Clark v. State

231 P.3d 366, 2010 Alas. App. LEXIS 50, 2010 WL 2011507
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMay 21, 2010
DocketA-10170
StatusPublished

This text of 231 P.3d 366 (Clark 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
Clark v. State, 231 P.3d 366, 2010 Alas. App. LEXIS 50, 2010 WL 2011507 (Ala. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

BOLGER, Judge.

The police detained Marteshia Clark as a passenger in a reportedly stolen vehicle. The police searched the vehicle, finding packets of cocaine in a metal cigarette case left on the backseat. Clark challenges the superior court's conclusion that the search was justified as a consent search and a search incident to arrest. We conclude that the police were authorized to open the cigarette case based both on the vehicle owner's consent to a general search and on the cireumstances suggesting that the case had been left on the backseat of a stolen vehicle.

Background

On January 19, 2006, Susan Roatch notified the Fairbanks Police Department that her car had been stolen. Talking with Officer Avery Thompson, Roatch implicated a woman named Crystal in the theft. While Thompson was talking with Roatch at her home, Roateh's boyfriend, Jack Brown, telephoned to report that he had found her vehicle parked on a street in downtown Fairbanks. The officers then drove to the location where Brown had seen the car and parked approximately half a block away from the vehicle to see if any of the possible suspects would return to the car.

About fifteen minutes later, Marteshia Clark and Crystal Thomas approached the stolen car. Thomas matched the physical description given by Roatch. Thomas got into the driver's seat and Clark sat in the passenger seat. Officer Thompson activated the patrol car's overhead lights, drew his weapon, and he and Officer Benjamin Hol-ston directed the women to get out of the *367 car. The officers handcuffed Clark and Thomas and searched the women for weapons. Officer Thompson put Thomas into the back of the patrol car, and when Officer Bruce Barnett arrived on the scene, the officers placed Clark in the back of the second patrol car.

After advising Thomas of her Miranda rights, Officer Thompson asked her about her relationship with Roatch. Thomas said that she had known Roatch for three months, and that Roatch had given her permission to use the car.

Officer Thompson then spoke with Roatch, who had arrived at the scene, and she denied giving Thomas permission to use the vehicle. Roatch then gave Officer Thompson permission to search her vehicle for illegal drugs or weapons. Officer Thompson found clothing, fast food containers, a cell phone, trash, and a metal cigarette case which was decorated with a design of marijuana leaves and a "rasta character." Roatch denied ownership of a majority of the items in the car, including the cigarette case.

The cigarette case was sitting on the backseat of the car. Officer Thompson opened the case and discovered three bindles of cocaine inside. Officer Thompson then asked Thomas about the case, and she denied that it belonged to her. Officer Thompson did not ask Clark if she owned the cigarette case, and Clark remained handcuffed in the backseat of the patrol car while Thompson searched the vehicle.

The officers transported Thomas and Clark to the Fairbanks Police Station and secured them in separate holding cells. Officer Thompson and a drug enforcement officer interviewed Clark at the jail. Clark said that she did not know that the vehicle was stolen, and that Thomas was giving her a ride down the street. Clark admitted that she owned the cigarette case and explained that she was planning to trade the cocaine in the case for some martjuana.

A grand jury indicted Clark on one count of misconduct involving a controlled substance in the third degree. 1 Clark moved to suppress the evidence of the cocaine seized from the cigarette case and the statements she made related to that seizure, arguing that the search did not fall within an exception to the warrant requirement.

After an evidentiary hearing, Superior Court Judge Douglas Blankenship found that Roatch gave Officer Thompson her general, unlimited consent to search the car and that during the search, Officer Thompson found the cigarette case. He ruled that Roateb's denial that she owned the cigarette case did not limit that consent. Judge Blankenship also found that Clark did not have an expectation of privacy in the cigarette case since it was in a stolen car from which she had just been removed.

Judge Blankenship also found that Officer Thompson had probable cause to arrest Clark for criminal mischief in the fifth degree for joyriding. Judge Blankenship concluded that the search of the cigarette case was also justified as a search incident to Clark's arrest for criminal mischief. The court denied Clark's motion to suppress and a jury convicted her of misconduct involving a controlled substance. This appeal followed.

Discussion

The police may conduct a warrant-less search based on the voluntary consent of a person who has valid control of the place to be searched. 2 Ordinarily, a general consent by the property owner will allow the police to open closed but unlocked containers that could contain the object of the search. 3 Thus, an owner's general consent to the search of a vehicle for drugs includes consent to open closed containers found in the vehicle. 4

We applied these principles to a similar situation in Ingram v. State. 5 In that case, *368 the defendant left his jacket and his wallet on the floor of a neighbor's apartment, where he was arrested for his involvement in an LSD transaction. 6 After Ingram's arrest, the neighbor allowed the police to search the apartment for LSD and marked money. 7 We held that the search of Ingram's jacket and wallet were within the scope of the neighbor's consent, even though the neighbor told the police that those items did not belong to him. 8 We held that Ingram "assumed the risk" that the neighbor might consent to a search of the jacket and wallet by leaving them behind when he was arrested. 9

In Ingram, our conclusion that the neighbor had the authority to agree to a search of Ingram's property was based on the diminished expectation of privacy held by someone who leaves property in a neighbor's apartment. In the present case, Clark had a diminished expectation of privacy in her cigarette case for similar reasons: She apparently left her cigarette case in the backseat of a stolen vehicle.

The prevailing view of cases from other jurisdictions is that a passenger has no expectation of privacy in containers left in a stolen vehicle. 10 In response, Clark argues that there was no evidence establishing that she knew that Roateh's vehicle was stolen. But that is not the critical question. The critical question is what information was available to Officer Thompson at the time of the search.

Judge Blankenship found that Officer Thompson had probable cause to believe that the vehicle was stolen and that Clark was guilty of joyriding.

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231 P.3d 366, 2010 Alas. App. LEXIS 50, 2010 WL 2011507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-state-alaskactapp-2010.