People v. Robinson

226 P.3d 1145, 2009 Colo. App. LEXIS 818, 2009 WL 1331093
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 14, 2009
Docket06CA1187
StatusPublished
Cited by212 cases

This text of 226 P.3d 1145 (People v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Robinson, 226 P.3d 1145, 2009 Colo. App. LEXIS 818, 2009 WL 1331093 (Colo. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge DAILEY.

Defendant, Kareem Abdul Robinson, appeals the judgments of conviction entered upon jury verdicts finding him guilty of possession with intent to distribute a schedule II controlled substance and conspiracy to distribute a schedule II controlled substance. We affirm.

At trial, the prosecution presented evi-denee that (1) at the behest of the police, an informant purportedly made contact with two people to arrange to buy $300 worth of cocaine; (2) the transaction was to occur at a certain location; (8) at that location, the informant identified (by saying, "That's them. There they are.") two people approaching in a car as his suppliers; (4) defendant was one of the two people (he was sitting in the front passenger seat of the car); (5) the police stopped the car, arrested defendant and the other person, and searched them and the car; (6) although no drugs were found on defendant, two pieces (2.83 grams) of crack cocaine were found underneath his seat; and (7) $300 would buy two to three grams of crack-cocaine.

The jury found defendant guilty of the above-mentioned offenses. It also found that this was defendant's second occasion possessing more than one gram of a schedule II controlled substance. Based on the jury's verdicts, the trial court sentenced defendant to two concurrent sentences of nineteen years imprisonment in the Department of Corrections.

Although, on appeal, defendant initially raised five contentions for review, in his reply brief he withdrew from consideration one of those contentions. Consequently, we address only defendant's remaining four contentions.

I. Trial Court's Suppression Ruling

Defendant contends that the trial court erred in not suppressing the evidence obtained as a result of his arrest. According to him, the evidence was illegally obtained because the police lacked probable cause to arrest him. We disagree.

The following evidence was elicited at the pertinent suppression hearings.

The informant in this case was not a confidential informant. He had been arrested on an outstanding warrant for drugs and was willing to cooperate with police to "work off" his case.

The informant told the police that, over the past five to six years, a woman with a street name of "Dee" had supplied him with crack cocaine on approximately fifty occasions and that on more than one occasion, he had purchased crack cocaine from Dee's boyfriend, a person who went by the street name "Nephew" and whom the informant had known for about a year. He described the two for the police and associated "Nephew" (later identified as defendant) with a dark colored Cadillac.

The police instructed the informant to set up a purchase of $300 worth of erack cocaine. The informant reported back that he had arranged the transaction, at a certain location, by talking primarily with "Nephew"; although the police did not listen to or record the informant's conversations arranging the transaction, they were present during later calls in which the informant purported to speak with "Nephew."

Upon approaching the meeting place, the informant and an officer saw two people-whom the informant identified as his suppliers-in a tan Buick. After the officer observed that the two people-a woman and defendant-matched the informant's descriptions of his suppliers, other officers were directed to close in and arrest them.

Defendant elicited evidence that the informant had legal problems, that he had not been used before as an informant by the police involved in this case, that his eriminal history included giving false information to police, and that, due to his cooperation in the present case, the informant had not been charged in connection with a recent drug bust. Defendant also made an offer of proof that, if called, the informant would testify that he had understood that "Dee" and *1149 "Nephew" had broken up and he had not seen them together in more than a year.

Ultimately, the trial court determined that defendant's arrest was justified because the police had probable cause to believe that the occupants of the car were present at that particular location to sell drugs.

On appeal, we defer to the trial court's findings of historical fact but review de novo the issue of whether the police had probable cause to effect a warrantless arrest. People v. Matheny, 46 P.3d 453, 461 (Colo.2002).

"Probable cause to arrest exists when, under the totality of the circumstances at the time of arrest, the objective facts and cireumstances available to a reasonably cautious officer at the time of arrest justify the belief that (1) an offense has been or is being committed (2) by the person arrested." People v. Rogers, 68 P.3d 486, 489 (Colo.App. 2002) (quoting People v. King, 16 P.3d 807, 813 (Colo.2001)).

Probable cause is measured in terms of "probabilities similar to the factual and practical questions of everyday life upon which reasonable and prudent persons act." People v. Flowers, 128 P.3d 285, 287 (Colo. App.2005) (quoting People v. MacCallum, 925 P.2d 758, 762 (Colo.1996)). It takes into account a police officer's experience and training in determining the significance of his or her observations, King, 16 P.3d at 813, and, because it turns on "common-sense conclusions about human behavior," People v. Polander, 41 P.3d 698, 702 (Colo.2001), it may be satisfied even where innocent explanations exist for conduct. See 2 W.R. La-Fave, Search and Seizure § 8.2(e), at 77-78 (4d ed.2004) (probable cause exists if a "succession of superficially innocent events had proceeded to the point where a prudent man could say to himself that an innocent course of conduct was substantially less likely than a criminal one").

In cases where police act upon information supplied by an informant, a court should consider the informant's reliability, veracity, and basis for knowledge, as well as the corroboration by independent police work of information supplied by the informant. People v. Diaz, 798 P.2d 1181, 1183 (Colo. 1990).

Here, defendant asserts that the trial court erred in its probable cause assessment because it failed to properly consider the informant's unreliability, conflicting evidence about the informant's basis of knowledge, and facts showing the absence of corroboration by the police.

With respect to the informant's unreliability, defendant points to the informant's lack of a track record as an informant, to his providing police with a false name on a prior occasion, and to his being on probation in one drug case and wanted in connection with another one. However, as the trial court noted, the informant's legal problems also "gave him an incentive to ... cooperate." See United States v. Miller, 925 F.2d 695, 699 (dth Cir.1991) (an "informant's interest in obtaining leniency create[s] a strong motive to supply accurate information"); see also United States v. Soriano, 361 F.3d 494, 505 (9th Cir.2004) (an informant "could not achieve that goal if he gave false information, so the cireumstances in which he provided the information further served to corroborate its reliability").

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 P.3d 1145, 2009 Colo. App. LEXIS 818, 2009 WL 1331093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-robinson-coloctapp-2009.