State v. Thomas Tucker Jr.

2008 MT 273, 190 P.3d 1080, 345 Mont. 237, 2008 Mont. LEXIS 423
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 5, 2008
DocketDA 06-0284
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 2008 MT 273 (State v. Thomas Tucker Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Thomas Tucker Jr., 2008 MT 273, 190 P.3d 1080, 345 Mont. 237, 2008 Mont. LEXIS 423 (Mo. 2008).

Opinion

JUSTICE RICE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Thomas Eugene Tucker, Jr. appeals from the final judgment and order of the District Court for the Fourth Judicial District, Missoula County, denying his motion to suppress evidence seized from his residence pursuant to a search warrant. We affirm.

¶2 The issues on appeal are as follows:

1. Did the District Court err in concluding there was sufficient probable cause in the application for search warrant when it denied Tucker’s motion to suppress?
2. Did the District Court abuse its discretion in failing to conduct a hearing on Tucker’s motion to suppress, pursuant to § 46-13-302(2), MCA?
3. Alternatively, if it was necessary for Tucker to have requested a hearing on his motion to suppress, did defense counsel render ineffective assistance in failing to do so?

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 On December 4, 2002, Detective Richard J. Maricelli of the Missoula County Sheriffs Department applied for a warrant to search Tucker’s residence located at 19505 Pond Road in Frenchtown, Montana. Detective Maricelli filed the application for search warrant acting on the belief that Tucker had committed the offenses of criminal defamation and sexual abuse of children. Detective Maricelli based the application on information obtained from two different sources-Eric Belker, a Frenchtown resident who had hired Tucker to do drywall work on the Belker’s family home, and Tucker’s ex-fiancée, Aleece Sobrio. Detective Maricelli set forth the following facts as grounds for the search warrant in the application.

¶4 The application stated that on November 7, 2002, a Missoula County Sheriffs deputy responded to a call complaining of criminal defamation in Frenchtown, Montana. The officer met with Eric Belker. Belker informed the officer that someone had placed thirty slanderous *239 letters in area mailboxes. Belker suspected that Tucker had distributed the anonymous letter. In March of 2002, Belker had criminal charges brought against Tucker for deceptive practices, related to the drywall work Belker had hired Tucker to complete. The charge stemmed from Belker’s contention that Tucker failed to complete the job in a timely manner, despite numerous extensions and receiving his fees up front. Belker also alleged that his wife Virginia had caught Tucker in their young daughter’s bedroom with a pair of their daughter’s underwear in his hand. The application stated that Tucker did not seem to have a reasonable explanation for this and told Virginia that he picked them up off the floor so that he would not step on them. In the application, Belker also said that Tucker worked at the Frenchtown High School but was fired when he was discovered to be a registered sex offender. Belker had not known about Tucker’s dismissal until the assistant principal contacted Belker and informed him that Tucker had contacted the assistant principal inquiring if Belker was responsible for disclosing Tucker’s registered sex offender status to the school.

¶5 The anonymous letter made several allegations concerning Belker, a retired California police officer, including that Belker had “gunned down a young innocent child” while serving in California, that Belker had an extremely violent nature and quick temper, that Belker came to Montana to hide his crime, as well as numerous other allegations of a similar nature. The application stated that the shooting was determined to be justified as an “in the line of duty shooting” and Belker was cleared of any criminal or civil charges. Belker also related that he had disclosed the details of the shooting with only a few of his closest friends, and not Tucker. Belker speculated that Tucker learned of the incident while snooping around the Belkers’ residence. A copy of the letter was included with the application.

¶6 The application further detailed that a week after Belker contacted the sheriffs office, Detective Maricelli received a copy of a letter sent by Tucker’s ex-fiancée Aleece Sobrio to Deputy Missoula County Attorney Kirsten LaCroix. While the application did not identify Sobrio by name, it did refer to her as Tucker’s ex-fiancée. The application summarized the contents of the letter, including that Sobrio and Tucker had met on the internet in 2001 and she had eventually moved from Utah to Montana to be with him. Shortly thereafter, she and Tucker had gotten engaged and planned to marry. The relationship began to deteriorate when she learned that Tucker was a registered sex offender and that he had an “exorbitant” amount of pornography, both in his bedroom and in a camper/trailer located on the property. The application stated that Sobrio had found a number of young girls’ undergarments in Tucker’s *240 possession, as well as depictions of what she believed to be underage girls in pornographic DVDs, videos, magazines, and computer images. For these reasons and due to what she said was Tucker’s violent temper and controlling nature, the marriage had been called off and Sobrio had sneaked out of Tucker’s residence at night and returned to Utah. The application stated that Sobrio would be willing to testify against Tucker. Detective Maricelli also stated in the application that he was in constant contact with Sobrio and could reach her if needed for further information.

¶7 The application also noted that Sobrio informed Maricelli that she assisted Tucker in the distribution of a defamatory letter, similar to the one distributed regarding Belker, only this time directed at the Frenchtown Fire Chief, Scott Waldron. Sobrio claimed that Tucker wrote the letter at his residence on either the family computer or his laptop, and she drove his vehicle while he distributed the letters around the Frenchtown area. The application stated that Maricelli contacted Waldron and confirmed that such a letter had been distributed. Waldron provided Maricelli with a copy of the letter and Maricelli attached a copy to the application.

¶8 The application attached photographs of, and described in detail, Tucker’s residence on Pond Road in Frenchtown and the structures found on the land, including the trailer noted by Sobrio. Detective Maricelli stated that he had confirmed Tucker resided at the Pond Road residence, as it was the same address Tucker had provided for his sex offender registration. Based on the foregoing information and his knowledge and experience, Maricelli believed that a search of Tucker’s residence would result in locating not only evidence of the Belker letter, including the computer used in its creation, but also child pornography.

¶9 District Court Judge John Larson reviewed and approved the application for a search warrant on December 4, 2002. The following day, Detective Maricelli and four other law enforcement officers searched Tucker’s residence, and seized numerous pornographic videotapes and magazines, as well as several computer disks that were later determined to contain child pornography. Copies of the Belker letter were also found in the search, although Tucker was ultimately not charged with criminal defamation.

¶10 On August 28,2003, the State charged Tucker by Information with one count of sexual abuse of children, in violation of § 45-5-625, MCA, as a result of images found on the seized computer disks.

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Bluebook (online)
2008 MT 273, 190 P.3d 1080, 345 Mont. 237, 2008 Mont. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-thomas-tucker-jr-mont-2008.