People v. Balint

41 Cal. Rptr. 3d 211, 138 Cal. App. 4th 200, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2721, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 3866, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 465
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 30, 2006
DocketG034435
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 41 Cal. Rptr. 3d 211 (People v. Balint) 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. Balint, 41 Cal. Rptr. 3d 211, 138 Cal. App. 4th 200, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2721, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 3866, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 465 (Cal. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion

ARONSON, J.

A jury convicted Kelli Marie Balint of receiving stolen property. (Pen. Code, § 496; all statutory references are to the Penal Code.) She contends officers exceeded the scope of a search warrant for her residence when they confiscated an open laptop computer under a warrant clause authorizing seizure of “any items tending to show dominion and control” of the premises searched. We agree with the trial court that a laptop computer logically could serve as a container for information tending to show occupancy and control of the residence. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment.

I

Facts

Erin Fouche’s Compaq-brand laptop computer was stolen from her car in Irvine on October 30, 2002. Anaheim police officers executing a search *203 warrant on November 25, 2002, found the computer on a living room sofa in Balint and John Stephens’s Anaheim residence. The computer was open and turned on, and had been used repeatedly between October 30 and November 25. It contained data identifying Fouche as the owner. Investigators found two additional laptop computers, a damaged WinBook on the floor near the couch, and a Toshiba in a bedroom closet. The serial numbers on the computers had been removed.

Balint, who was not present during the search, telephoned police shortly after the search and asked an investigator whether they planned to arrest her. She claimed the Compaq computer belonged to her, explaining that she purchased it from a “girl” for $200. Asked if it was stolen, she admitted she “thought it was possible,” but “didn’t want to know if it was stolen.” She thought the Toshiba was stolen but claimed she purchased the WinBook at a swap meet. In a subsequent interview, Balint added she purchased the Compaq at a Cypress swap meet three to six months before the search. She now claimed to have purchased the WinBook from a “girl” at “Amy’s” house in Westminster for less than $150.

Following a trial in July 2004, a jury convicted Balint of receiving stolen property. (§ 496.) She admitted she had previously served a prison term within the meaning of section 667.5, subdivision (b). The court imposed the two-year midterm and struck punishment on the section 667.5 enhancement.

II

Discussion

Balint argues investigating officers illegally seized the Compaq computer while executing the search warrant. She notes the warrant did not identify the Compaq computer, either in the “specifically enumerated” list of stolen property police could seize, or in the “encyclopedic list” of items demonstrating “dominion and control” of the residence. In other words, the seizure of the computer exceeded the scope of the warrant and amounted to a general search. We conclude investigators properly seized the computer pursuant to the warrant’s dominion and control clause.

A. Suppression Motion Facts

The parties stipulated to the following facts for purposes of the suppression motion. On November 4, 2002, Anaheim police officers arrested Michael Maydon and others for failing to pay their motel room bill. Officers found a black bag in Maydon’s room that contained three credit cards issued to Jessica Jaynes. Contacting Jaynes, officers learned her wallet containing the *204 credit cards and other property had been stolen at another motel about a week earlier. She suspected her “ex-friends” Maydon and John Stephens had stolen the items while visiting her at the motel. Both men had used methamphetamine with her in the past. A convicted methamphetamine addict herself, Jaynes had not reported the theft and “was going to accept the loss as a lesson.”

The next day, Anaheim Detective Tim Schmidt interviewed Maydon in jail. Maydon claimed the black bag officers found in the motel room belonged to him. He admitted he and “Johnny” had visited Jaynes at the motel, but denied knowing anything about her missing credit cards or the other stolen property.

Schmidt learned Stephens previously had been convicted of assault and burglary. On November 14, Jaynes directed investigators to a house in Anaheim where she believed Stephens and Balint lived. Schmidt checked with the water utility company and learned Balint had an active account at the location. Schmidt also learned police had responded to a “disturbance” involving Stephens at an address Balint had formerly provided to the Department of Motor Vehicles.

On November 18, Schmidt obtained a search warrant for the residence based on the above information and his belief, drawn from training and experience, that thieves commonly retain stolen property in their homes to use or to exchange for drugs. The warrant directed officers to search Stephens and his residence for tangible items related to the Jaynes theft. In an attachment to the warrant, Schmidt provided a list of stolen property including Jaynes’s Toshiba laptop computer. The warrant also authorized the search for “[a]ny items tending to show dominion and control of the location . . . .’ 1

On November 25, Schmidt served the warrant on Stephens after detaining him at a gas station. Stephens said his girlfriend had left the house earlier and no one was home. Ten officers participated in the house search. Schmidt seized an open Compaq-brand laptop computer that was “opened up and sitting on the sofa in the family room.” He also seized other equipment and computers, including Jaynes’s Toshiba laptop, located on a shelf in a bedroom closet. Investigators seized other documents, including a September water bill in Balint’s name.

*205 At the police station, Stephens claimed the Compaq laptop belonged to Balint. The Toshiba was not hers, but he declined to say whether it belonged to him. Schmidt spoke to Balint about the Compaq and subsequently obtained a second search warrant to have it forensically examined, which led investigators to Fouche.

Balint moved to suppress the Compaq computer as outside the scope of the first search warrant. She noted the computer was not specifically listed in the stolen property list and it was not “readily apparent” the computer was stolen or being used for illegal activity. The prosecutor countered “data ordinarily contained in a computer includes information identifying its owner. The search warrant specifically authorized seizure of such identifying information, which was important to establish who exercised dominion and control over the residence named in the search warrant.” 2

The court concluded investigators properly seized the computer: “[I]t seems to me that this would be like an address book that’s laying there. It might or might not have things inside it that would be able to prove that the room is defendant’s, It looks like it might. And they’re justified in seizing it____[ffl . . • fid [T]he personal computer sitting in the room like that in this day and age with what [a] normal, reasonable person knows about a personal computer [is] like [a folder possibly containing identifying information]. And it’s seizable immediately as indicia.”

B. Standard of Review

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Bluebook (online)
41 Cal. Rptr. 3d 211, 138 Cal. App. 4th 200, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2721, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 3866, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-balint-calctapp-2006.