State v. Laney

507 P.3d 308, 318 Or. App. 509
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 23, 2022
DocketA171485
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 507 P.3d 308 (State v. Laney) 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. Laney, 507 P.3d 308, 318 Or. App. 509 (Or. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Argued and submitted February 22, 2021, affirmed March 23, petition for review denied July 28, 2022 (370 Or 197)

STATE OF OREGON, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. MICHAEL LEROY LANEY, aka Michael Laney, Defendant-Appellant. Multnomah County Circuit Court 18CR26017; A171485 507 P3d 308

Defendant appeals his convictions on two counts of first-degree sexual abuse. While moving out of a home that his daughter and her family were moving into, defendant left five computers in the garage and asked his then-son-in-law Parks to destroy them. Defendant and Parks never spoke about the matter again. Parks failed to follow through and eventually decided to keep the hard drives for his own use. At one point, Parks connected the hard drives to his own com- puter to see whether they still worked, and he saw a photo of a naked young girl jumping into a pool at a home that defendant used to own. Approximately six years after defendant left the computers with Parks, the police began inves- tigating an allegation by defendant’s granddaughter that defendant had raped her as a child. Parks told the police about the photo that he had seen and turned over the hard drives. The police obtained a warrant, searched the hard drives, and found numerous photos of naked girls and women. Before trial, defendant moved to suppress, arguing that the search violated Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution. In response, the state argued, among other things, that defendant had abandoned his property interest in the hard drives before the police searched them. The trial court agreed and denied the motion to suppress. Held: The court did not err by denying defendant’s motion to suppress. Some of the trial court’s reasoning is no longer viable in light of State v. Lien/ Wilverding, 364 Or 750, 759, 441 P3d 185 (2019), which was decided shortly after defendant’s trial. However, considering all of the relevant factors, the court’s conclusion—that defendant abandoned his property interest in the hard drives— was correct. Affirmed.

Benjamin N. Souede, Judge. Stephen A. Houze argued the cause and filed the reply brief for appellant. On the opening brief was Jacob G. Houze. Peenesh Shah, Assistant Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent. Also on the brief were Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General. 510 State v. Laney

Before Tookey, Presiding Judge, and Aoyagi, Judge, and Armstrong, Senior Judge. AOYAGI, J. Affirmed. Cite as 318 Or App 509 (2022) 511

AOYAGI, J. Defendant was convicted of two counts of first- degree sexual abuse. On appeal, in his third assignment of error, defendant contends that the trial court erred by denying his motion to suppress photos found on a computer hard drive that defendant had given to his then-son-in-law six years earlier with instructions to destroy. We write only to address that issue. For the reasons explained below, we conclude that the trial court correctly denied the motion to suppress, because defendant had abandoned his possessory and privacy interests in the hard drive, constitutionally speaking, by the time it was searched. As for defendant’s other assignments of error, we reject the first and second assignments of error in light of our resolution of the third assignment. We reject the fourth assignment of error, in which defendant challenges the denial of his motion for judg- ment of acquittal on both charges, because the evidence was legally sufficient for defendant to be found guilty. We reject the fifth assignment of error, in which defendant argues that the trial court erred by striking certain testimony, because the court did not err in striking that testimony as irrele- vant. Accordingly, we affirm. FACTS1 Parks married defendant’s daughter. Their daugh- ter, E, was born in 2002. In late 2010 or early 2011, defendant and his wife were moving from Oregon to California, and Parks and his family were moving into the house that defendant and his wife were vacating. While defendant was moving out, he and Parks were standing in the garage. Defendant pointed to five computers that were sitting in the garage, and they “talked about recycling them.” Parks does not remember whether defendant asked him to do it or whether he volun- teered. Parks also does not remember whether they used the term “recycling,” but the idea was to dispose of them. Defendant asked Parks “to remove the hard drives and to

1 The only relevant witness at the pretrial hearing was Parks. Except for procedural facts, or as otherwise noted, the facts herein are taken from Parks’s pretrial testimony. 512 State v. Laney

destroy them with a hammer so that they were, you know, unusable or unreadable.” They did not discuss why defen- dant wanted them destroyed. Parks assumed that it was a “privacy type of thing,” in that Parks uses computers, knows that “stuff can be stored on computers,” and thinks it is “bet- ter to destroy it so other people can’t look at it.” He did not perceive defendant to be wanting to destroy anything spe- cific on the computers. Parks said or indicated “okay.” At that time, it was Parks’s intention to destroy the computers. Parks’s conversation with defendant about the com- puters “wasn’t a long conversation” and “was just part of the, let’s do this and let’s do that type of stuff of moving.” Parks and his family had generally been helping defendant and his wife with their move over a period of weeks, includ- ing helping with packing and moving boxes. Defendant had asked Parks to get rid of a number of items that he and his wife did not want to take with them, including unusable household items and some old shotguns. Parks and his family were going through a difficult time in the period when defendant and his wife were mov- ing to California. Their house was in foreclosure, they were moving, and Parks had just started a new job that had him working 50 to 60 hours a week. Dealing with the computers was not his priority, so he put them in his storage unit. In 2012, Parks separated from his wife and moved back to their old house, which was still in foreclosure. In late 2014 or early 2015, Parks decided to empty out their storage unit. He found the computers, thought it was “silly” that he was hanging onto them, and remembered that defendant had asked him to take out the hard drives. Parks removed the hard drives from four computers and, except for the hard drives, recycled those four computers at an e-waste site. He kept the fifth computer, as well as the four hard drives, thinking he might be able to use them for work. Parks is a digital artist, so “hard drive space is important” to him, and hard drives were more expensive then than they are today. Parks hooked up each of the hard drives to his computer to see if they still worked. In the process, he looked at the content of one drive and saw a photo of a naked little girl, aged five or so, jumping off a diving board into a pool. Parks Cite as 318 Or App 509 (2022) 513

recognized the house as one that defendant used to own in California. He was disturbed by the photo. He noticed that the drive contained other photo files, but he did not open them, because the one photo bothered him and he did not want to see anything else. After Parks took the computers out of his storage unit and recycled the four boxes (less hard drives), Parks kept the fifth computer and the four hard drives at his old house that was still in foreclosure—where he had been stay- ing during the separation—and later put them into his new storage unit when he moved from the foreclosed house into a rental. Parks never talked to defendant about the fact that he still had the computers, and defendant never asked about them. After 2012, when Parks and his wife separated, Parks mostly lost touch with defendant, communicating with him maybe once. In 2017, E accused defendant of raping her as a child.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
507 P.3d 308, 318 Or. App. 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-laney-orctapp-2022.