State v. Clark

226 P.3d 120, 233 Or. App. 553, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 17, 2010
DocketCF050319; A136893
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 226 P.3d 120 (State v. Clark) 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. Clark, 226 P.3d 120, 233 Or. App. 553, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 128 (Or. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

*555 ROSENBLUM, P. J.

Defendant appeals a conviction for possession of a controlled substance, former ORS 475.992(4)(b) (2003). 1 She assigns error to the trial court’s denial of her motion for a mistrial. She contends that, in closing arguments, the prosecutor improperly commented on her right to remain silent following her arrest and at trial by telling the jury that there was no testimony that defendant had claimed that the controlled substances at issue were not hers. We conclude that it was unlikely that the jury understood the prosecutor’s comment as a reference to the fact that defendant did not testify at trial. We further conclude that defendant opened the door to the prosecutor’s comment on her silence following her arrest. We therefore affirm.

The facts are not in dispute. Defendant was a passenger in a pickup truck that was stopped for a traffic infraction. During the stop, the officer who had stopped the pickup, Officer Palmer, believed that defendant had given him a false name and also discovered that a warrant for defendant’s arrest was outstanding. He placed her under arrest based on the warrant and for providing him with a false name. Palmer noticed a backpack in the bed of the pickup. He asked the driver if it belonged to him. The driver said that it belonged to defendant, so Palmer asked defendant if it was hers. She said that it was. Palmer took defendant and the backpack to the police station. At the station, he searched the backpack for evidence of defendant’s identity. He found, inside a wallet, a small, blue Ziploc bag that appeared to him to contain methamphetamine residue. Palmer placed the blue bag in an evidence bag to be sent to the Oregon State Police crime lab. The crime lab later confirmed Palmer’s suspicion that the blue bag contained methamphetamine.

At trial, Palmer testified about the above facts on direct examination. On cross-examination, defense counsel asked Palmer,

*556 “[Y]ou did not show [defendant] the evidence that you had retrieved; is that correct?
“A I do not recall if I did or not.
“Q So it could be the case that you found this in this wallet-style purse, marked it and placed it in the evidence locker without [defendant] ever having seen it; would that be fair to say?
“A That was possible.
“Q Okay. And you didn’t confront her with this and try to obtain a statement; is that correct as well?
“A No. I advised her of her charges for the Possession of Controlled Substance, advised her what I had found, and then, also, for the false information.”

After Palmer’s testimony concluded, two other witnesses testified for the state about the crime lab’s testing of the blue bag and the chain of custody of the bag. Defendant rested without presenting any evidence. The parties then proceeded with closing arguments.

The prosecutor began his closing argument as follows:

“Good afternoon. The outline I gave you at the start of the day, it started with a traffic stop and ended with the testimony I promised from the Oregon State Police crime lab scientist, Tracy Rose.
“That’s been the stream of events, and it’s been consistent with what I anticipated and, hopefully, with what you anticipated as well, based on my opening statement. I thank you for your attention * * *.
“It all centered around the contents of a backpack, the Defendant’s backpack, and the testimony today established that the Defendant claimed that backpack. She told Officer Palmer that that was her backpack, it wasn’t the driver’s backpack.
“And Officer Palmer testified that he found the controlled substance in the backpack, and while he may not have shown the little blue baggie to the Defendant, Officer Palmer testified that he told the Defendant what had happened. Controlled substances, or [what] he supposed to be *557 controlled substances, based on his training and experience, were found in the backpack. There was no testimony that the Defendant disputed that, claimed that someone else owned it, claimed that it wasn’t hers. No testimony that when — ”

Defendant’s counsel interrupted at that point with an objection. The jury was sent out, and counsel moved for a mistrial, arguing that the prosecutor had commented on defendant’s right not to testify and right to remain silent following her arrest. Counsel argued that “[t]he jury is left with the perception * * * that she should have said something, that she should have told the officer that it wasn’t hers * * He contended that the prosecutor’s statement was “not a bell that you can unring,” and he asked that the case be retried before a different jury. The prosecutor responded that he was “commenting on Officer Palmer’s testimony, if anything, commenting on the fact that Officer Palmer did not confront the Defendant with the actual blue baggie, comment that — what his testimony did or did not include.”

The trial court denied the motion, stating:

“We’re talking about a dotted-line inference from the fact that the officer failed, which is a gaping wound in the Court’s mind as to why he failed to present the baggie to the Defendant, but that’s — I don’t see how that becomes a commentary on her right to remain silent here today, which would be the major, major problem not so much during the course of an investigation, [sic] But if she takes the Fifth Amendment, that would be different.”

The court instructed the prosecutor not to address the issue further in the balance of his closing argument. The arguments proceeded without any further objections. The jury found defendant guilty.

On appeal, defendant assigns error to the denial of the motion for a mistrial. She renews the argument that the prosecutor improperly commented on her right to remain silent. She contends again that the prosecutor’s argument constituted direct comments on the fact that she did not protest her innocence to Palmer or testify at trial in her own behalf to deny ownership of the blue bag and its contents. She *558 argues that the trial court erred in concluding that the prosecutor’s comments were directly addressed only to her failure to deny possession of the blue bag during the investigation, rather than being addressed to her failure to testify at trial. She also argues that, even if the court were correct, commenting only on the fact that she remained silent following her arrest would, by itself, warrant a mistrial.

We reject defendant’s contention that the prosecutor’s argument was a comment on her right not to testify at trial. Granted, taken alone, the prosecutor’s statement that “[t]here was no testimony” that defendant denied possession of the blue bag is ambiguous: It could be understood as a reference to the fact that defendant did not testify or as a reference to Palmer’s testimony.

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Related

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338 Or. App. 486 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2025)
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419 P.3d 730 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2018)
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385 P.3d 1099 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2016)
State v. Robinson
260 P.3d 671 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 P.3d 120, 233 Or. App. 553, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-clark-orctapp-2010.