State v. Powell

282 P.3d 845, 352 Or. 210, 2012 WL 2928526, 2012 Ore. LEXIS 439
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 2012
DocketCC CM0621169; CA A141129; SC S059620
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 282 P.3d 845 (State v. Powell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Powell, 282 P.3d 845, 352 Or. 210, 2012 WL 2928526, 2012 Ore. LEXIS 439 (Or. 2012).

Opinion

*212 WALTERS, J.

In this case, the trial court found that defendant’s statements to private investigators were induced by the investigators’ promises of leniency and other benefits and therefore suppressed those statements and a second set of inculpatory statements that defendant made to a police officer on the same subject, both pursuant to ORS 136.425(1). 1 The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s order in part and reversed it in part. We affirm the order of the trial court.

This case comes before us on an interlocutory appeal of the trial court’s pretrial order of suppression. After conducting a hearing, the trial court concluded that defendant’s first set of inculpatory statements were involuntary and that the coercive effect of the investigators’ inducements had not been dispelled when defendant made the second set of inculpatory statements. On review, we consider the factual findings that the trial court made in support of its conclusions, and, to the extent that the trial court did not make explicit findings with regard to any pertinent fact, we presume that the trial court decided the facts in a manner consistent with those conclusions. State v. Foster, 303 Or 518, 529, 739 P2d 1032 (1987) (citing Ball v. Gladden, 250 Or 485, 487, 443 P2d 621 (1968)). If we find that the evidence in the record sustains the trial court’s factual findings, we do not disturb them. Id. However, we do not defer to the trial court’s conclusions but decide, as a matter of law, whether defendant’s inculpatory statements were involuntary and whether the trial court erred in suppressing them. Id.

When the material events occurred, defendant was employed as a courier for Federal Express (FedEx) in Corvallis. FedEx had instituted an internal investigation after discovering that, over a period of several months, a number of packages had gone missing from defendant’s worksite. Two FedEx investigators called defendant in from his route one morning for questioning. The interview was *213 conducted in a conference room at the FedEx worksite in Corvallis and was tape-recorded. The investigators began by telling defendant that they were questioning a number of employees in connection with the investigation. Defendant denied stealing any of the packages or knowing anything about the matter. The investigators continued to press him, but defendant repeatedly maintained that he knew nothing about the missing packages. At that point, the investigators changed tack. One of the investigators said to defendant:

“Lance, *** we’ve been looking into this for a while. We’ve done some extra things to the station, different things to help us pinpoint what’s going on. And it’s apparent that you took this stuff, ok? So now we’re at a crossroads here, okay? We’re at a point where either we handle it in-house here, in FedEx, or we can turn everything we have over to the [police department], and then they handle it from there. Now if you choose that route, well there’s nothing we can do. They’ll be going to get search warrants for your house, for your mother’s house. They’ll go through all of your stuff. It’s just gonna be a big mess, okay? * * *
“At this point, our base concern here at FedEx is we want to know, we need to make a customer happy. And if we can make the customer happy, then they don’t come back on Lance, okay? And I don’t think you’re a bad guy, okay? If I had thought you were a bad guy I would’ve taken all this stuff and we would’ve given it to the [police department] and said, You guys jack him up, we’re done with him,’ okay? 1 don’t feel that way You’ve got a lot of stuff going on in your life right now, and I know it. People do boneheaded things, okay? But where we go now is what’s going to decide your future. Can we get any of this stuff back? Can we get it back and get it to the customer? Nobody but who’s in this room needs to know, you know. [2] Your wife doesn’t have to know, nobody has to know nothing.”

At that point, defendant admitted to having some of the stolen items and agreed to take the investigators to his house to recover some of the stolen property. On the way to his house, defendant expressed second thoughts about proceeding. However, the investigators assured defendant that

*214 “it was better to let them know about everything, get everything — get it back to the customers, and * * * it was better just to take care of this all now with us so we could just get it behind us, and that way they didn’t have to bring the police into it.”

Defendant let the investigators into his garage, where they recovered a number of items of allegedly stolen property.

The investigators then told defendant that they needed him to come back to the worksite with them to provide a written statement and that he would then be free to go. Defendant accompanied the investigators back to the worksite and wrote out a statement with the assistance of one of the investigators. Defendant testified that, as he worked on the statement, one of the investigators was in the room with him, and was “kind of letting [defendant] know what he needed to have on that statement.” When asked whether the statement was in his own words or the investigator’s words, defendant responded that it was “a mix, part my words, part his words. He was — I wasn’t sure what exactly needed to be done and he said ‘This is what I need you to write. You need to tell me this, this, this.’” When defendant completed the statement, the investigators said that “they needed to take care of one more thing first and then [defendant] could go.” One of the investigators then said to defendant, “Listen, I need you to give a statement to the police. We just need a third party to kind of document what’s been said here, what’s going on.” The investigator assured defendant that, “It doesn’t mean you’re being arrested. * * * We just need you to tell them what you told us so we can have it documented.”

At that point, the investigators brought a uniformed police officer into the room. The officer informed defendant that the investigators had told her about everything that had transpired up to that point but that she wanted to hear from defendant what had happened. She then read defendant his rights, but she advised him that she was doing so “just * * * as a matter of housekeeping, you know, just a formality.” Defendant became “a little concerned” at that point. The officer asked defendant if he knew why she was there. Defendant responded, “Probably to arrest me.” 3 The officer *215 “kind of laughed, and said, ‘Well, I, you know, appreciate your honesty.’ She said, you know, ‘Not necessarily.’ She said ‘That could be a possibility but it’s ultimately up to your company how they want to handle this.’” Defendant testified that one of the investigators, who remained present throughout defendant’s entire interview with the officer, nodded his head in agreement with the officer’s statement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 P.3d 845, 352 Or. 210, 2012 WL 2928526, 2012 Ore. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-powell-or-2012.