State v. Enos. ( 2020 )


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  •     *** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAI#I REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
    Electronically Filed
    Supreme Court
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    27-MAY-2020
    09:02 AM
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAI#I
    ---o0o---
    STATE OF HAWAI#I,
    Respondent/Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    FRANK ENOS,
    Petitioner/Defendant-Appellant.
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    CERTIORARI TO THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
    (CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX; CR. NO. 1CPC-XX-XXXXXXX)
    MAY 27, 2020
    RECKTENWALD, C.J., NAKAYAMA, McKENNA, POLLACK, AND WILSON, JJ.
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY RECKTENWALD, C.J.
    A police officer discovered Frank Enos sleeping below a
    freeway and arrested him for Criminal Trespass onto State Lands.
    Hawai#i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 708-814.7 (Supp. 2017).              Nearby,
    the officer found a pipe and plastic bag, from which the police
    later recovered an aggregate .005 grams of substances containing
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    methamphetamine.    Enos was subsequently charged with Promotion of
    a Dangerous Drug in the Third Degree, a class C felony.              HRS
    § 712-1243 (2014).
    Enos moved to dismiss the charge as de minimis pursuant
    to HRS § 702-236 (2014), which allows a court to dismiss a
    criminal charge when the defendant’s conduct “[d]id not actually
    cause or threaten the harm or evil sought to be prevented by the
    law defining the offense or did so only to an extent too trivial
    to warrant the condemnation of conviction[.]”            The State opposed
    the motion, arguing that .005 grams of methamphetamine was
    sufficient to produce a physiological effect and therefore not de
    minimis.   In addition, the State asserted that Criminal Trespass
    onto State Lands is a property crime, and this court has long
    described the purpose of Promoting a Dangerous Drug in the Third
    Degree as, among other things, preventing property crimes.
    The circuit court granted the motion, concluding that
    Enos’s conduct did not “warrant the condemnation of conviction.”
    While the circuit court credited expert testimony that .005 grams
    of methamphetamine could affect the body, and it therefore
    concluded the amount possessed was not de minimis, the other
    attendant circumstances weighed in favor of dismissal.              In
    addition, as a matter of statutory interpretation, the circuit
    court determined that Criminal Trespass onto State Lands was not
    a property crime and accordingly did not constitute a “harm” or
    “evil” with which the drug statute was concerned.
    2
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    On appeal, the Intermediate Court of Appeals (ICA)
    disagreed with the circuit court that Criminal Trespass was not a
    property crime, but agreed that “it was not a property crime
    consistent with the legislative intent of criminalizing the
    possession of any amount of illicit drugs.”           Nonetheless, the ICA
    remanded to the circuit court based on two clearly erroneous
    findings of fact that it could not conclude were harmless.
    We hold that it was within the circuit court’s
    discretion to dismiss the charge against Enos as de minimis.
    While there were errors of fact in the circuit court’s order
    dismissing the charge, those errors did not affect the outcome
    and were therefore harmless.       In addition, the ICA correctly
    analyzed Criminal Trespass onto State Lands and its relationship
    to the de minimis statute.       While Criminal Trespass onto State
    Lands is a property crime, it is not the type of property crime
    that motivated the legislature to criminalize possession of any
    amount of a dangerous drug.
    Moreover, although the amount of methamphetamine Enos
    possessed was capable of producing some effect on the body,
    quantity is one of many factors a court must consider when
    deciding a de minimis motion on a drug charge.            In light of the
    minute quantity of methamphetamine he possessed and the
    mitigating circumstances presented by the facts of this case, the
    circuit court did not abuse its discretion when it dismissed the
    Promotion of a Dangerous Drug in the Third Degree charge against
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    Enos as de minimis.
    I.   BACKGROUND
    A.    Enos’s Arrest
    On January 21, 2018, around 11:00 p.m., Officer Albert
    Moniz of the Honolulu Police Department (HPD)1 did a “routine
    patrol check” of an area under the H-1 Freeway near the
    intersection of Wai#alae Avenue and Keala#olu Avenue in Honolulu,
    “based on complaints that residentially challenged individuals”
    were camping there.      The area under the freeway belongs to the
    State of Hawai#i, and there are signs in the area that say “Keep
    Out,” “Government Property,” and “Trespassers will be
    Prosecuted.”
    Using his flashlight, Officer Moniz saw Enos lying
    behind a cardboard box under the freeway and recognized him from
    past encounters.      When Officer Moniz was about five feet away
    from Enos, he noticed a “neoprene pouch with a clear glass pipe
    containing a bulbo[u]s end sticking out of it.”             Enos tried to
    hide the bag under his leg.         Recognizing the pipe to be drug
    paraphernalia used to smoke methamphetamine, Officer Moniz
    instructed Enos to stand up and asked him to hand over the pipe,
    to which he responded “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
    Officer Moniz placed him under arrest for Criminal Trespass onto
    1
    The account of Enos’s arrest comes from the police report by
    Officer Moniz and the Declaration by HPD Detective Reginald Caneda attesting
    to the facts that established probable cause. The parties stipulated to the
    police report, and for the purposes of the de minimis motion, the facts are
    undisputed.
    4
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    State Lands.    See HRS § 708-814.7.2        Enos told the Officer, “I
    know, but I have nowhere else to go.”
    After placing Enos under arrest, Officer Moniz
    recovered the glass pipe from the open neoprene pouch, which Enos
    denied belonged to him.       The open pouch also contained a “clear
    zip lock type bag containing a crystalline substance” that
    resembled crystal methamphetamine.          In addition, a warrant check
    revealed three outstanding warrants for Contempt of Court.                Enos
    was taken into custody and read his Miranda rights.              When
    questioned thereafter, Enos again denied that he possessed, used,
    or owned the pipe.      He asserted that he was watching the area for
    his friend, who had been using the pipe earlier in the evening
    with Enos’s girlfriend.
    The pipe and plastic bag were submitted to the HPD
    Scientific Investigation Section, and an HPD analyst tested both
    for methamphetamine.      The pipe contained .002 grams of a
    substance containing methamphetamine, and the plastic bag
    contained .003 grams of the same.          The analyst did not do a
    purity test on either substance.
    B.   Circuit Court Proceedings
    In the Circuit Court of the First Circuit (circuit
    court),3 the State charged Enos with Promoting a Dangerous Drug
    in the Third Degree for knowingly possessing methamphetamine,
    2
    For the text of HRS § 708-814.7, see infra note 9.
    3
    The Honorable Karen T. Nakasone presided.
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    which is a class C felony.          See HRS § 712-1243.4
    1.    Motion to Dismiss for De Minimis Violation
    Enos filed a Motion to Dismiss for De Minimis Violation
    (Motion) pursuant to HRS § 702-236.5            The Motion argued that the
    amount of methamphetamine found was de minimis because it was
    “neither useable nor saleable for any illicit purpose.”6                 To
    support this claim, the Motion pointed to our decision in State
    v. Vance, 
    61 Haw. 291
    , 307, 
    602 P.2d 933
    , 944 (1979), which Enos
    said
    approved dismissing charges based upon possession of a small
    amount of a dangerous drug “where . . . the amount is
    microscopic or is infinitesimal and in fact unusable as a
    narcotic, the possibility of unlawful sale or use does not
    exist, and proscription of possession under these
    circumstances may be inconsistent with the rationale of the
    statutory scheme of narcotics control.”
    Enos asked to incorporate into the record testimony
    from past hearings on the issue of how much methamphetamine could
    4
    HRS § 712-1243 provides: “(1) A person commits the offense of
    promoting a dangerous drug in the third degree if the person knowingly
    possesses any dangerous drug in any amount. (2) Promoting a dangerous drug in
    the third degree is a class C felony.”
    5
    HRS § 702-236 provides in relevant part: “The court may dismiss a
    prosecution if, having regard to the nature of the conduct alleged and the
    nature of the attendant circumstances, it finds that the defendant’s conduct
    . . . [d]id not actually cause or threaten the harm or evil sought to be
    prevented by the law defining the offense.”
    6
    Enos’s motion only addressed the substance containing
    methamphetamine recovered from the pipe (.002 grams). The substance recovered
    from the bag (.003 grams) was tested on March 8, 2018, after Enos filed the
    Motion to Dismiss. On the same day that Enos filed the Motion to Dismiss, he
    also filed a Motion for a Bill of Particulars, asking the State to clarify
    “the act of possession at issue and the item containing methamphetamine at
    issue” and noting the lack of analysis of the contents of the bag. The State
    opposed the motion and submitted a Memorandum in Opposition on March 29, 2018.
    The State clarified in the Memorandum and again in court on April 2, 2018,
    that it was proceeding on possession of both the pipe and the bag, and the
    Motion for a Bill of Particulars was denied.
    6
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    trigger a physiological response.         In particular, the Motion
    relied on the testimony of Dr. George Read, an expert who
    testified before the circuit court in 1999 in State v. Oneha, CR
    No. 99-0742.   Dr. Read had testified that .008 grams of
    methamphetamine “cannot produce a euphoric effect and is
    insufficient for sale of illicit use.”          Enos asked the court to
    credit this testimony rather than that of Dr. Kevin Ho, the
    State’s expert in Oneha, who had extrapolated that inhaling
    .002–.005 grams of methamphetamine can produce euphoric effects.
    In addition, Enos pointed to the fact that the HPD did not test
    the substance found in the pipe and bag for purity.             He argued
    that nothing about the circumstances “indicate[d] that [Enos]
    either intended to use or sell” the drug.           Accordingly, that
    fact, combined with the small amount of material containing
    methamphetamine found (of which it was possible that only a
    fraction was actually the drug), warranted dismissal of the
    charge as de minimis.
    In its Memorandum in Opposition, the State argued that
    under the totality of the circumstances, Enos’s “conduct did in
    fact cause or threaten the harm sought to be prevented, i.e.
    narcotic drug use.”     The State pointed to the legislative history
    of § 712-1243, the statute criminalizing Possession of a
    Dangerous Drug in the Third Degree, and noted that this court has
    recognized the purpose of the statute to be “to respond to abuse
    and social harm” and to “counter increased property and violent
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    crimes.”   State v. Viernes, 92 Hawai#i 130, 134, 
    988 P.2d 195
    ,
    199 (1990) (quoting H. Conf. Comm. Rep. No. 1 in the 1972 House
    Journal at 1040 and 1996 Haw. Sess. L. Act 308 at 970).              The
    State argued that because the Defendant was found trespassing on
    State property - a property crime - when the drugs were found,
    Enos indeed threatened the type of harm - property crimes - that
    the legislature sought to prevent.         Finally, the State
    highlighted that the burden of proof rested with Enos to show
    that the attendant circumstances warranted dismissal and claimed
    that Enos failed to meet that burden.          The State argued that Enos
    failed to prove that .005 grams of methamphetamine constituted a
    de minimis amount and asked the court to credit Dr. Ho’s
    testimony in State v. Castro, CR No. 01-1-2105, in which the
    expert “opined that a dose ‘smaller’ than .0025 grams can . . .
    cause a physiological effect.”
    At the hearing on the motion, Enos emphasized that
    Criminal Trespass onto State Lands was not among the harms that
    the legislature intended to combat by criminalizing drug
    possession.   Conceding that Enos was found “sleeping in an area
    that he wasn’t supposed to be,” Enos nonetheless contended that
    the legislature intended to combat “public violence and property
    offenses.”    According to Enos, this charge constituted an
    “attempt[ ] to pigeonhole what should be paraphernalia drugs
    . . . into a felony statute.”
    In addition, Enos emphasized that because there was no
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    purity test done on the net .005 grams of methamphetamine-
    containing substance, “[w]e have no idea how much of that
    substance was actually meth.”        He also pointed to the other
    attendant circumstances that minimized his culpability: the pipe
    was not warm to the touch, which would indicate recent use; there
    were no other tools around that would allow Enos to smoke the
    material (e.g., a lighter, scraper, or scooper); Enos had no cash
    that would suggest dealing; there was no indication that Enos was
    intoxicated when he was arrested; and when discovered, the pipe
    was not in use and lying five feet away.
    The five-foot distance, which Enos mentioned in his
    Motion and at the hearing, did not accurately reflect the police
    report, to which Enos stipulated.         Although the State called
    attention to the mistake on appeal, it did not object to the
    misstatement during the hearing.          In fact, the report indicated
    that Officer Moniz was five feet from Enos when he saw the pipe,
    but it did not mention precisely how far the bag and pipe were
    from Enos.   The report indicated that the pipe was “next to
    [Enos’s] left leg.”     (Emphasis added.)
    The State’s argument in response to Enos at the hearing
    focused on the legislature’s intent to prevent property crimes.
    The State first emphasized the circumstances in which Enos was
    arrested: he was trespassing on State property in an area with
    conspicuous signs and arrested for Criminal Trespass onto State
    Lands.   This, according to the State, is a property crime.              The
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    State also noted the defendant’s record and his past convictions
    for other property offenses (specifically, forgery, unauthorized
    control of a propelled vehicle, and escape associated with the
    unauthorized control conviction).7         Clarifying to the court that
    the amount of drugs found was only one of many factors the court
    should consider, the State asserted that Enos had not met his
    burden.    The State emphasized that the legislature’s intent in
    criminalizing possession “was specifically to prevent these
    property crimes.”      Finally, the State defended Dr. Ho’s analysis
    and claimed that even using Dr. Read’s testimony, .005 grams of
    methamphetamine would still produce some physiological response,
    even if that response fell short of euphoria.             In sum, the State
    argued that under the totality of the circumstances, Enos’s
    offense was more than de minimis.
    2.    The Order Granting the Motion to Dismiss
    The circuit court orally granted Enos’s motion and
    issued a written order (Order) two weeks later.             In the Order,
    the circuit court made eleven Findings of Fact (FOF):
    1. On January 21, 2018, Honolulu Police Officer Albert Moniz
    (Officer Moniz) found Defendant laying in a cardboard box.
    2. It [is] undisputed that Defendant is well-known to
    Officer Moniz as a homeless person. Officer Moniz and
    Defendant had multiple prior interactions in that regard.
    3. Officer Moniz discovered a pouch containing a glass pipe
    and zip packet in a homeless encampment, located five (5)
    feet away from Defendant, not inside the cardboard box.
    7
    These convictions were thirteen and eighteen years old
    respectively, which Enos pointed out at the hearing.
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    4. While Defendant did try to conceal the pouch containing
    the pipe and the packet, Defendant repeatedly told Officer
    Moniz that it did not belong to him and it belonged to his
    friend.
    5. No other drug paraphernalia was found on Defendant’s
    person.
    6. The Defendant told officers he had nowhere else to go and
    that was why he was camped out at that location.
    7. Officer Moniz initially appended [sic] and arrested
    Defendant for Trespassing on State Lands in violation of
    section 708-814.7 of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS).
    8. Officer Moniz recovered the glass pipe and zip packet.
    9. The contents of the glass pipe and zip packet were tested
    by [an] HPD criminalist . . . .
    10. [The] HPD Criminalist . . . determined that the
    substance in the pipe and packet at issue weighed a combined
    .005 grams and contained methamphetamine.
    11. On March 25, 2002, Dr. Kevin Ho, a qualified expert in
    the field of Pharmacy, testified that .0025 grams of inhaled
    methamphetamine is capable of producing a physiological or
    euphoric effect.
    Next, in its Conclusions of Law (COLs), the court
    concluded that .005 grams “meets the criteria for illicit use.”
    The court cited several of our cases that found as little as .002
    grams of residue to be more than de minimis, at least absent
    other attendant circumstances.        See, e.g., State v. Carmichael,
    99 Hawai#i 75, 80, 
    53 P.3d 214
    , 219 (2002).          In light of the
    defendant’s burden of proof, the court also stated that “[n]o
    evidence was presented to support defense’s challenge that no
    purity analysis was done to determine what portion of the .005
    [grams of] substance actually constituted methamphetamine.”
    However, the court found that the offense was
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    nonetheless de minimis.      Citing State v. Fukagawa, the court
    defined its task as determining whether “the defendant’s conduct
    caused or threatened the harm or evil sought to be prevented by
    the law defining the offense sufficiently to warrant the
    condemnation of conviction.”       100 Hawai#i 498, 505, 
    60 P.3d 899
    ,
    906 (2002).   As to the charging statute, HRS § 712-1243, the
    court found that this law “proscribes the use and sale of illicit
    drugs” in order “to address ‘related social harms, including
    property and violent crimes,’” again quoting Fukagawa, 100
    Hawai#i at 504–05, 
    60 P.3d at
    905–06.
    Addressing the relevant attendant circumstances, the
    court found that the pipe and pouch “were not found on the
    defendant’s person, but on the ground, five feet away from the
    cardboard box that the defendant was lying in.”            Likewise, “[n]o
    other paraphernalia was found on defendant’s person.”              In
    addition, Enos was not “engaged in nor suspected of engaging in
    any violent activity” nor was he “committing a crime against the
    property of another, such as theft, burglary, or property
    damage.”   Accordingly, the court determined that these
    circumstances “do not support a finding of illicit use or intent
    for illicit use.”
    Concerning HRS § 708-814.7,8 the court concluded that
    8
    HRS § 708-814.7 provides in relevant part:
    (1) [With the exception of certain state property,] a
    person commits the offense of criminal trespass onto
    state lands if:
    (continued...)
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    Criminal Trespass onto State Lands “is not a property crime
    consistent with the legislative intent criminalizing the
    possession of any amount of illicit drugs.”            The court pointed to
    § 708-814.7(4), which provides: “No conviction under this section
    shall be used to establish a felony conviction under section 708-
    803.”    In turn, HRS § 708-803 (Supp. 2016) covers habitual
    property crimes.      From § 708-814.7(4), the court concluded that
    Criminal Trespass onto State Lands “is specifically exempted from
    being a property crime, even though it is contained with Chapter
    708, which deals with offenses against property rights.”              The
    court also noted that the legislative history of § 708-814.7
    “indicates a concern that the statute not be used to punish or
    criminalize homelessness.”        Accordingly, it would be inconsistent
    with that intent to construe Criminal Trespass onto State Lands,
    the commission of which “ar[ose] out of [Enos’s] homelessness
    situation” in the instant case, as a property crime for
    determining whether Enos’s drug offense was de minimis.
    The circuit court concluded that, in light of all the
    attendant circumstances, Enos “did not cause or threaten the harm
    or evil sought to be prevented by the law defining [Possession of
    8
    (...continued)
    . . .
    (b) The person enters or remains unlawfully in
    or upon any state land on or under any highway,
    and the state land has a sign or signs displayed
    upon the land that are sufficient to give
    reasonable notice that read: “Government
    Property - No Trespassing”;
    . . . .
    (4) No conviction under this section shall be used to
    establish a felony conviction under section 708-803.
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    a Dangerous Drug in the Third Degree] sufficient to warrant the
    condemnation of conviction.”        The circuit court thus granted
    Enos’s Motion to Dismiss.
    C.    ICA Proceedings
    The State appealed to the ICA, asking it to vacate the
    Order of Dismissal and remand the case for trial.              In addition to
    reiterating the arguments made to the circuit court, the State
    called attention to the discrepancy between the police report and
    FOFs 1 and 3.     The circuit court found that Enos was lying in a
    cardboard box and that the pipe and pouch were five feet away,
    but the State asserted that the police report contradicted these
    findings,9 rendering them clearly erroneous.            Per the State, the
    distance between Enos and the pipe, combined with his attempt to
    conceal the pipe and his denial that the pipe was his, supported
    the conclusion that Enos constructively possessed the drugs.                  In
    response, Enos conceded that FOFs 1 and 3 were inconsistent with
    the police report and not supported by evidence.             He noted,
    however, that the State had the opportunity to object when the
    erroneous five-foot distance was raised in the circuit court, but
    it did not.     Even so, Enos argued the errors were “not fatal to
    the court’s conclusions” because nowhere did the court find that
    Enos was not in possession; to the contrary, ruling that the
    violation was de minimis presumes that he was in possession.
    9
    In addition to the discrepancy in the five-foot distance noted
    above, the report also indicated that Officer Moniz saw Enos “lying behind a
    cardboard box,” not inside it. (Emphasis added.)
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    In a summary disposition order, the ICA concluded that
    FOFs 1 and 3 were clearly erroneous because they were not
    supported by any evidence in the record.          The ICA could not
    conclude that these errors were harmless because, although the
    circuit court “made other findings relevant to the issue of
    illicit use,” the circuit court included and relied on the
    erroneous findings in its decision to grant the Motion to
    Dismiss.
    However, the ICA agreed with the circuit court’s
    conclusion that Criminal Trespass onto State Lands “is not the
    harm sought to be prevented by HRS § 712-1243.”            The ICA
    disapproved of the statutory interpretation by the circuit court;
    according to the ICA, Criminal Trespass onto State Lands is
    literally a “property crime” under the HRS.           However, the ICA
    held that Criminal Trespass onto State Lands does not fall within
    the “type of property crimes actually associated with dangerous
    drug use” that motivated the legislature to criminalize drug
    possession.    The ICA pointed to Act 161 of 2002, which amended
    § 712-1243, and noted that while “nondrug offenses” associated
    with drug use were of concern to the legislature, the enumerated
    examples (“thefts, burglaries, robberies, assaults, rapes, and
    homicides”) were markedly different from Criminal Trespass onto
    State Lands.   2002 Haw. Sess. Laws Act 161, § 1 at 569.
    Accordingly, the ICA held that while the circuit court was wrong
    to say that Criminal Trespass onto State Lands was not a property
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    crime, it correctly concluded that it was not a property crime
    “consistent with the legislative intent of criminalizing the
    possession of any amount of illicit drugs.”
    However, because the circuit court “exercised its
    discretion, in part, based on erroneous findings,” the ICA
    vacated the Order and remanded to the circuit court “to
    redetermine the issue of whether Enos’s conduct constituted a de
    minimis violation.”
    D.   Supreme Court Proceedings
    Enos urges us to reverse the ICA’s vacatur of the order
    dismissing the charge against him.          He claims that while FOFs 1
    and 3 were clearly erroneous, any error was harmless.               He also
    argues that while the ICA was right to affirm the circuit court
    with respect to the “property crime” issue, “it gravely erred in
    holding that the court had ‘wrongly concluded’ that Criminal
    Trespass onto State Lands is not a property crime.”              Finally,
    Enos claims that the ICA gravely erred in holding that the
    circuit court abused its discretion.
    II.   STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    A.   Statutory Interpretation
    “Questions of statutory interpretation are questions of
    law to be reviewed de novo under the right/wrong standard.”
    Nakamoto v. Kawauchi, 142 Hawai#i 259, 268, 
    418 P.3d 600
    , 609
    (2018).
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    B.   Findings of Fact
    Findings of fact “are subject to the clearly erroneous
    standard of review.      A finding of fact is clearly erroneous when,
    despite evidence to support the finding, the appellate court is
    left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been
    committed.”    State v. Rapozo, 123 Hawai#i 329, 336, 
    235 P.3d 325
    ,
    332 (2010) (quoting State v. Gabalis, 83 Hawai#i 40, 46, 
    924 P.2d 534
    , 540 (1996)).
    Even if a trial court’s finding is found to be clearly
    erroneous, it may nonetheless be harmless.            For clear error to be
    reversible, it must be shown that the erroneous finding “affected
    the outcome of the trial court’s decision.”            Chakta v. County of
    Maui, 109 Hawai#i 198, 219 (2005) (citing HRS § 641-2); see also
    Torres v. Torres, 100 Hawai#i 397, 412 (2002).
    C.   Motion to Dismiss for De Minimis Violation
    The dismissal of a prosecution for a de minimis
    infraction is reviewed for abuse of discretion. State v.
    Pacquing, 129 Hawai#i 172, 180, 
    297 P.3d 188
    , 196 (2013).               “A
    court abuses its discretion if it clearly exceeded the bounds of
    reason or disregarded rules or principles of law or practice to
    the substantial detriment of a party litigant.”             Rapozo, 123
    Hawai#i at 336, 
    235 P.3d at 332
     (quoting State v. Oughterson, 99
    Hawai#i 244, 253, 
    54 P.3d 415
    , 424 (2002)).
    III.   DISCUSSION
    The circuit court did not abuse its discretion when it
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    dismissed the charge against Enos as de minimis.             While the ICA
    correctly analyzed the Criminal Trespass onto State Lands
    statute, we disagree that the challenged findings of fact, while
    clearly erroneous, were not harmless.           Moreover, we conclude that
    it was within the circuit court’s discretion to dismiss the
    charge as de minimis because it considered the relevant attendant
    circumstances and reasonably concluded that Enos’s conduct did
    not “warrant the condemnation of a conviction.”             HRS § 702-236.
    A.   Criminal Trespass onto State Lands Does Not Fall Within the
    Harm Sought to Be Prevented by the Felony Drug Statute
    A court may dismiss a charge as de minimis if, in light
    of the attendant circumstances, it finds that the defendant’s
    conduct “[d]id not actually cause or threaten the harm or evil
    sought to be prevented by the law defining the offense or did so
    only to an extent too trivial to warrant the condemnation or
    conviction[.]”     HRS § 702-236(1)(b); see also State v. Park, 
    55 Haw. 610
    , 617, 
    525 P.2d 586
    , 591 (1974).           Dismissing a charge as
    de minimis falls squarely within “the sound discretion of the
    trial court.”     Viernes, 92 Hawai#i at 133, 988 P.2d at 198
    (citation omitted).      The defendant bears the burden of proof in a
    de minimis motion.      State v. Oughterson, 99 Hawai#i at 256, 
    54 P.3d at 427
    .
    Throughout the proceedings, the parties disagreed over
    whether Criminal Trespass onto State Lands was a “property crime”
    and argued over the proper statutory classification for the law.
    This argument stemmed from our previous descriptions of the “harm
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    or evil,” HRS § 702-236(1)(b), the legislature sought to prevent
    by criminalizing possession of any amount of a dangerous drug,
    which included combating “property and violent crimes.”              Viernes,
    92 Hawai#i at 134, 988 P.2d at 199.        Since Enos was committing a
    property crime when he was arrested, the State argued that his
    conduct of drug possession in fact caused the “harm or evil
    sought to be prevented by” HRS § 712-1243, Promotion of a
    Dangerous Drug in the Third Degree.
    At the outset, the circuit court’s interpretation of
    the Criminal Trespass onto State Lands statute was incorrect.
    The circuit court concluded that, as a matter of statutory
    interpretation, Criminal Trespass onto State Lands is exempted
    from the “property crime” designation because this offense cannot
    “be used to establish a felony conviction” under the Habitual
    Property Crime law.     HRS § 708-814.7(4).       We agree with the State
    that this reasoning conflates the definition of a property crime
    with a particular subclass of property crimes that can support
    enhanced penalties under the habitual property crime statute.                As
    the ICA correctly concluded, Criminal Trespass onto State Lands
    is by definition a “property crime,” sentencing exclusions
    notwithstanding.
    Nonetheless, the ICA was also correct to hold that the
    legislature was not concerned with Criminal Trespass onto State
    Lands when it criminalized drug possession.           In turn, the fact
    that Enos was committing that offense when he was arrested does
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    not preclude a court from determining that his conduct was de
    minimis.   Framing the question as simply one of statutory
    interpretation, as the circuit court did and the State urged,
    elides the true issue.      The Criminal Trespass onto State Lands
    statute does not need to be inflexibly classified as a “property
    crime” or not, nor does committing a property crime determine
    whether Enos’s conduct cannot be considered de minimis.              Rather,
    the operative question is whether the defendant’s conduct (which,
    here, involved Criminal Trespass onto State Lands) falls within
    “the harm or evil sought to be prevented” by the drug statute.
    HRS § 702-236(1)(b).     The ICA concluded that the legislature was
    not concerned with property crimes as a class, but “with the type
    of property crime actually associated with dangerous drug use.”
    It so concluded based on legislative history that pinpointed
    specific kinds of crimes that posed a particular concern.
    A review of the legislative history confirms that
    Criminal Trespass onto State Lands does not fall within the ambit
    of the legislature’s concerns over drug crimes.            The language
    “property and violent crimes,” which, as mentioned, we have
    adopted in describing the legislative intent in criminalizing
    drug possession, see, e.g., Viernes, 92 Hawai#i at 134, 988 P.2d
    at 199, traces to the 1996 amendments to HRS § 712-1243.              The
    House Standing Committee Report stated an intent to penalize
    possession and distribution of drugs, and methamphetamine in
    particular, in order “to counter increased property and violent
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    crimes associated with the use of this dangerous drug.”              H.
    Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 734-96, in 1996 House Journal, at 1312; see
    also S. Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 2597, in 1996 Senate Journal, at
    1212 (“The proliferation of drugs has also had a direct and
    significant impact on the increase in and severity of both
    violent and property crimes.”).
    However, HRS § 712-1243 has been amended twice more
    since 1996, in 2002 and 2004, and those Acts put a finer point on
    the kinds of crimes associated with drug use that concerned the
    legislature.   Act 161 of 2002, cited by the ICA and intended to
    lessen penalties for nonviolent drug offenders, noted that “a
    large percentage of persons who are arrested for both drug and
    nondrug offenses (such as thefts, burglaries, robberies,
    assaults, rapes, and homicides) test positive for recent drug
    use.”   2002 Haw. Sess. Laws Act 161, § 1 at 569.           In addition,
    the legislature found:
    Adults who are under the influence of a controlled substance
    or alcohol commit many offenses to raise revenue to support
    their habits. Some mind and mood altering drugs induce
    criminal and often violent behavior . . . . Some drugs may
    also reduce an offender’s ability to empathize with a
    potential victim, resulting in episodes of seemingly
    mindless violence.
    Finally, some crimes, including crimes of violence, are
    committed in the normal course of conducting illicit drug
    businesses and enterprises. These include strong-arm
    robberies and “rip-offs,” violent retaliations for these
    offenses, and efforts to protect markets and “turf” by means
    of intimidation and terrorism directed against “would be”
    competitors and drug purchasers who patronize competing drug
    distributors.
    2002 Haw. Sess. Laws Act 161, § 1 at 569 (emphases added).
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    The 2004 amendments responded specifically to
    methamphetamine addiction, and while the Act’s language focused
    less on drug-related crimes than the 2002 amendments, the
    Preamble stated its purpose as, in relevant part, “deter[ring]
    the proliferation of drug trafficking and importation into
    Hawaii” and “expand[ing] access to treatment for first time
    nonviolent drug offenders.”        2004 Haw. Sess. Laws Act 44, § 1 at
    205 (emphasis added).
    Thus, the most recent amendments to HRS § 712-1243
    indicate that the legislature’s concern with drug-related crimes
    has focused primarily on violence.          The history of both the 2002
    and 2004 amendments evince the legislature’s intent to be more
    lenient on nonviolent offenders while preventing and punishing
    crimes of violence.      To the extent the legislature was motivated
    by preventing property crimes, it was concerned with, as the ICA
    put it, “the type of property crimes actually associated with
    dangerous drug use,” such as theft, burglary, and robbery; not
    simply property crimes as a category.10
    Accordingly, the ICA was correct when it concluded that
    deterring Criminal Trespass onto State Lands, a “property crime”
    to be sure, did not motivate the legislature in passing and
    subsequently amending § 712-1243.          In turn, Enos could commit the
    10
    To be clear, committing a property crime associated with dangerous
    drug use - i.e., the kind of property crime that motivated the legislature to
    criminalize possession of any amount of a dangerous drug - does not foreclose
    de minimis dismissal. The attendant circumstances must be evaluated in each
    individual case to determine whether the defendant caused or threatened “the
    harm or evil sought to be prevented” by the statute. HRS § 702-236(1)(b).
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    property crime of Criminal Trespass onto State Lands while still
    warranting de minimis dismissal of the drug possession charge.
    In other words, the fact that Enos was committing the property
    offense of Criminal Trespass onto State Lands does not mean that
    his conduct “actually cause[d] or threaten[ed] the harm of evil
    sought to be prevented” by § 712-1243, as the State urged.                HRS
    § 702-236(1)(b).
    B.   The Clearly Erroneous Findings of Fact Were Harmless
    Given that the ICA’s analysis of the Criminal Trespass
    onto State Lands offense presents no errors of law, we must next
    turn to the errors of fact.        The ICA agreed with the State that
    “the circuit court clearly erred in finding that Enos was lying
    ‘inside’ the cardboard box and that the pipe and packet were
    located ‘five feet away’ from Enos.”          Enos concedes that these
    points were clearly erroneous.         The police report - evidence to
    which the parties stipulated - stated that the officer was five
    feet away from Enos, that the pipe was “near” Enos, and that Enos
    was lying behind, not in, the box; these facts were not
    controverted.     However, Enos asserts that the ICA erred insofar
    as it “[could not] conclude that the circuit court’s inclusion of
    and reliance on FOFs 1 and 3 was harmless error.”
    We agree with Enos that these errors were harmless.
    While the ICA cited the “inclusion of and reliance on” the
    erroneous findings as its basis to remand the case, an analysis
    of the relevance of the erroneous findings shows that neither
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    error affected the circuit court’s decision to dismiss.              First,
    Enos’s location relative to the cardboard box has no bearing at
    all on the offense for which he was charged.           His position
    “behind” rather than “in” the cardboard box makes his conduct of
    drug possession neither more nor less “harmful” or “evil” per the
    de minimis statute, and so this erroneous finding of fact is
    harmless.
    That leaves the erroneous finding that the pipe and
    pouch were five feet away from Enos when discovered.             The State
    argued that this fact bore directly on the matter of possession.
    But Enos responded that in finding his conduct to be de minimis
    under the drug possession statute, the circuit court must have
    “presumed that he was in possession of the items.”             In other
    words, for a court to find that an offense is de minimis, it must
    inherently find that all of the elements of the offense are met.
    Per Enos, this means that the distance between him and the
    paraphernalia is inconsequential, because the court must have
    necessarily concluded he possessed them, at least constructively,
    in order to determine that his conduct was de minimis.
    We agree with Enos that the distance does not matter to
    the issue of possession because the circuit court found, as it
    must have, that the possession element was met.            First, the
    circuit court concluded explicitly that Enos had possessed the
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    drugs in its COLs.11     Even if it had not, as we noted in Rapozo,
    the de minimis statute derives from the Model Penal Code, the
    commentary to which states that the de minimis statute
    “authorizes courts to exercise a power inherent in other agencies
    of criminal justice to ignore merely technical violations of
    law,” and “[a]melioration of the letter of the law is both
    necessary and inevitable[.]”        123 Hawai#i at 337, 988 P.2d at 333
    (quoting 1 American Law Institute, Model Penal Code and
    Commentaries, § 2.12 at 399, 404 (1962)) (emphases added).                This
    context shows that a violation of the letter of the law is
    intrinsic to dismissing a charge as de minimis, and violation of
    the letter of HRS § 712-1243 requires possession.              Thus, the
    five-foot distance does not bear on the issue of possession in
    this case, because the dismissal of the charge as de minimis
    inherently required the circuit court to find that the possession
    element was met.     As such, the ICA erred in concluding that the
    plainly erroneous findings of fact were not harmless.
    C.    The Circuit Court Was Within its Discretion to Grant the De
    Minimis Motion.
    We must finally consider whether the circuit court
    abused its discretion in granting the de minimis motion.12               We
    hold that it did not.       The circuit court did not “clearly
    exceed[ ] the bounds of reason or disregard[ ] rules or
    11
    The pertinent COL read: “Defendant’s conduct of possessing a very
    small amount of the drug . . . .” (Emphasis added.)
    12
    The ICA did not reach this question and remanded the case to the
    circuit court in light of the clear errors of fact.
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    principles of law or practice to the substantial detriment of”
    the State when it concluded that Enos’s conduct did not “cause or
    threaten the harm or evil sought to be prevented by” Promotion of
    a Dangerous Drug in the Third Degree.          Rapozo, 123 Hawai#i at
    336, 
    235 P.3d at 332
    ; HRS § 702-236(1)(b).
    In Fukagawa, we described Hawai#i’s drug laws as
    “intended to control the use and sale of illicit drugs . . . and
    to address related social harms, including property and violent
    crimes.”   100 Hawai#i at 504, 
    60 P.3d at 905
    .          As discussed
    above, a review of the development of the Hawai#i drug law
    framework since Fukagawa indicates that the “harm or evil sought
    to be prevented by” Promotion of a Dangerous Drug in the Third
    Degree includes deterring drug-related crimes, and violent crimes
    in particular, while easing penalties on low-level, nonviolent
    offenders.
    Although Promotion of a Dangerous Drug in the Third
    Degree on its face applies explicitly to drugs in any amount,
    “where a literal application of HRS § 712-1243 would compel an
    unduly harsh conviction for possession of a microscopic trace of
    a dangerous drug, HRS § 702-236 . . . may be applicable to
    mitigate this result.”      Vance, 61 Haw. at 307, 61 P.2d at 944;
    see also Fukagawa, 100 Hawai#i at 504, 
    60 P.3d at 905
    .             The
    quantity possessed of a dangerous drug is “microscopic” or
    “infinitesimal,” Vance, 61 Haw. at 307, 
    602 P.2d at 944
    , and de
    minimis dismissal is warranted if the amount could not “produce a
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    pharmacological or physiological effect.”           Fukagawa, 100 Hawai#i
    at 506, 
    60 P.3d at
    907 (citing State v. Hironaka, 99 Hawai#i 198,
    209, 
    53 P.3d 807
    , 817 (2002); State v. Balanza, 92 Hawai#i 279,
    283–85, 
    1 P.3d 281
    , 285–87 (2000)).
    Even so, we have long insisted that “quantity is only
    one of the surrounding circumstances a court must consider.”                 Id.
    at 505, 
    60 P.3d at 906
    .      “[B]efore [the de minimis statute] can
    be properly applied in a criminal case, all of the relevant facts
    bearing upon the defendant’s conduct and the nature of the
    attendant circumstances regarding the commission of the offense
    should be shown to the judge.”        Park, 55 Hawai#i at 616, 
    525 P.2d at 591
    .    Possession of an amount of drugs capable of producing a
    “pharmacological or physiological effect” may nonetheless warrant
    dismissal as de minimis if the amount possessed approaches
    “infinitesimal” - which is to say, a very small amount - and the
    other attendant circumstances indicate that the defendant “did
    not cause or threaten the harm or evil sought to be prevented by
    the law defining the offense.”        Vance, 61 Hawai#i at 307, 
    602 P.2d at 944
    ; HRS § 702-236(1)(b); see also Viernes, 92 Hawai#i at
    134, 988 P.2d at 199.      In sum, Fukagawa presented the court’s
    task in considering a de minimis motion on a drug charge as
    follows:
    Before dismissing a charge as a de minimis infraction,
    a court must consider the amount of drugs possessed
    and the surrounding circumstances to determine if the
    defendant’s conduct caused or threatened the harm or
    evil sought to be prevented by the law defining the
    offense sufficiently to warrant the condemnation of
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    conviction.
    Fukagawa, 100 Hawai#i at 505, 
    60 P.3d at 905
     (emphasis added).
    In the instant case, the circuit court concluded, based
    on competing expert testimony, that the aggregate .005 grams of
    substance containing methamphetamine could produce a
    “physiological or euphoric effect” and therefore “[was] not a de
    minimis amount.”    However, it nonetheless decided to dismiss the
    charge.   While not de minimis, the circuit court concluded that
    the amount possessed was “very small,” and the other attendant
    circumstances supported dismissal.         In particular, the circuit
    court found that: “no other paraphernalia was found on [Enos’s]
    person”; Enos “was not engaged in or suspected of engaging in any
    violent activity”; he was trespassing onto state lands, but that
    offense does fall within the ambit of the legislature’s concern
    with respect to drug possession and property crimes; and the
    trespassing offense occurred because he was homeless and “had
    nowhere else to go.”
    Considering “the nature of the conduct alleged and the
    nature of the attendant circumstances,” including quantity, it
    was not an abuse of discretion for the circuit court to conclude
    that Enos’s conduct “did not actually cause or threaten the harm
    or evil sought to be prevented by the law defining the offense or
    did so only to an extent too trivial to warrant the condemnation
    of conviction[.]”     HRS § 702-236(1).      None of the attendant
    circumstances indicated that Enos “cause[d] or threaten[ed]” any
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    of the “harms or evils” the legislature contemplated in passing
    and amending § 712-1243.      Most importantly, Enos falls squarely
    into the category of nonviolent, low-level offender that the
    statute seeks to treat rather than incarcerate.            While this alone
    does not change the fact that Enos violated § 712-1243 and
    thereby committed a felony, under these circumstances, including
    the “very small amount” of substance containing methamphetamine
    found, we hold that the circuit court did not abuse its
    discretion in dismissing the charge against Enos.             See Rapozo,
    123 Hawai#i at 332, 
    235 P.3d at 328
     (“A court abuses its
    discretion if it clearly exceeded the bounds of reason or
    disregarded rules or principles of law or practice[.]” (citation
    omitted)).
    To be clear, the quantity of drugs possessed remains a
    critical consideration when deciding a de minimis motion on a
    drug charge.   It would be an abuse of discretion, for instance,
    if a court gave no consideration at all to the quantity
    possessed.   Cf. Fukagawa, 100 Hawai#i at 504–05, 
    60 P.3d at
    905–06.   This would run counter to the legislature’s intent to
    criminalize possession of “any dangerous drug in any amount.”
    HRS § 712-1243 (emphasis added).          We only hold in the instant
    case that the quantity possessed by a defendant may pass the
    threshold into an amount capable of “produc[ing] a
    pharmacological or physiological effect” without precluding a
    court from dismissing a charge as de minimis.            Fukagawa, 100
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    Hawai#i at 506, 
    60 P.3d at 906
    .            As here, if the amount possessed
    is capable of producing such an effect but is nonetheless very
    small, and if the other attendant circumstances weigh in favor of
    dismissal, it is within a court’s sound discretion to dismiss the
    charge as de minimis.
    Moreover, even though the circuit court did not credit
    the defendant’s argument that the substance containing
    methamphetamine was not tested for purity, the form of the drug
    and the place it was found -residue in a pipe and a bag - bears
    on the de minimis analysis.            The legislature decriminalized
    paraphernalia possession in 2017.              See HRS § 329-43.5 (Supp.
    2017).        In the Act making paraphernalia possession a violation,
    the legislature found “that state funds are better spent on
    community programs and rehabilitation of nonviolent, low-risk
    drug offenders[.]”          Act 72 § 1, 2017 Session Laws of Hawai#i at
    367.        This change puts the legislative intent behind the Hawai#i
    drug scheme into sharper relief: possessing paraphernalia is not
    a “harm or evil” that “warrants the condemnation of a
    conviction,” and certainly not a felony conviction.                 HRS § 702-
    236(1)(b).        Enos was found with mere milligrams of residue of
    unknown purity, which was recovered from two pieces of
    paraphernalia, a pipe and a virtually-empty bag.13                During the
    13
    Drug paraphernalia is defined in HRS § 329-1 (Supp. 2016) as
    all equipment, products, and materials of any kind which are
    used, primarily intended for use, or primarily designed for
    use, in planting, propagating, cultivating, growing,
    harvesting, manufacturing, compounding, converting,
    (continued...)
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    hearing on the Motion before the circuit court, Enos asserted
    that the charge was “attempting to pigeonhole what should be
    paraphernalia drugs, which is a violation, into a felony
    statute.”        While the circuit court did not rely on this assertion
    in its Order, “it is well-settled that ‘an appellate court may
    affirm a judgment of the lower court on any ground in the record
    that supports affirmance.’”           Fukagawa, 100 Hawai#i at 506
    (quoting State v. Dow, 96 Hawai#i 320, 326, 
    30 P.3d 96
    , 932
    (2001)).       Thus, we may consider the fact that the “very small
    amount” of methamphetamine that Enos possessed was recovered from
    paraphernalia, possession of which is only a violation, in
    reaching our conclusion that the circuit court did not abuse its
    discretion.        This attendant circumstance relates directly to the
    “harm or evil” of Promotion of a Dangerous Drug in the Third
    Degree, which the legislature could not have intended to be used
    to subvert its changes to the paraphernalia statute.
    From the above analysis, we conclude that the circuit
    court did not “clearly exceed the bounds of reason” nor did it
    “disregard rules or principles of law” when it granted Enos’s
    Motion.       Rapozo, 123 Hawai#i at 332, 
    60 P.3d at 328
    .
    13
    (...continued)
    producing, processing, preparing, testing, analyzing,
    packaging, repackaging, storing, containing, concealing,
    injecting, ingesting, inhaling, or otherwise introducing
    into the human body a controlled substance in violation of
    [the Uniformed Controlled Substances Act, HRS Chapter 329.]
    This definition includes: “envelopes[ ] and other containers used,
    primarily intended for use, or primarily designed for use in packaging small
    quantities of controlled substances” and “objects used . . . in inhaling . . .
    methamphetamine into the human body” like a “glass . . . pipe.” HRS § 329-1.
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    Accordingly, the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in
    dismissing the charge against Enos as de minimis.
    IV.   CONCLUSION
    The ICA correctly analyzed the Criminal Trespass onto
    State Lands statute and its relation to the de minimis motion
    brought by Enos in this case.        However, the ICA erred by holding
    that the clearly erroneous findings of fact were not harmless.
    The circuit court did not abuse its discretion by dismissing the
    charge against Enos as de minimis.          Thus, we reverse the June 28,
    2019 judgment on appeal of the ICA.
    Jon N. Ikenaga                            /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
    for petitioner
    /s/ Paula A. Nakayama
    Stephen K. Tsushima
    for respondent                            /s/ Sabrina S. McKenna
    /s/ Richard W. Pollack
    /s/ Michael D. Wilson
    32