State v. Krebbs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedNovember 5, 2021
Docket122166
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Krebbs (State v. Krebbs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals 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. Krebbs, (kanctapp 2021).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 122,166

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

CHRISTOPHER ALAN KREBBS, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Reno District Court; TRISH ROSE, judge. Opinion filed November 5, 2021. Affirmed.

Caroline M. Zuschek, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

Kimberly A. Rodebaugh, senior assistant district attorney, Thomas R. Stanton, district attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before GREEN, P.J., CLINE, J., and BURGESS, S.J.

PER CURIAM: After the trial court denied his suppression motion, a jury convicted Christopher Alan Krebbs of distributing methamphetamine, possessing THC, and criminal possession of a firearm. Krebbs appeals his convictions, arguing that the trial court wrongly denied his motion requesting that it suppress all the incriminating evidence seized from his car shortly after his arrest. He contends that the trial court wrongly denied his suppression motion because law enforcement lacked probable cause both for his arrest and for the search of his car. Additionally, Krebbs challenges the trial court's reliance on his criminal history to enhance the severity of his underlying prison sentence. He argues

1 that section 5 of the Kansas Constitution Bill of Rights preserved his common-law jury trial right, and his common-law jury trial right prohibited the trial court from relying on his criminal history to enhance the severity of his prison sentence without first proving his criminal history to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. Nevertheless, because numerous preservation issues stymie our ability to adequately consider Krebbs' appellate arguments, we decline consideration of his claims of error. As a result, we affirm the trial court's denial of Krebbs' suppression motion and the trial court's imposition of Krebbs' total controlling sentence of 154 months' imprisonment followed by 36 months' postrelease supervision.

FACTS

The GPS Search Warrant

On November 27, 2017, the Reno County trial court issued a search warrant, allowing members of the Drug Enforcement Unit (DEU) of the Reno County Sheriff's Office to place a global positioning system (GPS) tracking device on Krebbs' blue 2009 Ford Fusion. The trial court issued the search warrant based on the affidavit of Deputy Andrew Soule—a DEU member who asserted that there was probable cause to believe that Krebbs was distributing methamphetamine in Hutchinson, Kansas, that he had purchased in Wichita, Kansas.

In his affidavit, Deputy Soule explained that the DEU started investigating Krebbs after "receiv[ing] various pieces of information from several sources that [Krebbs] ha[d] been distributing ICE methamphetamine in Hutchinson . . . ." He then went on to discuss the specific information that the DEU had learned about Krebbs from four different sources. According to Deputy Soule's affidavit, those sources, as well as the information that those sources divulged about Krebbs distributing methamphetamine in Hutchinson, were as follows:

2 • Source One was a "potential Confidential Informant[,] who was seeking leniency" on pending Reno County "criminal charges" and who had also given the DEU "reliable information over the past month." This source told the DEU that "a man in Wichita was supplying [Krebbs]" with "at least one pound of methamphetamine" each time that Krebbs visited. This source further told the DEU that he had seen Krebbs "at [this Wichita] supplier's residence in the last two months";

• Source Two was a "confidential informant," who was "seeking leniency for pending cases." This source told the DEU that sometime after June 1, 2017, Krebbs "was selling methamphetamine and marijuana in large quantities";

• Source Three was a "person who was attempting to seek leniency for pending charges." When speaking to the DEU, this source "confirmed" Source Two's assertion that sometime after June 1, 2017, Krebbs was selling methamphetamine and marijuana in large quantities; and

• Source Four was a "[confidential informant]" for the United States Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), who told DEA Agent Mike Silveira information about Krebbs, which Agent Silveira then told Deputy Soule about on November 20, 2017. This source told Agent Silveira that as he or she completed a control buy on October 25, 2017, within the Wichita home of Johnny Duncan—a person that the DEA believed was distributing methamphetamine within Wichita—a male driving a "blue Ford passenger car" arrived and then entered Duncan's home. This source told Agent Silveira that upon entering Duncan's home, Duncan introduced this man to him as Krebbs. Also, this source told Agent Silveira that before he left Duncan's home, he heard Duncan and Krebbs having a conversation about two people who had methamphetamine distribution charges pending against them in Reno County.

3 In addition to discussing the information that the DEU had learned from the four sources, in his GPS search warrant affidavit, Deputy Soule noted that the DEA had been monitoring Duncan's phone calls. After noting this, he suggested that the DEA had given the DEU information establishing that Krebbs and Duncan "were in telephone contact with each other 71 times" between September 28, 2017, and October 26, 2017.

Finally, in his GPS search warrant affidavit, Deputy Soule asserted that the GPS search warrant was necessary because a GPS tracker would help the DEU investigate Krebbs as a potential methamphetamine distributor. He noted that Krebbs lived in a "remote location" that was difficult for the DEU to physically survey without detection. He also noted that drug distributors often drive erratically to avoid physical surveillance. He thus alleged that the GPS tracker would help the DEU's investigation by allowing the DEU's members to monitor Krebbs at his rural house and to follow Krebbs even if he engaged in counter surveillance.

The GPS Investigation

After the trial court issued the GPS search warrant on November 27, 2017, the DEU had 15 days to install the GPS tracker on Krebbs' car. But the DEU was unable to install the GPS tracker on Krebbs' car within 15 days. As a result, Deputy Soule submitted a second affidavit to the trial court in which he requested a 15-day extension for the DEU to install the GPS tracker on Krebbs' car. In the end, on December 17, 2017, just four days after the trial court granted Deputy Soule's extension request, the DEU was able to install the GPS tracker on Krebbs' car.

Afterwards, the DEU continued to monitor Krebbs by both physical and GPS surveillance for the next few weeks. During that time, the DEU tracked Krebbs as he took two trips from Hutchinson to Wichita. The first trip was on December 21, 2017. Meanwhile, the second trip was on January 10, 2018. Also, it was as Krebbs was driving

4 back to Hutchinson from Wichita following his second Wichita trip on January 10, 2018, that Deputy Soule had Krebbs arrested.

It is undisputed that the evening of January 10, 2018, Deputy Soule had been monitoring Krebbs' speed and location through the computer application associated with the GPS tracking device installed on Krebbs' car. When Deputy Soule realized via the GPS tracker computer application that Krebbs had reentered Reno County from Sedgwick County while speeding, he contacted Patrol Deputy Jack Trussell, who was nearby Krebbs' purported location, and told him to stop Krebbs' car. Shortly after receiving Deputy Soule's request, Patrol Deputy Trussell saw and then stopped Krebbs' car "just south of K-96 on Worthington Road . . .

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State v. Krebbs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-krebbs-kanctapp-2021.