People v. Lawrence

25 Cal. App. 3d 213, 101 Cal. Rptr. 671, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 1024
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 27, 1972
DocketCrim. 6338
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 25 Cal. App. 3d 213 (People v. Lawrence) 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. Lawrence, 25 Cal. App. 3d 213, 101 Cal. Rptr. 671, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 1024 (Cal. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

Opinion

JANES, J.

Defendant appeals from the judgment on jury verdicts convicting him of selling, furnishing, and giving away a restricted dangerous drug, amphetamine (count 1), and possessing a restricted dangerous drug, amphetamine, for sale (count 2). (Health & Saf. Code, §§ 11911, 11912.)

Facts

Early in the evening of December 29, 1970, state narcotic agent Joseph Lindsay and a reliable informant, Jerry Ramirez, drove together to an apartment rented by defendant in the City of Sacramento.' Lindsay had previously used Ramirez as an undercover buyer, and they planned that Ramirez would attempt to purchase drugs from defendant that evening.

Before proceeding to the apartment with Lindsay, Ramirez had been subjected to a “skin search” at Lindsay’s office to make sure that he' was not carrying contraband. Ramirez was given $500 in recorded state funds, and a radio transmitter was concealed by Lindsay on the informer’s person:

At approximately 6:25 p.m., Ramirez entered the apartment. Lindsay waited in an adjacent washroom; four other agents and officers were in the area. None of them had a search warrant.

Although static interfered with reception over a radio receiver he was carrying, Lindsay heard on it parts of a conversation between Ramirez and another man, whose voice Lindsay could not identify. At trial, for the limited purpose of showing probable cause, Lindsay was allowed to testify that he initially heard over the radio a conversation inside the apartment “having to do with reds”—a street term used for seconal, a barbiturate. Then he heard Ramirez say that “an individual . . . had given Ramirez $500,” and shortly thereafter he heard Ramirez say, “Okay, *217 here is the $500.” From what he heard, Lindsay testified, he formed an opinion “as to whether or not. a sale had been made . . . .”

Ramirez remained in the apartment about five minutes. When the door to the apartment opened, Lindsay saw the informer standing just inside the threshold. Lindsay approached him and observed protruding out of the informer’s coat pocket the ends of several plastic bags which Lindsay could see contained miniature white amphetamine tablets. The door was still open. Lindsay did not knock, but in a loud voice announced “Police officers” several times and then entered the apartment. Another officer stayed behind and frisked Ramirez at the doorway, finding in the informer’s pockets 10 plastic bags each containing 1,000 amphetamine tablets.

Lindsay proceeded from the doorway 20 feet to the kitchen. There he saw defendant sitting eating dinner at the kitchen table, accompanied by a woman named Adeline Ciannella, whom the evidence showed to be a co-lessee of the apartment. The $500 which had been given to Ramirez was on the table an inch or two from defendant’s plate and directly in front of where he was sitting.

Lindsay observed three small plastic bags on the kitchen table. On the kitchen drainboard, an arm’s length from where defendant was sitting, there was an open brown paper bag inside of which eight more plastic bags were visible. Seven additional small plastic bags were found in a kitchen' cabinet drawer after defendant was arrested at the apartment.

Like the 10 bags found on the informer’s person, all of the plastic bags found in the kitchen contained miniature white, cross-marked, amphetamine tablets commonly known as “double-scored mini-Bennies.” Each of the larger plastic bags contained 10 smaller bags, in each of which were 100 tablets. In Lindsay’s opinion as an experienced investigator, this method of packaging indicated that the tablets were packaged not only for sale but also for resale in smaller quantities. Approximately 19,000 amphetamine tablets were confiscated at the apartment.

The informer, Ramirez, testified 1 that he had been in contact with defendant during the month preceding the arrest; that defendant had rented the apartment to store “narcotics” there; that defendant had brought the amphetamine tablets into the apartment; and that, on the night before the arrest, he (Ramirez) had helped defendant and Adeline *218 Ciannella package the tablets there. Ramirez further testified that, when he entered the apartment kitchen on December 29, he told defendant that a customer wanted 10,000 tablets at $60 per thousand; that the customer had given him $500; and that he (Ramirez) was going to take the tablets and receive the $100 balance upon delivery. According to Ramirez, defendant replied that “it was okay” and said, “We’re finally getting going . . . .” Ramirez then got the brown paper bag out of the kitchen drawer, took out 10 plastic bags of tablets and placed them in his coat pocket, put the $500 on the table, and left the paper bag on top 1 of the sink.

Defense

Adeline Ciannella—who was the only other person in the apartment with defendant and Ramirez at the time of the alleged sale—testified that Ramirez had a key to the apartment (a fact which Ramirez and agent Lindsay admitted); that Ramirez had been there with her on December 28; that, while she and defendant were having supper on December 29, Ramirez came into the kitchen, placed “[s]ome money” on the table, and asked their permission to leave the money there so that it would not be stolen while he was walking the streets; that they gave their consent; and that, before he left, Ramirez put “something” in his pocket after taking it out of a bag which was in the cupboard by the drainboard.

Defendant took the stand and denied knowing that the amphetamines were in the apartment prior to his arrest. He testified that Ramirez was a trafficker in narcotics and drugs; 2 that, on December 26 at the home of Ramirez’s mother, he saw Ramirez and Adeline Ciannella counting “a large amount of amphetamines” and packaging them in the same plastic bags which were seized at the apartment on December 29; that, when Ramirez had finished counting the amphetamines, the informer put the plastic bags into a brown paper bag; and that Ramirez had moved info the apartment on December 28. Like Ciannella, defendant claimed that on December 29 Ramirez told them he did not want to carry the $500 with him o-ustide the apartment; that Ramirez left the money on the kitchen table after obtaining defendant’s permission to do so; and that, before he left, Ramirez “spent some time at the cupboard.”

Evidence of Oakland Crimes

During the prosecution’s case-in-chief, evidence was introduced that in Oakland on July 18, 1970, defendant had attempted to sell to an under *219 cover agent marijuana and, at $65 per bag, two plastic bags of white, double-scored mini-Bennies. Such evidence showed that the two bags each contained 1,000 amphetamine tablets, and that defendant carried the plastic bags in a brown paper bag.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Cal. App. 3d 213, 101 Cal. Rptr. 671, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 1024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lawrence-calctapp-1972.