocaine” at his residence. Both of these tips included general descriptions of Carter and of the location of his home.

The third tip, a Crimestoppers call to the Mat-Su Narcotics office on May 19, 1993, reported an “individual who is selling marijuana and gets his marijuana from another individual and Phil Carter.” According to the tip, Carter and the other unnamed individual were “growing a lot of marijuana and selling in the Valley.” This tip did not describe Carter or mention his residence, but it listed a telephone number for him. The final tip, a call to the Anchorage DEU on August 30, 1993, alleged that Carter was purchasing a house on Cheri Lake Road in Houston, that he “has a grow” there, and that he “was ‘dealing’ to people in the Big Lake area.” 2

In addition to describing these tips, Santo-ra’s first affidavit confirmed that Carter *622 owned a residence near Cheri Lake Road in Houston. Santora had driven by the house on September 9, 1993. She described it as a single family residence with an attached garage; the garage had an overhead door with “two windows which were covered from inside.” According to the affidavit, Department of Public Safety records indicated that a nineteen-year-old female named Julie Carter lived at the same location; the records also indicated that Carter’s telephone number was 892-7920. 3 Santora’s affidavit fur- ■ ther stated:

Investigator Ed Harrington, with the Alaska State Troopers assigned to the DEA task force, informed Investigator Santora that PHILLIP CARTER was willing to provide information to Investigator Harrington during the summer of 1992, about cocaine activity, but not marijuana. CARTER told Investigator Harrington that CARTER believes marijuana should be legalized.

Santora’s second affidavit summarized MEA records of electrical consumption at Carter’s Cheri Lake Road residence. The records themselves were introduced at the October 6, 1993, search warrant hearing. Those records indicated that Julie Carter first occupied the residence in August of 1992, when the utility account was placed in her name. Due to nonpayment of bills by the Carters, the utility account was relisted to the name of the Carters’ landlord on February 1, 1993. A service order dated March 1 restored the account to Julie Carter’s name; a handwritten remark on the service order indicated that “Julie paid her bill of $2,192.86 on March 23,1993[J”

In order to supplement and interpret the MEA records described in Santora’s second affidavit, the state called MEA employee By-van Bogue to testify at the October 6 search warrant hearing. Bogue testified that he found nothing remarkable in the Carters’ electrical consumption from shortly after the beginning of Julie Carter’s listing on the account in August 1992 through February 1993. 4 But beginning in March 1993, Bogue thought he detected “the first clues that something else is ... happening.” What Bo-gue detected was that, in the March, April, and May billings, 5 the Carters’ electrical consumption remained relatively constant — approximating their winter consumption — even though average outdoor temperatures rose significantly. Although June, July, and August consumption decreased significantly, September and October consumption increased sharply — to winter levels — even though the fall temperatures remained relatively mild. Bogue interpreted this type of electrical usage pattern to show that “something else other than normal household usage is taking place.” In Bogue’s view, the pattern was “very consistent with growing marijuana.”

Based on this evidence, Magistrate Zwink issued the requested warrant, finding probable cause to believe that Carter was growing marijuana in his home. In issuing the warrant, the magistrate reasoned that, given the recent pattern of electrical consumption and the variance between Carter’s use and the owner’s past use during the same months, there was “something highly suspicious about [the] electrical usage, which is consistent with a marijuana growing operation of some size[.]” In the magistrate’s view, this suspicious usage, coupled with “the observation of the trooper that there are some blacked out windows there,” amounted to “corroborating factors to the tips, which clearly indicated that ... Phillip and Julie [Carter] were selling marijuana [at the Carters’].”

The troopers executed the search warrant the next day. At Carter’s house, they found and seized 248 marijuana plants (199 starter plants and 49 more mature plants), growing equipment, lights, scales, and miscellaneous *623 drug paraphernalia. Charges were subsequently filed against Carter, who moved to suppress this evidence, arguing that the October 6 warrant was not supported by probable cause.

Judge Cutler denied Carter’s suppression motion. The judge stated that if there had been just one tip and the electrical information, the state would have “a very, very slim case.” However, Judge Cutler concluded that probable cause had been established by the multiplicity of tips and the corroborating MEA records.

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Bluebook (online)
910 P.2d 619, 1996 Alas. App. LEXIS 4, 1996 WL 53815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-state-alaskactapp-1996.