State v. Sundberg

611 P.2d 44, 1980 Alas. LEXIS 682
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1980
Docket4397
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 611 P.2d 44 (State v. Sundberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska 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. Sundberg, 611 P.2d 44, 1980 Alas. LEXIS 682 (Ala. 1980).

Opinions

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.

This petition for review raises the propriety of the superior court’s adoption of an exclusionary rule as a sanction against the use of excessive force by the police in effectuating an arrest of a fleeing burglary suspect. We conclude such a rule should not have been applied and reverse.

The relevant facts are as follows. On the night of April 30, 1978, Anchorage Police Officer Jack Bohannon, driving a marked patrol car, responded to a police dispatch reporting a burglary in progress at a pharmacy in a medical office building. The information relayed by the dispatch was that there were two suspects one being possibly a black male. When Officer Bo-hannon arrived at the scene of the reported burglary, he noted the presence of a private security guard and another police patrol car. He had also observed a third patrol car a short distance away on its way to the scene.

Officer Bohannon saw a suspect near a broken window of the pharmacy carrying a blue hat and a pillow case as a sack. The suspect dropped the pillow case on the sidewalk and began to run down the sidewalk away from Bohannon. Carrying a 12-gauge riot shotgun loaded with buckshot, Bohannon pursued the suspect on foot around the corner of the building for about fifteen or twenty feet, and shouted, “Hold it, police officer.” Bohannon did not warn the suspect that he had a weapon and would shoot if the suspect failed to stop.

Bohannon decided that he could not outrun the suspect, stopped, and fired at the suspect with his shotgun from a distance of approximately fifty yards. In accordance with police department policy, Bohannon had not fired a warning shot. One shotgun pellet struck the suspect in the back of the foot and another pellet struck him in the upper thigh. The suspect immediately fell to the ground.

Bohannon quickly reached the suspect and several other police officers arrived at that location within a minute or so. The suspect was searched and a box containing forty-two nine-millimeter cartridges was found in his pocket. A subsequent search of the pillow case which had been dropped by the suspect revealed drugs and other items which had been taken from the pharmacy. The suspect was arrested, questioned, and identified as Russell Sundberg, the respondent in this case.

Two days later, a nine-millimeter semiautomatic handgun with seven cartridges in its clip and one cartridge in its chamber was found on the roof of a building near the pharmacy. This rooftop location was above the place where Sundberg had fallen after being shot, and the cartridges in the handgun found there were the same type as those found on Sundberg’s person when he was apprehended. While Sundberg’s fingerprints were not on either the handgun or the cartridges, the superior court concluded that Sundberg had been armed at the time of the burglary and his subsequent flight.

[46]*46However, Officer Bohannon did not testify to any facts which indicated that he perceived Sundberg to be armed at the time of the chase, nor did he testify that he saw Sundberg either reach for or discard a weapon, though the street was well lit. Accordingly the superior court found that “nobody perceived [Sundberg] to be armed” at the time of the shooting and arrest.

In the superior court, Sundberg moved to suppress any evidence obtained by his arrest, including statements made by him, his clothes and other evidence obtained in the search made incident to his arrest, and the identification of him accomplished after he was arrested. Sundberg asserted that his arrest was unlawful because excessive force had been used to accomplish it. He argued that Alaska’s statutory scheme, AS 12.25.-080, detailing the means permissible to effect an arrest is unconstitutional, if interpreted to allow the use of deadly force to arrest a fleeing felon who is not threatening the life of another. His argument invoked constitutional doctrines concerned with due process, equal protection, cruel and unusual punishment, and unreasonable searches and seizures.

In a memorandum opinion, the superior court interpreted AS 12.25.080 to prohibit the use of deadly force by a police officer to arrest a fleeing felon unless the officer had “a reasonable belief that the [fleeing felon] was threatening the use of deadly force against either the officer himself, the victims of a crime, or innocent bystanders.” The superior court alternatively held that, if not so interpreted, the statutory scheme violated Alaska’s constitutional guarantee against “unreasonable searches and seizures.”1 Subsequently the superior court entered an order “suppressing the results of the search which took place pursuant to what . . . [it] believe[d] was an unreasonable seizure of Mr. Sundberg’s body.”

The state then petitioned this court for review of Judge Carlson’s opinion and suppression order. The state’s petition in part asserts the following:

The state can establish that there was a burglary of a pharmacy, that a person was seen fleeing from the pharmacy, and that prior to being arrested that person dropped a pillow case containing drugs and other items taken from the pharmacy. However, with the suppression of the results of the arrest, the critical piece of evidence, the identification of Sundberg made after his arrest as the person fleeing from the pharmacy, is unavailable to the state. The state is unable to establish Sundberg’s identity by other means. While the [superior court’s] order is framed in terms of the suppression of evidence, its effect is to bar prosecution of Sundberg.

Because of the importance of the legal issues involved, we granted review.

I Historical Background

The common law developed a highly articulated set of principles of justification for the use of force to prevent crime and effect arrest.2 These principles are related to and some extent overlap the doctrines of [47]*47self-defense, defense of others, and defense of property.3

With regard to crime prevention, one commentator noted:

The use of force has historically been justified when its purpose is the prevention of a criminal act. Such force is prompted by different motives than when the actor is protecting himself or his property, because the threat is not to a personal interest of the actor but rather to society’s general interest in preventing criminal acts. This interest would clearly seem a sufficient justification for force, particularly because the common law justified such force in apprehending the criminal once he had committed the criminal act. Thus the effect of the crime-prevention privilege is to allow a person to use force in preventing a crime, rather than compel him to await the commission of the unlawful act.
Historically, the right to use force in preventing crimes was limited to situations where the threatened act would have constituted a felony or breach of the peace. Consequently, the threatened commission of a non-violent misdemean- or, such as petty larceny, provided no basis for the use of preventive force.4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
611 P.2d 44, 1980 Alas. LEXIS 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sundberg-alaska-1980.