State v. Naranjo

2005 UT App 311, 118 P.3d 285, 529 Utah Adv. Rep. 19, 2005 Utah App. LEXIS 288, 2005 WL 1530260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJune 30, 2005
DocketNo. 20030677-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2005 UT App 311 (State v. Naranjo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Naranjo, 2005 UT App 311, 118 P.3d 285, 529 Utah Adv. Rep. 19, 2005 Utah App. LEXIS 288, 2005 WL 1530260 (Utah Ct. App. 2005).

Opinions

OPINION

THORNE, Judge:

¶ 1 James Andrew Naranjo appeals from his conviction, following the denial of his motion to suppress, of possession of a controlled substance with the intent to distribute, a first degree felony. See Utah Code Ann. § 58~37-8(l)(a)(iii) (2002). We reverse.

BACKGROUND

¶2 In the early afternoon of January 5, 2003 — a Sunday between semesters — officer David Valentine of the Weber State Police Department was notified that dispatch had received a 911 call reporting that a male in a red jacket had been seen looking in vehicles that were parked in a campus parking lot. Valentine exited the campus student services building and walked to his patrol car. As he did so he saw a man — -later identified to be Naranjo — wearing a red hooded sweat shirt and riding a bicycle across the parking lot. Valentine quickly got into his patrol car and attempted to catch the cyclist. After drawing near to Naranjo, Valentine sounded either the car’s standard horn or his crowd control air horn to get Naranjo’s attention. Naranjo stopped and Valentine shouted that he either wanted to, or needed to, talk to him. Naranjo, who was talking on a cellular phone at the time, responded that he was going somewhere and rode away. Valentine again followed Naranjo and noticed that he was riding on the wrong side of the street. He also noticed that Naranjo had a black object extending out of one of his back pockets, and that the object appeared to be metallic. He could not, however, identify the object.

¶ 3 After the pair crested a hill that leads to an area off campus, Valentine activated his emergency lights, either to stop Naranjo for riding on the wrong side of the road, to get Naranjo to talk to him, or to warn oncoming traffic of their presence on the wrong side of the road. Naranjo stopped, got off of his bicycle — leaving it lying in the road — and began walking back to the patrol car. In Valentine’s words, Naranjo approached with “a steady aggressive walk toward the passenger side of my car and he’s making eye contact with me at the time that he’s approaching me.”

¶ 4 While still seated in the patrol car, Valentine observed Naranjo reach into one of his front pockets and then remove his hand while apparently attempting to hide what he was holding. Valentine exited the patrol car and further noticed that Naranjo was still talking on the cellular phone. He also became aware that Naranjo was yelling, apparently at Valentine, but Valentine could not understand a thing that Naranjo said. As Naranjo walked up to the passenger side door of the patrol car, Valentine ordered him to show what was in his hand. Valentine was concerned because of Naranjo’s “aggressive nature [in] approaching my vehicle ... and the look on his face [specifically,] he was making eye contact with me.”

¶ 5 Valentine ordered Naranjo to step around to the front of the vehicle and to keep his hands where they could be seen. Naran-jo complied, but he did not show his hands, and instead of stopping at the front of the car, he approached Valentine’s position. Valentine drew his sidearm and ordered Naran-jo to stop. When Naranjo failed to heed this order, Valentine pointed the sidearm at him. Naranjo stopped. Valentine then ordered him to show what he had in his hand. Instead, however, Naranjo started taking things from his pockets and throwing them on the ground, not in Valentine’s direction, and yelling, “you want to see what I’ve got?” Among the items that Valentine saw Naranjo discard during this outburst was a pry bar— apparently the black object from his back pocket.1 Valentine then ordered Naranjo to get down on his knees, which he did.

[287]*287¶ 6 Valentine ordered Naranjo to lie face down on the pavement, where he handcuffed Naranjo’s hands behind his back. After noting that the black metallic object was no longer in Naranjo’s back pocket, Valentine stood him up and walked him over to the side of the patrol car. There, Valentine began to frisk him. When asked during the suppression hearing why he undertook the frisk, Valentine stated that he frisked Naranjo because “[i]t’s procedure. That’s something I do when I’m going to handcuff somebody. That’s what I’m taught.” Valentine then proceeded to describe the frisk, noting first that Naranjo was essentially cooperative. When his frisk got to Naranjo’s waist area, however, Valentine noticed that Naranjo was pressing his hip into the patrol car and attempting to move his handcuffed hands to his right front pocket or waistband. Rather than forcing Naranjo to comply with the search of his waist, Valentine proceeded down Naranjo’s body. However, instead of patting down his right leg, Valentine lifted Naranjo’s right pant leg, causing a bindle of drugs to drop to the ground.2 He then patted down Naranjo’s left leg. When he re[288]*288turned his attention to Naranjo’s waist, Nar-anjo was still pressing his hip into the side of the patrol ear, so Valentine took Naranjo to the ground. At about this time, Valentine noticed the arrival of a South Ogden police car.

¶7 Examining the totality of the circumstances, as we must, the incident appears to have occurred as follows: Valentine twice approached Naranjo to question him concerning the report of a car prowler. During the second encounter, Naranjo acted erratically; thus, Valentine drew his sidearm and ordered Naranjo to the ground where he handcuffed his hands behind his back, and because it was standard procedure when dealing with a handcuffed person, Valentine decided to search Naranjo. However, rather than patting him down while prone, Valentine lifted Naranjo to his feet and led him to the patrol car. Naranjo generally cooperated with the patdown, but when Valentine reached his waist, Naranjo pressed his hip into the side of the car and attempted to reach his pocket or front waistband with his handcuffed hands. Valentine became concerned that Naranjo might be concealing something around the area of his waist. He then inexplicably proceeded to lift Naranjo’s right pant leg, causing a bindle to drop to the ground. Immediately thereafter, he patted down Naranjo’s left leg, and only then did he turn his attention back to Naranjo’s waist. However, when Naranjo continued to “resist” Valentine’s search of his waist, Valentine took him to the ground.3

¶ 8 The South Ogden police officer who had arrived on the scene either during the time that Naranjo was taken to the ground, or just before, Sergeant Will DeHart, then took control of Naranjo while Valentine collected the items that Naranjo had thrown or dropped on the ground. The bindle was among the items collected and Naranjo volunteered that it contained heroin. He further volunteered that it was not his, but that he was delivering it to someone who was waiting nearby. Upon examination, Valentine and DeHart confirmed that the bindle contained heroin. They also determined that the main package contained three smaller bindles. Naranjo was arrested and transported to jail, where he was given his Miranda warnings.

¶ 9 Prior to his trial, Naranjo moved to suppress all of the evidence discovered during the encounter. The trial court denied this motion, following which Naranjo was tried by jury and convicted of possession of a controlled substance with the intent to distribute. He now appeals.

ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

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Bluebook (online)
2005 UT App 311, 118 P.3d 285, 529 Utah Adv. Rep. 19, 2005 Utah App. LEXIS 288, 2005 WL 1530260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-naranjo-utahctapp-2005.