State v. Wagar

79 P.3d 644, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 129, 2003 WL 22519864
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 2003
DocketS-10369
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 79 P.3d 644 (State v. Wagar) 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. Wagar, 79 P.3d 644, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 129, 2003 WL 22519864 (Ala. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The question here is whether an officer conducting a pat-down search for weapons during an investigatory stop who feels an object that he reasonably believes might be used as a weapon may examine the object to confirm that it is not a potential weapon. The court of appeals answered this question in the negative, holding that the officer must have a reasonable belief that the object is a weapon, not merely that it might be used as a weapon. We answer in the affirmative because officer safety is better served by permitting searches for potential weapons and because this is the teaching of the leading treatise on search and seizure law.

*646 II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The facts and the initial proceedings are stated by the court of appeals:

At about 10:00 p.m. on August 8, 1997, Othal C. Madden, a security manager for Brown Jug, Incorporated, was in a parking lot by the Brown Jug liquor store at 26th Avenue and Spenard Road. Madden was in the parking lot to look for adults purchasing alcohol for minors or minors trying to buy aleohol out of the Brown Jug store. Madden saw Wagar and a female companion pull into the lot in a relatively new Dodge pickup. Wagar was driving. Madden saw Wagar throw and break a bottle into the parking lot. Then Wagar got out, went to the bed of the pickup, took a bottle of beer out of a cooler, and got back into the driver's side. Shortly thereafter, Wa-gar got out again, left the door open, and urinated in the parking lot.
Madden watched the pickup for about an hour. During the hour, Madden saw Wa-gar return to the cooler for what appeared to be several more beers. Madden also saw the passenger repeatedly put her hand to her nose, covering a nostril, and lean down as if she were snorting cocaine. Madden decided to defer calling the police about what he saw until he was ready to wrap up or until the pickup started to leave because Madden did not want his "sting" interrupted by a "parking lot ... full of police cars." When Madden was ready to go, he called Alcohol Beverage Control Board Investigator John F. Bilyeu on a cell phone. Bilyeu was approximately 200 yards away in a patrol car with Anchorage Police Officer Derek Hsich. Bilyeu and Hsieh were working together that night investigating potential aleohol violations.
Madden told Bilyeu that he had seen a man (Wagar) consume four or five beers and urinate in the parking lot. Madden told Bilyeu that the woman passenger appeared to be using cocaine. Madden also described the Dodge to Bilyeu. According to Bilyeu, Madden told him that both occupants appeared to be using cocaine. Bilyeu relayed this version of Madden's report to Hsieh,. Bilyeu and Hsieh, who had just pulled up to Chilkoot Charlie's to walk through the bar, instead went directly to the parking lot where the Dodge was parked. As Hsich and Bilyeu pulled into the lot, Madden pointed to the Dodge, and Hsich drove up to the truck and parked.
Wagar and his companion were getting out of the truck when Hsich and Bilyeu 'arrived. Hsich contacted Wagar and noticed that he smelled of alcoholic beverages. Bilyeu contacted the companion. Wa-gar put his hands in his jeans pockets, although Hsich told him not to do that. Wagar turned away from Hsieh, an action that Hsich described as "blading," and "kind of a danger sign that a person may be attempting to hide something or ... positioning their body in some type of fighting posture[.]" Because Wagar put his hands in his pockets and turned away, Hsich testified that he felt he was "potentially ... at risk[.]" Hsieh frisked Wagar for weapons.
Hsieh found nothing of note until he got to Wagar's T-shirt pocket. In that pocket, Hsieh felt a pack of cigarettes, a lighter, and an unknown object that was hard, pointed, and approximately three inches long. Hsich asked Wagar what the object was, and Wagar said he did not know. Hsieh testified that he became "very nervous" because he thought that the object might be a weapon. As Hsich manipulated the object with his fingers, he looked into the T-shirt pocket and saw that the object was a glass vial with a white powdery substance that looked like cocaine. Hsich seized the vial and arrested Wagar.
The grand jury indicted Wagar on one count of fourth-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance. Wagar moved to suppress the cocaine Hsich seized. Superior Court Judge Larry D. Card held an evidentiary hearing on Wagar's motion. Judge Card found that Wagar was subjected to an investigatory stop at the point Hsieh touched him, and that this investigatory stop was supported by Hsieh's reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. Judge Card concluded that Hsieh's reasonable suspicion justified a pat-down for weapons and denied Wagar's motion. Wagar en *647 tered a Cooksey 1 plea, reserving his right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress. Judge Card sentenced Wagar to eighteen months' imprisonment with seventeen months suspended. 2

On appeal, Wagar raised three points. First, he contended that the investigatory stop conducted by Officer Hsich was not supported by reasonable suspicion "that imminent public danger exists or that serious harm to persons or property has recently occurred." 3 Second, even if the stop were permissible, Wagar argued that the frisk was not 4 Third, even if the stop and the frisk were permissible, Wagar argued that Hsich exceeded the allowable seope of a pat-down search for weapons when Hsieh looked into Wagar's T-shirt pocket in order to determine what the unknown object was. 5

On the first two points, a majority of the court of appeals concluded that the superior court's determinations were appropriate. 6 But on the third point, the court of appeals concluded that the superior court's findings were inadequate and remanded the case for "findings on whether the object felt like a typical weapon or whether Officer Hsich knew of specific and articulable facts that support a reasonable belief that the unknown object was an atypical weapon that Wagar could use to harm Officer Hsich or others nearby." 7

On remand, the superior court conducted a supplemental evidentiary hearing. The superior court purported to answer the court of appeals's second question in the affirmative, stating:

This court finds after hearing that the glass vial discovered by Officer Hsich was not a typical weapon which was apparent to the Court of Appeals. Having not found it a typical weapon, Officer Hsieh had to have specific and articulable facts that would support a reasonable belief that the unknown object was an atypical weapon that it could use-to harm the officers before he examined the contents of the pocket.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P.3d 644, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 129, 2003 WL 22519864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wagar-alaska-2003.