State v. Ellis

287 P.3d 1215, 252 Or. App. 382, 2012 WL 4378583, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1165
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 26, 2012
Docket091034055; A145688
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 287 P.3d 1215 (State v. Ellis) 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. Ellis, 287 P.3d 1215, 252 Or. App. 382, 2012 WL 4378583, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1165 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

ARMSTRONG, P. J.

This is a state’s appeal of a pretrial order granting defendant’s motion to suppress evidence. ORS 138.060(1)(c). Defendant was stopped after Portland police officers, some of whom were on the ground in patrol cars and another of whom was conducting aerial surveillance of the area, became suspicious that defendant had just committed a “car prowl.”1 Defendant was ultimately charged with unauthorized use of a motor vehicle (UUMV), possession of a stolen vehicle, and first-degree theft, based on evidence obtained during the stop and the ensuing search of defendant’s backpack. The sole issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred in determining that the police officer’s subjective belief that defendant had committed a crime was not objectively reasonable under the circumstances.2 For the reasons explained below, we reverse and remand.

Our standard of review is of particular consequence in this case. We are bound by the trial court’s findings of historical fact when there is evidence to support them. State v. Hall, 339 Or 7, 10, 115 P3d 908 (2005). Then,

“[o]ur function is to decide whether the trial court applied legal principles correctly to those facts. State v. Peller, 287 Or 255, 260, 598 P2d 684 (1979). In addition, if the trial court did not make findings on all pertinent historical facts and there is evidence from which those facts could be decided more than one way, we will presume that the trial court found facts in a manner consistent with its ultimate conclusion. Ball v. Gladden, 250 Or 485, 487, 443 P2d 621 (1968).”

[384]*384State v. Stevens, 311 Or 119, 126-27, 806 P2d 92 (1991). Here, because there is a dispute over whether we must presume that the court rejected some of the officers’ testimony and defer to the implied findings of fact that flow from that presumed rejection, we begin by summarizing all of the pertinent evidence adduced at the suppression hearing.

On October 2, 2009, Portland Police Officers Dobbs, Ho, Snitily, and Jackson were among those participating in a burglary mission to combat a “huge increase” in residential burglaries in the Kenton neighborhood of Portland. The mission included police use of undercover cars, marked patrol cars, and an airplane equipped with a FLIR daylight camera system. The FLIR system detects “infrared signatures”: objects emitting “heat” (such as a person) appear in a lighter shade than cooler objects, essentially allowing the operator to see in the dark.

At approximately 3:00 a.m., Officer Snitily, who was in an unmarked car doing “spotting” for the mission, saw defendant, who was carrying a backpack, on the west side of Peninsular Avenue, walking southbound. Defendant then crossed through a Walgreen’s parking lot and headed down Lombard Street. At that point, Snitily notified Officer Ho, who was operating the FLIR system in the airplane, that defendant “might be somebody we want to keep an eye on.”

Officer Ho testified that he located defendant from the air and then watched him

“walk southbound on Atlantic, just south of Lombard. He was wandering around and just — he was just constantly looking around, as if to see if he was being followed. He continued southbound, then reversed direction and started walking northbound on Atlantic, on the west side of the street.
“At that point, when he was approaching Lombard, he started to cross the street towards the east of the— of Atlantic, and stopped approximately 30 feet south of Lombard and just kind of stood in the middle of the street, next to the vehicle that was later identified as [an] ’06 Dodge Caravan.
“He was looking around, then he walked up to the vehicle, to the driver’s side door. And I saw him get into the vehicle, using the driver’s side door, and he was in the [385]*385vehicle for probably a couple, three minutes. At that point, he — the car never moved, it never went anywhere. He got back out, using the driver’s side door, crossed the street back to the west side of the street, to a business that’s on that corner, into the rear parking lot area, where he kind of stood between two dumpsters for about a minute.
“After staying there for about a minute or so, he walked southbound on Atlantic, on the west side of the street, where he was contacted by ground officers.”

Ho testified that he asked the ground officers to contact defendant

“[b]ecause of his behavior around that car, prior to entering that car. People don’t normally just clear their tail, I like to say, where they’ve just kind of walked past the car that is their car. Start looking around to see if anybody’s watching, then make a U-turn and head back towards the car, stay there a little bit, before even getting into the car. And then when they get into the car, they don’t normally just sit in the car and then decide to leave and go straight across the street and kind of like hide out between two dumpsters.”

The prosecution also introduced into evidence video footage from the FLIR system camera, on which Ho can be heard describing defendant’s movements to officers on the ground. However, Ho began recording images only at the moment defendant was standing at the driver’s door of the car looking in, and, therefore, the video does not show defendant “wandering around” and “just constantly looking around, as if to see if he was being followed”; nor does it reflect that defendant walked past the car, then reversed course, and doubled back to the car, as Ho testified.3 The video does reflect the remainder of defendant’s actions as described by Ho: defendant stands by the driver-side door for a moment (about 12 seconds) before getting in, stays in the car for almost four minutes, then gets out of the car the same way he got in and crosses the street toward two dumpsters in a parking lot. He remains near the dumpsters [386]*386for a little over one minute, but the camera does not reflect what he is doing; he then starts walking southbound.

Officer Dobbs responded to Ho’s request to contact defendant, believing, based on Ho’s observations, that defendant “had just committed a car prowl” and they needed to investigate. She stopped her patrol car less than 50 feet from defendant, turned on her overhead lights, and activated her spotlight. Officer Jackson arrived in a separate car shortly thereafter. According to Dobbs’s testimony, she asked defendant where he was going, and he told her that he “was just walking around” and “didn’t live in the area.” Dobbs took defendant’s name and date of birth and returned to the patrol car to check for warrants. Dobbs also checked the vehicle that defendant was seen getting into, as well as the two dumpsters. Dobbs, who had almost nine years of experience with the Portland Police Bureau, testified that she knew “from prior contacts” that

“the people that *** are prolific car prowlers *** have tendencies to hide the stuff that they might have just stolen from a car into the dumpsters, to pick it up later so that officers won’t find that — it on them, at that time, and later they can go pick it up in the dumpster.”

Dobbs did not find anything unusual in her check of the dumpsters.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 P.3d 1215, 252 Or. App. 382, 2012 WL 4378583, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ellis-orctapp-2012.