State v. Wendler

274 P.3d 30, 47 Kan. App. 2d 182, 2012 WL 975416, 2012 Kan. App. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedMarch 23, 2012
Docket104,469
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 274 P.3d 30 (State v. Wendler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wendler, 274 P.3d 30, 47 Kan. App. 2d 182, 2012 WL 975416, 2012 Kan. App. LEXIS 24 (kanctapp 2012).

Opinion

Buser, J.:

The State of Kansas appeals the district court’s order suppressing a large quantity of marijuana seized by law enforcement officers after a traffic stop of a recreational vehicle (RV) driven by Trever Rhodes Wendler.

We conclude that under the totality of the circumstances, the duration of the traffic stop was measurably extended after the purpose of the traffic stop — to investigate Wendler’s commission of a traffic violation — was concluded. Moreover, during tire investigation into the traffic violation, the officer did not gain reasonable suspicion of illegal drug activity necessary to lawfully extend the scope and duration of the detention. Finally, we conclude the unlawful detention of Wendler infected or tainted his consent to answer questions and to search the RV. Accordingly, we affirm the ruling of the district court suppressing the marijuana seized from the RV and the dismissal of charges against Wendler.

Factual and Procedural Background

As a result of the traffic stop, on November 10, 2009, the State charged Wendler with possession of marijuana with intent to sell (K.S.A. 2009 Supp. 21-36a05[a][4]) and failure to affix a drug tax stamp (K.S.A. 79-5201). Prior to trial, Wendler filed a motion to suppress the marijuana found hidden in the RV. During hearings on the motion, the State presented testimony from the arresting officer, Robert Youse of the Topeka Police Department, and a DVD of the vehicle stop taken from a camera mounted on Officer Youse’s patrol vehicle. At the conclusion of the hearings, the district court made numerous and detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law.

*185 The district court found Officer Youse stopped the RV for following another vehicle too closely on Interstate 70, in violation of K.S.A. 8-1523. Wendler was the driver, and the passengers were his girlfriend/fiancée and their infant son. During the stop, the officer noticed a “strong odor of air freshener” coming from the interior of the RV.

The district court found that Officer Youse asked Wendler “some general investigatory questions regarding his travel mode plans, and asked for license and registration.” Wendler told the officer “he was driving a rented [RV], [and he] displayed a driver s license that had been issued from the State of Florida.” Wendler said he was driving from San Diego, California, to Florida. The district court surmised that “the minute [Officer Youse] heard rental, California, [and] Florida, ... he was going to . . . keep [the RV] as long as he possibly could.”

Officer Youse took Wendler’s license and registration to his police vehicle “to run it.” According to the district court, tire officer sat “there for a good three, three and-a-half minutes not doing anything.” He then called “the information into dispatch.” The DVD shows this occurred about 6 minutes after the stop began.

According to the district court, the dispatcher took “three minutes to come back negative,” so 9 minutes had elapsed since tire vehicle stop. Officer Youse then “just [sat] there and [did] nothing with the information, but wait[ed] another five minutes” before returning to the RV. From these facts, the district court inferred tire officer was “stretching tire stop out as long as he possibly [could],” even though the information was “all negative.”

Upon approaching Wendler again, Officer Youse “initiate[d] another conversation . . . asking now about the rental papers” and about Wendler s employment. Wendler told Youse that he worked on boats. The district court concluded that Officer Youse “was obviously just trying to get additional information, which he got, but which . . . nonetheless . . . didn’t relate back to the reason for tire initial stop [and] didn’t really elicit any more information to support his reasonable suspicion.”

The rental papers “were all in order,” with Wendler listed as “an authorized operator,” although “somebody else” had rented the *186 RV for Wendler. When Officer Youse returned to his patrol vehicle, he learned from dispatch that Wendler “did have criminal convictions — or criminal activity of some sort in Florida and Colorado.” The DVD shows Officer Youse discussed Wendler s criminal histoiy with the dispatcher about 18 minutes after the stop. The district court found that Officer Youse then waited for another officer, who arrived in about “four to five minutes.”

While waiting, Officer Youse “was not pursuing any information. He was not actually working on trying to verify anything or clear up anything.” The district court opined, “There was nothing inconsistent with [Wendler s] information,... it’s all believable,” and it “may be true.” Even after the other officer arrived, he and Officer Youse were not “engaged in any activities that were designed to dispel or confirm any sort of information relating to the traffic stop.” The total length of the stop at this point was “at least 25 minutes.”

The district court made no findings regarding Officer Youse’s next actions, but the DVD shows the officer approached the driver’s door of the RV while the assisting officer approached the passenger’s side. The officers were both in uniform and armed. The emergency lights on Officer Youse’s patrol vehicle were illuminated.

Officer Youse asked Wendler to leave the vehicle. The officer then accompanied Wendler to the back of the RV, where the assisting officer joined them.

The district court found that Officer Youse made “the very standard attempt to effectuate a release from custody.” The officer advised Wendler that he was giving him a warning. Officer Youse then said, “[Tjhat’s all, or something to drat effect,” and Wendler turned towards the front of the RV to walk away. Then, according to the district court, “because ... it’s a highway and all that, Officer Youse has to call out pretty loudly, hey, Trev[e]r, would you come — and Mr. Wendler turns around, and he has to come back to Officer Youse to talk to him.” This exchange is audible on the DVD.

The district court found that Officer Youse started “into the typical . . . questions. Do you have anything else, do you — you *187 know, what’s up, all that.” The district judge characterized these as a “shotgun of questions, . . . you don’t have this, you don’t have that, you don’t have this, you don’t have that, well, can I search your [RV]?” Answering “hesitantly and reluctantly,” Wendler said, “[S]ure, but will this take very long?” Officer Youse said, “[N]o, just a few minutes.”

The district court found that Officer Youse “direct[ed] Mr. Wendler back” to the patrol vehicle and “directed the removal of Mr. Wendler’s girlfriend and baby from the RV.” The three were then “secured” in the patrol vehicle. The district court found the search “did not take just a few minutes” and that Officer Youse was inside tire RV “for more than 15 minutes,” yet “couldn’t find anything.”

Wendler approached the RV while Officer Youse was searching it. The conversation between the two men is audible on the DVD.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 P.3d 30, 47 Kan. App. 2d 182, 2012 WL 975416, 2012 Kan. App. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wendler-kanctapp-2012.