State v. Ellis

469 P.3d 65
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedAugust 7, 2020
Docket120046
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 469 P.3d 65 (State v. Ellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ellis, 469 P.3d 65 (kan 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

No. 120,046

STATE OF KANSAS Appellee,

v.

SHELBIE ELLIS, Appellant.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. A law enforcement officer who has available objective, specific, and articulable facts creating a suspicion that an individual needs help or is in peril may stop and investigate the situation.

2. If an individual has been stopped subsequent to a legitimate suspicion that she or he needs aid, the officer may take appropriate action to render assistance.

3. Once the officer is assured that an individual is not in peril or is no longer in need of assistance, any actions beyond that constitute a seizure, implicating the protections provided by the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

1 4. A law enforcement officer's mere request for identification or identifying information generally will not constitute a seizure.

5. The nature of a police-citizen encounter can change, and what may begin as a consensual encounter can transform into an investigative detention if the police conduct changes.

6. Police may not lawfully extend a welfare check by running a warrant check on an individual who is the subject of the check unless some other circumstances support prolonging the check and converting it into a detention.

7. Under the attenuation doctrine, the poisonous taint of an unlawful search or seizure may dissipate when the connection between unlawful police conduct and challenged evidence becomes attenuated.

8. The State bears the burden of establishing sufficient attenuation to purge the taint of an illegal search or seizure and avoid application of the exclusionary rule.

9. To demonstrate that the taint of an illegal seizure has dissipated, the government must prove, from the totality of the circumstances, a sufficient attenuation or break in the

2 causal connection between the illegal detention and the discovery of incriminating evidence.

10. The development of probable cause to arrest an individual, after a police officer's discovery of evidence of a crime when the officer has illegally detained an individual, does not attenuate the taint of an illegal seizure and allow admission of evidence obtained in a later search.

11. Probable cause flowing directly from an unlawful seizure does not break the causal connection between the Fourth Amendment violation and a search and is therefore not an intervening circumstance.

12. Once a law enforcement officer has legal grounds to conduct an investigatory detention, the officer is free to check an individual for outstanding warrants as part of the investigation. If a warrant is discovered, then an arrest may follow and evidence consequent to the arrest is admissible.

Review of the judgment of the Court of Appeals in 57 Kan. App. 2d 477, 453 P.3d 882 (2019). Appeal from Lyon District Court; W. LEE FOWLER, judge. Opinion filed August 7, 2020. Judgment of the Court of Appeals reversing the district court is affirmed. Judgment of the district court is reversed, and the case is remanded to the district court with directions.

Rick Kittel, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, was on the briefs for appellant.

3 Laura L. Miser, assistant county attorney, and Marc Goodman, county attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, were with her on the brief for appellee.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

ROSEN, J.: Shelbie Ellis appeals from the denial of her motion to suppress evidence relating to possessing drugs and from her subsequent conviction. The Court of Appeals reversed, and this court granted the State's petition for review.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On the afternoon of January 20, 2018, an employee of a Casey's General Store in Emporia called in a police report that a woman had been in a store restroom stall for about 45 minutes and had been seen at one point on her hands and knees. Police officers Eric Law and William Kent were dispatched to the store for a welfare check, with Kent arriving at the scene first. The employee told Kent that the woman had told her she was "fine."

According to Officer Kent's affidavit, he went to the restroom door, knocked, and announced, "Police department." He told the woman the business staff was concerned about her being in the restroom for so long and had asked the police to check on her. According to Kent, the woman replied "she was feeling well and asked if she needed to come out." Kent asked her to step out so he "could see if she was ok." She told him "she had stomach issues due to her eating something."

4 Kent asked to see her driver's license, and he identified her as Shelbie Ellis. He held onto her license and placed a call to dispatch asking them to run the license information for possible outstanding warrants. Ellis told Kent that she and a friend were on their way to Michigan from Stafford, Kansas. She said that her friend was waiting in the car for her.

Kent directed her to step outside the store to see whether the friend was still around, and at about this time Officer Law arrived at the scene. Ellis walked around to the south of the building and then said the friend must have left, probably trying to find characters for a mobile Pokémon game. Kent then directed Ellis to call the friend to come get her. While this was going on, Kent received a report from the police dispatcher that Ellis had a possible outstanding warrant from Rice County, Kansas, for a probation violation.

As Ellis was attempting to call her friend, Kent observed her hands shaking. He asked her if she had been using drugs that day. She said that she had not but she was aware her hands were shaking. Kent then asked her if he could search her bag for drugs. She replied, "Please don't." He followed up by asking what she had been doing in the restroom. She replied, "I would never use drugs in a public restroom, but I do have drugs in my purse. I have meth and a pipe in my purse."

After Ellis finally contacted the driver and asked him to come back for her, based on a confirmation of the warrant report from the dispatcher, Kent placed her in handcuffs and read her her Miranda rights. He escorted Ellis to the back of his patrol car and then searched her wallet, where he found a clear plastic baggie containing a crystalline substance. In her makeup bag, he found a glass pipe wrapped inside two stockings. He then transported her to the county jail, where 5 she was confined on the outstanding warrant and the pending drug charges. A field kit gave a positive test for methamphetamine for the crystalline substance and residue in the glass pipe.

On January 22, 2018, the State filed a complaint charging Ellis with one count of possession of methamphetamine and one count of possessing drug paraphernalia. Through counsel, Ellis filed a motion to suppress, arguing that the seizure and subsequent search exceeded the scope of the encounter. The State filed a response, arguing that the attenuation doctrine set out in Utah v. Strieff, 579 U.S. ___, 136 S. Ct. 2056, 195 L. Ed. 2d 400 (2016), legitimized the seizure.

Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court denied the motion to suppress. The court also denied a motion to reconsider. Ellis elected to go to a trial before the bench, where she again objected to the introduction of the drug evidence. The court found her guilty of both counts. On August 15, 2018, the court sentenced her to a standard term of 13 months of incarceration with 12 months of postrelease supervision for the methamphetamine charge and a concurrent term of 6 months for the paraphernalia charge. The court then placed her on probation for a period of 18 months. She took a timely appeal to the Court of Appeals.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
469 P.3d 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ellis-kan-2020.