State Of Washington, V. Kenneth Lee Butler

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 18, 2026
Docket59854-0
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
State Of Washington, V. Kenneth Lee Butler, (Wash. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

February 18, 2026 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 59854-0-II

Respondent,

v.

KENNETH LEE BUTLER, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant,

CINDY RAE CONNER,

Defendant.

GLASGOW, J.— Cindy Conner and Kenneth Butler parked in the rear of a truck stop parking

lot. Officer Nichols had seen their car earlier in the evening at the same gas station while on patrol

and, after seeing it again, he parked his patrol car a short distance away and approached the car on

foot. As Nichols walked up to the car, he noticed what he thought to be an improper trip permit.

As he got close enough to talk to Conner, who had stepped out of the driver’s side, Nichols smelled

burnt fentanyl coming from the inside of the car. Nichols asked for Conner’s driver’s license and

discovered it was suspended. Nichols continued to ask about the smell of fentanyl and, after a few

moments, Conner pointed to Butler and silently mouthed to Nichols that the drugs belonged to

Butler.

Relying on the smell and Conner’s gestures, Nichols asked another officer to detain Butler

by removing him from the vehicle, placing him in handcuffs, and seating him on the hood of the No. 59854-0-II

Conner’s car. Nichols gave Butler Miranda1 warnings and, after questioning Butler, he showed

officers where to find fentanyl on the passenger side of the car where he had been sitting. After

the officers searched the car with Conner’s consent, the officers gave Butler Miranda warnings

again while he was still handcuffed in the back of a police car. Butler then admitted he was

planning to sell the fentanyl.

The State charged Butler with unlawful possession of a controlled substance with intent to

deliver. Butler moved to suppress his statements and the evidence obtained from the car as a fruit

of an unlawful seizure, arguing he was unlawfully detained. The trial court concluded that Nichols

had conducted an investigative Terry stop2 and properly detained Butler based on the officer’s

reasonable articulable suspicion that Conner and Butler were involved in a crime.3 The trial court

denied Butler’s motion.

Butler appeals the denial of his suppression motion. Butler argues that the officers lacked

a sufficient basis to seize Butler, and the proper remedy was exclusion of Butler’s subsequent

statements to the officers, as well as other evidence arising from the seizure. We hold that Butler

was lawfully detained and was given Miranda warnings before he directed officers to the fentanyl

on the passenger side of the car. After the officers found fentanyl on the passenger side of the car,

Butler’s ongoing detention was proper, and he received Miranda warnings again before he

1 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694 (1966). 2 Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 88 S. Ct. 1868, 20 L. Ed. 2d 889 (1968). 3 At the time of Butler’s offense, the statute had been amended to include the element of “knowingly” in the crime of unlawful possession of a controlled substance. See LAWS OF 2023, ch. 1, § 2.; see also State v. Blake, 197 Wn.2d 170, 481 P.3d 521 (2021).

2 No. 59854-0-II

admitted to intending to sell the fentanyl pills. Thus, the trial court properly admitted the evidence

of the fentanyl Butler led officers to, as well as his incriminating statements. We affirm.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

Officer Nichols was conducting a routine patrol of a truck stop in Napavine, Washington.

Nichols had been to the same truck stop earlier in the night. After seeing the same car a second

time, Nichols decided to talk to the driver and passenger.

Nichols saw the car drive away from the gas pumps and park in a lot. Nichols parked his

car about 50 feet away. He did not activate his emergency lights. As Nichols approached the

vehicle on foot, he saw Conner exit the vehicle on the driver’s side. Butler was sitting in the

passenger seat. Nichols did not attempt to stop Conner or Butler from leaving as he approached

them and neither tried to leave. Nichols testified that in his experience, in similar situations, when

he approached a person by walking toward them, they often walked away from him.

When Nichols arrived at the car, he began talking to Conner about the car and asked about

the temporary trip permit on the car’s back window, which Nichols thought might have been

altered.4 As Nichols and Conner spoke, Nichols came closer to the car to examine the permit,

which was in the rear window.

Nichols was roughly two feet away from the open driver’s side door when he smelled what

he believed to be burnt or recently smoked fentanyl, which has a distinctive smell like burnt

popcorn. Nichols believed the smell to be coming from the car, not from the surrounding area.

4 Under RCW 46.16A.320, a car with expired tabs can be operated legally with a temporary trip permit. The permit itself is a piece of paper that must be displayed prominently from the vehicle. The permit is valid for three consecutive days and must not be altered.

3 No. 59854-0-II

Nichols confronted Conner and Butler, who was sitting in the front passenger seat, about

his suspicions that they had been smoking fentanyl. Nichols also asked Conner for her driver’s

license and began the process of checking her license through dispatch. Conner and Butler both

denied Nichols’ assertions, but as Nichols kept talking to Butler through the open driver’s side

door, Conner began gesturing by pointing at Butler from behind her hand and mouthing “he has

it.” 1 Verbatim Rep. of Proc. (VRP) (June 5, 2024) at 23.

In the meantime, dispatch responded and Nichols learned that Conner’s driver’s license

was suspended. Officer Dave Sims arrived on the scene, and Nichols told Sims to detain Butler

while Nichols placed Conner under arrest for driving with a suspended license.

Sims approached the passenger side of the vehicle, removed Butler from the car, placed

him handcuffs, and sat him on the hood of Conner’s vehicle. After Nichols placed Conner in the

back of his police car, he returned to Sims and Butler where he read Butler his Miranda warnings.

Nichols then confronted Butler again with his conclusion that the burnt fentanyl smell was

coming from the car and his suspicion that someone had smoked fentanyl in the vehicle. Nichols

demanded to know where the fentanyl was. After a long pause, Butler acknowledged his rights

and showed officers to the passenger side of the vehicle where he informed Nichols that there were

fentanyl pills in a “puck”5 near the passenger seat. 1 VRP (June 5, 2024) at 25. The officers looked

through the passenger side window where Butler pointed, but they did not open the car at that time.

Nichols then performed a search of Conner’s purse, incident to her arrest, and found eight

baggies, each containing roughly 100 blue pills. Nichols also gave Conner Miranda warnings.

5 A “puck” here refers to a small, rubber container.

4 No. 59854-0-II

After telling Conner what he found in her purse, Nichols asked Conner about the pills. She

responded that Butler was the one selling the drugs and that he put the pills in her purse.

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