State of Maine v. Collins

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 11, 2013
DocketCUMcr-12-4755
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Maine v. Collins (State of Maine v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Maine v. Collins, (Me. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

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v. ORDER ON MOTION TO SUPPRESj~E:CEiVEO

CORNELL COLLINS

INTRODUCTION

The State has charged Cornell Collins (Collins) with Unlawful Possession of

Oxycodone, Class C, in violation of 17-A M.R.S.A. § 1107-A(l)(B)(4). Pending is

Collin's motion to suppress evidence arising out of a warrantless search of his rented

motel room in the Freeport Inn Annex in Yarmouth, Maine. Collins contends that the

officers lacked probable cause or exigent circumstances to enter the motel room where he

had an expectation of privacy and thus the officer's entry into his hotel room without a

warrant constituted an illegal search. The State counters that the warrantless entry was

valid because the hotel owned the room and the hotel-invited police in to check on a

guest who was unconscious or unresponsive in the wrong room.

At the hearing on the motion to suppress, the State presented two witnesses,

Officers Michael Pierce and Paul Martin. Collins presented no witnesses. After

considering all of the evidence, this court concludes for the reasons set forth below that

the motion to suppress is granted. FACTS

At approximately 2:00p.m. on July 14, 2012, Officer Pierce, a Yarmouth police

officer, was dispatched to the Freeport Inn Annex for an unresponsive or unconscious

male in a hotel room. While on their (there was a second officer who also responded to

the Dispatch call) way to the Annex, the officers were notified by Dispatch that the man

was not suppose to be in that room. When Pierce arrived at the Annex, two of the hotel

staff were present and the door to Room 221 was open with a man lying on the bed.

While the man was still lying on the bed, stafftold Officer Pierce that the man was a

guest of the hotel who had paid for a room. Subsequently, Pierce learned that hotel staff

had mistakenly escorted the man to Room 221, which turned out to be the wrong room.

The hotel staff wanted the man out of Room 221 from a housekeeping standpoint. The

guest's correct room was Room 222, located across the hall from Room 221. The hotel 1 guest was an African American man.

The hotel staff told Officer Pierce that he could go into Room 221. According to

Officer Pierce, he entered Room 221 "to make sure the man was okay and not to

investigate." He found the guest sleeping on top of the sheets with his shoes off, a half

1 I mention defendant's race because both officers identified him as "African American." They identified no reasonable articulable suspicion for expanding the investigation of Collins in Room 221. Race never provides a basis for reasonable, articulable suspicion. Many states have appointed commissions and tasks forces to look at racial bias in the criminal justice system. Repeatedly these commissions have reached the same conclusion that racial bias affects our criminal justice system .. Bias includes unfounded stereotypes about African Americans, which we must acknowledge exist. One only has to look at the experience of renowned Harvard University Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr., who was arrested for breaking and entering into his own home. Speaking up against the conscious and unconscious bias that impacts our criminal justice system and our society in so many ways is the only way to eradicate it. See Barbara Madsen, Chief Justice, Washington State Supreme Court, Racial Bias in the Criminal Justice System, 47 Gonz. L. Rev. 243 (2011).

2 drunk bottle of beer and a lap top computer in the room. The officer woke the guest up

within 10 seconds by shaking his foot. Once the man had shaken offthe cobwebs, he was

fully alert and fine. When the man awoke, he asked Pierce "what was going on?" Pierce

responded that he was a Yarmouth police officer and the man was in the wrong hotel

room. According to Pierce, the guest responded he "liked the sauce." Officer Pierce drew

his "conclusions" from that comment? However, Officer Pierce testified that there were

two prongs for police presence at the hotel: the first was to check on a man in Room 221

and to make sure he was okay; the second was to investigate whether he was trespassing.

While the man was still lying on the bed in Room 221, Pierce learned the man was okay

and he was not trespassing in the hotel. 3

While still in Room 221 and after learning that Collins was fine and not a

trespasser, Pierce asked the hotel guest what he was doing here. Collins responded he

was here "on a fishing trip." Pierce did not find this story plausible because the man did

not have any fishing gear and he had "no real concrete responses" to Pierce's questions

about fishing. When asked at the motion hearing why he asked questions of what the

guest was he doing in Maine, Pierce responded that he was "just trying to be decent and

establish rapport," and then he said that "I liked to fish, so I was just curious." Thus he

was not relying on reasonable articulable suspicion of a crime occurring.

At some point, one hotel staff member told Pierce about the guest's odd behavior

of following staff and taking photos with his cell phone and that he had changed rooms.

2 Pierce did not explain what conclusions he drew, and whether those conclusions provided a basis for any suspicions he may have harbored. It should be noted that Pierce wondered, "whether he could be a trespasser because he was in the wrong room." However, he was in the wrong room because the hotel staff directed him to that room; this undermines any claim that he was a trespasser.

3 Pierce however was not able to remember who, what, where and when he learned certain

information. His memory of when he learned what information was very sketchy.

After questioning Collins in Room 221, Officer Pierce escorted Collins into Room

222. Pierce admitted that nothing illegal had occurred at that point but he was continuing

his "investigation". He did not articulate what he was investigating. Pierce continued to

question the guest and tried to get him to break down his whereabouts day by day. Pierce

was suspicious about what the guest was doing in Maine. Pierce did not find Collins

credible with regard to his fishing story and he concluded that Collins had no plausible

explanation about why he had been in Maine over the last few days. Collins told the

officer that he had met some girls staying in Room 101 , a different section of the hotel,

and had some sexual contact with them, but he didn't know their names or anything else

about them. Pierce testified that he thought, "prostitutes and drugs flow together."

However, Pierce testified that he is not sure whether this conversation raised suspicions

about drugs. He did not articulate reasonable grounds for any suspicions he may have

had about drugs or any other crimes.

A few minutes later, Officer Pierce explained to Collins that there were

inconsistencies in his story and asked if he could search him. Collins, who was sitting on

one of the two beds in Room 222, stood up between the beds, raised his arms up with his

back to the Officer. Pierce interpreted this action as consent to search him. Officer Pierce

went through Collins pockets and located 3 cell phones, a cell phone charger, a large sum

of cash (in the hundreds) and a small glassine bag with 13 pills.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Maine v. Collins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-maine-v-collins-mesuperct-2013.