State v. Heirtzler

789 A.2d 634, 147 N.H. 344, 2001 N.H. LEXIS 224, 2001 WL 1640115
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 24, 2001
DocketNo. 2000-139
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 789 A.2d 634 (State v. Heirtzler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Heirtzler, 789 A.2d 634, 147 N.H. 344, 2001 N.H. LEXIS 224, 2001 WL 1640115 (N.H. 2001).

Opinion

Broderick, J.

The defendant, Joseph Heirtzler, was charged with possession and distribution of a controlled drug. See RSA 318-B:26 (I)(b)(3), (II)(a) (Supp. 2000). The State appeals an order of the Superior Court (Coffey, J.) granting his motion to suppress evidence obtained as a result of an interrogation and search conducted by a school official. We affirm.

The record supports the following facts. Londonderry Police Officer Michael Bennette was assigned as the school resource officer for Londonderry High School (school). One reason for Bennette’s assignment was the Londonderry Police Department’s (department) perception that the school was investigating criminal matters, which should have been reported to and handled by the department. As the school resource officer, Bennette remained under the direct control and supervision of the department, and his job essentially was to investigate criminal activity on school grounds. The department’s policy was to investigate reports of criminal activity at the school in the same manner as other criminal complaints.

[346]*346Prior to assuming his assignment at the school, Bennette met with school .officials to discuss the parameters of his job. He made clear that cases were to be reported and prosecuted, not “whitewashed” by school officials. Bennette told school officials to contact him when cases involved criminal activity or required criminal investigation. They agreed, but asserted that administrative and disciplinary matters involving students fell within the sole authority and control of the school. According to Bennette, the school principal was keenly aware of the difference between administrative duties and law enforcement within the school.

Because of the number of searches conducted at the school under its search policy, Bennette could not handle the investigation of every potential criminal matter. The school, therefore, agreed to investigate the less serious potential criminal matters, including searches. Indeed, at the suppression hearing, assistant principal James O’Neill testified as follows:

Q: But I guess when Officer Bennett [sic] and you worked out what the parameters of his job ...
A: Yes.
Q: ... this would be acceptable to the school, because you had to agree to let him come, right?
A: Let him come into the building? Yes.
Q: So part of that agreement was a lot of those potential criminal matters you would handle, and some of the more serious criminal matters they would handle?
A: That’s fair.

. Bennette’s testimony regarding this agreement was as follows:

Q: Drug investigation. Do you recall me asking you: “Is it fair to say that, in your mind at least, you delegated some of the responsibility of investigating these cases to the school administration?”
Your answer is, ‘Yeah,” right?
A: Yes.

.This delegation of responsibility, according to Bennette, would occur at his direction after he assessed the information brought to his attention to determine “what level it [rose] to.” Bennette stated at his deposition that if the safety level and threat were high, such as in cases involving a report that a student possessed a knife or gun, he would conduct the investigation and any necessary search. If the information involved drugs, however, he would pass it along to school officials for action. Essentially, if Bennette lacked probable cause to pursue a less serious criminal matter and perhaps make an arrest, he would deem it a school issue and turn the information [347]*347over to school officials. Once he turned the information over, he had no further involvement unless the school requested it. He testified, however, that when officials seized contraband from a student they would contact him.

Bennette conceded that a “silent understanding” existed between him and school officials that passing information to the school when he could not act was a technique used to gather evidence otherwise inaccessible to him due to constitutional restraints. At his deposition, Bennette stated:

Q: I mean, isn’t it fair to say that it is a technique that is used that when you have some information, but it is not enough under the existing case law to permit you to do a search, that one of the techniques you would have utilized, or did utilize was to pass it on to the school, because you know they don’t need all the probable cause that you need in order to act?
A: I know that, and I know that going in, the first day of school.
And [school officials] know it themselves too____
Q: But isn’t it fair to say that there is sort of a silent understanding that when you pass on this type of information
A: Well, I think we both know, you know and I know it, and so does the school administration____

At the time of his arrest for possession and distribution of a controlled drug, the defendant was a student at the school. During science class, his teacher observed him pass what appeared to be a folded piece of tinfoil to another student. The student removed something from the tinfoil, put it in a piece of cellophane and passed the folded tinfoil back to the defendant. After class ended, the teacher contacted Bennette and told him what she had observed. Bennette testified that although he may have had articulable suspicion to investigate further, he ultimately decided that he did not have enough information to warrant further investigation. Instead, Bennette passed the information to O’Neill for action.

After receiving the information from Bennette, O’Neill told him that the matter was a school administrative issue. O’Neill testified that although the situation could involve drugs or illegal substances, since it did not involve criminal activity of a more serious nature, it was the school’s administrative duty to act upon the information. O’Neill and another assistant principal, Robert Shaps, called the defendant to the office, questioned him and asked if they could search him. The defendant complied with the search request and a piece of paper wrapped in tinfoil was found in his cigarette pack. After further questioning, the defendant stated that the piece of paper might be LSD. Once the search produced the [348]*348potential presence of an illegal drug, O’Neill contacted Bennette and turned the matter over to him.

In his motion to suppress, the defendant argued that O’Neill and Shaps were acting as agents of the police and thus their interrogation and search had to conform with the procedural safeguards afforded criminal suspects when the State acts. Alternatively, the defendant argued that even if O’Neill and Shaps were not acting as agents of the State, they lacked reasonable grounds to interrogate and search him.

Relying upon State v. Bruneau, 131 N.H. 104 (1988), the trial court found that Bennette’s affirmative act of deciding to report the information about the defendant to O’Neill and Shaps could reasonably be seen to have induced them to question and search the defendant. The trial court also found that a prior agreement existed between the school and the department.

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Related

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910 A.2d 1253 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 2006)
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807 A.2d 1289 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 2002)

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Bluebook (online)
789 A.2d 634, 147 N.H. 344, 2001 N.H. LEXIS 224, 2001 WL 1640115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-heirtzler-nh-2001.