Stavenjord v. State

66 P.3d 762, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 54, 2003 WL 1589519
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMarch 28, 2003
DocketA-7418
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 66 P.3d 762 (Stavenjord v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stavenjord v. State, 66 P.3d 762, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 54, 2003 WL 1589519 (Ala. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

STEWART, Judge.

A jury selected for a trial in Palmer found Paul T. Stavenjord guilty of two counts of first-degree murder 1 for shooting Carl H. Beery and D.R. near Chulitna, a small, off-road community in the Matanuska Susitna Borough. Because this case generated substantial publicity, Stavenjord argues that the superior court erred when it denied his motion to change venue. But we have examined the record and conclude that the superior court did not abuse its discretion when it kept the trial in Palmer after conducting jury voir dire.

Stavenjord also argues that the superior court erroneously denied his motion to suppress evidence seized when the police executed several search warrants. Stavenjord renews his claim that the police intentionally or recklessly misstated material facts and intentionally or recklessly withheld material facts when applying for the search warrants. Because we conclude that the superior court did not abuse its discretion, we reject Staven-jord's argument. Accordingly, we affirm Stavenjord's convictions.

Background facts

Beery and D.R. had a cabin in the Chulitna area of the Mat Su Borough. The Chulitna area is not on the road system but is accessible by foot or off-road vehicles. Beery and D.R. planned to spend the Memorial Day weekend of 1997 at their cabin. When D.R. did not return to work the following Tuesday, May 27, D.R.'s brother, Donald Tidwell, Jr., borrowed a four-wheeler and drove along the railroad tracks into the cabin. Tidwell found the couple's dogs at the cabin but no other sign of the couple.

Tidwell stopped at Stavenjord's nearby cabin to ask about D.R. and Beery. Staven-jord said that he and Beery had had a "falling out" and that he had not seen or talked to the couple in about a year. Nonetheless, he offered to help Tidwell look for them. By the next day, Wednesday, May 28, the troopers had been notified of the missing couple. Tidwell went to Pass Creek (about two miles north of Chulitna) when he heard that a green four-wheeler had been stuck in the creek since the previous Saturday. He recognized it as belonging to D.R.

The next day, Thursday, May 29, Beery's body was recovered from Pass Creek near the stuck four-wheeler. D.R.'s body was located a week later hidden in the bushes less than 150 feet away. Forensic examination found semen consistent with Stavenjord's DNA on D.R.'s body. Each victim was killed by a gunshot to the head with a small caliber weapon: Beery was shot with a .22 caliber bullet; D.R. was likely shot with a .22 caliber bullet. Ultimately, the grand jury indicted Stavenjord on two counts of first-degree murder, one count of first-degree sexual assault, *765 2 and two counts of second-degree theft. 3

At trial, Stavenjord claimed that he shot Beery in self-defense after Beery discovered that he was having consensual sex with D.R. and opened fire at Stavenjord. Stavenjord asserted that D.R. was accidently shot by Beery during the gunfight. The jury convicted Stavenjord of the two counts of first-degree murder and acquitted him of the other charges. Superior Court Judge Eric Smith imposed consecutive 99-year terms.

Did the superior court property uphold the challenged search warrants?

As Judge Smith noted, the parties filed a "plethora" of motions that he resolved before trial, In this appeal, Stavenjord challenges the superior court's resolution of one of those motions: Stavenjord's claim that the testimony in support of several search warrants included intentional or reckless misstatements of fact and intentional or reckless omission of material facts such that the evidence seized when the warrants were executed must be suppressed.

On June 10, Alaska State Troopers Michael Brandenburger and Martin Patterson sought search warrants for Stavenjord's person, cabin, and vehicles. The troopers focused on Stavenjord as a potential suspect after they decided that a camper, who had been camping close to the area where D.R.'s four-wheeler and the bodies were found, was not a prime suspect. Both troopers testified in support of the warrant applications before Magistrate David L. Zwink and the court issued the search warrants.

When the troopers executed the warrants, they seized evidence including two .22 caliber rifles, three .22 caliber bullets found in a log near Stavenjord's cabin, writings by Staven-jord (which included an assertion of his whereabouts and activities on Memorial Day weekend), and hair samples and tissue swabs from Stavenjord's person.

In State v. Malkin, 4 the Alaska Supreme Court established the framework for evaluating a defendant's claim that an application for a search warrant included material misstatements or omissions. 5

[Olnee a misstatement or omission is established, the burden of proving that it was neither reckless nor intentional shifts to the state. A failure to meet this burden will vitiate the warrant if the misstatement or omission is material, that is, if deletion of the misstated information from or inclusion of the omitted information in the original affidavit would have precluded a finding of probable cause. A non-material omission or misstatement-one on which probable cause does not hinge-requires suppression only when the court finds "a deliberate attempt to mislead [the magistrate]." [ 6 ]

The parties presented testimony at an evi-dentiary hearing before Judge Smith. Judge Smith entered findings and denied Staven-jord's motion.

Stavenjord's motion rested on two main pillars. First, Stavenjord claimed that the troopers deliberately misled Magistrate Zwink by misstating and omitting information that implicated the camper whom the troopers first suspected but had ruled out as a prime suspect before they sought the Sta-venjord warrants. - Second, Stavenjord claimed that the troopers misstated or omitted information that would have corroborated Stavenjord's statements about his whereabouts on May 28 and May 24.

The State argues that we should reject Stavenjord's arguments and uphold the search warrants based on evidence presented at the trial. 7 As the State points out, Staven- *766 jord admitted at trial that he was involved in the homicides. And Stavenjord admitted that his statements to the troopers about his whereabouts on May 23 and 24 were not true. Thus, Stavenjord's case at trial affirmatively supported the magistrate's decision to issue the search warrants. Basically, the troopers told the magistrate that their investigation had turned from the camper as a prime suspect to Stavenjord when they discovered that several of Stavenjord's statements about his whereabouts around the time of the homicides were false. But we need not uphold the warrants by considering the trial testimony because Judge Smith directly rejected Stavenjord's claims and we conclude that Judge Smith did not abuse his discretion when he denied this motion. 8

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Related

LESTENKOF v. State
229 P.3d 182 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2010)
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193 P.3d 1184 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2008)

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Bluebook (online)
66 P.3d 762, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 54, 2003 WL 1589519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stavenjord-v-state-alaskactapp-2003.