Pearce v. State

45 P.3d 679, 2002 Alas. App. LEXIS 71, 2002 WL 598574
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedApril 19, 2002
DocketA-7445
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 45 P.3d 679 (Pearce 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
Pearce v. State, 45 P.3d 679, 2002 Alas. App. LEXIS 71, 2002 WL 598574 (Ala. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

In the summer of 1994, Dewell Wayne Pearce tried to abduct a young woman at gunpoint. He was subsequently convicted of attempted kidnapping, third-degree assault, and third-degree weapons misconduct (felon in possession of a concealable firearm) 1

In this appeal, Pearce argues that the superior court should have suppressed one piece of the State's evidence: an apparent suicide note, handwritten by Pearce, that was discovered on his boat during the execution of a search warrant. The warrant authorized the police to search for a handgun and holster, ammunition, and possible photographs of the handgun. Pearce points out that the handwritten note did not fall within any of these categories, and he therefore argues that the officer who found the note violated Pearce's privacy rights when he read the note (and, after reading it, seized it).

We reject Pearce's argument because the trial judge found that Pearce had no subjective expectation of privacy in the note, and that finding is not clearly erroneous.

Underlying facts

On July 21, 1994, a young woman, LW., was rollerblading alongside the Richardson Highway between Valdez and CMlennallen. A faded red Chevrolet pickup truck passed her, then turned around and passed her again. On this second pass, the driver-Pearce-asked LW. how far she intended to skate. Pearce proceeded down the highway, then turned around and passed L.W. a third time. Finally, Pearce turned around and passed L.W. a fourth time. This fourth time, Pearce stopped his truck in front of LW., pointed a long-barreled revolver at her, and ordered her to get into the truck; Pearce threatened to kill LW. if she did not comply. L.W. stalled for time. When she saw another vehicle approaching, she skated toward it. Pearce fled while LW. was flagging down this other car.

Having reached safety, LW. immediately wrote down the portion of the red truck's license plate number that she remembered: "4 6 7 83". Using this partial number and L.W.'s description of the truck, the police located Pearee's truck later that evening in a subdivision outside Valdez. However, the police did not find Pearce, for he had left on an overnight fishing trip. Pearce was arrested on his boat after he returned the next day.

L.W. identified Pearee's truck as the truck that had followed her on the highway. She also positively identified Pearce from a photographic line-up.

*681 The discovery of the apparent suicide note

As part of the investigation of this case, the superior court issued a search warrant for Pearce's boat. This warrant authorized the police to search for the revolver and holster, ammunition for the revolver, and any photographs depicting the revolver.

While searching for these items, Trooper Burke Waldron examined a duffel bag that was resting on a dinette table in the boat. When he picked up the duffel bag, he saw a handwritten note lying face-up on the table, underneath where the duffel had been resting. This note consisted of one 8k-by 11-inch sheet of paper, filled with handwriting large enough to cover the whole page. The note read:

Dearest Mom, Dad, & Granny,
I Love you with all my heart. Please forgive me for taking my own life, but I just had too. I Hope to see you in Heaven. Tell the family that my last thoughts were of you. My Heart goes out to you.
Love Wayne
xx } 2
My Folks
Please Call them

Waldron read the note and concluded that Pearce's apparent suicide threat was relevant to the criminal investigation. He therefore seized the note.

The litigation of Pearce's motion to suppress the note

Before trial, Pearce asked the superior court to suppress the handwritten note, arguing that Waldron's seizure of the note was not authorized by the warrant. The State responded that the note was found in plain view and that its potential importance (as an indication of Pearee's guilty conscience) was evident from a cursory reading.

Superior Court Judge pro tempore Joel H. Bolger held a hearing on Pearce's motion. Only one witness testified at this hearing: Trooper Waldron. He described his discovery of the note and his decision to seize it after he read it.

Pearce's attorney did not actively dispute Waldron's version of events, but he argued strenuously that Waldron exceeded his authority under the warrant when he read the handwritten note. The defense attorney pointed out that Waldron could immediately see that this handwritten note was neither a handgun, a holster, ammunition, or a photograph (i.e., that the note was not among the items listed in the search warrant). The defense attorney argued that, under the "plain view" exception to the warrant requirement, the State must prove that the relevance of the unlisted item was "immediately apparent" to the police. Pearce's attorney contended that the relevance of the handwritten note was not immediately apparent because, as Waldron conceded on the stand, it took him about five seconds to read the note and realize that it spoke of suicide. According to the defense attorney, Waldron's act of reading the note constituted an additional and warrantless intrusion into Pearce's privacy.

After hearing Waldron's testimony (and after examining the note), Judge Boiger denied Pearee's motion on several grounds.

Judge Bolger concluded that Pearce had no subjective expectation of privacy in the note. The judge pointed out that the note was found lying face-up on a table in Pearce's boat. Additionally, even though the main portion of the note was addressed to members of Pearce's family, the closing notation-ie., the telephone number and the request, "My Family; Please Call them"-was clearly addressed to whoever happened to find the note. From this, Judge Bolger concluded that Pearce left the note on the boat, hoping and expecting that it would be discovered and read by one or more third persons.

This finding was sufficient, by itself, to justify Judge Bolger's denial of Pearee's suppression motion. However, Judge Bolger also concluded that the handwritten note was seizable under the "plain view" exception to the warrant requirement. The judge pointed out that Waldron was executing a search warrant on Pearce's boat, and the judge *682 found that it was reasonable for Waldron to examine the duffel bag as a potential place for finding the items listed in the warrant. Pearee's handwritten note was revealed when Waldron lifted the duffel bag from the table; thus, it lawfully came into Waldron's view. Finally, Judge Bolger ruled that Waldron's act of reading the note was not an additional "search" for Fourth Amendment purposes.

The evidence supports Judge Bolger's finding that Pearce had mo subjective expectation of privacy in the handwritten note

Before a person can complain of a search or seizure conducted by the government, the person must establish that they had a protected privacy interest in whatever was searched or seized.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 P.3d 679, 2002 Alas. App. LEXIS 71, 2002 WL 598574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearce-v-state-alaskactapp-2002.