State v. Perez

61 P.3d 945, 186 Or. App. 122, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 29, 2003
Docket994733; A110420
StatusPublished

This text of 61 P.3d 945 (State v. Perez) 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. Perez, 61 P.3d 945, 186 Or. App. 122, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 104 (Or. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

BREWER, J.

Defendant, a police informant, was convicted after a jury trial of four drug offenses arising out of his use, as the location of a methamphetamine operation, of a motel room provided to him by the police at public expense. Defendant appeals from the trial court’s imposition of an upward durational departure sentence of 36 months’ imprisonment on his conviction for manufacture of a controlled substance. He asserts that the court erred in relying on his alleged use of a weapon and a purported violation of a public trust as aggravating factors justifying the departure sentence. We review to determine whether the court’s findings of fact and reasons justifying the departure are supported by evidence in the record and constitute substantial and compelling reasons to depart as a matter of law. ORS 138.222(3). We affirm.

Beginning in March 1999, for a period of six months, defendant cooperated with interagency drug enforcement teams in Lincoln and Marion counties as an undercover agent purchasing illegal drugs from suspected drug dealers. Defendant was paid certain benefits for his work as an informant. His supervising officer, Oregon State Police (OSP) Detective Meister, testified that “we pay [informants’] expenses, maybe gas expenses if they have a car or to use the phone or something like that, and then we will compensate them [for] various success in whatever case we’re working.” Under OSP guidelines, defendant was required to sign an agreement that governed his undercover activities. That document, executed on March 25, 1999, provided that defendant would “assist the [OSP] in the investigation of the criminal violations occurring in Oregon,” and it included the following terms:

“I am fully aware that I may have to testify in future court proceedings concerning cases in which I might participate. I have entered into this agreement freely and without duress. I fully understand that I am not to participate in any investigations of any criminal activities, unless the investigation [ ] is being directly supervised by a sworn member of this Department. I agree to follow the instructions of the supervising officer while assisting in such investigations. I agree that any compensation paid me with [125]*125respect to any services rendered by me in connection with any such investigation shall be the full and complete payment for those services.”

On the same date, defendant also signed a confidential questionnaire, in which he answered “Yes” to the following questions:

“1. Do you understand that you are not privileged to break any laws during the course or [sic] providing any services for this Department?
Yes
"* * * * *
“7. Do you understand that you are not to use your services for this Department to resolve personal matters?
Yes”

On six separate occasions defendant successfully purchased illegal substances from suspected drug dealers in controlled buys directed by Meister. In addition, defendant executed an affidavit that assisted police in Marion County in obtaining a search warrant that resulted in the recovery of controlled substances and a criminal prosecution. Although defendant was not specifically identified in the search warrant application, Meister testified that the information he had provided was “put together in a way that it could be figured out who [defendant] was.”

On September 26, 1999, defendant told Meister that two men had just tried to shoot him and his nephew at a state park in Waldport. Defendant stated that one of the assailants said, “[Y]our time has come” and, “[T]his is from Alvaro.” Defendant previously had identified “Alvaro” as “a major drug dealer in the Portland area.” Meister initially believed defendant’s account. Meister testified that he felt that, under the circumstances, the police were responsible for defendant’s safety. As a result, the Lincoln County Interagency Narcotics Team (LINT) paid for a motel room in Newport and placed defendant in that room. On September 30, LINT officers moved defendant to a different motel because he had reported seeing people who were aware of the encounter at [126]*126the state park and of whom he was afraid. LINT paid for that room as well.

During the same time period, Meister received information leading him to believe that defendant had not been truthful about the purported encounter with Alvaro’s henchmen. Meister confronted defendant, who then admitted that he had lied about the encounter at the park and said, instead, that it had resulted from a prearranged exchange of drugs. The police had neither sanctioned nor arranged for such an exchange. However, defendant persisted in his account that Alvaro’s men had tried to kill him.1 Defendant told Meister that, after the attempt on his life, he ended up in possession of the drugs involved in the exchange. Defendant admitted that he had a large quantity of drugs in the motel room where he was staying. He signed a consent form authorizing the police to search his room. The officers seized 14 individual bags of methamphetamine from the room with a total weight of 427 grams. Spinney told the police that she had observed defendant use one of her steak knives to cut a brick of methamphetamine into pieces that he and another accomplice, Chavez, put into plastic baggies.

The jury convicted defendant of possession, delivery, and manufacture of a controlled substance, and it also convicted him of delivery of a controlled substance to a minor. The trial court imposed a durational departure sentence of 36 months’ imprisonment on the delivery conviction and imposed concurrent sentences on the convictions for possession and delivery of a controlled substance to a minor. The court also imposed a consecutive 36-month durational departure sentence on the conviction for manufacture of a controlled substance. In making the departures, the court relied on separate findings that defendant’s crime involved the “use of a weapon,” OAR 213-008-0002(l)(b)(E), and that “the offense involved a violation of public trust.” OAR 213-008-0002(l)(b)(F).2 The court reasoned:

[127]*127“[Meister] is a veteran police officer, one skilled in investigating illegal drug transactions. [Meister] trusted the defendant because the defendant had proven himself to be reliable in terms of information provided and in terms of a willingness to undertake personal risk, which is involved when you make a controlled buy from people who pack guns * ** * and that he was willing to undertake those personal risks to further the cause of law enforcement.
“A person does not have to be a public employee to violate a public trust. [Defendant] had spoken to Meister before about Alvaro as being a person deserving of great scrutiny by the police. Although Meister had not authorized [defendant] to undertake any private enforcement action, [defendant] had baited the hook with Alvaro’s name and reputation and Meister bit.
"* * * * *
“* * * [Defendant] told the made-up story about being the object of an assassination attempt at Alvaro’s hands in light of [defendant’s] somewhat disclosed role in Salem as an undercover drug informant.

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Related

State v. Reid
915 P.2d 453 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1996)
State v. Harris
25 P.3d 404 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2001)
State v. Wolff
27 P.3d 145 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 P.3d 945, 186 Or. App. 122, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-perez-orctapp-2003.