D'ANTORIO v. State

926 P.2d 1158, 1996 Alas. LEXIS 135, 1996 WL 674313
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1996
DocketS-6541
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 926 P.2d 1158 (D'ANTORIO v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D'ANTORIO v. State, 926 P.2d 1158, 1996 Alas. LEXIS 135, 1996 WL 674313 (Ala. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

1. INTRODUCTION

A jury convicted Michael D’Antorio of engaging in a scheme to defraud in violation of AS 11.46.600(a)(1). 1 The superior court sentenced him to ten years of imprisonment with one year suspended and placed him on probation for five years.

Prior to trial, D’Antorio moved to suppress personal papers and credit cards seized during a search conducted in Ohio by an Ohio police detective and later examined by a sergeant of the Alaska State Troopers. 2 The superior court denied the motion and permitted the State to use the evidence at D’Anto-rio’s trial. The issue before us is whether the court of appeals erred in affirming the superior court’s decision to admit these papers and credit cards into evidence.

We hold that the search of D’Antorio’s personal papers conducted by the Alaska State Troopers cannot be sustained under the “second glance” doctrine. However, we conclude that the seizure of the credit cards occurred pursuant to a proper inventory search and that their examination by the Alaska State Troopers was valid under the “second glance” doctrine. We therefore reverse in part and affirm in part.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On April 30, 1987, a police officer stopped Michael D’Antorio near Huber Heights, Ohio for driving with a broken headlight. The officer conducted a routine computer check which revealed an outstanding Alaska arrest warrant for D’Antorio for a “parole violation, original charge scheme to defraud.” The officer placed D’Antorio under arrest and conducted a brief search of D’Antorio and the car. The car was then impounded and moved to an impound yard.

Huber Heights Detective Susan Finch went to the impound yard several hours later to “inventory” the contents of the car. Finch *1160 found an automobile filled with bags of new merchandise, including a camcorder, a convection oven, twenty boxes of shoes, several cases of beer, and numerous closed containers, including suitcases and a briefcase. Detective Finch opened and searched each closed container in the vehicle and found various credit cards and hundreds of pages of documents. These papers included credit bureau reports, business cards, letters, airline tickets, IRS forms and correspondence, college applications, handwritten notes, newspaper wedding announcements and obituaries, sales receipts, and completed credit applications.

Detective Finch conducted an inventory search of the car. She testified that her purpose in inspecting the documents was to identify D’Antorio’s property for safekeeping. She listed each of the credit cards separately. However, she filled out no inventory forms for the other papers, nor did her handwritten list of items describe any of the written documents found inside the closed containers in the automobile. Instead, she placed them in plastic bags and labeled them as “miscellaneous papers.”

Several days after the inventory was completed, Alaska State Trooper Sergeant Edward Stauber traveled to Ohio in order “to see what they had seized, what was in evidence, and ... to transport Mr. D’Antorio back to Alaska.” Sergeant Stauber was aware of D’Antorio’s prior conviction for a scheme to defraud and of probation restrictions placed on D’Antorio which prohibited him from possessing credit cards. 3 Stauber took possession of the items and papers from an Ohio evidence custodian. The papers were contained within closed plastic bags, identified by general tags such as “miscellaneous papers from glovebox.” Upon returning to Alaska, Sergeant Stauber, without seeking a search warrant for the papers, read each document, copied it, and described it on a detailed list.

D’Antorio filed a motion to suppress these papers and credit cards, asserting that the inventory conducted by Detective Finch in Ohio and the warrantless examination by Sergeant Stauber in Alaska violated the United States and Alaska constitutions. The superior court denied the motion to suppress, and D’Antorio was convicted of a scheme to defraud five or more people.

D’Antorio appealed. The court of appeals held that federal and Ohio law applied to the inventory search conducted by Detective Finch and affirmed the superior court’s conclusion that Finch’s inventory was valid. D’Antorio v. State, 837 P.2d 727, 731 (Alaska App.1992) (D’Antorio I). The court of appeals remanded the ease to the superior court and stated that

the pertinent issue is whether the intensity of Stauber’s warrantless search of the seized articles materially exceeded the scope of the inventory that Finch had previously conducted—in other words, whether Sergeant Stauber’s actions violated a reasonable expectation of privacy that had not already been “dissipated” by Finch’s earlier inspection.
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From the testimony below, it appears that Stauber’s search of D’Antorio’s property may have been more intensive than Finch’s prior inventory search. However, this is a factual issue, which requires findings by the trial court in the first instance. We must therefore remand this case for additional findings.

Id. The court of appeals further ordered the superior court, if it found upon remand that any of the inventory search evidence should have been suppressed, to decide whether introduction of that evidence was harmless error. Id. at 733-34.

On remand the superior court determined that Sergeant Stauber’s examination did not materially exceed the scope of Detective Finch’s inventory and that Stauber merely took a “second glance” at the seized items. *1161 In reaching this conclusion the superior court stated:

As a factual matter, it is undisputed that Sergeant Stauber knew what to look for and closely examined and catalogued every piece of paper provided him by the Huber Heights police. Detective Finch, on the other hand, knew only generally that defendant was wanted in connection with credit card fraud. She was aware of the probable evidentiary significance of the credit cards found in the vehicle; she separately listed each one of them. Sergeant Stauber’s search of the credit cards was not more extensive. Admission of evidence regarding the cards was not error. Because Detective Finch was not apprised of defendant’s -modus operandi, however, she was not necessarily aware of the evi-dentiary significance of each of the other papers she perused. But she testified that she opened every container found in the car and looked at each piece of paper. She said that she “glanced” through each one “enough to note that it was an application or obituary or whatever kind of article it was.” She said she could report the general gist of each piece of paper, but not repeat its contents “verbatim.”

The superior court stated that “Stauber did not inspect articles in closed containers that had not previously been opened.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
926 P.2d 1158, 1996 Alas. LEXIS 135, 1996 WL 674313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dantorio-v-state-alaska-1996.