People v. Stone

139 Cal. App. 3d 216, 188 Cal. Rptr. 493, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 1321
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 5, 1983
DocketCrim. 14526
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 139 Cal. App. 3d 216 (People v. Stone) 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. Stone, 139 Cal. App. 3d 216, 188 Cal. Rptr. 493, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 1321 (Cal. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Opinion

KAUFMAN, Acting P. J.

The People appeal from an order of the superior court dismissing an information. 1 The superior court made its order after concluding that certain evidentiary rulings by the magistrate at the preliminary hearing required the granting of defendants’ Penal Code section 995 motion. We reverse.

Facts

On July 14, 1982, officers from the Los Angeles Police Department clandestine lab squad observed defendants Nadine Lemonds and George Gray drive up to the Student Science Service Supply House in Glendale, California. The officers were observing the supply house because they knew supply houses such as that one sometimes sell chemicals used to make illegal drugs. The two defendants were in an orange Charger automobile. Lemonds got out of the car, and entered the store. She remained there about 15 or 20 minutes and then came out, carrying a large box containing numerous items. One of the officers, Detective Daniel Lang, caught a glimpse of some of the items. He saw the cap of a jar, a long straight object and the top of a small cardboard box. Detective Lang also recognized Lemonds from a prior arrest he made in 1973 in the Twenty-Nine Palms area. The arrest involved a methamphetamine lab.

*219 Lemonds put the box in the back seat of the car. The Charger then drove to a residence in North Hollywood. The officers noted the car did not take a direct route and that it altered its speed drastically on the freeway. From this, they formed the conclusion the car was driving “evasive[ly].”

At the residence in North Hollywood, Detective Lang observed Lemonds at the rear of the car with the trunk open. The Charger then drove to a shopping center on Foothill Boulevard, another North Hollywood residence, a North Hollywood apartment, Laurel Canyon, Reseda, back to Laurel Canyon, a Jack-in-the-Box restaurant, back to the apartment in North Hollywood, and finally ended up at a residence in Riverside.

At the Riverside residence, Detective Roy Wunderlich observed a number of items being taken out of the trunk by Lemonds and Gray: a half gallon amber jug, plastic buckets, stirring motors, glassware and a graduated cylinder. He recognized these items as commonly used in the normal operation of a clandestine lab. The officers then set up a command post at a nearby fire station and began to take turns watching the residence. The observation lasted two days.

About 4 a.m. on July 17, Detective Wunderlich smelled ether. The smell came off and on. At the time, Wunderlich was 400 yards north of the front of the garage area of the residence. By 5 a.m., Wunderlich had identified the odor as coming directly from the residence. Wunderlich believed there was danger of an explosion because of the volatility of ether vapor which may explode upon contact with static electricity or a pilot light. Wunderlich then rushed to the fire station and woke up Detective Lang, to tell him what he had smelled. The officers then made the decision to go into the residence, ventilate fumes, take any residents into custody, put out pilot lights, and have the fire department come and air out the whole area. The officers got back to the area between 30 and 45 minutes later, taking some members of the fire department with them. As he approached the residence in a car Detective Lang also detected the smell of ether. The car came to a stop in front of the garage of the residence. The ether appeared to Detective Lang to be originating in the garage area.

The officers announced they were making a narcotics investigation, and entered the residence and its garage. Inside the garage they noticed a small laboratory. Detective Wunderlich left for the Riverside Police Department to complete a search warrant. He gained the warrant by 8:30 and came back. He gave a copy of the warrant to another officer who then served the warrant on Mr. and Mrs. Gardner, the only defendants still at the location. The search pursuant to the warrant turned up a number of items associated with clandestine labs, as well as a machine gun and a firearm silencer.

*220 At the preliminary hearing, on recross-examination, counsel for one of the defendants asked Detective Lang how many labs he had visited over the past year. Lang replied he was involved in the seizure of approximately 10 to 12 labs. Counsel then asked how many of those labs he entered with a warrant. The court sustained the deputy district attorney’s objection on the ground the question was irrelevant. In response to counsel’s offer of proof that the question was relevant as to whether the clandestine lab squad officers deliberately created exigencies when they otherwise could have obtained warrants, the court stated that “This case will have to be dealt with on its own merits .... Otherwise, it’s a fishing expedition.”

On continued recross-examination, counsel for another defendant asked Detective Lang a similar question: “how many times have you participated in the seizure of clandestine laboratories?” Again the court sustained the objection on the ground the question was irrelevant. Counsel then stated that he had overheard a conversation between a Riverside police officer (hereafter the Riverside officer) and a member of the public defender’s office in which the police officer attributed a statement to Detective Wunderlich to the effect that the clandestine lab squad “doesn’t use search warrants, and that 99 percent of the time the cases stick anyway.” Counsel argued the question was relevant to show the “prospect of a ruse to tactically use the so-called ether smell” to create exigent circumstances to enter premises. The deputy district attorney then argued that the question was “irrelevant, immaterial” and not “probative.” He argued that if the court “[got] into this area” the district attorney “could ask the officers [about] each and every investigation” on which they had worked.

The court then stated that the “best way to raise” the issue for the record would be to have “this officer [presumably the Riverside officer]” testify. Counsel then argued that he should be able to “at least establish the possible foundation for impeaching testimony by the other officer.” The court then reiterated its position that the Riverside officer should testify before the matter could be brought up. Further argument ensued during the course of which the deputy district attorney contended that the proposed line of questioning would “be extremely time consuming.” He raised the spectre that if defense counsel showed that on previous occasions clandestine lab squad officers did not get a warrant, he would be entitled to show that on other occasions they did. “We’d have to go into the facts of each and every case, every one of them. If we get into this thing and there are any, the probative value with this if there is any, is going to be minimized, because this will be extremely time consuming. We could sit here for weeks talking about each and every investigation that every other clandestine lab had.” The court reiterated its position, reasoning that the proposed questioning would get “into too many other suppositions.”

*221 Defense counsel attempted the same line of questioning on cross-examination of Detective Wunderlich.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 Cal. App. 3d 216, 188 Cal. Rptr. 493, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 1321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-stone-calctapp-1983.