State of Washington v. Lanny Lee Griffith

455 P.3d 152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 31, 2019
Docket35848-8
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 455 P.3d 152 (State of Washington v. Lanny Lee Griffith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Washington v. Lanny Lee Griffith, 455 P.3d 152 (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FILED DECEMBER 31, 2019 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 35848-8-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) LANNY LEE GRIFFITH, ) PUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, J. — We are presented with a question of first impression in

Washington: are warrantless, suspicionless, state courthouse security screenings

constitutional, particularly if they include a search for controlled substances, either by

design or as carried out in a particular case?

The Chelan County Superior Court refused to suppress methamphetamine found in

a pocket of Lanny Griffith’s coat in the course of security screening that took place at the

county courthouse. Applying well-settled law under the Fourth Amendment to the

United States Constitution and a novel question under the Washington Constitution, we

hold that if the security guard’s action in removing methamphetamine from the coat

pocket was not cabined to the scope of a permissible administrative search, the evidence

should have been suppressed. Because there is a factual dispute whether the security No. 35848-8-III State v. Griffith

guard’s actions were consistent with the county’s security screening policy, we remand

for additional fact finding. Since the record provides insufficient evidence of Mr.

Griffith’s voluntary and knowing waiver of a jury trial, a new trial is ordered in the event

the suppression motion is denied following the entry of additional findings.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In January 2017, Lanny Griffith went to the Chelan County Superior Courthouse

to make a payment toward legal financial obligations (LFOs). He proceeded to the fifth

floor, where, in order to continue to the clerk’s office, he had to go through a security

screening. The security screening station was equipped with a magnetometer, which

visitors were required to pass through after first placing items from their pockets in a

basket. If a visitor set off the magnetometer, they were scanned with a hand wand. There

was no X-ray device at the screening station, so bags and heavy coats were subject to a

manual search.

The security officer on duty at the fifth floor security station was private security

guard James Mattix, who directed Mr. Griffith to empty his pockets and take off his coat.

When Mr. Mattix searched the coat, he found a small clear ziplock bag of what appeared

to be methamphetamine in a pocket. Mr. Mattix contacted his supervisor, Chelan County

Deputy Sheriff Elgin Shaw, to report the discovery. Upon arriving at the security

screening station and agreeing that the contents of the ziplock bag looked like

methamphetamine, Deputy Shaw placed the bag in a locked desk and notified Wenatchee

2 No. 35848-8-III State v. Griffith

police, who dispatched Officer Shawndra Duke to respond. The contents of the bag

proved to be methamphetamine, and the State charged Mr. Griffith with one count of

possession of a controlled substance (methamphetamine).

Mr. Griffith moved to suppress the seized methamphetamine, arguing that

administrative weapons searches that have a dual purpose of searching for drugs violate

the Fourth Amendment and article 1, section 7 of the Washington State Constitution. At

a two-day CrR 3.6 hearing, the trial court heard extensive testimony from Mr. Mattix,

from Deputy Shaw, and from Officer Duke.

Fourteen unchallenged findings of fact by the trial court summarize most of the

relevant evidence presented at the hearing:

1. On January 6, 2017, Mr. Lanny Griffith entered the 5th Floor of the Chelan County Superior Courthouse; 2. Upon entering the 5th Floor from either the stairs or the elevator, Mr. Griffith would have seen the sign, a picture of which was admitted as Exhibit 1, informing him that all visitors were subject to security screening; 3. Any individual not desiring to pass through screening may leave at any time back down the stairs or elevator prior to passing through the magnetometer; 4. Security screenings are conducted by private security officers who are trained and supervised by Chelan County Jail Deputy Elgin Shaw to search for weapons; .... 6. Mr. Griffith approached the security screening station, staffed by private security officer James Mattix; 7. Mr. Mattix observed that Mr. Griffith wore a heavy Carhartt-style coat;

3 No. 35848-8-III State v. Griffith

8. Although not a formal policy or directive, Mr. Mattix uniformly requires all individuals with heavy jackets to remove the jacket for individual screening before the individual passes through the magnetometer; 9. Mr. Mattix uniformly requires the same for all briefcases, purses, backpacks, and other containers; 10. In the present case, Mr. Mattix asked Mr. Griffith to remove and hand- over the jacket for screening and Mr. Griffith complied; 11. While hand-searching the outside of the jacket, Mr. Mattix felt a soft bulky object in one of the pockets and removed it; 12. The object was a plastic baggie containing a small amount of methamphetamine; 13. There is some dispute whether Mr. Mattix also removed a cell phone from that same pocket in that Mr. Mattix testified that he did, but Officer Duke and Deputy Shaw testified that Mr. Mattix had told them that the cell phone had been handed over prior to the coat search; .... 15. Some individuals are allowed to pass through security without undergoing screening, including mail and parcel delivery personnel, the local legal process server, the local bail bondsman, on-duty law enforcement officers, and current county employees; [and] 16. Although not in writing, these exceptions are authorized by the County Commissioners and security screening personnel do not have discretion to except other individuals, nor is there evidence that the screening personnel vary from these authorized exceptions.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 37-38.

The disputed evidence noted in finding 13 had to do with Mr. Mattix’s testimony

at the suppression hearing that the reason he reached into Mr. Griffith’s coat pocket was

because he felt a hard object that turned out to be Mr. Griffith’s cell phone. Officer Duke

and Deputy Shaw provided conflicting testimony; both testified that in speaking with Mr.

4 No. 35848-8-III State v. Griffith

Mattix on the day the methamphetamine was seized, he told them Mr. Griffin had placed

his wallet and cell phone in a basket before handing over his coat.1

The trial court’s finding 14, one of three findings challenged on appeal, states:

14. The Court does not resolve th[e] dispute of fact [over whether Mr. Mattix had already removed a cell phone from the pocket] because the Court does not believe it necessary for this motion.

CP at 38.

Deputy Shaw testified during the CrR 3.6 hearing that he trains security officers to

have people remove their coats, excluding suit jackets, and to physically check the coats

and to reach into a pocket “[i]f they feel something rigid or hard, that could be a

weapon.” Report of Proceedings (RP)2 at 50. He testified he instructs his officers that

“[i]f it isn’t rigid, and you cannot believe it might be a weapon, then you’re not to reach

in that pocket.” Id. at 69. He testified that if the security officers find drugs, they are to

lock the drugs in a desk at the security station and call him, which was the procedure

followed by Mr. Mattix.

Mr. Mattix testified that when he is searching someone’s coat, his “main goal” is

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