State v. Amaya

89 P.3d 1163, 336 Or. 616, 2004 Ore. LEXIS 290
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 2004
DocketD9707503M; CA A104692; SC S49344
StatusPublished
Cited by107 cases

This text of 89 P.3d 1163 (State v. Amaya) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Amaya, 89 P.3d 1163, 336 Or. 616, 2004 Ore. LEXIS 290 (Or. 2004).

Opinion

*618 BALMER, J.

In this criminal case, we consider the extent to which a police officer who has made a valid traffic stop of a vehicle may question a person in the vehicle about safety matters unrelated to the purpose of the stop. We hold, first, that ORS 810.410(3)(d), set out below, permitted the police officer’s inquiries of defendant, who was a passenger in the stopped vehicle. We further hold that, because the officer reasonably was concerned for his safety, Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution permitted his inquiry. Accordingly, we agree with the Court of Appeals that the trial court did not err in refusing to suppress either the statements that defendant made in response to the officer’s questions or the weapon that the officer seized from defendant following her statements, although we do so on somewhat different grounds.

FACTS

We take the facts from the Court of Appeals opinion, State v. Amaya, 176 Or App 35, 37-38, 29 P3d 1177 (2001), and from the record. On November 1, 1997, at 1:00 a.m., Officer Reynolds observed a van with a burned-out license plate light stopped in the middle of the road in an area of Beaverton known for drug dealing. The van pulled forward and made an unsignaled left turn. Reynolds stopped the van for the burned-out light and the illegal turn. The van was a full-sized cargo van without windows along the side, and Reynolds was able to see inside the van only when he was standing next to the driver’s window or the front passenger’s window. When Reynolds approached the van, he noticed that both the driver and defendant, who was a passenger in the van, were nervous. The driver was sweating and shaking, and the defendant was moving around and “tucking” something into a large purse-like bag at her feet. Reynolds immediately felt concerned for his safety, although he did not see any weapons.

Reynolds checked the license of the driver of the van and found that the driver’s license was suspended. Because Reynolds did not want to leave the van on the side of the road *619 overnight, he asked defendant if she was a licensed driver. When she responded that she was, Reynolds took her license to check its validity. At the suppression hearing, neither Reynolds nor defendant could recall specifically when Reynolds took defendant’s license, although it appears to have been after he learned that the driver had a suspended license. Nor could Reynolds or defendant recall when. Reynolds returned defendant’s license to her.

During the stop, Reynolds asked the driver for consent to search the van, which the driver gave. Reynolds asked the driver and defendant to step out of the vehicle while he awaited a second officer. Because of concern about what defendant might have in her bag, Reynolds encouraged her to leave it in the van, although he did not order her to do so. Defendant took the bag with her when she left the van and placed it on the ground between her feet, where it was covered by her trench coat. Reynolds noticed that defendant had taken her bag out of the van and apparently was trying to conceal it. Again, he felt concerned for his safety and believed that defendant might have a weapon or drugs in the bag.

A second officer arrived at some point during the encounter, although when he arrived in the sequence of events is not entirely clear. Reynolds asked defendant what she had in the bag. 1 Defendant said that she had a gun in the bag and that she did not have a concealed weapon permit. Based on that admission, the officers searched defendant’s bag and found a gun. The officers also searched defendant and the driver of the van by patting them down or looking in their pockets with a flashlight, although again the record is not clear as to whether that search took place before or after Reynolds asked defendant about the contents of her bag.

*620 PROCEEDINGS BELOW

Defendant moved to suppress both her admission and the weapon. She argued that the questions that Reynolds had asked her exceeded the scope of the traffic stop. The state resisted the motion on two grounds: that Reynolds had had a reasonable suspicion that defendant had been engaged in some form of illegal activity and, alternatively, that Reynolds had been justified in seeking further information about the bag for safety reasons. The trial court agreed and denied the motion to suppress.

The trial court stated that Reynolds, once he had noticed defendant’s suspicious concern for the bag, “was entitled to inquire further for his safety and that included asking what was in the purse.” See ORS 810.410(3)(d) (police officer making traffic stop may make any inquiries to ensure safety, including inquiries regarding presence of weapons). In addition to that statutory authority, the trial court relied on State v. Bates, 304 Or 519, 747 P2d 991 (1987), and concluded that Reynolds had had sufficient grounds to ask the questions that he did. “[H]e’s entitled to take reasonable [minimally] intrusive steps to determine whether or not there are weapons involved that might be a danger to the officer, and there’s enough articulable suspicion here on the part of the officer * * * for him to be concerned about his safety.” The trial court also found that defendant had been free to leave the scene and that she had not been required to answer Reynolds’s questions. As noted, the trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress, and she subsequently was convicted of unlawful possession of a weapon.

Defendant appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. In the Court of Appeals, defendant made two arguments. First, she claimed that, when Reynolds had taken and retained her driver license, he had “stopped” her separately and independently from the valid traffic stop. That stop had been unlawful, defendant argued, because it had been made without reasonable suspicion that she had been engaged in any criminal activity or had posed an immediate threat of physical injury to Reynolds. The Court of Appeals refused to consider that argument, because defendant had failed to raise it before the trial court. Amaya, 176 Or App at 38.

*621 Defendant’s second argument, which the Court of Appeals did address, was that the evidence should have been suppressed because Reynolds’s questions to her about her bag constituted a seizure without reasonable suspicion that she had been involved in illegal activity or had posed a risk to Reynolds’s safety. Defendant contended that, although ORS 810.410(3)(d) appears to authorize inquiries related to officer safety during a valid traffic stop without requiring reasonable suspicion, the court nevertheless should construe that statute to prohibit those inquiries in the absence of reasonable suspicion of an immediate threat to officer safety.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 P.3d 1163, 336 Or. 616, 2004 Ore. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-amaya-or-2004.