State v. Boisselle

448 P.3d 19, 194 Wash. 2d 1
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 12, 2019
Docket95858-1
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 448 P.3d 19 (State v. Boisselle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Boisselle, 448 P.3d 19, 194 Wash. 2d 1 (Wash. 2019).

Opinion

' This opinion was yFIHEv IN CLimU OFFICE X filed for record

•UFKME COUNT.CDOE OP VNttHMSreN

j DATE SEP 1 2 ?flt) Susan L. Carlson Supreme Court Clerk GHIEFJUSTlGe

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON,

Respondent, No. 95858-1

En Banc

MICHAEL CLIFFORD BOISSELLE, Filed ^ ^ 2019 Petitioner.

OWENS,J. — Law enforcement officers were dispatched to Michael Clifford

Boisselle's home after two anonymous 911 calls reported that a man named Mike shot

and possibly killed someone at the residence. While responding to the calls, the

officers learned that the residence was related to an ongoing missing person/homicide

investigation. Unable to determine whether someone was alive inside the home,the

officers entered the residence and conducted a warrantless search, discovering

evidence of a murder therein. Boisselle moved to suppress the evidence, arguing that

the officers' warrantless search was unlawful under article I, section 7 ofthe

Washington Constitution. The trial court denied Boisselle's motion, concluding that

the officers' search fell within the emergency aid function of the community State V. Boisselle,'S\o. 95858-1

caretaking exception to the warrant requirement. Following a jury trial, Boisselle was convieted ofsecond degree murder and second degree unlawful possession of a firearm. The Court of Appeals affirmed his convietions. We hold that the offieers' warrantless seareh of Boisselle's home was a pretext for a eriminal investigation because the offieers had significant suspicions of criminal activity, the officers' entry was motivated by the desire to conduct an evidentiary search, and there was no present emergeney. Accordingly,the search did not fall within the emergency aid function ofthe community caretaking exeeption to the warrant requirement and thus violated article I, section 7. Therefore, the trial court s findings offact do not support its conclusions of law and the trial eourt erred in denying Boisselle's motion to suppress. We reverse the Court of Appeals and remand to the trial court for further proceedings.

FACTS

On August 13, 2014, a passerby notified law enforcement of a man fleeing the scene of a roadside fire. Auburn Police Deteetive Douglas Faini responded to the fire

and located a pile of eharred, bloodied debris, including carpet, carpet padding, laminate flooring, a towel, and a spent bullet casing. Due to the amount of blood on the items. Detective Faini "feared ... that someone could be either seriously injured

on the side somewhere, or deceased" and initiated a missing person/homieide

investigation. 4 Verbatim Report ofProceedings(VRP)at 613. Deteetive Faini sent the items to the crime lab for DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) testing, which rendered a State V. Boisselle, No. 95858-1

match to Brandon Zomalt. Later in his investigation, Detective Faini identified Boisselle as a suspect.

At 6:38 p.m. on September 1, South Sound 911 received an anonymous call regarding a possible homicide at a duplex unit in Puyallup. The anonymous caller reported that a friend named Mike said that he had shot and possibly killed someone at the duplex unit in self-defense. Soon after, the Puyallup Police Department s tip line received a similar anonymous call reporting a possible dead body in the unit. Law enforcement was subsequently dispatched to the duplex unit. Pierce County Sheriffs Deputies Ryan Olivarez and Fredrick Wiggins responded to the residence at approximately 6:50 p.m. Both Deputies Olivarez and Wiggins knocked on the front door ofthe unit multiple times, but they did not receive a response. The deputies proceeded to walk around the duplex and heard a dog barking aggressively inside the unit as they approached. The deputies could not see inside the unit as the lights were off and the blinds and curtains were drawn throughout. Pierce County Sheriffs Sergeant Christopher Adamson arrived at the duplex unit around 7:13 p.m. Sergeant Erik Clarkson arrived soon after. Due to the nature of the anonymous phone calls, both Sergeants Adamson and Clarkson "wanted to confirm, as best [they] could, that there may or may not have been a crime, or there

may or may not have been a victim." 1 VRP at 89. While walking around the unit. Sergeant Clarkson noted a foul odor emanating from the garage. He believed the smell was either rotting garbage or a decomposing body. State V. 5ome//e,No. 95858-1

As Sergeants Adamson and Clarkson approached a sliding glass door at the rear ofthe duplex unit, the dog inside came up to the door and pushed aside the blinds covering the door, allowing the sergeants to see inside the unit. Sergeant Clarkson saw furniture overturned in the living room ofthe unit and signs of a struggle. Sergeant Adamson also noted that carpet in the living room had been ripped out, which "is never a good sign in police work. It's something that s sometimes used to cover up a crime scene." 1 VRP at 31. Sergeant Clarkson determined "[i]t's a very suspicious welfare check at this point" and called animal control to secure the dog inside the unit in case he and Sergeant Adamson decided to enter the home. Id. at 32. The deputies and Sergeant Adamson began contacting neighbors to obtain more information. Neighbors stated that a man named Mike lived in the duplex unit and that although there was usually heavy traffic in and out ofthe unit, they had not seen anyone in the last four or five days. The officers determined that the duplex unit was Boisselle's last known address.

Sergeant Clarkson then noticed a man across the street taking particular interest in law enforcement's activities. Sergeant Clarkson approached the man, who

identified himself as Christopher Williamson. Williamson stated that his friend

Zomalt lived in the duplex with Boisselle and that he had not seen Zomalt in several

weeks. Williamson also mentioned that Zomalt was associated with a missing person

investigation in Auburn and asked if the officers "had details [on the] location of

[Zomalt's] body." Def.'s Ex. 12. State V. Boisselle, No. 95858-1

At approxiniat6ly 8:00 p.m., th6re was a phone call between Sergeant Clarkson and Detective Faini. It is unclear from this court's record who made initial contact with whom, and the exact content ofthe phone call is not part ofthis court s record. During the call. Detective Faini informed Sergeant Clarkson ofthe roadside fire and the missing person/homicide investigation concerning Zomalt. Detective Faini also stated that he would be interested to know whether any carpet was missing from the

duplex unit. Shortly after, a second phone call between Sergeant Clarkson and Detective Faini took place; the record is silent as to what was discussed during this second call.

Both Sergeants Adamson and Clarkson decided to enter the unit and conduct a warrantless search, believing the emergency aid function ofthe community caretaking

exception to the warrant requirement justified entry. Sergeant Adamson noted that he had "suspicion of a crime." 1 VRP at 95. Sergeant Clarkson determined:

Dealing with a suspicious welfare check and possibly someone that's down inside, has been hurt or dead, we don't know. So at that point I'm thinking the bottom line is you can't walk away from this. You have got a duty to do something.

. . . There's too much information to say that . . . something possibly happened inside. With what we . . . observed, the information I received from Detective Faini, the two anonymous tips, you can't just walk away from something like that.

1 VRP at 45-46.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
448 P.3d 19, 194 Wash. 2d 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-boisselle-wash-2019.