State v. Watkins

615 P.2d 394, 47 Or. App. 777, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 3225
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 11, 1980
DocketC 78-12-20292, CA 14304
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 615 P.2d 394 (State v. Watkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Watkins, 615 P.2d 394, 47 Or. App. 777, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 3225 (Or. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

WARREN, J.

Defendant seeks reversal of his conviction by a jury verdict of robbery in the first degree.1 He assigns as error the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress identification evidence and the court’s failure to give his requested instruction on the lesser included offenses of robbery in the second degree2 and robbery in the third degree.3

On December 20,1978, at approximately 6:30 p.m., two black women and one black man holding a sawed-off .22 caliber automatic rifle robbed a tire store [780]*780in Portland. The robbery lasted about 2 or 3 minutes. Three witnesses observed the robbery: Gene Cross and Christopher McCord, employees of the tire store, and Mariane Stites, a police officer who was seated in a patrol car across the street. When the two women left the store, Officer Stites and her partner, Officer Mosiman, chased and apprehended them about a block and a half away. The male robber escaped.

In the meantime, a few minutes after the robbery, a second police car arrived at the store. McCord described the male robber and pointed out the way he had fled. Thereupon, McCord and a police officer followed the robber’s footprints in the snow for about three and a half hours. McCord subsequently returned to the tire store. Approximately four hours after the robbery, Officers Stites and Mosiman went back to the store and picked up Cross and McCord. Officer Stites advised them that the police had a possible suspect whom they wanted them to see.4 She instructed them not to talk to each other or to talk out loud when they observed the suspect.

They drove to a location approximately one mile from the scene of the crime. When they arrived, the defendant was standing in the middle of the street, handcuffed, surrounded by four police officers, and illuminated by the headlights of several police cars. He was about 12 to 15 feet away from the police car containing Stites, Cross and McCord. Defendant was the only black man present. Officer Stites asked Cross and McCord to look at the suspect and see if they could identify him. After they observed him for a few minutes and were unable positively to identify him as the robber, Officers Stites and Mosiman drove them around the block. They got out of the car, whereupon Officer Stites took McCord off to one side to interview [781]*781him, while Officer Mosiman interviewed Cross in a separate location.

After their interviews, Cross and McCord returned to the police car and were driven to the location of their first observation of defendant. At this time, Officer Stites left the police car and instructed the other officers that they could arrest the suspect for robbery based upon her own identification. Defendant was then handcuffed and seated in the back of a police car. There were no lights where he was seated, nor was any one else sitting in the back seat. The police car containing the witnesses was driven next to the oné in which defendant was seated, and Cross and McCord were asked to take another look at the suspect. At this time, both Cross and McCord identified defendant as the robber. They observed defendant for approximately 1 to 2 minutes and could hear what each other was saying.

The state stipulated that at the time defendant was stopped he would have been arrested eventually or at least detained for interview purposes concerning the robbery.

Defendant filed a motion to suppress identification, challenging both testimony concerning the "show-up” and any in-court identification testimony by Cross, McCord and Stites on the grounds that the on-the-street identification procedure was unconstitutionally suggestive and that any in-court identification was tainted thereby. In denying this motion, the court made no finding that the in-court or out-of-court identifications were reliable and independent of any suggestiveness of the original procedure.

The Oregon Supreme Court in State v. Classen, 285 Or 221, 232, 590 P2d 1198 (1979), articulated the following test:

"* * * As a practical matter, in the context of a motion by a defendant to suppress identification evidence on the ground that it is the product of a [782]*782suggestive procedure, the decision on its admissibility involves two steps. First, the court must determine whether the process leading to the offered identification was suggestive or needlessly departed from procedures prescribed to avoid such suggestiveness. If so, then the prosecution must satisfy the court that 'the proffered identification has a source independent of the suggestive confrontation’ or photographic display, see Commonwealth v. Botelho, 343 NE2d 876, 881 (Mass 1976)(citing cases), or that other aspects of the identification at the time it was made substantially exclude the risk that it resulted from the suggestive procedure.”

In the present case, it is clear that the activity leading to the offered identification was suggestive. Moreover, in view of the imminence of defendant’s arrest, the police may have needlessly departed from procedures established to prevent such suggestiveness. This conclusion, however, does not end our inquiry. We must next examine the facts and determine whether these identifications have a source independent of the suggestive confrontation.

In making this determination, the following factors are relevant:

"* * * These include the opportunity that the witness had at the time to get a clear view of the persons involved in the crime and the attention he or she gave to their identifying features, the timing and completeness of the description given by the witness after the event, the certainty expressed by the witness in that description and in making the subsequent identification, and, of course, the lapse of time between the original observation and the subsequent identification. These are not to be taken as a mechanical checklist of 'constitutional’ facts. Obviously other facts may also be important, such as the age and sensory acuity of the witness, see State v. Bush, 29 Or App 315, 563 P2d 747 (1977), or a special occupational concern with people’s appearance or physical features, or the frequency of his or her contacts with individuals sharing the general characteristics of the person identified, see Manson v. Brathwaite, 432 US [783]*783at 115. Listing these and other relevant inquiries must not distract attention from the ultimate issue whether an identification made in a suggestive procedure has nevertheless been demonstrated to be reliable despite that suggestiveness. * * *” State v. Classen, supra at 232-33.

In applying these factors to the present case, we will individually discuss the testimony at the suppression hearing of all three witnesses.

Cross testified that during the robbery his attention was fixed primarily on the male robber who was standing 3 to 4 feet away from him for about a minute. He stated that although it was dark out he got a good look at the man. However, he did not recall his initial description to the police of the male robber nor was there any other evidence submitted as to such a description.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
615 P.2d 394, 47 Or. App. 777, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 3225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-watkins-orctapp-1980.