State v. Sparling

2024 UT App 59, 549 P.3d 86
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedApril 18, 2024
Docket20220390-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2024 UT App 59 (State v. Sparling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Sparling, 2024 UT App 59, 549 P.3d 86 (Utah Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 UT App 59

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

STATE OF UTAH, Appellee, v. TRUE SPARLING, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20220390-CA Filed April 18, 2024

Seventh District Court, Monticello Department The Honorable Don M. Torgerson No. 201700244

K. Andrew Fitzgerald, Attorney for Appellant Sean D. Reyes and Lindsey Wheeler, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES GREGORY K. ORME and JOHN D. LUTHY concurred.

HARRIS, Judge:

¶1 During a traffic stop, law enforcement officers discovered a large “rock” of methamphetamine in a car that True Sparling had been driving. The State later charged Sparling with various drug and traffic offenses. After a bench trial, the district court acquitted Sparling of two of the three drug-related charges but convicted him of possessing the methamphetamine. Sparling now appeals that conviction, asserting that insufficient evidence existed to support it. We disagree and therefore affirm. State v. Sparling

BACKGROUND 1

¶2 One night, two police officers on patrol on Main Street in Monticello, Utah, passed a “small black car” with mismatched headlights. One of the officers (Officer 1) noticed that the car “did not have a license plate.” The officers followed the car, watching as it made a right turn followed by an immediate left, then entered a parking lot only to quickly exit the lot and pull back onto Main Street. Officer 1 found this driving pattern to be “suspicious” and had the impression that the car was “trying to avoid” the officers. The officers also observed that one of the car’s brake lights was out. Eventually, they decided to initiate a traffic stop.

¶3 At the traffic stop, the officers found two individuals in the car. The driver identified himself as Sparling and told the officers that he and his passenger (Friend) were coming from Salt Lake City, where Sparling had just purchased the car, and that they were headed home to Blanding, Utah. When Officer 1 asked Sparling for his driver license, Sparling said he had lost it; he also advised Officer 1 that there was a warrant out for his arrest.

¶4 After checking on both Sparling and Friend in the law enforcement database, Officer 1 learned that Sparling’s driver license was suspended and that Friend’s was expired. Given that no one in Sparling’s vehicle was licensed to drive it, Officer 1 made the decision to impound it, and he instructed Sparling and Friend to get out of the vehicle.

¶5 While the officers were preparing to inventory the vehicle, Friend asked them if she could have “a cigarette and her purse.” The other officer (Officer 2) then retrieved Friend’s purse, which

1. “On appeal from a bench trial, we view and recite the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s findings; we present additional evidence only as necessary to understand the issues on appeal.” Bountiful City v. Sisch, 2023 UT App 141, n.1, 540 P.3d 1164 (quotation simplified).

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was “still on the passenger’s seat,” and took a look inside. In the purse, Officer 2 found a crystallized “pink rock” that Officer 1 “immediately” identified as methamphetamine; in fact, Officer 1 later described it as the “largest methamphetamine rock” he had ever seen during his eleven years of working in law enforcement. Also in Friend’s purse, Officer 2 found “a black tar substance,” some “marijuana flake,” and a “glass pipe,” as well as Sparling’s driver license, which had been “broken in half.” A few minutes later, when the officers searched the vehicle’s glove box, they located more “marijuana flake” and “a THC vape pen.”

¶6 At that point, the officers informed Sparling and Friend that they were being “detained for suspicion of possession of narcotics.” The officers then seized Friend’s cell phone and conducted field tests on the substances; the rock tested positive for methamphetamine, and the black tar substance tested positive for heroin. When the officers questioned Sparling, he denied any knowledge of the drugs, stating that they did not belong to him, and he claimed that the last time he used drugs had been either “days” or “weeks” earlier.

¶7 Friend, on the other hand, claimed full ownership of the substances, asserting that “they were hers and hers alone” and that Sparling “had no idea” she had them. Upon further questioning, however, Friend admitted that the previous day— while they had been in Salt Lake City—she and Sparling had “consumed” a portion of the drugs that Friend had purchased; in particular, she stated that Sparling had “smoked a bowl” with her. Seeking further clarification, Officer 1 then asked, “A bowl of what?,” and Friend responded, “The meth” and “the pot.” Later, in reaffirming the timeline of events, Officer 1 asked Friend again whether she was “sure” that Sparling “used with [her] yesterday,” and Friend confirmed that he had. Indeed, at trial, Friend testified that the reason she had accompanied Sparling to Salt Lake City was so that she could “purchase some more drugs,” something she did on a monthly basis, and that she had been

20220390-CA 3 2024 UT App 59 State v. Sparling

using Sparling’s broken driver license as a tool to “chop up” the methamphetamine rock.

¶8 Later, the State charged Sparling with three counts of possession or use of a controlled substance—filed as third-degree felony charges because Sparling had prior drug convictions—for the methamphetamine and heroin found in Friend’s purse and the THC found in the glove box. 2 The State also charged Sparling with one traffic-related misdemeanor count and two traffic infractions.

¶9 The case proceeded to a bench trial. In support of its case- in-chief, the State called Officer 1, Friend, a forensic scientist, and an individual who had performed a forensic download of Friend’s phone. Sparling’s primary defense to the drug charges was that the drugs belonged to Friend and not to him. The State’s theory of the case was that Sparling had, at a minimum, “constructively possessed” the drugs.

¶10 To support its case, the State relied, in part, on text messages found on Friend’s phone. Although the messages were all sent from or received on Friend’s phone, some of the messages indicated that Sparling and Friend sometimes shared the device; some of the messages were apparently even written and sent by Sparling, who indicated his presence by typing “Hi this is true” at the beginning of such messages. One message from Friend, apparently sent to a potential customer, stated that “we can get some for you my guy said it’s really good and same price,” and “I can see if true can get that for you and you can pay him back when we get home.” Another message, sent just a few hours before Sparling and Friend were detained at the traffic stop, asked a potential customer to “come to blanding cause true is really tired and plus we don’t have scales to weigh so he said to come over.”

2. Following the incident, Friend was charged in another case with possessing controlled substances and she later entered a guilty plea to some of those charges.

20220390-CA 4 2024 UT App 59 State v. Sparling

Officer 1 testified that a recipient of some of the messages was an individual known to law enforcement as a “user dealer supplier of narcotics”; one message to this recipient asked “how much” for “three.” Some of the messages discussed “insurance money,” with one such message stating, “I got my insurance money today so I’m all excited I’m like a kid on x-mas morning.” Officer 1 testified that, based on his investigation, Sparling was the one who had received insurance money around that time, not Friend.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 UT App 59, 549 P.3d 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sparling-utahctapp-2024.