State v. Yoder

935 P.2d 534, 313 Utah Adv. Rep. 5, 1997 Utah App. LEXIS 28, 1997 WL 123354
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMarch 20, 1997
Docket950568-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 935 P.2d 534 (State v. Yoder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Yoder, 935 P.2d 534, 313 Utah Adv. Rep. 5, 1997 Utah App. LEXIS 28, 1997 WL 123354 (Utah Ct. App. 1997).

Opinions

JACKSON, Judge:

Defendant Michael W. Yoder appeals his convictions for child kidnaping, a first degree felony, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-301.1 (1995), and aggravated sexual abuse of a child, a first degree felony, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-404.1 (1995). We affirm.

FACTS1

On October 21, 1993, around 6:30 p.m. at a West Valley City apartment complex, five-year-old S.F. left her apartment to take some trash to a dumpster about thirty feet from her apartment door. When S.F. failed to return after a few minutes, her mother began searching for her and then called the police to report that she was missing. About one-half hour later, Officer Robert Idle of the West Valley City Police Department arrived at the apartment complex to investigate S.F.’s disappearance.

Officer Idle first met with S.F.’s mother and conducted a preliminary search of the family’s apartment and other nearby places where S.F. may have wandered. When this preliminary search uncovered nothing, Idle began a door-to-door search of building I, the building in which S.F. lived, and a search of the perimeter of the apartment complex, followed by a general search from building to building. Two other officers and about fifteen residents of the complex assisted Idle in this search.

Within the next several hours, the search was joined by all detectives of the West Valley City Police Department and numerous agents of the Salt Lake City and Salt Lake County Police Departments, and all the surrounding areas of the complex were searched. During this period, a crowd also gathered at the complex.

About three horns after S.F. had first disappeared, S.F.’s clothes were found in an area that had already been searched by the police. The clothes were located between a sidewalk and a small pond, about twenty feet from building K, the building in which defendant lived. There were no reports indicating how or by whom the clothes had been placed or thrown there.

[538]*538The officers first searched the pond but found nothing. They then turned to building K, as this building was closest to where the clothes were found. Budding K has six apartments with balconies facing the area where the clothes were found, with two apartments on each of the blinding’s three floors. Lights were on in only two of these apartments, one of which was defendant’s second floor apartment.

A number of unidentified people reported to the police that they had seen defendant “acting suspicious,” going back and forth numerous times between his apartment and his balcony and the balcony closet, and standing on the balcony watching the crowd below. A few of the officers also saw defendant both standing on his balcony and going back and forth between his apartment and his balcony.

The police decided to check all the apartments in buflding K. Detective Alan Call and Officer John Pearce were told to search the building, starting with defendant’s apartment. They were instructed to ask defendant if he had seen anything concerning the clothes and to seek his consent to search his apartment.

Thus, the two officers, followed shortly thereafter by Detective Vince Garcia, went to defendant’s apartment and asked defendant if they could enter his apartment, explaining that they were looking for a five-year-old girl. Defendant opened the door and stepped back, allowing the officers to enter six-to-eight feet inside the apartment. The officers asked defendant if he knew anything about a missing five-year-old girl. In response to the officers’ inquiry about S.F. and their questions as to whether he had seen anything, defendant claimed to have been sleeping and to have just awakened. The officers observed that defendant appeared unusually nervous and agitated.

The officers then explained to defendant that the child had been missing for several hours, that her clothes had been discovered near his apartment building, and that they would like to look at his balcony to see if there might be other items there. Defendant refused to allow the officers to search his apartment or balcony. The officers further explained the urgency of finding a small girl who was probably without clothing, again asking for defendant’s cooperation. Defendant again refused to allow them to search and told them they would need a warrant if they wanted to search his apartment. Defendant also asked the officers to leave his apartment, but they refused.

Within five to fifteen minutes after the officers had arrived, defendant said he would not cooperate with the West Valley police because of some prior incident, but said he would cooperate with the Salt Lake County Sheriff. Accordingly, Officer Pearce left the apartment to communicate this to the officer in charge. Meanwhile, the officers who stayed in the apartment continued to “explain the urgency of their inquiry” and to “plead or request that [they] be allowed to find the child.” Again, defendant refused to allow a search of his apartment and insisted that the officers leave.

A few minutes later, Officer Pearce returned to defendant’s apartment with Salt Lake County Deputy Sheriff Kenneth Eyre. Deputy Eyre introduced himself to defendant and explained that the officers were not there to search for drugs or weapons or anything of that nature, but that they were just trying to find a little girl to make sure that she was all right. Eyre said to defendant, “As a possible father or brother ... wouldn’t you want to help somebody find their little girl?” Defendant answered, “No,” a response Eyre found odd “considering the circumstances.”

In the course of the officers’ requests to search the apartment, defendant vacillated back and forth four or five times, indicating at times that he would be cooperative and then refusing to cooperate. At one point after Deputy Eyre’s arrival, defendant said he was going to call his attorney. He instead called 911, telling the dispatcher that there were four trespassers — three West Valley City police officers and a Salt Lake County deputy — in his apartment, and asking that they be removed. The dispatcher recommended that he cooperate with the officers.

Deputy Eyre then drew defendant aside and suggested that just he and defendant go out and search the balcony, without the West [539]*539Valley officers being involved. Defendant agreed, but said he wanted the West Valley officers to leave. The West Valley officers retreated to the apartment’s doorway where they could see Eyre to ensure his safety. Defendant then led Eyre out onto the balcony.

Once on the balcony, defendant went directly to the balcony closet. Defendant briefly opened the closet door about three or four inches and then shut it, saying something to the effect of, “See, there’s nothing out here.” Deputy Eyre made a cursory search of the rest of the balcony, and then asked that defendant go back into the apartment before him. Defendant at first refused, but then went ahead. As soon as defendant reached the sliding glass door, Eyre turned to the closet and opened the closet door. There he saw S.F. huddled in a box and covered by a blanket. She did not move, and Eyre believed at first that she was dead.

Deputy Eyre immediately arrested defendant, pushing him back into the apartment and handcuffing him.

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State v. Yoder
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Bluebook (online)
935 P.2d 534, 313 Utah Adv. Rep. 5, 1997 Utah App. LEXIS 28, 1997 WL 123354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-yoder-utahctapp-1997.