State v. Miramontes

CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 18, 2021
Docket47628
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Miramontes (State v. Miramontes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Miramontes, (Idaho Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 47628

STATE OF IDAHO, ) ) Filed: November 18, 2021 Plaintiff-Respondent, ) ) Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk v. ) ) THIS IS AN UNPUBLISHED NATALIE J. MIRAMONTES, ) OPINION AND SHALL NOT ) BE CITED AS AUTHORITY Defendant-Appellant. ) )

Appeal from the District Court of the Sixth Judicial District, State of Idaho, Bannock County. Hon. Stephen S. Dunn, District Judge.

Judgment of conviction for possession of methamphetamine, affirmed.

Eric D. Fredericksen, State Appellate Public Defender; Sally J. Cooley, Deputy Appellate Public Defender, Boise, for appellant.

Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General; Justin R. Porter, Deputy Attorney General, Boise, for respondent. ________________________________________________

BRAILSFORD, Judge Natalie J. Miramontes appeals from the judgment of conviction entered on her conditional guilty plea to possession of methamphetamine, Idaho Code § 37-2732(c)(1). Miramontes challenges the district court’s denial of her motion to suppress. We affirm. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Miramontes does not challenge the district court’s factual findings made in support of its denial of her suppression motion. Those findings are that Officers Myler and LaVallee arrived at Christine Evans’ residence to conduct a probationary check on Evans. After entering the residence, Officer Myler saw another person, who was later identified as Miramontes, exiting through the residence’s back door, hunching over, and carrying a bag. Officer Myler ordered Miramontes to stop three times. The third time, Miramontes complied and dropped what she was carrying. At

1 that point, Officer Myler ordered Miramontes to return to the residence and to identify herself and asked why she was at the residence. Miramontes explained she was staying with Evans in a spare bedroom. Officer LaVallee collected the items Miramontes had dropped on the ground outside and placed those items on the washing machine in the residence. Among the items was a backpack and several smaller, zipped bags. When Officer Myler asked Miramontes for her identification, Miramontes responded it was in a pink floral print bag. Officer Myler asked Officer LaVallee to retrieve Miramontes’ identification, and when Officer LaVallee opened a pink bag, he saw what appeared to be drugs and drug paraphernalia. After Officer Myler looked into the bag, she called the Pocatello Police Department. Officers Myler and LaVallee detained both Miramontes and Evans until officers from the Pocatello Police Department, including Officer Leach, arrived at the residence. Officer Leach searched the bedroom in which Miramontes had been staying and found drug paraphernalia and drugs, which later tested positive for methamphetamine. Officer Leach also inspected the bags which Officer LaVallee had collected from outside and found Miramontes’ identification and a syringe containing a dark substance in a different pink bag than the one Officer LaVallee had opened. Officer Leach spoke with both Evans and Miramontes, read Miramontes her Miranda1 rights, identified the items which belonged to Miramontes, and arrested her. As a result, the State charged Miramontes with one felony count of possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver, I.C. § 37-2732(a)(1)(A). Miramontes pled not guilty to this charge and filed a motion to suppress, arguing Officer Myler unreasonably seized her outside of Evans’ residence and seeking to suppress the “[e]vidence obtained through this seizure.” The district court held an evidentiary hearing on the motion at which Officers Myler, LaVallee, and Leach all testified. Following this hearing, the parties submitted briefing, in which Miramontes argued generally that her “detention and the subsequent search of her purse violated the Fourth Amendment.” In support, Miramontes relied on State v. Williams, 162 Idaho 56, 60-64, 394 P.3d 99, 103-07 (Ct. App. 2016), in which this Court addressed the constitutionality of a third party’s detention during the execution of a search warrant and

1 See Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).

2 established a balancing test for determining whether such a detention violated the Fourth Amendment. After reviewing the parties’ post-hearing briefing in this case, the district court held a second hearing to clarify the parties’ positions. In particular, the court inquired whether the State charged Miramontes based on the evidence found in her purse or in the bedroom in which she was staying, and the prosecutor responded “both.” Then, the court inquired of Miramontes’ counsel whether Miramontes was seeking to suppress the evidence found in both her purse and in the bedroom, and it noted Miramontes had not addressed in her briefing what evidence was the “fruit of the poisonous tree” from the alleged unlawful seizure. Miramontes’ counsel responded that “if there is [an] illegal seizure then things that . . . are obtained subsequent to the illegal seizure are supposed to be suppressed.” Further, Miramontes’ counsel stated “the difference is what they are allowed to do when they detain her,” acknowledged the officers could “detain her to determine her identity perhaps--or probably,” and framed the issue as “can they then get into her purse? Can they search her effects[?]” At the conclusion of this second hearing, the district court inquired of Miramontes’ counsel whether he wanted “to address more fully the question of can the drugs found in the bedroom be a basis for this charge, even if the drugs in the purse were suppressed?” to which he responded affirmatively. Further, the court articulated: The question is that even if I were to suppress the drugs they found in the purse . . . is the discovery of the drugs in the bedroom . . . sufficiently attenuated from the discovery of the drugs in the purse so as to be a proper basis for these charges, regardless of what was in the purse? Following this second hearing, the parties filed supplemental briefing. In this briefing, Miramontes argued that neither the attenuation doctrine, the inevitable discovery doctrine, nor the independent source doctrine provided an exception to the exclusionary rule for the evidence discovered during the officers’ search of Evans’ residence. After reviewing this supplemental briefing, the district court denied Miramontes’ suppression motion. In denying the motion, the court relied on Williams, applied the balancing test set forth in that case, and concluded “the detention and subsequent seizure of [Miramontes] was not in violation of her Fourth Amendment rights.” After reaching this conclusion, the court found “no reason” to analyze whether “the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine” provided an exception to the exclusionary rule.

3 Following the denial of her suppression motion, Miramontes pled guilty to possession of methamphetamine and reserved her right to appeal the denial of the motion. After timely appealing that denial, Miramontes moved to suspend briefing in this appeal, pending the resolution of a petition for certiorari for the review of the Idaho Supreme Court’s decision in State v. Phipps, 166 Idaho 1, 454 P.3d 1084 (2019). In Phipps, the Court held that “officers have the categorical authority to detain all occupants of a residence incident to a lawful parole or probation search and to question them as long as the detention is not prolonged by the questioning.” Id. at 8, 454 P.3d at 1091. When the petition for certiorari was denied in October 2020, this appeal resumed. II.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Miramontes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miramontes-idahoctapp-2021.