State v. Crocker

97 P.3d 93, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 175, 2004 WL 1908795
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedAugust 27, 2004
DocketA-8462
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 97 P.3d 93 (State v. Crocker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Crocker, 97 P.3d 93, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 175, 2004 WL 1908795 (Ala. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinions

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Leo Richardson Crocker Jr. was charged with fourth-degree controlled substance misconduct after the police executed a search warrant at his home and found marijuana plants, harvested marijuana, and marijuana-growing equipment. The superior court later concluded that the search warrant for Crocker’s home should not have been issued. The superior court therefore suppressed all of this evidence and dismissed the charges against Crocker. The State now appeals the superior court’s decision.

Our main task in this appeal is to clarify what the State must prove in order to obtain a warrant to enter and search a person’s home for evidence of marijuana possession. The issue arises because not all marijuana possession is illegal. In Ravin v. State,1 the Alaska Supreme Court held that the privacy provision of our state constitution (Article I, Section 22) protects an adult’s right to possess a limited amount of marijuana in their home for personal use. And recently, in Noy v. State,2 we held (based on Ravin) that Alaska’s marijuana statutes must be construed to allow possession by adults of any amount less than four ounces of marijuana in the home for personal use.3

For the reasons explained in this opinion, we hold that a judicial officer should not issue a warrant to search a person’s home for evidence of marijuana possession unless the State’s warrant application establishes probable cause to believe that the person’s possession of marijuana exceeds the scope of the possession that is constitutionally protected under Ravin. And, because the State’s war[95]*95rant application in Crocker’s ease fails to meet this test, we conclude that the superior court properly suppressed the evidence against Crocker.

A search warrant application must establish probable cause to believe that the property being sought is connected to the commission of a crime.

Under AS 12.35.020, a judicial officer is empowered to issue a warrant authorizing the police to enter a premises and search for specified property if the government’s warrant application establishes probable cause to believe:

that the property was stolen or embezzled, or
that the property was used as a means of committing a crime, or
that the property is the intended means of committing a crime, and the property either is in the possession of a person who intends to commit the crime or is in the possession of someone else to whom it has been delivered for the purpose of concealing it or otherwise preventing its discovery, or
that the property constitutes evidence of a particular crime or tends to show that a certain person has committed a particular crime.

In every case, the government must establish probable cause to believe that the property being sought is connected in one of these ways to the commission (or intended commission) of a crime.

Not all possession of marijuana is a crime. Thus, when the government seeks a warrant authorizing the search of a home for marijuana or related paraphernalia, the government’s warrant application must establish probable cause to believe that the marijuana possessed in that home falls outside the type of possession protected under Ravin.

Not all marijuana possession is a crime in Alaska. Under Ravin and Noy, an adult may possess any amount of marijuana less than four ounces in their home, if then-possession is for personal use. Thus, it would seem that a court should not issue a search warrant based on an allegation of marijuana possession unless the State establishes probable cause to believe that the type of marijuana possession at issue in the case is something other than the type of possession protected under Ravin. (For instance, a court might properly issue a search warrant if the State establishes probable cause to believe that the marijuana is possessed for commercial purposes, or that the amount of marijuana is four ounces or more.)

But the State disputes this conclusion. In its brief to this Court, the State argues that Ravin does not actually forbid the legislature from criminalizing the possession of marijuana. Rather (the State argues), Ravin established an affirmative defense — the defense of personal use — that can be raised by people who are charged with marijuana possession. Based on this interpretation of Ravin, the State argues that all possession of marijuana continues to be crime in Alaska — and, thus, a judicial officer can lawfully issue a search warrant for evidence of marijuana possession so long as the State establishes probable cause to believe that the premises to be searched contains any marijuana (or any other property tending to show possession of marijuana).

We addressed and rejected this same argument in our opinion on rehearing in Noy:

Ravin did not create an affirmative defense that defendants might raise, on a case-by-case basis, when they were prosecuted for possessing marijuana in their home for personal use.... [T]he Alaska Supreme Court has repeatedly and consistently characterized the Ravin decision as announcing a constitutional limitation on the government’s authority to enact legislation prohibiting the possession of marijuana in the privacy of one’s home.
Accordingly, we reject the State’s suggestion that Ravin left Alaska’s marijuana statutes intact but created an affirmative defense to be litigated in each individual case.

Noy (opinion on rehearing), 83 P.3d at 547-48.

The State further argues that if search warrant applications must establish probable cause to believe that the marijuana posses[96]*96sion at issue in that case falls outside of the marijuana possession protected by Ravin, this would be tantamount to “a presumption that all marijuana possessed in a home is for purely personal use”. But this “presumption” of non-criminality is built into the search and seizure clause of the Alaska Constitution and the statutory law governing the issuance of search warrants.

Before a search warrant can lawfully issue, the government must establish probable cause to believe that the evidence being sought is connected to a crime. This same rule governs search warrants for all controlled substances, not just marijuana.

Every day, people obtain controlled substances legally through a doctor’s prescription. For instance, several prescription painkillers contain codeine, which is a Schedule IA controlled substance.4 Our state constitution protects people from government intrusion into their homes unless the government affirmatively establishes a valid reason for the intrusion.

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State v. Crocker
97 P.3d 93 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 P.3d 93, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 175, 2004 WL 1908795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-crocker-alaskactapp-2004.