State v. Sargent

918 P.2d 819, 323 Or. 455, 1996 Ore. LEXIS 58
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1996
DocketCC C91-07-33376; CA A72824; SC S41128
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 918 P.2d 819 (State v. Sargent) 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. Sargent, 918 P.2d 819, 323 Or. 455, 1996 Ore. LEXIS 58 (Or. 1996).

Opinion

*457 FADELEY, J.

Police officers executed a warrant to search an apartment in Portland for evidence related to heroin trafficking. The warrant was based on observations that had been made earlier during the service of an arrest warrant at the same premises. The police officers obtained various items of evidence of heroin trafficking and use. Based on that evidence, defendant, his wife, and others were charged with possession, delivery, and conspiracy to deliver heroin.

Defendant moved to suppress a variety of evidence. The trial court denied suppression of items that the police saw in plain view in the apartment when they entered it initially to execute the arrest warrant. The trial court also denied suppression of money taken from defendant’s possession during a consent search of his person. However, all items first discovered in the later search pursuant to the search warrant were suppressed. Also suppressed was a large sum of money found, at the time of the earlier arrest, in a closet in which the person to be arrested had hidden in an attempt to avoid apprehension.

The state appealed, and defendant filed a cross-assignment of error. The Court of Appeals affirmed that portion of the trial court’s order that denied suppression of evidence. However, the Court of Appeals reversed that portion of the trial court’s order that suppressed the drug evidence discovered and seized later through execution of the search warrant. State v. Sargent, 123 Or App 481, 860 P2d 836 (1993). We allowed defendant’s petition for review and now affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals on different grounds.

Persons living in the neighborhood of an apartment house in Portland complained to the police about what they thought was drug dealing in their neighborhood. They informed the police of the location, the method employed, and the persons involved.

A named citizen informant identified a photograph of defendant’s wife as a woman from the apartment and specifically identified her as being involved in a particular suspected drug transaction. The manager of the apartment *458 house identified defendant and his wife by name as the renters of the second-story front apartment that was the subject of the citizen’s complaints.

Defendant’s wife was the subject of an outstanding arrest warrant for Unauthorized Departure from an Intensive Supervision Program, to which she was required to submit based on an underlying conviction for possession of a controlled substance. She also had a drug-related conviction. Defendant, who was observed coming and going from the apartment, recently had been released from prison on parole and was known by the officer in charge to have used heroin in the past.

Rather than acting immediately on the outstanding arrest warrant, the officer in charge of investigating the citizen’s complaints ordered surveillance of the apartment. Surveillance confirmed the information supplied by the local residents. The next day, the officer conducting the surveillance advised the officer in charge that defendant’s wife was in the apartment, as were defendant and at least one other male.

Accompanied by two uniformed police officers, the officer in charge knocked on the apartment door and responded to a question from inside the apartment that they were police officers. After the officer in charge knocked twice more and again responded “police officers” to the same question from inside the apartment, the door was opened. The officers entered the apartment under the authority of the arrest warrant. The officer in charge saw defendant’s wife hurriedly going down the hall away from the front door. Entering, that officer saw defendant and two additional males in the kitchen and living area. The officer in charge requested that the other police officers enter the apartment and find defendant’s wife.

A pager on a table emitted noise. One of the males turned it off. The officer in charge saw needle caps, needles, and syringes in the vicinity of a microwave oven in the kitchen. He saw a paper with Arabic numbers on it, arranged in fractions and whole numbers, near the pager. He knew from his experience that numbers arranged in fractions were used for keeping records of drug transactions.

*459 The officer in charge obtained the identities of the three males. One, Holte, asked if he would be permitted to leave if he consented to a search of his person. The officer agreed, and Holte was searched and permitted to leave after the search revealed nothing unusual. Another, Hunter, refused consent to search his person and, on his request, was permitted to leave. Neither took the pager. Thereafter, defendant consented to a search of his person when asked by the officer in charge; $268 was found in his pants pocket, and an additional $2,350 was located in his wallet. The officer in charge observed “needle tracks” and open abscesses on defendant’s arms. Defendant told that police officer that he was in a methadone treatment program and that his parole officer could confirm that he had the large sum of cash when he left prison on parole. The officer took the $2,618 from defendant’s person and issued a receipt and forfeiture notice.

The uniformed officers found defendant’s wife hiding in a bedroom closet and brought her to the living area to the police officer in charge. Injection abscesses were visible on her arms. The officer in charge directed the other officers to return to the closet and look for evidence in the area “within arms length of where she was found.” They observed three “large” rolls of bills, wrapped in rubber bands, that were visible on a shelf just above eye level in that closet, quite near where defendant’s wife had been hiding. They took the rolls to the officer in charge. He counted $3,295 and directed that the rolls be returned to the shelf in the closet where they were found.

After defendant’s wife was transported from the area under arrest, defendant also left the apartment. When he left, police officers were still present, but defendant said nothing to them relative to their continuing occupation of the apartment. He did not ask that they leave. Thereafter, the officer in charge posted other police officers inside the apartment to “secure” it while a search warrant was being obtained. That warrant was obtained, and a search under it had begun when, seven or eight hours later, defendant returned and attempted to re-enter the apartment.

The search warrant was obtained on the affidavit of the officer in charge. All information in his affidavit, including the presence in the apartment of the money in the closet *460 and of the pager, sales-record paper, and needles, was known to the officer in charge when he left the apartment after defendant’s wife was arrested. About six hours later, he radioed the police officers inside the apartment that he had obtained a search warrant and that they should start searching the apartment. They did so.

When defendant returned to the apartment after the search under the search warrant had started, he opened the front door with his keys. The officer in charge seized the keys as evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
918 P.2d 819, 323 Or. 455, 1996 Ore. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sargent-or-1996.