Lanolan Anderson v. State of Alaska

444 P.3d 239
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJune 7, 2019
DocketA12294
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 444 P.3d 239 (Lanolan Anderson v. State of Alaska) 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
Lanolan Anderson v. State of Alaska, 444 P.3d 239 (Ala. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Judge WOLLENBERG.

*241 Lanolan Anderson was convicted of three counts of first-degree assault. The superior court sentenced him to a composite term of 20 years to serve.

On appeal, Anderson raises several claims. First, Anderson argues that the court erred in failing to suppress his clothing, which the police seized without a warrant. Second, Anderson argues that the court erred in instructing the jury regarding a witness's unavailability. Third, Anderson argues that the court erred in rejecting two of his proposed mitigating factors and by giving insufficient weight to a third mitigating factor. Finally, Anderson argues that the court improperly found that Anderson had two prior felony convictions, rather than one, when determining the applicable presumptive sentencing range.

For the reasons explained in this decision, we reject Anderson's claims, and we affirm Anderson's convictions and his sentence.

Underlying facts and proceedings

In May 2009, shortly before midnight, Anderson kicked in the front door of a residence in Anchorage, and he and two accomplices (all three armed with handguns) entered the residence. Once inside, Anderson's accomplices shot two of the occupants and pistol-whipped a third. Anderson was also shot during this incident.

All three occupants of the residence required medical treatment for their wounds, and two of them were taken to Providence Medical Center. Because Anderson was wounded, he contacted a friend, and this friend also took him to the emergency room at Providence.

In response to the report of the shooting, Anchorage Police Officer Jean Mills went to Providence, where she expected to meet and interview the victims of the alleged home invasion. Mills arrived at the hospital just as Anderson got out of his friend's vehicle, and Mills could see that Anderson was bleeding from a wound to his abdomen. From this, Mills assumed that Anderson was one of the victims.

Mills accompanied Anderson into the emergency room and stayed there as the hospital staff treated him. Mills took photographs of Anderson as the medical staff worked on him, and she observed a gunshot wound to Anderson's left side when the staff cut off his clothing. Anderson at first confirmed that he had been at the residence where the home invasion occurred, but he later changed his story, telling Mills that he was in a grocery store parking lot when he was shot.

Another officer then informed Mills that Anderson was a possible suspect in the home invasion. After some further questioning, Mills seized all of the clothing that the medical staff had removed from Anderson, including his shoes.

The police subsequently compared a photograph of the soles of Anderson's shoes to photographs of shoe impressions left on the kicked-in front door of the residence, and they appeared to match. At trial, a witness from the crime laboratory testified to the match between Anderson's shoes and the shoe impressions on the front door of the residence. Crime lab representatives also testified that there was a blood stain on one of the shoes and that one of the victims could not be excluded as a source of the DNA found in the stain.

Anderson and his two accomplices were charged with numerous felonies, including three counts of first-degree assault (one for *242 each alleged victim). 1 Prior to trial, Anderson filed a motion to suppress, arguing that the police unconstitutionally seized his clothing from the hospital emergency room. Anderson asked the court to suppress his clothing, as well as photographs of the clothing and the forensic analysis comparing the soles of his shoes to shoeprints recovered from the crime scene.

The parties agreed to forgo an evidentiary hearing and to have the court decide the motion based on Officer Mills's police report. Based on the police report, the superior court found that the seizure of Anderson's clothing was justified by the plain view exception to the warrant requirement.

Anderson and his co-defendants were tried together. At trial, Anderson argued that the alleged victims had actually assaulted him.

The jury found Anderson guilty of the three first-degree assaults, but the jury was unable to reach verdicts on the remaining counts, including counts of first-degree robbery and conspiracy to commit first-degree robbery. Ultimately, the State dismissed the remaining counts against Anderson, and his case proceeded to sentencing on the three assault convictions. (The jury could not reach verdicts as to Anderson's co-defendants, and their cases were later resolved without a trial.)

At Anderson's sentencing, the superior court rejected Anderson's two proposed mitigators - that he played a minor role in the offenses, and that his conduct was the result of serious provocation from the victims. 2 But the superior court did find that one of the assaults qualified as among the least serious conduct within the definition of the offense. 3 Anderson conceded one aggravating factor - that he had a history of aggravated assaultive behavior. 4

Finally, over Anderson's objection, the superior court found that Anderson had two prior felony convictions for purposes of determining the applicable presumptive sentencing range. Because the court found that Anderson was a third felony offender, he was subject to a presumptive sentencing range of 15 to 20 years for each first-degree assault conviction. 5 The court sentenced Anderson to a term of 15 years on each count. The court imposed some of this time consecutively, giving Anderson a composite sentence of 20 years, with no time suspended.

Anderson now appeals.

Why we affirm the superior court's denial of Anderson's suppression motion

Prior to trial, Anderson moved to suppress his clothing, arguing that the State had no justification for seizing the clothing without a warrant. The parties agreed that the superior court could decide this motion based solely on Officer Mills's police report and the parties' briefing - that is, without holding an evidentiary hearing.

Based on the police report, the court concluded that the seizure of the evidence was lawful because the evidence was in plain view. More specifically, the court found that (1) Officer Mills was in a place where she was lawfully entitled to be; (2) the discovery of Anderson's clothing was inadvertent, since Anderson arrived at the hospital while Mills was waiting for the victims of the home invasion; and (3) the evidentiary relevance of the clothing was immediately apparent. 6

Before we analyze the superior court's ruling, we must discuss the two meanings of the phrase "plain view."

In his leading treatise on search and seizure law, Professor Wayne R. LaFave points out that the phrase "plain view" is actually used in two distinct Fourth Amendment contexts. 7

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Bluebook (online)
444 P.3d 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanolan-anderson-v-state-of-alaska-alaskactapp-2019.