McCoy v. State

491 P.2d 127, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 273
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1971
Docket1316
StatusPublished
Cited by98 cases

This text of 491 P.2d 127 (McCoy v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCoy v. State, 491 P.2d 127, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 273 (Ala. 1971).

Opinions

OPINION

ERWIN, Justice.

Appellant Charles Grier McCoy brings his appeal from his conviction of the crime of unlawful possession of cocaine. After trial by jury McCoy was found guilty and sentenced to four years’ imprisonment. Before trial appellant moved to suppress the cocaine which was taken from his person on the ground that its seizure was unlawful. McCoy’s suppression motion was denied. In this appeal the only error specified is the superior court’s denial of the motion.

At the suppression hearing McCoy testified that he went to the Anchorage International Airport to catch a flight to Seattle. When he presented his ticket to a Western Airlines counter employee, the police arrested him for attempting to pass a forged document, handcuffed him, and, while still in the terminal building, searched him, finding nothing. At this same time, the police removed McCoy’s two pieces of luggage which were on the conveyor belt at the Western Airlines counter. The police then took him to the Anchorage Police Station.1 In an interrogation room at the sta-tionhouse his handcuffs were removed and Officer Weaver ordered him to empty the contents of his pockets onto a table. McCoy stated that Officer Weaver also asked him for his jacket, which at the time was draped over the back of the chair on which McCoy was seated. In the pocket of the jacket, Officer Weaver found a package of cocaine which subsequently furnished the basis of McCoy’s drug conviction. McCoy further testified that he was not served with an arrest warrant or a search warrant during the period from his arrest up to and including the time Officer Weaver searched the pocket of his jacket.

At the suppression hearing the trial court also heard testimony from Officers Ronald Rice and George Weaver of the City of Anchorage Police Department. Officer Rice 'testified that a man named Rund had been rolled in a house of prostitution and his credit card stolen. He further testified that a Western Airlines plane ticket in the name of “R. Jackson” had been purchased with the stolen credit card. The officers stated they went to the Anchorage International Airport and requested a ticket agent at the Western Airlines counter to let them know when the “R. Jackson” ticket was presented. The police were subsequently notified that a reservation for “R. Jackson” had been made for a 10 o’clock flight the next morning. The next morning McCoy presented the “R. Jackson” ticket at the Western Airlines counter and was arrested. Officer Rice told' McCoy he was under arrest for passing a forged instrument.2 While McCoy was in the interrogation room at the City of Anchorage Police Station, Officer Rice went to the district attorney’s office to initiate procedures to obtain search warrants covering McCoy’s two pieces of luggage and his Anchorage residence. Rice obtained the warrants and carried out the searches.

Officer George Weaver testified to the same facts pertaining to the arrest.3 Concerning the events which transpired in the interrogation room, Officer Weaver testified that McCoy was taken into the inter[129]*129rogation room at about 9:30 a. m., his handcuffs were then removed, and he was told to empty his pockets. Weaver then searched the pockets of McCoy’s jacket, which had been on the back of McCoy’s chair, and found a small packet wrapped in aluminum foil and covered with plastic. Officer Weaver opened the packet and found “a white crystalline substance.”

Officer Weaver’s testimony also disclosed that his search of McCoy was not the standard booking inventory. This was performed later by the jailer. Weaver did not inventory the items he observed, except to list the serial numbers of McCoy’s money to check against a list. When he commenced the search, Weaver had no reason to believe that McCoy possessed narcotics. On the other hand, Officer Weaver did testify that his search of McCoy was reflective of standard procedures when prisoners are brought into the interrogation room prior to their being booked into jail. Weaver stated that he returned to McCoy all of his possessions except the cocaine. Weaver further stated that McCoy’s possessions were subsequently taken by the jailer when McCoy was booked.

In this appeal McCoy urges three points in support of his single specification of error that the trial court ruled incorrectly in refusing to grant his motion to suppress. He first argues that the airport arrest was unlawful because the police did not act pursuant to a warrant for his arrest and lacked probable cause to arrest him without a warrant. Second, he contends that the search in the interrogation room at police headquarters was too remote to qualify as a search incident to his arrest. Finally, he argues that even if the search of his jacket pocket was incident to his arrest, it became impermissibly intense when the officer opened that package that was found to contain the cocaine.

I. ARREST

AS 12.25.030 provides that a peace officer without a warrant may arrest a person

(1) for a crime committed or attempted in his presence;
(2) when the person has committed a felony, although not in his presence;
(3) when a felony has in fact been committed, and he has reasonable cause for believing the person to have committed it.4

McCoy contends that since there was no evidence connecting him with the theft of Rund’s credit card, or with the subsequent use of this credit card to obtain a ticket from Western Airlines for “R. Jackson”, the police lacked probable cause for any belief that he used Rund’s credit card to obtain the ticket in question. In Brinegar v. United States, the Supreme Court of the United States defined the term “probable cause” in the following manner:

Probable cause exists where ‘the facts and circumstances within their [the officers’] knowledge, and of which they had reasonably trustworthy information, [are] sufficient in themselves to warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that’ an offense has been or is being committed.5

On the basis of the record made at the suppression hearing, we believe that the police had probable cause to arrest McCoy. Officer Rice testified that his superior officer on the evening prior to McCoy’s arrest had informed him that a man named Rund had been assaulted at a house of prostitution in Anchorage, and that his credit card had been stolen. Rice was further in[130]*130formed that someone using Rund’s credit card had purchased a ticket from Western Airlines in the name of “R. Jackson”.6 From the foregoing, we conclude that the Anchorage Police had probable cause to believe that the person who was in possession of the “R. Jackson” ticket and who had just presented the ticket at the Western Airlines counter was the same person who had used the stolen Rund credit card to purchase the “R. Jackson” ticket. Thus, McCoy was lawfully arrested pursuant to AS 12.25.030 (3). Furthermore, we think it reasonable for the police to have inferred that in obtaining a ticket from Western Airlines the purchaser of necessity had to sign Rund’s name, in order to successfully use the credit card. Given this inference, there appears to have been probable cause for the belief that the person who used the Rund credit card was guilty of forgery 7 or uttering a forged instrument.8

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Bluebook (online)
491 P.2d 127, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccoy-v-state-alaska-1971.