State of Missouri v. Stephen D. Wright

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 22, 2014
DocketWD76647
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
State of Missouri v. Stephen D. Wright, (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Appellant, ) ) WD76647 v. ) ) OPINION FILED: ) April 22, 2014 STEPHEN D. WRIGHT, ) ) Respondent. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Macon County, Missouri The Honorable Frederick P. Tucker, Judge

Before Division One: Cynthia L. Martin, Presiding Judge, and Mark D. Pfeiffer and Karen King Mitchell, Judges

The State appeals from a judgment purportedly dismissing its information against

Stephen Wright. The State contends that the trial court erred in dismissing the information

because the information sufficiently states and apprises Wright of the essential elements of the

charged offenses related to imitation controlled substances. Wright claims that the trial court

correctly dismissed the information because his conduct does not come within the purview of the

imitation controlled substance statutes. Because we are unable to discern exactly what the trial

court‟s ruling was, or in fact, whether a final judgment was entered, the appeal is dismissed. Factual and Procedural Background

Stephen Wright was charged by information with one count of delivering an imitation

controlled substance in violation of section 195.242,1 one count of possessing drug paraphernalia

(with the intent to use it while ingesting an imitation controlled substance) in violation of section

195.233, and one count of promoting the sale of an imitation controlled substance in violation of

section 195.244. More specifically, in Count I, Wright was charged with delivering to Travis

Lovett an imitation controlled substance, described as “a kilogram of green plant material in

plastic packaging, which appeared or was represented to be marijuana, a controlled substance,

knowing that it was an imitation controlled substance.” In Count II, he was charged with

possession of drug paraphernalia by “possess[ing] pipes, which were drug paraphernalia,

knowing of their presence and illegal nature, with intent to use them to introduce an imitation

controlled substance into the human body.” And in Count III, he was charged with promoting

the sale of an imitation controlled substance by “knowingly plac[ing] an advertisement or

solicitation on a website to promote the distribution of an imitation controlled substance,

„Sedation Incense.‟”

Wright filed a motion to dismiss the information, raising two grounds in support: (1) as

to all three counts, he claimed that section 195.010(21) (the definition of imitation controlled

substance) was void for vagueness, as applied, in that the statute failed to provide Wright with

fair notice that his conduct was illegal; and (2) alternatively, he claimed that the information was

insufficient to charge him with a crime: as to Count I (delivery of an imitation controlled

substance), because he never represented the substance to be marijuana, which he claims was the

conduct the statute was designed to prohibit; and as to Count III (promoting the sale of an

1 All statutory references are to Missouri Revised Statutes (2000), as updated through the 2010 Cumulative Supplement, unless otherwise noted.

2 imitation controlled substance), because the website on which Wright promoted the sale of his

“Sedation Incense” did not constitute the kind of publication or advertisement contemplated by

the statute.

In accordance with an agreement between the parties (the parameters of which are

unclear), the trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law on Wright‟s motion,

rather than simply granting or denying it. The judgment contained the following factual

findings:2

On January 6, 2011, two Macon police officers responded to a 911 call regarding an

alleged burglary in progress in an upstairs apartment of a building near Macon City Hall. 3 When

the officers arrived, they discovered that the main door to the apartment was open, but a glass

storm door was closed. The officers observed three men (one of whom was Wright) inside, all

looking at a computer screen; Wright and another man (Travis Lovett) were smoking from glass

pipes or water bongs.4 The substance they were smoking had the appearance of “bad

marijuana.” When the officers knocked on the storm door, Wright and Lovett began looking

very nervous and attempted to hide the pipes behind their backs; Wright stated, “oh shit.”

Wright then answered the door while Lovett moved to a back room.

When Wright opened the door, the officers detected an odor similar to that of marijuana.

One officer sought permission to enter the apartment, and Wright indicated that he preferred to

speak outside. At that point, the officer had all three men step outside. Wright and Lovett

2 It is unclear to us what the exact source for these factual findings is. At oral argument, there were indications that the facts came from the preliminary hearing and were possibly the result of a stipulation between the State and Wright for purposes of the motion to dismiss. There is no transcript or written stipulation in the record on appeal to support either of these assertions. 3 The alleged burglary was apparently a misunderstanding by the 911 caller, who did not know that the men in the upstairs apartment also owned the store in the lower level and were simply trying to get the lower door to latch. 4 At the time, Wright was on probation for a prior conviction of possessing drug paraphernalia. Consequently, he was asked for a urine sample and directed to contact his probation officer.

3 identified themselves and consented to pat-down searches, but nothing of evidentiary value was

found during these searches. The officer then asked to speak with Wright alone.

The officer advised Wright of his Miranda warnings, and Wright agreed to speak with

him. The officer indicated that he had observed Wright smoking what appeared to be marijuana.

Wright told the officer that it was not marijuana; it was “incense” and “a legal product.” The

officer asked why Wright had attempted to conceal the pipe if the substance he was smoking was

legal, and Wright responded that he did so because smoking incense was “not socially

acceptable.”

The officer then sought consent to search the apartment, and Wright agreed, both orally

and in writing. The officers seized the pipes that they had observed Wright and Lovett using.

Wright showed the officers the packaging for the substance they had been smoking; it was

labeled as “Sedation Blueberry.”

In a large bedroom closet, there were individual storage totes containing several plastic

Ziploc packages of “green plant material” that was similar in appearance to marijuana and

adorned with homemade labels, stating “4 grams.” On the closet floor, there were two large

totes and one medium-sized tote; the medium-sized tote contained two digital scales, numerous

baggies and labels, a measuring cup, and more green plant material. One of the large totes

contained more green plant material, and the other contained seven individually packaged bags

that were each labeled as containing “1 pound” of the green plant material. The officers found

eight pills of a generic form of Klonopin, a Schedule IV controlled substance, in Wright‟s top

dresser drawer, but Wright was unable to produce any prescription or prescription packaging for

the pills.

4 Wright advised the officers that he and Lovett manufactured the “incense” they were

smoking by purchasing large quantities of it from the internet and then adding their own

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State of Missouri v. Stephen D. Wright, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-stephen-d-wright-moctapp-2014.