Gray v. State

798 P.2d 346, 1990 Alas. App. LEXIS 82, 1990 WL 136461
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedSeptember 14, 1990
DocketA-2875
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 798 P.2d 346 (Gray 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
Gray v. State, 798 P.2d 346, 1990 Alas. App. LEXIS 82, 1990 WL 136461 (Ala. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Judge.

Terry L. Gray was convicted after pleading no contest to a charge of misconduct involving a controlled substance in the fourth degree (possession of cocaine). Gray reserved the right to appeal the superior court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence. On appeal he contends that the evidence against him should have been suppressed because it resulted from a jailhouse search that occurred before he was allowed a reasonable opportunity to post bail. We reverse.

The pertinent facts are undisputed. On February 11, 1988, Palmer Police Officer Michael Lamb stopped a car in which Gray rode as a passenger. Lamb subsequently arrested Gray on an outstanding misdemeanor warrant for contempt of court. Bail on the warrant had already been set at $500. Lamb frisked Gray for weapons and transported him to the Matanuska Pretrial Correctional Facility (Matsu Pretrial). A search of Gray’s person at Matsu Pretrial disclosed a small packet of cocaine.

*348 After being charged with possession of cocaine, Gray moved to suppress the evidence against him, arguing that the search at Matsu Pretrial violated the requirements of Zehrung v. State, 569 P.2d 189 (Alaska 1977), modified in part on rehearing, 573 P.2d 858 (1978). At the evidentiary hearing on the motion to suppress, the state called Michael Lamb, the arresting officer. Lamb testified that upon arrival with Gray at Matsu Pretrial, he placed Gray into the custody of William McCumbsky, a correctional officer. McCumbsky asked Gray if he had money for bail. Gray said that he hoped a friend was bringing it.

According to Lamb, immediately after this conversation, McCumbsky began a search of Gray, removing all articles from his pockets. Although Lamb had focused his immediate attention on filling out a remand slip, he was able to provide the following description of the search:

I don’t know what they consider it, it’s just a normal, it would probably be an inventory search. They just take everything out of his pockets and putting it up there and all I heard was what is this? And as soon as I heard that, I looked over and I observed a white packet with a regular clear plastic bag with white substance. And as soon as he said that, Mr. Gray stated that’s not mine, I don’t know how that got there, I don’t know what it is.

Lamb field-tested the substance in the bag; the test indicated the presence of cocaine.

The only other witness called by the state at the suppression hearing was Ernest Griffiths, an assistant correctional superintendent at Matsu Pretrial. Griffiths was not present during Gray's search and had no personal knowledge of the circumstances. He was called solely for the purpose of establishing institutional policy for handling persons who had been arrested on minor offenses for which bail had already been established.

Griffiths confirmed that the type of search to which Gray had been subjected, as described by Lamb, was routine procedure. According to Griffiths, persons arrested for minor offenses with bail already established were allowed approximately an hour after arrival at Matsu Pretrial to make arrangements for bail. Immediately upon arrival at Matsu Pretrial, however, arrestees were subjected to a search, which Griffiths described as a “patdown.” Arres-tees were required to empty all articles from their clothing and were frisked to make sure that all articles had been removed. The articles were then inventoried and placed into a property bag. Arrestees were then placed in one of two holding cells located immediately adjacent to the booking area, outside the area of the institution that houses prisoners who have already been booked.

On some occasions, however, when the holding cells were being used to house juveniles or female prisoners, newly arrived arrestees would be kept handcuffed on a bench in the booking area while waiting for bail to be arranged.

Griffiths further testified that if an ar-restee managed to post bail within the allotted hour and was released, the articles removed in the initial “patdown” were returned, except for contraband. When an arrestee could not post bail, all articles taken from the arrestee’s person would be stored in a property box in the control room, the arrestee would be subjected to a full strip search and would then be moved into the correctional facility proper.

Gray also testified briefly in his own behalf at the suppression hearing. He described the search in the following terms:

I was wearing a Carhart jacket and the booking officer or what — jailer, whatever, just kinda swished by my side and came up with it. I don’t know.

Following the suppression hearing, Gray argued that the Department of Corrections’ policy, as it was applied in his case, violated the requirements of Zehrung. That case held, in relevant part:

[Wjhen one is arrested and brought to a jail for a minor offense for which bail has already been set in a bail schedule, he should be allowed a reasonable opportunity to attempt to raise bail before being subjected to the remand and book *349 ing procedures and the incident inventory search.

569 P.2d at 195.

In opposition to Gray, the state characterized the institutional policy described by Officer Griffiths as a limited “patdown” that was permissible under Zehrung and that was both reasonable and necessary to protect against the introduction of weapons and contraband into correctional facilities.

Superior Court Judge J. Justin Ripley denied Gray’s motion to suppress. Although Judge Ripley was troubled that the institutional policy which Griffiths had described accorded little significance to the Zehrung rule, he nevertheless found the procedure necessary to protect against the introduction of weapons and contraband into correctional facilities. Noting that Gray’s own testimony suggested that the actual intrusiveness of the search that he had been subjected to was minimal, Judge Ripley found it to be permissible.

On appeal, the parties renew the arguments that they advanced below. We must accordingly decide whether the warrantless search in Gray’s case was permissible in light of Zehrung. We begin our analysis where Zehrung began:

A' search conducted without a warrant is per se unreasonable unless the search fits within one of the “few specifically established and well-delineated exceptions” to the warrant requirement. The burden of proof is on the state to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the exigencies of the situation make conduct of the search without a warrant imperative.

Id. at 192 (footnotes omitted).

In Zehrung, the defendant was arrested on outstanding misdemeanor and failure to appear warrants for which bail had been preset.

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Bluebook (online)
798 P.2d 346, 1990 Alas. App. LEXIS 82, 1990 WL 136461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-state-alaskactapp-1990.