Ingram v. State

703 P.2d 415, 1985 Alas. App. LEXIS 333
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJuly 19, 1985
Docket6784
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 703 P.2d 415 (Ingram 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
Ingram v. State, 703 P.2d 415, 1985 Alas. App. LEXIS 333 (Ala. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Judge.

Paul W. Ingram was convicted, following a jury trial, of one count of selling LSD, in violation of former AS 17.12.010, and one count of misconduct involving weapons in the third degree, in violation of AS 11.61.-220(a)(1). Superior Court Seaborn J. Buck-alew, Jr., sentenced Ingram to serve concurrent terms of seven years with one year suspended for the drug charge and ninety days for misconduct involving weapons. On appeal, Ingram argues that the superior court erred in declining to suppress evidence illegally seized by the police. Ingram further asserts that he was not tried within the 120-day period provided for under Alaska Criminal Rule 45, that the prosecution improperly presented hearsay evidence to the grand jury, and that the trial court erred in admitting photocopies of buy-money and refusing to give an informer instruction to the jury. Finally, Ingram maintains that the sentence he received is excessive.

‘I. SUPPRESSION ISSUES

The primary issues raised by Ingram relate to the propriety of the superior court’s denial of his pretrial motions to suppress, which alleged that various items of evidence were illegally seized by the police and were therefore inadmissible. In order to place our discussion of these issues into context, it is necessary to review the circumstances surrounding Ingram’s arrest.

A. Facts

In April 1981, Police Investigator William Boitnott, while working as an undercover officer with the Anchorage Metropolitan Drug Unit (Metro), began buying LSD from James Roy Wilson. Boitnott eventually arranged to buy 6,000 “hits” of LSD from Wilson for $16,200. The sale was set for the evening of April 29,1981. Boitnott, along with five other Metro officers, planned to perform a “buy-bust” by locating and arresting the source of Wilson’s LSD.

At the appointed time, Boitnott, driving a pickup truck, met Wilson; Wilson directed Boitnott to an area near the intersection of Fifty-Third Avenue and Arctic Boulevard. Wilson originally wanted the full $16,200 in purchase money “fronted” to him, but Boit-nott insisted on handling the transaction in installments and refused to provide Wilson any money until he received some LSD. Wilson agreed. He left Boitnott’s truck and walked south along Arctic Boulevard until Boitnott lost sight of him. Boitnott then radioed other Metro officers in the area to inform them of the direction in which Wilson had gone.

*419 Wilson returned to Boitnott’s truck within two to three minutes. He gave Boitnott 1,000 dosage units of LSD in exchange for $2,700 in prerecorded buy-money. Following the exchange, Wilson again left the truck and disappeared by the same route. He returned in several minutes with another 1,000 dosage units of LSD, and Boitnott made another $2,700 payment. After making a third trip for LSD and receiving another $2,700, Wilson told Boitnott that his source had a total of only 4,500 hits, not 6,000 as initially agreed upon. Wilson had already delivered 3,000 hits; he agreed to produce the remaining 1,500 on his fourth, and final, trip. As soon as Wilson left, Boitnott again radioed to tell other Metro officers that Wilson was making his last pickup. Boitnott waited for Wilson in his truck, but after a period of five to seven minutes had elapsed he began to suspect that something was amiss.

In the meantime, other Metro officers had managed to track Wilson to 5308 Arctic Boulevard, a fourplex with two upstairs and two downstairs apartments. Access to all four apartments was provided by a common enclosed entryway, with stairs leading upward to apartments one and two and downward to apartments three and four. Officers believed that Wilson had entered one of the two downstairs apartments.

One of the Metro officers maintaining surveillance at the fourplex was Investigator Mark O’Brien. O’Brien was on foot; as he walked in the vicinity of the fourplex he noticed a man, later identified as Ingram, who was wearing a blue jacket, walking a large dog, and apparently watching O’Brien intently. When O’Brien went inside the entryway of the fourplex, Ingram approached, opened the glass door to the building and asked what O’Brien wanted. O’Brien responded by asking Ingram if he lived in the building. Ingram said he did not. O’Brien asked again and received the same answer. O’Brien, who was dressed in shabby clothes and had long hair and a beard, became concerned that his appearance might arouse suspicion and interfere with his surveillance. Thus, O’Brien identified himself as a police officer and instructed Ingram to go.

O’Brien watched as Ingram walked to the neighboring building, a sixteen-unit apartment complex. Ingram went up the stairs with his dog. Simultaneously, two men left an apartment, number 20, on the second floor; they met with Ingram on the stairs. Ingram and one of the men returned to the apartment. The third man, later identified as Thomas Heriford, remained, made an obscene gesture toward O’Brien, and watched. O’Brien instructed another officer to tell Heriford to leave the area.

O’Brien remained in the fourplex where Wilson was believed to be. By this time, O’Brien had been joined by Officer Stevens. Within about a minute after Ingram entered apartment 20 in the neighboring building, O’Brien heard the telephone ringing in apartment 3 of the fourplex. A male voice inside that apartment said, “cops, it’s a bust,” or words to that effect. O’Brien and Stevens listened but heard no further conversation. A girl, about eleven or twelve years of age, entered the fourplex and went down the stairs to apartment 3. She tried to enter the apartment but seemed startled when she found the door locked. The door opened from the inside, and the officers saw a woman pull the girl into the apartment.

O’Brien concluded that Wilson must be in apartment 3 and had been tipped off by Ingram from the neighboring building. Fearing that evidence might be destroyed, O’Brien had drawn his weapon and badge. When O’Brien knocked, Virginia Ingram answered the door. O’Brien saw Wilson sitting on the couch inside the apartment. He entered and arrested Wilson.

Upon entering the apartment, O’Brien asked if anybody else was present. Virginia Ingram told O’Brien that her husband was out walking the dog. When O’Brien asked if Ingram’s husband had a large black dog, Virginia Ingram said yes. O’Brien immediately instructed Stevens to secure Wilson and ran to the neighboring building. He was joined by Investigator *420 Boitnott. . Only several minutes had elapsed since O’Brien’s initial entry of apartment 3.

As O’Brien approached the door to apartment 20, he passed by the living room window and saw three men inside. O’Brien knocked on the door and yelled “police, open up.” Nobody answered. O’Brien yelled again, and when there was still no response, he pushed open the door, which was unlocked. Ingram stood inside ■ the door, across the room from O’Brien. He was no longer wearing a jacket. O’Brien instructed Ingram to exit the residence, but Ingram did not move and would not leash his dog. Heriford and another man were with Ingram. Heriford, who resided in apartment 20, approached the door. Boit-nott immediately led Heriford outside. He was not permitted to reenter. Ingram then moved closer to the door. O’Brien took a step into the apartment, grabbed Ingram, and pulled him outside.

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Bluebook (online)
703 P.2d 415, 1985 Alas. App. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingram-v-state-alaskactapp-1985.