In Re Welfare of A.B.L.

358 N.W.2d 417, 1984 Minn. App. LEXIS 3796
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 20, 1984
DocketC9-84-636, C0-84-637
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 358 N.W.2d 417 (In Re Welfare of A.B.L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Welfare of A.B.L., 358 N.W.2d 417, 1984 Minn. App. LEXIS 3796 (Mich. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

PARKER, Judge.

Two juveniles were adjudicated delinquent by a referee of the Ramsey County Juvenile Court based on charges of aggravated robbery. After a hearing to determine probable cause, other Rasmussen issues concerning purported identifications made by two witnesses were incorporated into the trial on the merits. The referee suppressed identifications made by the witnesses and found appellants guilty. Subsequently the court granted defendants’ motion for a new trial based upon the court’s improper consideration of the failure of the defendant to call a witness at trial. By agreement of the parties, the new trial was submitted to the district court on the record made before the referee. After reviewing tapes of the earlier proceeding, the court entered an order sustaining the petition. Appellants contend the evidence was insufficient to sustain the petition and the arresting officer lacked probable cause to arrest them. We affirm.

FACTS

On a November evening Kathleen Ne-deau, 18, and Lisa Jerde, 16, parked on Seventh Place in downtown St. Paul to pick up some friends who were working in Town Square. The lighting was dim. As they were getting out of the car, two young black men approached and asked the time. Ms. Jerde said it was eight o’clock.

The youth who asked the time was about six feet from the car. Ms. Nedeau said he wore a blue jacket with a colored stripe about one and a half inches wide down the sleeve or across the chest. His companion remained behind the car; she thought he was wearing a dark brown jacket. Ms. Jerde also noticed that the first youth was wearing a blue coat with a red or yellow stripe, one and one half or two inches wide, across the front.

The girls got back in their car, and the two youths walked west along Seventh Place in the direction of Town Square. The girls watched them for about 25 seconds.

*419 Between three and five minutes later, as the girls got out of their car, they heard a scream. They ran to the corner of Seventh and Minnesota Streets, where they found a woman lying on the ground. Ms. Nedeau observed two males running together three-fourths of a block away. She recognized them, from the back, as the same two males she had spoken to earlier. She said she recognized the blue jacket with the colored stripe.

Elvira Eggert, 54, the victim, testified that she was waiting at a bus stop on the southeast corner of Minnesota and Seventh when two black males who she thought were teenagers approached her. One was at her right side and the other was facing her. The youth facing her asked her what time it was. She looked at her watch and told them it was eight o’clock. This same person asked to see her watch. He took hold of her wrist, lifted it to look closer, and then jerked the purse off her wrist. Ms. Eggert lost her balance and fell. The two youths ran east around the corner of Sixth Street.

Lighting at the bus stop was poor, and she did not look at their faces. She is five feet, seven inches tall and said they were a bit taller than herself. They wore dark jackets which looked like blue windbreakers. She was not sure if there was color in their jackets.

St. Paul Police Officer DeWitt responded to a call reporting the purse-snatching. Ms. Eggert told him her purse contained two $20 bills, four $10 bills, three $1 bills, and $10 in food stamps in her purse. He also interviewed the two girls and put out a general description of the suspects.

Officer Howard Tucker also heard the initial purse-snatch report while patrolling downtown St. Paul in a squad car. Three to five minutes after the report, he saw two teenage black males walking south on Robert Street near Kellogg, five to six blocks from the crime scene. He testified that their presence aroused his curiosity because there were no attractions for young people in that area, particularly at that time of the evening. They turned west on Kellogg.

As Tucker turned west on Kellogg he heard a description of the suspects over the police radio; police were alerted to look for two black males in their mid-teens, one wearing a dark blue jacket with orange stripes and the other a two-tone jacket, possibly a blue jacket with an orange or red top.

Tucker made a U-turn back to Robert and Kellogg. He saw the same youths walk into the Y.W.C.A. at Kellogg and Minnesota, and he entered to look for them. Toward the rear of the Y.W.C.A. building he entered a room and heard a male voice ask, “how much money did you have” or “how much money do you have?” He found the same two black teenagers sitting at a lunch table. J.D.W. was sitting with his back to the door. A.B.L. was facing the door and was counting money, in bills, in his hands.

When A.B.L. saw the officer he put the money in his wallet and put the wallet in his pocket. When asked, they said they had come from the St. Anthony Hill area and were waiting at the Y.W.C.A. to meet their group home mother for a ride home. At trial their group home mother corroborated the fact that she was to meet the boys there that evening.

Tucker noted in his report that A.B.L. was five feet, seven inches tall, 140 to 150 pounds, and wore a dark blue jacket with orange shoulders. J.D.W. was five feet, six inches tall, about 130 pounds, and wore a dark blue jacket with a thin orange stripe on the sleeves and shoulders. Both were in their mid-teens.

At Tucker’s request, A.B.L. produced the money he had in his wallet. He had one $20 bill, four $10 bills, and one $1 bill. J.D.W. emptied from his pockets two $20 bills, two $10 bills, and three $1 bills.

Ms. Eggert was asked to view the boys; she remained in the squad car as they were brought out into the lighted area in front of the Y.W.C.A. She testified that she could not identify them because she had *420 not seen their faces. She also testified that, at the time, she told Officer DeWitt that she did not know if these were the boys who snatched her purse. Officer De-Witt said he heard Ms. Eggert say “she felt that those were the two parties * * * I’m sure that was them” and seemed certain she had identified them. Officer Tucker reported that he understood DeWitt to have told him that she was not sure of her identification. Officer Collins, also present, testified that he did not think Ms. Eggert had been able to identify them.

The suspects were then taken to Town Square to be shown to Ms. Nedeau and Ms. Jerde. Neither said she could make an identification; however, at trial Ms. Ne-deau testified that she could have identified them both at that time but that she did not because she was afraid of the way one of them had “looked” at her.

A.B.L. told police that he went downtown with only some change on him and that the money was given to him that evening as a birthday gift from his uncle, who they saw at a store where the uncle worked. J.D.W. said they got the money from A.B.L.’s uncle at a house they visited.

Several days later A.B.L. and J.D.W. were videotaped with three other young black males in a lineup. Ms. Eggert viewed the videotape and was unable to identify them. She made no identification at trial.

Ms. Nedeau and Ms. Jerde were both shown the videotape and identified A.B.L. and J.D.W.

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Related

In Re the Welfare of W.W.M.
400 N.W.2d 203 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1987)
In re the Welfare of P.L.M.
375 N.W.2d 591 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1985)
In re the Welfare of B.R.H.
367 N.W.2d 83 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1985)
In Re the Welfare of J.P.L.
359 N.W.2d 622 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1984)

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Bluebook (online)
358 N.W.2d 417, 1984 Minn. App. LEXIS 3796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-welfare-of-abl-minnctapp-1984.