State v. Lieberg

553 N.W.2d 51, 1996 Minn. App. LEXIS 895, 1996 WL 438775
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 6, 1996
DocketC9-95-2138
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 553 N.W.2d 51 (State v. Lieberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Lieberg, 553 N.W.2d 51, 1996 Minn. App. LEXIS 895, 1996 WL 438775 (Mich. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

SHORT, Judge.

A jury found Kirk Lieberg guilty on three counts each of second-degree burglary and misdemeanor theft for the unauthorized entry into, and removal of women’s undergarments from, three homes. On appeal, Lieberg argues the trial court erroneously refused to suppress evidence gathered in a search of his house because: (1) the affidavit, when properly sanitized, does not establish probable cause; and (2) the prior unlawful search prompted the authorities to seek the warrant.

FACTS

Lieberg is an adult male with an I.Q. of 82, a diagnosed fetish (fixation on women’s underclothing), and a 25-year history of stealing objects associated with his sexual disorder. After he physically assaulted a woman in a laundromat, Lieberg was committed to the state security hospital in 1977, conditionally paroled in 1984, and discharged by the Commissioner of Human Services in 1986. The following year, a homeowner returned from church and found Lieberg running from the house with a pair of bags. After the homeowner held Lieberg at gunpoint, the police arrived and discovered that the bags contained underwear belonging to the homeowner’s daughters. As a result of this incident, Lieberg was convicted of burglary. In 1988, a woman found Lieberg rifling through her clothes at a laundromat. Although she notified police of the incident, no charges were filed against Lieberg. Later that year, another man returned to his house at lunchtime and found Lieberg in his bedroom closet, gathering women’s underwear from a hamper. This incident resulted in Lieberg’s second burglary conviction.

In July 1994, D.V. noticed that some of her ■underwear was missing. On August 16, someone forced open the entrance to her home and removed more of her undergarments. In October, someone broke into L.H.’s residence, but took nothing of value. The following month, a group of hunters found a bag containing L.H.’s wedding dress, underwear, perfume, pictures, and a piece of paper bearing her name. L.H. then talked with her sister-in-law and D.V. regarding the events. Shortly thereafter, L.H.’s sister-in-law discovered unfamiliar lingerie in her dresser, some of which L.H. and D.V. identified as their own. On January 31,1995, N.B. found a broken window in her basement and a footprint on top of her dryer. After speaking with the police, she discovered that some of her underwear was gone.

*54 Based on their familiarity with Lieberg, police officers suspected his involvement and placed him under surveillance. They also made three attempts to compare his footprints to the one found at N.B.’s home. First, they placed fresh snow around his mailbox, but did not obtain a footprint. Second, an officer gained entry to the Lieberg residence by pretending to have found a Bible in the road. This ploy failed to yield an opportunity to view the soles of Lieberg’s shoes. And third, a different officer stopped Lieberg on the highway and, under the pretext of investigating a reported pop-machine vandalism, photographed the underside of Lieberg’s tennis shoe. Finding a close similarity, the officers applied for a warrant and submitted an affidavit, which described:

1. The incidents under investigation;
2. Lieberg’s criminal history;
3. A Wright County police officer’s notes of a 1988 conversation with Lieberg’s probation officer, who referred to Lie-berg as an “accident waiting to happen”;
4. A 1988 letter from the mayor of Coka-to, Minnesota, who criticized a trial court’s decision to release Lieberg into the community;
5. A neighbor’s claim to have seen (a) a mid-size vehicle of inexact color that may have been maroon, brown, or “something else really dirty” parked in N.B.’s driveway on the morning of January 31, 1995, and (b) a man of medium to a-little-heavier-than-medium build walking from the car towards the house;
6. Another neighbor’s observation of a “light, light grey” station wagon parked at D.V.’s residence on the day of a break-in;
7. Lieberg’s station wagon, which has light metallic paint of a tan or copper hue;
8. The existence of a geographical connection between the break-ins and Lie-berg’s home; and
9. The stop of Lieberg’s car, which produced a photograph demonstrating a similarity between Lieberg’s tennis shoes and the footprint discovered at N.B.’s home.

The affidavit’s attachments also showed that, between the mid-1970s to late-1980s Lieberg has been described as 5'7" to 5'9" and roughly 160 to 180 pounds, with more recent accounts placing his weight at the heavier end of the scale.

The police received and executed a search warrant on March 1, 1995. In Lieberg’s room, they found women’s undergarments hidden in a quilt, a cereal box, an ice cream bucket, and in various bags. The officers seized a few of the garments. Of the garments seized, D.V. identified one item, L.H. identified two, and N.B. identified one. The police also seized Lieberg’s tennis shoes, which matched the footprint left at N.B.’s house.

At the omnibus hearing, Lieberg claimed the warrant’s supporting affidavit was tainted by: (1) a photograph showing the tread of his shoes, which was the product of an unlawful search; and (2) the omission of a recent letter written by Lieberg’s probation officer, which demonstrated an enlargement of Lie-berg’s freedom of movement and might have offset his earlier characterization of Lieberg as an “accident waiting to happen.” Lieberg further argued that the remaining evidence could not establish probable cause because his criminal history was too stale to be relevant, and none of the victims’ neighbors correctly described the color of his car or was able to identify him with precision. The trial court agreed the police acted unlawfully in obtaining the photograph of Lieberg’s shoe because their warrantless stop did not justify more than a plain-view or consensual search. Because he was wearing rubber overshoes, Lieberg’s tennis shoes were not in plain view, and the pretext used by the police vitiated any possibility of consent. 1 However, the trial court declined to suppress the fruit of the later search because a sanitized affidavit would have established probable cause, due to Lieberg’s peculiar criminal history, the presence of a car similar to Lieberg’s at or near the scene of two burglaries, and the *55 proximity of Lieberg’s residence to those of the victims.

ISSUES

I. Was there a substantial basis for the trial court’s determination that a sanitized affidavit would have established probable cause?

II. Is a remand necessary, given the trial court’s failure to decide whether the unlawful search prompted the authorities to seek a warrant?

ANALYSIS

The United States Constitution prohibits unreasonable searches and allows the issuance of search warrants only upon a showing of probable cause. U.S. Const, amend. IV. The exclusionary rule generally requires the suppression of evidence acquired as a direct or indirect result of an unlawful search. Murray v. United States,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
553 N.W.2d 51, 1996 Minn. App. LEXIS 895, 1996 WL 438775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lieberg-minnctapp-1996.