People v. Abes

174 Cal. App. 3d 796, 220 Cal. Rptr. 277, 1985 Cal. App. LEXIS 2785
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 21, 1985
DocketB007491
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 174 Cal. App. 3d 796 (People v. Abes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Abes, 174 Cal. App. 3d 796, 220 Cal. Rptr. 277, 1985 Cal. App. LEXIS 2785 (Cal. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

Opinion

LILLIE, P. J.

The People appeal from order granting motion to set aside count I of the information (possession for sale of PCP); count II (under the influence of PCP) was transferred to the municipal court for further proceedings.

I

Facts

About 2:30 p.m. Sergeant McCormick received a radio call to investigate possible PCP at an apartment building on Cleon Avenue; when he arrived he smelled a very strong odor of ether; the manager told him she had detected a heavy odor of ether about the premises and it was emitting from apartment 53, then took the officers up one flight to apartment 53 (in which defendants Abes and Luna resided) which opened onto a stairwell. The odor of ether was very strong, “extremely heavy” outside of and coming from apartment 53; Sergeant McCormick associated this odor with the manufacture of PCP and knew that ether was an extremely flammable and explosive *801 chemical; he then directed an officer to the rear of the building and ordered a fire department unit and additional police units.

When additional police units arrived, the officers began evacuation of the apartment building because ether is “extremely flammable and explosive.” The officers knocked on doors on the upper and lower levels alerting the occupants; Sergeant McCormick aroused five persons all of whom were directed to the front of the building. They had been knocking on doors for about five minutes when Sergeant McCormick, standing on the sidewalk at the bottom of the stairwell, looked up and saw defendant Abes exit apartment 53 and start down the stairs; he noted that Abes’ “actions were very strange. That he appeared to have difficulty in locating the ground with his feet. ... He was, his actions were uncoordinated.” Sergeant McCormick identified himself and directed Abes to continue down the stairwell; Abes did not respond but stopped, looked at him and appeared not to understand what he was saying; he again directed Abes to proceed down the stairwell, a tier of 20-25 steps, whereupon Abes continued one step at a time, “very cautiously,” down the stairwell; Sergeant McCormick believed that Abes was under the influence of PCP 1 ; fellow officers took him into custody.

At that time Sergeant McCormick looked up 15 to 20 feet above him, and saw defendant Luna also step out of the doorway of apartment 53 onto the landing; he watched her take four or five steps to the rail, and noted “that she appeared to be very uncoordinated and that her gait, she was also having difficulty finding the ground with her feet”; he called out to her, “Police officers. Come down the stairs,” but she stood there and did not appear to comprehend what he was saying; he made several requests of her to come down the stairs, then again identified himself and started to walk up the stairwell towards her; Luna “looked in our direction and quickly went back into the apartment [53] and closed the door.” At that time Sergeant McCormick was of the opinion that Luna was under the influence of PCP. *802 Sergeant McCormick, Officer Jefferson and another officer continued up the stairs to the door of apartment 53 and knocked; Sergeant McCormick identified himself as a police officer and demanded entrance; there was no verbal response from inside but he could hear movement within the apartment; again he demanded admittance and, after waiting 15 seconds and no response, forced entry; he “believed that evidence could be, was being destroyed by the defendant Luna”; further, “At that time I had reason to believe that there was a laboratory at the location and felt that the evidence could be destroyed, if I did not force entry into the apartment”; “The defendant, in my estimation was under the influence of PCP and at that time she was in the process of escaping from me.”

They entered the apartment and saw Luna carrying a brown paper shopping bag walking towards the rear of the apartment; Officer Jefferson removed the bag from her; Luna and one Brookner were handcuffed; Sergeant McCormick immediately took Luna out of the apartment and downstairs, the other officer took out Brookner, because “At that time the heavy odor of ether in the apartment was very, very extremely strong and I was concerned about their safety and my safety”; Officer Jefferson removed from the shopping bag a round pint size metal container from which emitted the heavy odor of ether, and two small boxes containing herb tea; he left the apartment placing the can on top of the ice chest out on the stairwell for ventilation; it was later transported by S.I.D. in a special vehicle. When analyzed, it was found to contain 486 milliliters of diethyl ether, enough when detonated to fire bomb an area about the size of a tennis court. 2

When Sergeant McCormick took Luna downstairs, “[a]t that time” the fire department unit arrived and “a few minutes later” he reentered the apartment with fire department personnel; they found various items, some in plain sight, others in a cupboard and freezer—a plate containing a green leafy substance, cans and jars of liquid, film canisters of a green leafy substance, roaches, two hand scales and a beaker. Officer Stanley, an expert in the possession, sale and manufacture of PCP went to the Cleon Street address; when he turned into Cleon, 100 to 150 feet from the apartment building, he detected a strong ether odor; when he came to the stairwell of apartment 53 where the ether can was located, he smelled a very, very strong odor of ether; the officers and fire department personnel were inside and outside of the apartment. He expressed the opinion that 24 grams of green leafy substance contaminated with phencyclidine found on the premises were possessed for sale. The various cans, canisters, plate, liquid con *803 tainers and roaches found on the premises contained “phenylcyclottexyepyrrolidine. ”

II

Magistrate’s Holding

The magistrate ruled the entry and search of and seizure at apartment 53 to be lawful. When Luna moved to strike Sergeant McCormick’s testimony—that in his opinion she was under the influence of PCP—on the ground he is not qualified as an expert to form that opinion, the magistrate related Sergeant McCormick’s length of service, experience, training and knowledge of PCP and its effects, and said, “I think that we have to look to whether a reasonable person under the circumstances given his training and experience, could have formed the opinion that she was under the influence of PCP. [f] And based on this test, I would say that he could form that opinion.” Later the magistrate found that Sergeant McCormick not only detected the strong odor of ether, but personally observed, even though briefly, both defendants under the influence of something he had been taught was PCP; that even though there are legal uses for ether, Sergeant McCormick “saw something inconsistent with the legal use of that component,” “what [McCormick] did see was consistent with what he had learned about someone being under the influence of PCP,” he then told Luna to stop, and she fled and, putting these factors together, there was probable cause to arrest her at that point; that “the fact that she went into the house, she can’t escape or get around the requirements of Ramey [People v. Ramey

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 Cal. App. 3d 796, 220 Cal. Rptr. 277, 1985 Cal. App. LEXIS 2785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-abes-calctapp-1985.