Wilson v. State

82 P.3d 783, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 231, 2003 WL 23011815
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedDecember 26, 2003
DocketA-8377
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 82 P.3d 783 (Wilson 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
Wilson v. State, 82 P.3d 783, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 231, 2003 WL 23011815 (Ala. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

On February 5, 2001, the Petersburg district court issued a warrant authorizing the search of Troy A. Wilson's residence for evidence of fourth-degree controlled substance misconduct under AS 11.71.040(a)(@)-pos-session of one ounce or more of marijuana for purposes of distribution. The question presented in this appeal is whether the information presented in the search warrant application established probable cause for the issuance of this warrant.

When a search warrant application rests on hearsay information, the State must establish (1) that each of its hearsay informants is generally a credible source of information, and (2) that each informant obtained their present information in a reliable way. 1 As we explain in more detail below, the search warrant application in Wilson's case *784 rested on information supplied by three informants. Of these three, the State established the credibility of only one. This one reliable informant had hardly any personal knowledge of the alleged incriminating facts. Instead, the main incriminating information was supplied by the two informants of unproven credibility. Moreover, with regard to these two informants' allegations, the State failed to establish that the informants had personal knowledge of many of their incriminatory assertions. We therefore conclude that the information presented to the district court failed to establish probable cause for the issuance of the warrant.

Details of the search warrant application

Petersburg Police Officer Gregg Siera applied for the search warrant and supplied all of the testimony in support of the search warrant application. He purported to rely on information he received from two police informants, "N-788" and "GSO1-O1". But, as will become clear in the next few paragraphs, Officer Siera actually relied on three informants: N-788, GSO1-O1, and an unnamed "friend" of N-788. Siera apparently was aware of the identities of N-788 and GSOl-01, but he had absolutely no information about this unnamed friend.

Siera told the Petersburg magistrate that, on January 27, 2001 (%.e., nine days before the search warrant application), he received a report from N-788. Siera testified that N-788 was a police informant who has proven to be reliable in the past.

N-788 told the police that a friend of his had purchased a quarter pound of marijuana from Troy Wilson for $900. But N-788 did not disclose any information about this friend-neither his name nor anything else about him.

Moreover, N-788 did not witness this sale (although his friend apparently showed him a supply of marijuana). Thus, N-788 was mainly reporting what his unnamed friend told him.

In addition, Siera did not know when this alleged sale of marijuana took place. Under questioning from the magistrate, Siera asserted that "N-788 contacted me shortly after the fact". But the "fact" that Siera is referring to must have been the unnamed friend's statement to N-788 that he had purchased marijuana-because N-788 said that he did not witness the sale. Even if we assume that N-788 made some statement to Siera concerning when the alleged sale took place, it is clear that N-788's information was obtained from his unnamed friend. In other words, any assertion about the timing of the purchase rests entirely on the unnamed friend's credibility.

N-788 told Siera that he himself had purchased marijuana from Wilson in the past. But Siera explained that N-788's purchase of marijuana occurred more than a year before.

Siera added one more incriminating assertion: he told the magistrate that, according to N-788, Wilson currently possessed approximately fourteen pounds of marijuana at his residence. But, again under questioning from the magistrate, Siera conceded that he had no idea how N-788 knew this. Siera told the magistrate, "I don't know if the [unnamed] friend told N-788 that, or if N-T788 ... talked with Wilson. I don't know how N-788 came by that information."

Siera attempted to bolster N-788®'s report with information obtained from another police informant, GSOLI-O1.

Siera testified that, on February 5, 2001 (ie., the day of the search warrant application, and nine days after Siera received N-7788's report), GSO1-O1 reported that "he had heard" that a man named TR. Kito had marijuana for sale, and that Kito had obtained this marijuana from Wilson.

But when the magistrate asked Siera how long ago it was that GSO1-O1 spoke to Kito, Siera responded that he did not know whether GSO1-O01 had ever spoken to Kito. Rather, GSO1-O1 had merely keard within the previous several days that Kito had marijuana for sale, and that Kito's supplier was Wilson. Siera conceded that he had no idea how GSO1-O1 heard that Kito had marijuana for sale, or how GSO1-O1 heard that Wilson was the one who sold the marijuana to Kito.

According to Siera's testimony, GSO1-OL1 reported that, approximately one month before (presumably in late December 2000 or *785 early January 2001), GSO1-O1 had spoken personally to Wilson, and Wilson had told GSO1-O1 that "he was about to receive some marijuana and [that hel would be in the business of distributing it". But Siera admitted to the magistrate that GSO1-O1 was an untested informant. That is, Siera did not know whether GSO1-O1 was a credible source of information. ' ©

Why we conclude that this information fails to satisfy the Agwilar-Spinelli test

As we explained in the introduction to this opinion, when the State applies for a search warrant and bases its application on hearsay, the State must establish (1) that each of its hearsay informants is generally a credible source of information, and (2) that each informant obtained their present information in a reliable way. In this case, the State's search warrant application rested on information provided by three informants: GS01-01, N-788, and N-788's unidentified friend.

Of these three, N~788 was known to the police to be a reliable informant-t.e., a generally eredible source of information. GSO1-01 was also apparently known to the police, but his credibility was untested. And with regard to N-788's unidentified friend, the police had absolutely no information about him (or her)-other than N-788's assertion that N-788 had seen his friend in possession of a substantial amount of marijuana. This tended to show that the "friend" was a member of the criminal milieu, thus obliging the State to affirmatively establish the unidentified friend's credibility. 2

The State's problem in this case is that their one credible informant, N-788, had hardly any first-hand knowledge of Wilson's alleged criminal activities. N-788 had personally purchased an unspecified amount of marijuana from Wilson, but this was at least one year before.

The State's main allegation against Wilson was that Wilson had recently sold four ounces of marijuana to N-788's unidentified friend for the sum of $900. N-788 claimed to have recently seen his friend in possession of marijuana, but N-788 had no first-hand knowledge of how or when his friend obtained the marijuana.

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Related

Hart v. State
397 P.3d 342 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 P.3d 783, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 231, 2003 WL 23011815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-state-alaskactapp-2003.