People v. Miller

773 P.2d 1053, 13 Brief Times Rptr. 546, 1989 Colo. LEXIS 185, 1989 WL 41938
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMay 1, 1989
Docket88SA472
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 773 P.2d 1053 (People v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Miller, 773 P.2d 1053, 13 Brief Times Rptr. 546, 1989 Colo. LEXIS 185, 1989 WL 41938 (Colo. 1989).

Opinions

VOLLACK, Justice.

The prosecution brings this interlocutory appeal from the Jefferson County District Court order suppressing evidence seized pursuant to a warrantless arrest of the defendant. A statement made by the de[1054]*1054fendant at the time of his arrest was also suppressed. We conclude that the district court correctly held that exigent circumstances did not exist in this case and we affirm the suppression order.

I.

In the early morning hours on July 26, 1988, the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department received a report of a sexual assault that had occurred between 11:00 P.M. and 2:00 A.M. Sheriffs were dispatched to the victim’s home at 2:25 A.M. Based on the victim’s description of the apartment and its location, deputies determined that the assault had taken place at an “Apartment 12” in one of the buildings in the Caesar’s Square Apartment complex. When they realized that this apartment complex was located in the jurisdiction of the Wheatridge Police Department, the Jefferson County Sheriff deputies contacted and met with two Wheatridge police officers.

Deputy Sheriff Warner was the first to contact the fourteen-year-old victim, C.P. C.P. told Deputy Warner that her assailant was a dark-skinned male about 5'9" tall, 140 pounds, with brown eyes, a scar over his right eyebrow, and short, curly, brown hair. She thought his name was “Ricky” because while she was in his apartment she saw what looked like a check with that name written on it.

C.P. explained to the officers that she met her assailant underneath the viaduct at 1-70 and Garrison; he and another man were sitting under the viaduct drinking alcoholic beverages. When he offered to help her get a job by introducing her to the manager of the nearby Denny’s restaurant, she obtained permission from her mother to go to Denny’s and began walking with the defendant along 48th Avenue. While walking to Denny’s, the man suggested that C.P. accompany him to his apartment to get matches. While in his apartment, he forced her onto a mattress and sexually assaulted her. When she struggled, he displayed a knife and verbally threatened her. He kept the knife in his hand, threatened to use guns if she did not cooperate, and committed “several sexual assaults” on C.P.

The victim did not know the exact address of the building within the apartment complex, but was able to identify it as the westernmost building within the complex, and was able to describe the entrance and the apartment number. Deputies Warner and West and Lieutenants Girk and Carmo-sino went to the apartment complex. The five buildings in the complex are numbered 9235, 9265, 9295, 9325, and 9355 West 48th Avenue. C.P. had described the apartment as having an “in-door” type of entrance from a hallway, so the officers eliminated buildings 9235 and 9265, which were “courtyard” apartments that only had outdoor access.

Having narrowed their search to the other three buildings, the officers went to buildings 9325 and 9295.1 One building did not have an apartment 12. The occupant of apartment 12 in the other building was an adult male who spoke with the officers. He was a “chunky,” “somewhat short” white male who provided identification and did not resemble C.P.’s description of her assailant, and the officers concluded that he was not the suspect.

The four officers then went to Apartment 12 at 9355 West 48th and spent “three or four minutes standing there knocking, [and] yelling for Rick.” Two officers knocked on the door, one stayed outside the building to watch the window, and the fourth stood in the hallway a number of feet from the door of the apartment. When they received no response, Officer Carmosino tried the doorknob, found it unlocked, and opened the door. The officers entered the apartment, saw a mattress in [1055]*1055the bedroom, and found a nude white male lying asleep on the mattress. This man matched C.P.’s description of her assailant, and he identified himself to the officers as Rick Miller. The officers who entered the apartment had to shake the suspect to awaken him. Deputy West saw a check made out to “Rick” on the kitchen counter in the apartment, consistent with the victim’s description. Officer Carmosino found a very large knife the victim had described, blue jeans with tire chains for a belt, and a short-sleeved shirt.

Officer Carmosino advised Miller of his Miranda rights and Miller conceded that he had had a “girl” in his room earlier in the evening but said that they had engaged in consensual intercourse. Miller was arrested and the officers seized as evidence sheets found rolled up in the hallway, a pair of shoes, a baseball cap, and a personal check. Officers obtained a search warrant. The next morning they returned to the apartment with C.P., had her confirm that it was the location where her assault had taken place, and executed the search warrant.2 Miller was charged by information with first degree sexual assault,3 sexual assault on a child,4 and three counts of violent crime.5

The defendant filed a Motion to Suppress Evidence and Statements. He asked for suppression of “any and all statements elicited from Defendant by law enforcement officers on the date of and subsequent to Defendant’s arrest” and suppression of “any and all physical evidence seized from the person or presence of the Defendant, including but not limited to items found within his residence.”

A hearing on the suppression motion was held in December 1988 and the trial court ordered suppression of the items seized in the first, warrantless search and the statement made by Miller at the time of his arrest. The state filed this interlocutory appeal from the trial court’s suppression order, arguing that exigent circumstances existed to justify the warrantless entry and arrest.6

II.

A.

At the suppression hearing the officers were asked why they felt that a warrant-less entry was justified. In response, Officer Girk testified:

We were concerned about the fact that this individual indicated to the victim that he was armed, he had made life-threatening gestures to her — toward the victim— with a knife. And I was concerned about the fact that he knew where the victim lived. And he had also indicated to her for her not to report this incident to the police.

Deputy Warner testified:

Well, what the victim had related to me that indicated that Ricky was a violent person. I mean, here he was punching out a guy for just saying something under the viaduct.[7] He told her that he likes to fight. And then he — she said that he used a knife ... to force her to have sexual intercourse, and that she thought he had a gun, also, in the house.
[1056]*1056That makes it a high risk — high-risk suspect that you would be looking for. And you want to make sure you. cover yourself and you have all avenues of escape covered.

Deputy West testified:

Well, the victim, being a juvenile and 13 years old was — was terrified. She described this knife and these guns in this apartment. And I felt, with the violence of this crime that just occurred and the possibility of something else happening that evening, that now was the time.

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People v. Miller
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
773 P.2d 1053, 13 Brief Times Rptr. 546, 1989 Colo. LEXIS 185, 1989 WL 41938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-miller-colo-1989.