State v. Sholedice

431 P.3d 386, 364 Or. 146
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 2018
DocketCC 141765 (SC S064787 (Control) ), (CC 141766) (SC S064806)
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 431 P.3d 386 (State v. Sholedice) 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. Sholedice, 431 P.3d 386, 364 Or. 146 (Or. 2018).

Opinion

KISTLER, J.

**148This case presents two questions. The first is whether a United States Postal Service (USPS) inspector seized a package in violation of the Oregon Constitution when she took the package out of a mail hamper and put it on the floor so that a drug-detection dog could sniff it. The second is whether another postal inspector seized the package when, after the dog had alerted to the package, he took it to the addressee's house and asked for consent to search it. Focusing on the first issue, the trial court ruled that no seizure had occurred because defendants had no constitutionally protected possessory interest in the package while it was in the mail. The Court of Appeals reversed, reasoning that defendants had a constitutionally protected property interest in the package, which the first postal inspector significantly interfered with when she took the package out of the mail hamper. State v. Sholedice , 283 Or. App. 346, 386 P.3d 701 (2017) (per curiam); State v. Smith , 282 Or. App. 208, 384 P.3d 175 (per curiam), on recons , 283 Or. App. 422, 387 P.3d 499 (2017) (per curiam). We allowed the state's petitions for review and now reverse the Court of *388Appeals decisions and affirm the trial court's judgments.

These consolidated cases involve two defendants, Sholedice and Smith. On May 27, 2014, Sholedice mailed a package from Las Cruces, New Mexico, to Smith in Lincoln City, Oregon. He paid the USPS approximately $63 to mail the package by express mail with a guaranteed delivery date of May 29, 2014. The label on the package was handwritten, addressed to "M. Smith" in Lincoln City, and contained a signature waiver, which meant that the package could be left at the address without the addressee signing for it.

Craig is a federal postal inspector who works at a mail processing facility near the Portland airport. Hampers full of mail come into the processing facility each day, filled with packages destined for various locations throughout Oregon. Pursuant to federal policies, Craig sorts through the hampers looking for prohibited mail-i.e. , mail that contains poison, controlled substances, suspicious powders, bombs, and "injurious objects," such as knives, guns, poisonous insects, and snakes. As she explained and the trial **149court found, she looks for packages containing prohibited mail "to keep our-our carriers safe."1

The USPS has established protocols for determining which packages may contain prohibited materials, and Craig sorted packages based on those protocols. On the morning of May 28, Craig came across Sholedice's package. She noticed that four indicators set out in the USPS protocols were present. First, Sholedice's use of express mail was unusual. Express mail is ordinarily used by businesses; it is not typically used for mailing packages from one person to another. Second, Sholedice paid more than was necessary to send the package. He paid approximately $63 to mail the package from New Mexico to Oregon by express mail when first-class or priority mail could have gotten the package to Oregon in the same amount of time at a fraction of the cost.2 Third, the label included a signature waiver. Craig testified that most senders use express mail to ensure that the letter or package has been received by having the addressee sign for it. She explained that a sender may waive the signature requirement either because "they don't want [the mail carrier] to have a face to face with [the addressee]" or because they do not want the addressee to know that the package has arrived.3 Finally, Craig testified that senders who use express mail ordinarily use the addressee's full name rather than an initial and last name, such as "M. Smith."

Not only did Sholedice's package stand out for those reasons, but Craig also knew that Oregon is a source state for exporting marijuana and a destination state for receipt of drug proceeds. For those reasons, she took the package out of the hamper and put it on the floor of the sorting **150facility along with six other similarly-sized packages, which Craig also took out of the mail, so that Nikko, a trained drug-detection dog, could sniff them. Nikko and his handler did not take part in sorting the packages or in selecting which packages would be put in the "package lineup," nor were they aware of which package had aroused Craig's suspicions. Their role was limited to determining if any packages contained drugs. As the handler testified, the USPS does not have "K-9s, and so they ask mostly local agencies to provide that tool for them to screen mail."4 *389Nikko sniffed the seven packages and alerted on the package that Sholedice had sent Smith. At the suppression hearing, Nikko's handler explained that Nikko has been certified every six months to detect four drugs: methamphetamine, marijuana, cocaine, and heroin. He testified that, during 4,000 training and certification searches, Nikko has alerted incorrectly only eight times. After Nikko alerted on defendants' package, a person checked the address in Lincoln City and found that it was listed on a registry for medical marijuana grows.

Later, at the suppression hearing, Craig was asked a hypothetical question. She was asked on cross-examination what she would have done if Nikko had not alerted on the package. She testified that the package would not have continued "in the normal course of the mail." Rather, she "would have done a further investigation on it." When asked on redirect what she meant by "further investigation," Craig explained that "we would try to-try to get ahold of M. Smith or Nathan * * * Sholedice" and "talk to them a little bit about the parcel to get some more information."

Craig was not able to take the package to Lincoln City. She accordingly asked another federal postal inspector, Helton, to deliver the package. Helton testified that, although he does not ordinarily deliver mail, he is authorized, as a postal inspector, to do so. On the way to Lincoln **151City, Helton contacted a Lincoln City detective to serve as a backup. When Helton delivered the package, both he and the detective were wearing plain clothes. Neither displayed a weapon. No patrol car was parked in view of the house.

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Related

State v. Peek
485 P.3d 292 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2021)
State v. Lien
441 P.3d 185 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2019)
State v. Sholedice
437 P.3d 1142 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
431 P.3d 386, 364 Or. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sholedice-or-2018.