Dana Mark Camann, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 28, 2023
Docket0243224
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dana Mark Camann, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Dana Mark Camann, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Dana Mark Camann, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Athey, Chaney and Raphael UNPUBLISHED

Argued by videoconference

DANA MARK CAMANN, JR. MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0243-22-4 JUDGE STUART A. RAPHAEL FEBRUARY 28, 2023 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FREDERICK COUNTY William W. Eldridge, IV, Judge

(Jason E. Ransom; Ransom/Silvester, on brief), for appellant. Appellant submitting on brief.

Rebecca M. Garcia, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

While investigating a public-indecency complaint, the sheriff’s deputies here spoke with

appellant Dana Mark Camann, Jr., in the parking lot of a convenience store. During that

encounter, one deputy noticed that Camann was hiding something under his shoe and told him to

move his foot. Camann did so, revealing aluminum foil with burnt residue and a straw. The

deputies arrested Camann and searched his person, discovering a white powder in a cellophane

wrapper in his wallet and pills in a pill bottle in his pocket. Testing of the white powder revealed

that it contained two controlled substances: fentanyl and etizolam. The pills tested positive for

two other controlled substances. Camann was convicted of three felony counts of possessing a

Schedule I or II controlled substance and one misdemeanor count of possessing a Schedule IV

controlled substance, all in violation of Code § 18.2-250.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. We reject Camann’s argument that the trial court erred in failing to grant his motion to

suppress the evidence.1 While we agree that a Fourth Amendment seizure occurred when the

deputy told Camann to move his foot, the directive was part of a lawful investigative detention

that was supported by reasonable suspicion. Upon discovering the burnt residue on the

improvised smoking device that Camann was hiding, the deputies had probable cause to arrest

him for drug possession. They then conducted a lawful search incident to arrest, discovering the

narcotics that he was convicted of possessing.

We agree with Camann, however, that there was insufficient evidence to support his

conviction for felony possession of etizolam.2 While Code § 18.2-250 permits a defendant to be

convicted for knowingly possessing a controlled substance without knowing which controlled

substance he has, it does not impose strict liability for each subsequent controlled substance that

may be found in the mixture. Because the Commonwealth failed to prove that Camann knew

that the white powder in his possession contained more than one controlled substance, we

reverse his conviction for possessing etizolam.

BACKGROUND

After 1:00 a.m. on September 10, 2020, Deputies Spears and Russell of the Frederick

County Sheriff’s Office responded to a report of a man masturbating outside a 7-Eleven

convenience store. When Deputy Russell arrived, Camann was standing on a sidewalk in the

parking lot, with his back against the side of the store.

Deputy Russell was the first on the scene. Deputy Spears arrived soon after, and his

body-camera footage was introduced into evidence. Deputy Russell conversed briefly with

Camann before entering the store to interview the customer and employee who had reported the

1 Judge Chaney dissents from this conclusion. 2 Judge Athey dissents from this conclusion. -2- incident. While Deputy Russell was inside, Deputy Spears engaged in “normal small talk” with

Camann before telling him why the police had been called. Camann denied any wrongdoing and

continued to stand in place. Deputy Russell returned, telling Camann that witnesses claimed to

have seen him masturbating.

Camann reacted indignantly, but as he shifted his weight back and forth, Deputy Spears

noticed that Camann appeared to be hiding something under his left shoe. After Camann moved

his foot enough to offer a glimpse of the aluminum foil underneath, Deputy Spears said, “move

your foot, move your foot.” Camann did so, revealing a blue plastic straw and a piece of

aluminum foil with burnt residue. From his training and experience, Deputy Spears knew that

people commonly “use aluminum foil and plastic straws” to smoke narcotics. Upon seeing the

burnt residue on the aluminum foil, Spears decided to arrest Camann.

After placing Camann in handcuffs, Deputy Spears read him his Miranda3 rights and

subsequently searched his pockets. Spears found more foil and a straw, similar to what Camann

had been hiding under his foot, a cellophane wrapper in Camann’s wallet containing a white

powdery substance, and pills in a pill bottle.

Subsequent testing revealed that the white powdery substance was a mixture of fentanyl,

a Schedule II controlled substance, and etizolam, a Schedule I controlled substance.4 The

mixture weighed 0.056 gram. One pill in the pill bottle contained amphetamine, a Schedule II

controlled substance; another contained clonazepam, a Schedule IV controlled substance.5 The

aluminum foil and straw that Camann was hiding under his shoe were not tested for narcotics.

The grand jury returned four indictments against Camann: three felony counts of possessing a

3 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966). 4 See Code §§ 54.1-3446 (Schedule I), 54.1-3448 (Schedule II). 5 See Code § 54.1-3452 (Schedule IV). -3- Schedule I or II controlled substance and one misdemeanor count of possessing a Schedule IV

controlled substance.

Camann moved to suppress the evidence, claiming that the search and seizure violated his

Fourth Amendment rights. The trial court denied the motion, finding: (1) the interaction between

Deputy Spears and Camann began as a consensual encounter; (2) Deputy Spears’s asking

Camann to move his foot was “not . . . an order” and was “not a seizure”; (3) there was no

expectation of privacy in the “public area” beneath Camann’s foot; (4) there was probable cause

to arrest Camann after seeing the straw and aluminum foil with burnt residue; and (5) the drugs

in Camann’s pockets were legally discovered as part of a search incident to arrest.6

At the jury trial that followed, the Commonwealth’s evidence consisted of Deputy

Spears’s testimony, his body-camera footage, and a certificate of analysis detailing the results of

the lab tests on the drugs found in Camann’s possession. The court denied Camann’s motion to

strike the Commonwealth’s evidence. Camann then testified. He admitted that he was a drug

addict, that he had tried to conceal the foil underfoot, that the foil contained “a drug,” and that

the items found in his pockets were all his. He admitted knowing that the white powder was

fentanyl but denied knowing that it also contained etizolam, a drug he’d never heard of.

The court denied Camann’s renewed motion to strike the etizolam charge. Relying on

Sierra v. Commonwealth, 59 Va. App. 770 (2012), the court held that Camann “b[ore] the risk

. . . of punishment for whatever substance was there.” Over Camann’s objection, the jury was

instructed that “[t]he Commonwealth [wa]s not required to prove that [Camann] knew the

precise substance he [wa]s alleged to have possessed, only that he knew the substance was a

controlled substance.” In closing, the prosecutor argued, based on that instruction, that “You

don’t need to know whether it is heroin or fentanyl or etizolam or cocaine or anything else,

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