STATE v. AGUILAR

2024 OK CR 18
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 18, 2024
DocketS-2023-575
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 OK CR 18 (STATE v. AGUILAR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE v. AGUILAR, 2024 OK CR 18 (Okla. Ct. App. 2024).

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OSCN Found Document:STATE v. AGUILAR
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STATE v. AGUILAR
2024 OK CR 18
Case Number: S-2023-575
Decided: 07/18/2024
THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA, Appellant v. AMANDA CAMP AGUILAR, Appellee


Cite as: 2024 OK CR 18, __ __

O P I N I O N

ROWLAND, PRESIDING JUDGE:

¶1 The State of Oklahoma appeals a pretrial order quashing the Information against Appellee Aguilar for insufficient evidence. The State charged Aguilar by Information in the District Court of Kay County, Case No. CF-2020-634, with one count of child neglect in violation of 21 O.S.Supp.2019, § 843.5(C). After being bound over for trial at preliminary hearing, she filed a motion to quash for insufficient evidence pursuant to 22 O.S.2021, § 504.1. The Honorable Lee Turner, District Judge, granted the motion and quashed the Information. The State now appeals, pursuant to 22 O.S.Supp.2022, § 1053(4), and raises the following propositions of error:

I. whether the district court erred in granting Aguilar's motion to quash for insufficient evidence when it found that her use of medical marijuana while pregnant is not illegal under Oklahoma law; and
II. whether the district court erred in finding that the out of state lab report should not have been admitted at preliminary hearing.

¶2 After thorough consideration of the entire record before us on appeal, including the original record, transcripts, exhibits and the parties' briefs, we find that no relief is required under the law and evidence. The district court's order granting Aguilar's motion to quash is affirmed.

I.

¶3 The issue in this appeal is whether an expectant mother who holds a medical marijuana card and uses the drug while pregnant has exposed her unborn child to illegal drugs constituting the crime of child neglect, which in Oklahoma includes "the failure or omission to protect a child from exposure to . . . the use, possession, sale, or manufacture of illegal drugs." 10A O.S.Supp.2019, § 1-1-105(48)(b)(1) (emphasis added). The Information charges Aguilar with a single felony count of child neglect by "exposing J.W.B. to controlled dangerous substances in utero, specifically Marijuana." (Emphasis added). Thus, the charging document accuses Aguilar of a crime which does not exist, i.e., child neglect by exposure to "controlled dangerous substances" as opposed to exposure to "illegal drugs[.]" This is not a matter of semantics, and although this charging error does not determine the outcome of this appeal, the apparent confusion in terminology and definitions which led to that error is central to understanding how to properly resolve this case.

¶4 The terms "controlled dangerous substance" and "illegal drugs" are not synonymous; the former includes hundreds of prescription drugs which, like marijuana, are lawful to possess only with a prescription or other legal authorization. The term "controlled dangerous substance" is defined in 63 O.S.Supp.2019, § 2-101(8) as any drug listed in any of the Schedules I through V of the Uniform Controlled Substances Act. However, neither that Act nor any other provision of Oklahoma law defines the term "illegal drug", so we must ascertain the meaning of that term, and specifically, whether the marijuana use in this case is included within it so as to constitute child neglect.

¶5 In general, drugs in Schedules II through V have potential for abuse, but also some legitimate medical value and can be lawfully prescribed by a practitioner. Those in Schedule I have high potential for abuse but no legitimate medical value, and because of this historically could not be prescribed by a practitioner. This clear distinction between Schedule I versus all other Schedules was blurred when Oklahoma enacted its medical marijuana laws, leaving marijuana in Schedule I but creating a licensing procedure authorizing its lawful possession and use. Thus, while every other drug listed in Schedule I is likely an "illegal drug" as that term is used in the child neglect statute, marijuana may or may not be, depending upon whether the particular user has a medical marijuana card. It is undisputed that Aguilar had one.

¶6 We find that the most logical reading of 10A O.S.Supp.2019, § 1-1-105(48)(b)(1) is that "illegal drugs" means those drugs whose possession or use violated the law at the time of that possession or use. Hence, an expectant mother who exposes her unborn child to illegal methamphetamine could be convicted of child neglect. See State v. Green, 2020 OK CR 18, 474 P.3d 886. Conversely, under that definition, an expectant mother's licensed possession and use of medical marijuana would not trigger an automatic finding of neglect for failure to protect her unborn child from exposure to illegal drugs because as to her, marijuana is not an illegal drug.

¶7 Judge Lumpkin's dissent points out that Aguilar's unborn child did not have a medical marijuana license and thus it became an illegal drug as soon as it crossed the placental barrier from the mother. This attempt to get to a desirable result in this case proves too much, because every drug in Schedules II through V, lawfully prescribed to an expectant mother, would subject her to prosecution for child neglect as soon as a molecule of such drug entered the body of her unborn child. All of these drugs are illegal to possess or use without a prescription. Like it or not, in Oklahoma, marijuana, like all of these other controlled substances, may now be either a legal or an illegal drug, depending upon whether the person has legal authorization to possess and use it. His dissent terms today's ruling "devoid of common sense" but he would craft a legal rule which turns on an unborn fetus not having a medical marijuana card, and which makes it unlawful for any expectant mother to ever be prescribed any controlled dangerous substance by any doctor. While we understand his obvious desire to discourage marijuana use by pregnant women, judicial restraint requires that we defer to the Legislature to address the problem. "[I]t is not our place to interpret a statute to address a matter the Legislature chose not to address, even if we think that interpretation might produce a reasonable result. We will not enlarge the meaning of words included in a statute to create a crime not defined by that statute." State v. Young, 1999 OK CR 14, ¶ 27, 989 P.2d 949, 955.

¶8 In the other dissent, Judge Lewis opines that neither the voters nor the legislature intended to legalize prenatal exposure to marijuana when they passed the medical marijuana laws. He is very likely correct, and we certainly do not condone marijuana use by an expectant mother. But, as explained above, when Oklahoma's laws were changed to exempt this drug from the always-illegal category of Schedule I, it became a legal drug for certain persons including Aguilar.

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