State v. BAKER/JAY

221 P.3d 749, 232 Or. App. 112, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1806
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 18, 2009
Docket0112-38477 A131574 (Control) 0112-38476 A131575
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 221 P.3d 749 (State v. BAKER/JAY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. BAKER/JAY, 221 P.3d 749, 232 Or. App. 112, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1806 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*115 ORTEGA, J.

In this consolidated case involving two codefendants, Baker and Jay, the state appeals four pretrial orders suppressing the testimony of a police officer and other evidence. ORS 138.060. In two cross-assignments of error, defendant Jay challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence discovered during a traffic stop and evidence of jail visitation logs created after his arrest. We vacate two of the orders in their entirety, reverse two others in part, and remand for further proceedings.

I. FACTS

On June 16, 2001, the driver of a blue car shouted derogatory and racist remarks at a mixed-race couple as the couple stood in front of their Portland apartment. When one of the victims told the driver that he “shouldn’t say that,” the driver pulled over, got a gun from the car’s trunk, pointed it at the couple, and instructed them to leave the neighborhood. The couple left the area, then returned. They later discovered that the tires of their own car had been slashed.

One of the couple’s neighbors witnessed both the confrontation and the tire-slashing incident and called the police after the second incident. The neighbor told police that the perpetrators of the initial threat had been involved in slashing the couple’s tires. She identified the car as a “Chev[rolet] Celebrity, four-door, slate blue in color” and provided a partial license plate number.

The couple decided to move out of their apartment. They did so several days later, with a police officer present to ensure their safety. While the officer was outside the couple’s apartment, the couple’s neighbor told the officer that the car driven by the perpetrators was parked nearby. After one of the victims confirmed that the car was the one involved in the menacing incident, the officer researched the car’s full license plate number in the police data system and discovered that one of the defendants, Baker, was associated with the car. 1

*116 On June 21, five days after the original incident, two masked and armed suspects broke into a North Portland home. They hit one of the occupants with a gun, stole cash, and stole a rental car parked in the home’s driveway. The victims gave descriptions of the robbers to the police. The stolen car was recovered the next day at a location near both the scene of the robbery and the duplex where defendants were staying at the time.

In the meantime, officers Santos and Stradley had begun investigating the menacing incident and conducted surveillance at the residence where the blue Celebrity had been seen. Information gathered during that surveillance led to three traffic stops on June 22, 2001 — one stop of the Celebrity with which Baker was associated and two traffic stops of a gray Chevrolet Caprice.

The first stop of the Caprice occurred shortly after noon. After Santos observed the car near the residence that was under surveillance, he directed another officer, Staul, to stop the car on the ground that the windows were excessively tinted. Staul conducted the stop and made contact with defendants, but they were neither cited nor detained at that time.

Approximately one hour later, Santos asked Staul to stop the Celebrity that police suspected was involved in the menacing incident; the basis for the stop was that the car’s driver had failed to stop for a red light. Staul conducted the traffic stop and, several minutes later, was joined by Santos, who obtained the consent of the driver, Foster, to search the car for weapons. The officers did not find any weapons in the car but found three citations in the glove box, including one dated 12 days earlier showing that defendant Baker had been operating the car. The final encounter, in which officers again stopped the Caprice, occurred later that afternoon and resulted in defendants’ arrest.

After defendants’ arrest, police eventually obtained 10 search warrants relating to their investigation of defendants. The initial warrants authorized searches of the Caprice in which defendants had been arrested and the residence in which they had been seen shortly before their arrest. The discovery during those searches of a mask, gloves, and *117 clothing, as well as information gathered from defendants after their arrest, led to additional warrant searches, including a warrant search of the home of defendant Jay’s girlfriend, Thompson, which resulted in the discovery of two firearms. Analysis of those firearms and of the evidence discovered in the Caprice connected defendants with the unsolved June 21 robbery. Defendants were charged with various drug and firearms-related offenses in federal court, as well as several robbery and firearms-related offenses in state court.

Based on the federal charges against them, defendants originally were held in federal custody. On at least two occasions, the state obtained a writ of habeas corpus ad prosequendum from the state circuit court, ordering federal officials to transport Baker from a federal facility to Multnomah County Circuit Court. 2 The state proceedings against defendants were held in abeyance pending the outcome of the federal litigation. After defendants were convicted in federal court, the state court scheduled a hearing for December 12, 2005, on defendants’ motions to suppress evidence.

Several days before the hearing, federal officials transported defendant Baker from Oregon to a federal facility in Oklahoma. Despite being aware of the scheduled hearing, the state failed to obtain a writ specifically ordering Baker’s transport from that facility. Federal officials indicated that they were unable to return Baker to Oregon until early January.

At the December 12 hearing, the prosecutor acknowledged that the state had been responsible for ensuring defendant Baker’s attendance and that it had failed to do so. Counsel for defendant Baker declined to proceed in *118 Baker’s absence. Defendants instead moved to dismiss the indictments based on the state’s failure to ensure Baker’s attendance. In addition to defendant Baker’s absence, Stradley was on vacation and therefore also failed to comply with defendants’ subpoenas to attend the December 12 hearing.

The trial court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss the indictments and, acting on its own motion, set over the suppression hearing until January. Defendants then sought to exclude Stradley’s testimony at the January hearing, arguing that, but for the state’s failure to arrange for defendant Baker’s transport, the December 12 hearing would have gone forward without Stradley’s testimony; defendants argued that the state should not benefit from its neglect in regard to defendant Baker by having the benefit of that testimony at the January hearing. The trial court delayed ruling on that motion until the hearing resumed.

When the hearing resumed over a 13-day period in January, defendants renewed their motion to exclude Stradley’s testimony.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
221 P.3d 749, 232 Or. App. 112, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bakerjay-orctapp-2009.