State v. Castillo-Lima

360 P.3d 597, 274 Or. App. 67, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 1180
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 30, 2015
DocketC121988CR; A152978
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 360 P.3d 597 (State v. Castillo-Lima) 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. Castillo-Lima, 360 P.3d 597, 274 Or. App. 67, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 1180 (Or. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

ARMSTRONG, P. J.

Defendant was convicted of possession of cocaine, ORS 475.884, and, on appeal from the resulting judgment, contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence found in a search incident to his arrest. For the reasons set out below, we affirm.

In reviewing a trial court’s decision on a suppression motion, we view the record, and all the inferences that it may support, in the light most favorable to the trial court’s findings, if there is constitutionally sufficient evidence in the record to support them. State v. Ehly, 317 Or 66, 74-75, 854 P2d 421 (1993). Wolfe, an officer with the Beaverton Police Department, responded to a 1:30 a.m. report of a fight outside of a bar. Seven men were involved in the fight; one was injured and was treated by medical personnel at the scene. Wolfe observed a man in a black and white checkered shirt — later determined to be defendant — leaving the scene. After questioning witnesses, he determined that defendant had been one of the participants in the fight. Wolfe asked another officer to try to locate defendant, but the officer was unable to find him.

At about 3:00 a.m., Wolfe received word that the original participants in the fight had returned to the area of the bar. A witness with whom Wolfe had spoken earlier, Aguilar, was on the sidewalk next to the bar’s parking lot, and she told Wolfe that people who had been involved in the fight were in the parking lot of a nearby apartment complex. Wolfe and his police dog went to the area identified by Aguilar but discovered nothing. At that point, Wolfe heard yelling from the area where he had left Aguilar, and he began to return to that area. He saw defendant, whom he recognized from earlier in the evening, and told defendant to “come here.” Defendant responded, “I didn’t do anything.” Wolfe announced that he was a police officer and instructed defendant to get down on the ground. Defendant did not do that but instead asked, “What’s going on?” Wolfe, who could still hear yelling from nearby, approached defendant and repeatedly — at least 10 times — told him to get down on the ground. Defendant did not do that, and when Wolfe was approximately 10 feet from defendant, Wolfe told defendant [?]*?to get on the ground and that, if he did not comply, Wolfe’s police dog would bite him. Defendant then dropped to his knees and raised his arms, at which point Wolfe could see the butt of a gun in defendant’s pants. Wolfe pulled defendant to the ground, grabbed the gun and threw it behind them. Wolfe realized after he grabbed the gun that it was a simulated weapon rather than a real weapon.

Wolfe called for backup, and another officer, Volstak, arrived within a few minutes, as did the witness Aguilar. Aguilar indicated that defendant was her husband, that he had been involved in the earlier fight, but that he was not one of the men to whom she had directed Wolfe earlier. Wolfe took defendant into custody, and he and Volstak handcuffed defendant, took him to the police car, and removed everything from his pockets, looking for weapons and means of escape. One of the items found in defendant’s pocket was the cocaine at issue in this case.

The issue raised at the suppression hearing was whether Wolfe’s emptying of defendant’s pockets constituted a lawful search incident to arrest. See generally State v. Hoskinson, 320 Or 83, 86, 879 P2d 180 (1994) (search incident to arrest may be justified to protect officer safety, to prevent destruction of evidence, or to discover evidence relevant to crime for which defendant is being arrested). At the time of defendant’s arrest, Wolfe had been investigating assault and disorderly conduct crimes; after defendant failed to follow Wolfe’s instructions to get onto the ground, Wolfe arrested him for failing to obey a lawful order. Defendant asserts, and the state does not dispute, that the search incident to arrest in this case was not to discover evidence of the crime for which Wolfe had arrested defendant or to prevent destruction of evidence. Rather, the sole question is whether the scope of the search incident to arrest was justified by legitimate officer-safety concerns.

Defendant does not assert that Wolfe’s initial seizure of the gun at defendant’s waist was unlawful; the evidence is undisputed that, at the time that Wolfe seized the gun, he believed it to be an actual and not a simulated weapon. Rather, defendant argues that removing items from his pockets after the weapon was determined to be fake was [70]*70unlawful because, at that point, Wolfe no longer had a reasonable belief that defendant possessed weapons.

In light of defendant’s argument, we recount Wolfe’s testimony about the concerns that led to his actions after he had thrown the fake gun aside:

“[WOLFE:] [Defendant] was involved in the fight.
“Q: Okay, What do you do then?
“A: I went back with Officer Volstak and the Defendant, we got him up off the ground and walked him over to a police car, at which point we removed everything from his pockets looking for other weapons and * * * means of escape.
“Q: All right. So if you would, just elaborate a little bit as to why you felt you needed to look for weapons on his person.
“A: I’d already found one simulated weapon. Oftentimes when I find one weapon, people normally carry other weapons, knives, and other means of self-defense, or offensive weapons. So I was checking to make sure he wasn’t going to have anything else on him that was going to injure us while we were in such close proximity talking to him.”

When asked subsequently by the court about the sequence of events, Wolfe added:

“The — it was a very quick and fluid — Ms. Aguilar had pointed me to the back of that [apartment] complex, telling me that ‘they’ were over there, so in my mind there was more than one person in this dark parking lot. I confront the Defendant, who’s not obeying what I’m doing, I still don’t know if someone else is coming up behind me, that’s why it was so quick and so fast. And he needed to do what I told him to do as quickly as — as he could, because I didn’t know who else was out and around.
“Again, I had been directed to that part of the parking lot for multiple suspects, and I — and I only saw one being— one person there, being the Defendant. So I had my — my safety concerns in mind.”

In denying the suppression motion, the court first ruled that Wolfe had probable cause to arrest defendant — a conclusion that is not challenged on appeal. With respect to the officer-safety issue, the court ruled:

[71]*71“[R]ight before [Wolfe] pushed [defendant] down, he saw he had this gun. And of course, his first thought is as a police officer out there, confronting a guy in that circumstance, questioning the officer’s authority and what’s going on, and all that kind of stuff, and then he sees a gun on his person, you can imagine what was going through his head. And the only option he had was to grab it and throw it away, and he did that. And it was fake, and he realized — and he said on the witness stand it was a toy gun, or whatever.
“But the officer’s security is heightened at that point. You have a fight, there [were] seven people, I think he said they were Hispanics.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
360 P.3d 597, 274 Or. App. 67, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 1180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-castillo-lima-orctapp-2015.