State v. Widerstrom

818 P.2d 934, 109 Or. App. 18, 1991 Ore. App. LEXIS 1444
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 25, 1991
DocketC88-10-37108; CA A61948
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 818 P.2d 934 (State v. Widerstrom) 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. Widerstrom, 818 P.2d 934, 109 Or. App. 18, 1991 Ore. App. LEXIS 1444 (Or. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinions

[20]*20DEITS, J.

Defendant appeals his conviction for possession of a controlled substance. ORS 475.992. He assigns error to the denial of his motion to suppress. We affirm.

On March 5,1988, defendant arrived at the Portland airport to take a flight to Spokane. At the airport, he passed through a security checkpoint on his way to his gate. The scanner detected an opaque metal container, large enough to hold explosives or a weapon, in his carry-on bag, and the security person asked him to open the container. When defendant complied, the security person saw that it contained white powder, a razor blade and what appeared to be marijuana. She allowed defendant to pass, through the gate but reported her observations to Officer Sorenson of the Port of Portland Police. Sorenson asked State Trooper George of the Portland Airport Interagency Narcotics Team to assist in the investigation. While defendant sat in the gate waiting area, three uniformed officers observed him from a distance until George arrived.

George, who was not in uniform, approached defendant at the gate and identified himself as a police officer by showing his badge. During that conversation, the three uniformed officers were 15 to 18 feet from defendant. George told defendant that his job was “intercepting narcotics going out of and into the Portland area through the airport” and that he had received a call that defendant ‘ ‘may be in possession of some controlled substances.” George gave defendant the option of completing the investigation at the gate or in the police office. Defendant agreed to accompany George to his office, and the uniformed officers followed at a distance.

As George and defendant were walking toward George’s office, George noticed that defendant was holding a metal canister. He asked him if the canister was “the article or contained the articles that I was looking for.” Defendant replied that it was. George asked him if he could have it, and defendant gave it to him. Defendant, George and the uniformed officers entered the elevator together. When they reached the office, the uniformed officers waited in the hallway outside while George and defendant entered. They were alone in the room, which had only one door. In the office, [21]*21George asked defendant for identification and opened the canister in his presence. Defendant did not tell George not to open it. In the canister, George found baggies with white powder residue, a baggie containing white powder, a marijuana bud and a razor blade. In George’s experience, those items were consistent with methamphetamine packaging and use. After that, George gave defendant Miranda warnings, issued him a uniform criminal citation to appear in district court and allowed him to leave.

Defendant moved to suppress all evidence obtained by George at the airport, because it “was the product of an illegal stop, search and seizure of defendant * * The trial court denied the motion.1 Defendant assigns error to that denial, arguing that he was in custody from the time that George first contacted him at the gate, that George should have given him Miranda warnings before he asked him any questions and that the evidence obtained in violation of Miranda rights should be suppressed. He also argues that defendant’s consent to the seizure of the metal canister was involuntary, because it was the result of the illegal interrogation and was coerced.2

We first address whether defendant should have been advised of his rights when George first asked him about the canister. Under the Oregon Constitution,3 warnings are required when a defendant is in “full custody” or when circumstances exist which, although they do not rise to the level of full custody, create a setting that is “compelling.” State v. Smith, 310 Or 1, 7, 791 P2d 836 (1990). Defendant points to the presence of the three uniformed police officers and George and argues that he was in custody or, at least, in compelling circumstances at the time of the inquiry. We disagree. Although defendant may not have felt free to leave, [22]*22that does not necessarily mean that he was in custody or compelling circumstances. In discussing whether a defendant was in custody in State v. Greason, 106 Or App 529, 809 P2d 695, rev den 311 Or 643 (1991), we said:

George had been advised by the airport security personnel, who had limited training in drug investigation, that defendant had a white powder, razor blades and “what appeared to be marijuana’ ’ in the canister. Acting on a reasonable suspicion that defendant was in possession of narcotics, he conducted a lawful stop, pursuant to ORS 131.615. He was not in uniform, and his demeanor was casual and polite. The uniformed officers stayed 15 to 18 feet away. George told defendant that he wanted to investigate the matter, either at the gate or, at defendant’s choosing, at his office. Defendant indicated that he would prefer to have the investigation take place in George’s office. George told defendant that he would try to complete the investigation in time for defendant to make his flight. As the trial court found, there was nothing coercive in what had occurred at that timé:

“When Officer George arrived he identified himself as a police officer by showing a badge. He indicated his — what had been phoned to him, and he said that — he told the defendant that it would probably be less embarrassing to him if they talked about this in his office rather than in the presence of all these people, some thirty to forty people, waiting for the plane. I think this was an act of courtesy to the defendant. And the defendant agreed. There was no coercion at that point. I think the defendant probably went for the simple reason that he did not want to be embarrassed in front of all those people.”

George and defendant then proceeded down the public corridor with the security officers following them at a [23]*23distance. At that point, George had no further information about defendant’s alleged possession of contraband than he had received from the airport police. The state conceded at trial that, although George had a reasonable suspicion that defendant possessed contraband, he did not have probable cause to arrest him. George’s question about the canister was a reasonable inquiry following a lawful stop. There was no greater coercion than if George had continued questioning defendant at the gate.

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State v. Widerstrom
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Bluebook (online)
818 P.2d 934, 109 Or. App. 18, 1991 Ore. App. LEXIS 1444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-widerstrom-orctapp-1991.