Lee Allen Saffel v. State of Arkansas

2021 Ark. App. 163
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 14, 2021
StatusPublished

This text of 2021 Ark. App. 163 (Lee Allen Saffel v. State of Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee Allen Saffel v. State of Arkansas, 2021 Ark. App. 163 (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Cite as 2021 Ark. App. 163 Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS I attest to the accuracy and DIVISION II integrity of this document No. CR-20-539 2023.06.26 15:22:19 -05'00' 2023.001.20174 Opinion Delivered: April 14, 2021 LEE ALLEN SAFFEL APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE MILLER V. COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 46CR-19-655] STATE OF ARKANSAS APPELLEE HONORABLE BRENT HALTOM, JUDGE

AFFIRMED

RITA W. GRUBER, Judge

Following a bench trial, appellant Lee Allen Saffel was convicted of possession of a

controlled substance (methamphetamine) under Arkansas Code Annotated section 5-64-

419(b)(1)(A) (Repl. 2016), a Class D felony. He was sentenced as a habitual offender to

seven years’ imprisonment. For his sole argument on appeal, appellant contends that the

circuit court erred in denying his motion to suppress. We affirm.

At the beginning of the June 22, 2020 bench trial, appellant’s counsel indicated that

he had filed a motion to suppress evidence on the basis of Fourth Amendment violations;

however, neither the court nor the State had a copy of the motion. 1 Appellant’s counsel

asked the court to consider the motion to suppress as it heard the evidence, and the court

agreed.

1 The electronic-pleadings record does not contain a suppression motion. Officer Robert Derrick of the Texarkana Police Department testified that around

1:24 a.m. on September 20, 2019, he was patrolling on East 24th Street when he saw

appellant “walking around in circles, walking across the road on Franklin Drive.” Franklin

Drive is a side street off East 24th Street. Officer Derrick was patrolling in the area because

it is a moderate crime area. He testified that there had been a recent shooting in that area

and a “bunch” of shots-fired calls. He first saw appellant near the dumpsters at the Shangri-

La Apartments. As Derrick drove by, appellant “started walking in the middle of the road

on Franklin doing circles.” Derrick thought this activity at that time of the night was

suspicious and dangerous. Derrick turned around and made contact with appellant, at which

time appellant had just stepped over the curb and into the grass on the west side of the street.

Derrick could not remember whether appellant had indicated that he was in his yard. When

Derrick asked appellant what he was doing in the street, he said he was looking for rocks.

Derrick described appellant as having “pinpointed” eyes and seeming “very jittery” like he

possibly ingested “illegal narcotics.”

Derrick said that after getting appellant’s name, he provided the dispatcher with

appellant’s information, and the dispatcher advised Derrick that appellant had a possible

misdemeanor warrant. 2 Derrick asked the dispatcher to confirm the warrant. In the

meantime, Derrick asked appellant to step off the curb and step in front of the patrol car to

conduct a “patent [sic] search just to be sure . . . he didn’t have any guns or anything illegal

in his pockets or anything like that due to him having a warrant.” Derrick stated that he

2 The transcripts of the dash-cam and body-cam videos introduced indicate the dispatcher said appellant has a “probation violation out of your agency,” and Derrick told the dispatcher to “[g]o ahead and confirm.”

2 detained appellant and put him in handcuffs and began the search. Derrick testified that “the

warrant was confirmed in the search.” During the search, Derrick found a bag of insulin

syringes in appellant’s left cargo pocket and one syringe out of the bag that contained a clear

liquid. Appellant told Derrick that one of his parents is a diabetic. The Arkansas State Crime

Laboratory determined that the clear liquid was methamphetamine. The dash-cam and

body-cam videos were introduced into evidence without objection and played for the court.

After the State moved to introduce the evidence of the syringe that tested positive

for methamphetamine, appellant objected. The circuit court heard appellant’s suppression

motion at the conclusion of Derrick’s testimony. Appellant moved to suppress the syringe

because it was “based upon a possible warrant,” arguing that Derrick placed him in handcuffs

before the warrant was confirmed. The State responded that it was a matter of language that

the Texarkana Police Department used to confirm possible warrants, indicating that a

“possible warrant doesn’t mean we don’t know. . . . [W]e’ve got it here in front of us

showing on the computer and we just have to go get the physical file.” The State also argued

that the officer was acting in a good-faith belief that there was a warrant. The circuit court

agreed with the State that it was a matter of language, noting that if the warrant was out of

another jurisdiction, the police have to rely on what is on the computer and confirm it at a

different time. The circuit court denied the motion to suppress stating that once the officer

got word that there was a warrant, he had a right to search appellant incident to arrest.

The State called two more witnesses—Romeo Cross and Hunter Whalen. Cross, a

narcotics investigator with the Texarkana Police Department, testified that he interviewed

appellant after his arrest. Cross testified that appellant told him that when he was searched,

3 the officer found a syringe with “30 units of speed,” which appellant explained was

methamphetamine. Whalen, a forensic chemist at the Arkansas State Crime Laboratory,

testified that he determined the liquid in the syringe was methamphetamine. The State

rested and appellant renewed his motion to suppress, which was denied. Appellant’s counsel

indicated that he would not move for directed verdict.

Appellant, testifying in his defense, said that on the evening in question, he was

walking down the street (or down the side of his parents’ backyard) smoking a cigarette

when something caught his eye—a red and green light on the ground in front of a trashcan.

He recalled seeing a group of people standing around there looking at something a few days

earlier. He explained that if you hunt for “crystals or diamonds” at nighttime, you will see

a glare. So he went to that area and bent over to look at what he saw, and when he turned

around, he saw the police and started to walk back to his backyard. He said that when he

“got up to Franklin” he stopped to see if the police officer was going “to pass by, or whether

he was gonna stop and conduct an interview,” indicating that it was the middle of the night

and nobody was out. Appellant testified that the videos were incorrect because he had told

the officer he had a crystal—not glass—and questioned the color of the shirt he was wearing

that night. Appellant thought the video may have been edited. Appellant denied telling

Cross that the syringe contained “speed” and testified that Cross was lying.

At the close of the evidence, appellant renewed his previous motions. The circuit

court stood on its prior ruling on the motion to suppress and found appellant guilty of the

possession charge and sentenced him as a habitual offender to seven years’ imprisonment. A

4 sentencing order was filed June 24, 2020, and appellant filed a timely notice of appeal on

July 13, 2020.

In reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, we conduct a de novo review based

on the totality of the circumstances, reviewing findings of historical facts for clear error and

determining whether those facts give rise to reasonable suspicion or probable cause, giving

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Related

Bunch v. State
57 S.W.3d 124 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2001)
DECAY v. State
2009 Ark. 566 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2009)
Martin v. State
2017 Ark. App. 107 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2017)
Villanueva v. State
2013 Ark. 70 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2013)

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2021 Ark. App. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-allen-saffel-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2021.