State v. Santiago

2008 NMCA 041, 182 P.3d 137, 143 N.M. 756
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 31, 2008
DocketNo. 26,859
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2008 NMCA 041 (State v. Santiago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Santiago, 2008 NMCA 041, 182 P.3d 137, 143 N.M. 756 (N.M. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinions

OPINION

VIGIL, Judge.

{1} The State appeals the district court’s order granting Defendant’s motion to suppress. Defendant was searched outside of a shopping mall by private mall security guards after he was maced, thrown to the ground, and handcuffed, because he had a verbal confrontation with a peer within the mall. As a result of the search, the mall security guards discovered a pill bottle in Defendant’s pants pocket containing cocaine. The district court concluded that the search and seizure conducted by the mall security guards is governed by the Fourth Amendment. Further, the district court concluded the search and seizure to be unreasonable under Fourth Amendment standards, and it ordered that the physical evidence be suppressed, as well as all other evidence discovered as a result of the search and seizure under the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

{2} Defendant testified he was at the Coronado mall when his girlfriend’s ex-boyfriend came up behind him, and grabbed his visor. They cussed and yelled at each other, but there was no actual fight. Defendant grabbed his visor back and started walking up the escalator at a fast pace to leave the mall. Half-way up the escalator, Defendant heard a mall security guard yell, “Hey.” Since his car was right outside, and he was already leaving the mall, he started a “light jog” towards his car. Two mall security guards were waiting for Defendant outside, and they told him to get on the ground. When he heard them tell him to get on the ground, Defendant held his arms straight out, asking them why, and testified, “I never took an aggressive step or anything toward them.” However, the mall security guards threw him down face-first onto the pavement, cutting his chin. Defendant testified, “I was facing down. I was facing down on my stomach. I was on my stomach. My head was turned to the left, and my hands were behind me, and there was one [mall] security guard-one [mall] security guard was holding my hands; the other [mall] security guard had his knee in my neck____And the other one was searching me.” Defendant further testified that while he was being searched, “I was yelling at him to stop because, I mean, I thought it wasn’t legal to search anybody, you know, without any consent, you know. So he started searching me. I was yelling at him he couldn’t search me. He was telling me to shut up, and he took everything out of my pockets.” When he was asked if this was a pat-down search, Defendant replied, “I didn’t feel no patting down. I felt his hands go straight into my pockets.” Defendant then heard the mall security guard say, “Look what we have here. Call APD [Albuquerque Police Department].”

{3} Security Guard Ryan Martin testified he works for Valor Security, which provides security for the Coronado Mall. The mall security guards wear a uniform, “which kind of looks like Albuquerque Police Department’s uniform with the exception of the badge and the Smokey Bear hats[.]” Security Guard Martin was in the parking lot in one of the marked mobile patrol vehicles used by the security guards when he heard a radio dispatch, and he went to the south patio main entrance area of the mall. He saw Defendant running out of the entrance and Security Guard Richard Timmons following him while giving Defendant verbal commands to stop and get down to the ground. Defendant stopped and turned around toward Security Guard Timmons. Security Guard Martin interpreted his action as taking “an aggressive stance towards him.” Security Guard Martin also commanded Defendant to get to the ground, but he did not comply, and Security Guard Timmons sprayed mace towards Defendant’s face. Defendant then turned back towards Security Guard Martin to run from the mace and Security Guard Martin grabbed his right arm to take Defendant to the ground. As they struggled, Security Guard Martin sprayed mace into Defendant’s face. At this time Valor Security Sergeant George Rodriguez showed up on the scene and put hand restraints on Defendant. When asked whether Defendant was arrested Security Guard Martin answered, “We are to advise anybody that we place in hand restraints that they are under citizen’s arrest and we did so.” In his report Security Guard Martin noted that Defendant was told he was under citizen’s arrest “for breach of the peace.” When asked what his understanding of a citizen’s arrest is, Security Guard Martin answered, “It’s a citizen detaining an individual, private citizen detaining an individual for a crime until APD arrives.” The Valor Security mall dispatcher is just inside the glass doors where the struggle took place and Security Guard Martin said the Valor dispatcher “called via our radio to the Albuquerque Police Substation and contacted Officer Newbill on the radio and advised that we needed back up[.]” The Valor security guards use two-way walkietalkie radios at the mall, and the APD has one of these radios in its substation. After the incident outside the mall door, Security Guard Martin followed the police officers to the APD substation to exchange information with the APD officers to complete his report.

{4} The Coronado Mall furnishes the APD with a police substation. Officer Keith New-bill of the APD testified that he had been working with mall security for about two years and that “I am the Coronado Mall officer.” He was working at Coronado Mall and overheard on the Coronado Mall security radio he had that there was a fight on the lower level of the mall. He was then asked to assist, “because the fight had moved out to the south patio and they were struggling with an individual.” When he first arrived at the scene, he took Defendant to his police ear, set Defendant inside of it, and then went back to find out what was happening. When he placed Defendant in his police car, Defendant was not free to leave, “because I needed to identify him and determine whether or not I was — mall security was going to want a criminal trespass notification.” This coincided with Officer Newbill’s understanding of an arrest. “[M]ost generally what happens in these type of scenarios is they’re issued criminal trespass notifications saying they can’t return, and I send them on their way. It requires a short little report, and it’s a quick process.” However, in this case, Detective Bruce Arbogast of the APD came to the car holding a pill bottle he indicated he had picked up along with other property that belonged to Defendant, opened it up, and said, “Look at this.” Officer Newbill looked inside and saw five little baggies with white powder, so they decided to go the APD substation and field test the substance.

{5} Detective Arbogast testified he was at the Coronado Mall when Officer Newbill received a radio call from Coronado security requesting the APD to respond to a fight. Each driving their own police unit, he and Officer Newbill, “drove over there as fast as we could to help assist in the fight and break it up and sort out the situation.” Upon arriving, he saw Defendant on the concrete face down and handcuffed with mall security standing around him. Detective Arbogast testified, “It happened within a matter of seconds upon our arrival and the time they had him down on the ground.” A cell phone and pill bottle were laying next to his body. Detective Arbogast said, “I picked [Defendant] up with mall security and we transported him over to Officer Newbill’s car.

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Related

State v. Santiago
2009 NMSC 045 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 2009)
State v. Santiago
182 P.3d 137 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2008 NMCA 041, 182 P.3d 137, 143 N.M. 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-santiago-nmctapp-2008.