State v. Keanaaina. ( 2022 )


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  •    *** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
    Electronically Filed
    Supreme Court
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    22-MAR-2022
    07:54 AM
    Dkt. 11 OPA
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAII
    ---o0o---
    STATE OF HAWAII,
    Respondent/Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    SAMSON K. KEANAAINA,
    Petitioner/Defendant-Appellant.
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    CERTIORARI TO THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
    (CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX; CR. NO. 3CPC-XX-XXXXXXX)
    MARCH 22, 2022
    RECKTENWALD, C.J., NAKAYAMA, J.,
    AND CIRCUIT JUDGE CRABTREE, ASSIGNED BY REASON OF VACANCY,
    AND McKENNA, J., DISSENTING, WITH WHOM WILSON, J., JOINS
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY NAKAYAMA, J.
    Petitioner/Defendant-Appellant Samson K. Keanaaina
    (Keanaaina) appeals the judgment of the Intermediate Court of
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    Appeals (ICA) affirming the Circuit Court of the Third Circuit’s1
    (circuit court) denial of Keanaaina’s motion to suppress
    evidence.    On certiorari, Keanaaina contends that the evidence
    against him – specifically, the contents of a gray backpack –
    should be excluded because (1) Hawaiʻi Police Department officers
    failed to comply with Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes (HRS) § 803-37’s
    requirement that officers “demand entrance” before entering a
    building and (2) the resulting search of Keanaaina’s backpack
    exceeded the terms of the search warrant the officers executed.
    Keanaaina is incorrect.       First, the statutory
    obligation to “demand entrance” only applies when the building’s
    entrance is “shut.”      It cannot feasibly be said that the
    entrances to the tent structure – which had multiple openings
    between the materials forming its walls – were shut.             Thus, the
    officers did not need to demand entrance, nor did the officers’
    actions constitute a breaking.        Moreover, the purposes of
    HRS § 803-37 were satisfied when the officers’ entry did not
    create any risk of harm.       Second, there was no indication that
    the backpack belonged to Keanaaina.         The searches of the
    backpack consequently did not exceed the terms of the search
    warrant.    We therefore affirm the ICA’s June 5, 2020 Judgment on
    Appeal.
    1    The Honorable Melvin H. Fujino presided.
    2
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    I.     BACKGROUND
    A.    Factual Background
    On the morning of March 8, 2017, police officers
    executed a search warrant for Michelle Wright’s (Wright) tent
    structure located in a tent encampment within the Old Kona
    Airport Park.     The warrant authorized the search of
    The residence of Michelle WRIGHT described as a homeless
    campsite consisting of various color and size tarpaulins at
    the Old Kona Airport beach park, located at the north end
    of Kuakini Highway, behind the Hawaiʻi State Parks and
    Recreation maintenance building. Said campsite is situated
    on land belonging to the County of Hawaiʻi (Old Kona
    Airport) and Queen Liliuokalani Trust (corner of Kuakini
    Hwy and Makala Blvd); to include but not limited to all
    rooms, boxes, toolboxes, suitcases, handbags, safes,
    backpacks, fanny packs, bags, storage containers, wallets,
    purses, papers, utility receipts and clothing located
    within said camp and/or stored outside-near the camp,
    wherever located within the County and State of Hawaiʻi
    . . . [.]
    The affidavit in support of the search warrant included two
    photographs depicting Wright’s campsite.           In executing the
    search warrant, the officers knew that it was possible that they
    would find Keanaaina in Wright’s tent structure.
    When the officers entered the tent encampment at least
    fifteen feet away from Wright’s tent structure, they announced
    their presence and asked encampment residents to exit their
    tents.2    At the time of the search, it appears that the
    encampment consisted of approximately seven separate campsites.
    It appears from the record that one campsite was covered by a
    2     The officers asked encampment residents to exit their tents to ensure
    the officers’ safety, not to search the other tents.
    3
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    single orange tarpaulin, one campsite consisted of a tent with
    an additional gray tarpaulin covering, one campsite consisted of
    a blue tarpaulin wall and silver roof, one campsite was covered
    by a dark material and a blue umbrella, one campsite consisted
    of a single tent, and one campsite was covered by a single blue
    tarpaulin.   The seventh campsite belonged to Wright.
    Given the composition of Wright’s tent structure,
    there was no obvious entrance or exit.         However, the tent
    structure was “open” such that a person could enter and exit
    without moving any of the materials that formed its walls, the
    officers could look into the tent from the outside, and the
    officers could search inside of the tent without using
    flashlights.
    Looking through a large opening in the tent structure,
    Detective Michael Hardie (Detective Hardie) saw Wright and
    Keanaaina sleeping on a mattress inside.         Detective Hardie
    repeated the officers’ announcements that police were present
    and asked Wright and Keanaaina to exit the tent structure.
    After at least two minutes, Wright woke up and exited the tent
    structure through a small opening on the north end of the
    structure.     Keanaaina continued sleeping.      Detective Hardie
    attempted to wake Keanaaina by shouting into the tent structure
    for a few more minutes, but was unsuccessful.          Wright
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    subsequently informed the officers that Keanaaina was hard of
    hearing.
    Based on Wright’s statement, Detective Hardie entered
    the tent structure by “mov[ing] aside” a piece of fabric under
    the opening through which he observed Wright and Keanaaina.
    Detective Hardie also moved a couch so that he could walk in a
    straight line to the bed where Keanaaina was sleeping.                However,
    Detective Hardie could have walked around the couch to enter the
    tent structure.3     Detective Hardie woke Keanaaina and instructed
    him to exit the tent.      Before exiting the tent, Keanaaina
    allegedly asked Detective Hardie “where’s my backpack[?]”
    Once Wright and Keanaaina were outside of the tent
    structure, the officers searched the tent structure and found,
    inter alia, a leopard-print backpack and a gray backpack.
    3     Keanaaina testified that:
    [State’s Counsel]: Okay. In the area of that pink, the
    pink sheet in the front on the makai side of the tent ––
    [Keanaaina]: Yes.
    [State’s Counsel]: –– wasn’t there a couch there on the
    inside?
    [Keanaaina]: Under the opening, yeah.
    [State’s Counsel]: Okay.   There’s a couch; right?
    [Keanaaina]: No, not in the way but it’s on the side. You
    can walk around. Michelle used that pink for block the
    doorway so you cannot see in.
    (Emphasis added.)
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    During an initial search inside of the tent structure, the
    officers found a bag of marijuana within the gray backpack.              The
    officers took the gray backpack to the police station for a more
    thorough search.     During the second search, the police found
    Keanaaina’s identification, methamphetamine residue, and drug
    paraphernalia in the gray backpack.
    The State subsequently charged Keanaaina by complaint
    with one count of promoting a dangerous drug in the first
    degree, in violation of HRS § 712-1241(1)(a)4; two counts of
    prohibited acts related to drug paraphernalia, in violation of
    HRS § 329-43.5(a)5; three counts of promoting a dangerous drug in
    the third degree, in violation of HRS § 712-1243(1)6; one count
    4     HRS § 712-1241(1)(a) (Supp. 2016) provides in relevant part: “[a]
    person commits the offense of promoting a dangerous drug in the first degree
    if the person knowingly: (a) [p]ossesses one or more preparations, compounds,
    mixtures, or substances of an aggregate weight of: (i) [o]ne ounce or more,
    containing methamphetamine . . . .”
    A “dangerous drug” is “any substance or immediate precursor defined or
    specified as a ‘Schedule I substance’ or a ‘Schedule II substance’ by chapter
    329, or a substance specified in section 329-18(c)(14), except marijuana or
    marijuana concentrate.” HRS § 712-1240 (2014). Methamphetamine is a
    Schedule II substance. HRS § 329-16(e)(2) (2010).
    5    HRS § 329-43.5(a) (Supp. 2016) provides in relevant part:
    it is unlawful for any person to use, or to possess with
    intent to use, drug paraphernalia to plant, propagate,
    cultivate, grow, harvest, manufacture, compound, convert,
    produce, process, prepare, test, analyze, pack, repack,
    store, contain, conceal, inject, ingest, inhale, or
    otherwise introduce into the human body a controlled
    substance in violation of this chapter.
    6     HRS § 712-1243(1) (2014) provides: “[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.”
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    of promoting a detrimental drug in the second degree, in
    violation of HRS § 712-1248(1)7; and one count of attempted
    promoting a controlled substance in, on, or near schools, school
    vehicles, public parks, or public housing projects or complexes,
    in violation of HRS §§ 705-500(1)(b),8 712-1249.6(1).9
    B.    Pre-Trial Proceedings
    Keanaaina sought to suppress his identification and
    the evidence obtained from the gray backpack on the basis that
    the officers’ entry into the tent structure and subsequent
    7     HRS § 712-1248(1) (2014) provides in relevant part: “[a] person commits
    the offense of promoting a detrimental drug in the second degree if the
    person knowingly . . . [p]ossesses one or more preparations, compounds,
    mixtures, or substances, of an aggregate weight of one ounce or more,
    containing any marijuana.”
    8     HRS § 705-500(1)(b) (2014) provides: “[a] person is guilty of an
    attempt to commit a crime if the person . . . [i]ntentionally engages in
    conduct which, under the circumstances as the person believes them to be,
    constitutes a substantial step in a course of conduct intended to culminate
    in the person’s commission of the crime.”
    9     HRS § 712-1249.6(1) (2014) provides in relevant part:
    Promoting a controlled substance in, on, or near
    schools, school vehicles, public parks, or public housing
    projects or complexes. (1) A person commits the offense of
    promoting a controlled substance in, on, or near schools,
    school vehicles, public parks, or public housing projects
    or complexes if the person knowingly:
    (a) Distributes or possesses with intent to distribute a
    controlled substance in any amount in or on the real
    property comprising a school, public park, or public
    housing project or complex;
    (b) Distributes or possesses with intent to distribute a
    controlled substance in any amount within seven hundred
    and fifty feet of the real property comprising a
    school, public park, or public housing project or
    complex[.]
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    search of the backpack violated HRS § 803-3710 because the
    officers needed to demand entrance to the tent structure before
    they could search his bag.
    Keanaaina additionally argued that the search of his
    bag exceeded the scope of the warrant, which authorized the
    search of
    The residence of Michelle WRIGHT described as a homeless
    campsite consisting of various color and size tarpaulins at
    the Old Kona Airport beach park, located at the north end
    of Kuakini Highway, behind the Hawaiʻi State Parks and
    Recreation maintenance building. Said campsite is situated
    on land belonging to the County of Hawaiʻi (Old Kona
    Airport) and Queen Liliuokalani Trust (corner of Kuakini
    Hwy and Makala Blvd); to include but not limited to all
    rooms, boxes, toolboxes, suitcases, handbags, safes,
    backpacks, fanny packs, bags, storage containers, wallets,
    purses, papers, utility receipts and clothing located
    within said camp and/or stored outside-near the camp,
    wherever located within the County and State of Hawaiʻi
    . . . .
    Specifically, Keanaaina claimed that since the warrant was
    targeted at Wright, it did not “support a . . . search of his
    belongings.”     Keanaaina also asserted that the search warrant
    10    HRS § 803-37 (2014) provides:
    Power of officer serving. The officer charged with the
    warrant, if a house, store, or other building is designated
    as the place to be searched, may enter it without demanding
    permission if the officer finds it open. If the doors are
    shut the officer must declare the officer’s office and the
    officer’s business, and demand entrance. If the doors,
    gates, or other bars to the entrance are not immediately
    opened, the officer may break them. When entered, the
    officer may demand that any other part of the house, or any
    closet, or other closed place in which the officer has
    reason to believe the property is concealed, may be opened
    for the officer’s inspection, and if refused the officer
    may break them.
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    did not comply with constitutional prohibitions “that no
    warrants shall issue absent ‘ . . . particularity describing
    . . . . [sic] things to be seized.’”11
    Following a hearing, the circuit court denied
    Keanaaina’s motion.       As relevant here, the circuit court found
    that Detective Hardie “called into the structure numerous times,
    announcing police presence and search warrants.”
    The circuit court additionally found that “neither
    [Detective] Hardie nor any of the other officers were aware that
    a backpack inside the tent belonged to [Keanaaina] prior to the
    tent being search[ed] or whether any particular backpack
    belonged to [Keanaaina].”        When the officers first searched the
    gray backpack, “contraband was found within the backpack,
    including marijuana and small zip bags.”           “When the [gray]
    backpack was searched at the Kealakehe Police Station,
    identification cards for Samson Keanaaina were observed within
    it and photographed.”
    The circuit court therefore reached three relevant
    conclusions of law.       First, “[w]hen the officers observed the
    11    Keanaaina superficially identified this “Particularity of Warrant”
    claim on appeal, but did not present any argument to the ICA pertaining to
    the breadth of the search warrant.
    On certiorari, Keanaaina does not claim, much less argue, that the
    search warrant constituted an unlawful general warrant. Keanaaina therefore
    expressly abandoned his general warrant claim, and we do not address this
    basis for Keanaaina’s motion to suppress any further. Hawaiʻi Rules of
    Appellate Procedure (HRAP) Rule 28(b)(4).
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    items of identification . . . , the items of identification were
    in plain view, as the initial intrusion was justified by the
    valid search warrant.”
    Second, “[t]he officers did not need to comply with
    the requirements of [HRS § 803-37] because there was no
    ‘breaking’ of any door to gain entrance to the structure.”             This
    was because “[w]hen Ms. Wright exited the Wright Residence, her
    ‘door’ was voluntarily opened, and there is no need for officers
    to knock and announce.”     Nevertheless, the circuit court
    determined that
    the officers did comply by loudly announcing police
    presence, the police business (search warrants), and
    instructions to exit the tents. Having waited outside the
    structure for several minutes after the announcements
    before Ms. Wright exited the Wright Residence, then taking
    additional minutes to call into the tent to rouse the
    defendant, the officers waited a reasonable time to enter
    the structure.
    The circuit court therefore concluded that the officers’ actions
    “respected the purposes of the knock and announce rule and did
    not offend constitutional protections.”
    Third, the search warrant authorized the officers “to
    search ‘plausible repositories’ found within the Wright
    Residence . . . .“    Here, “[t]he backpack which contained
    [Keanaaina’s] identification cards . . . was not clearly the
    property of [Wright or Keanaaina] . . . , so the search of the
    backpack was not improper.”
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    C.    Trial Proceedings
    On September 12, 2017, the case proceeded to a jury
    trial.    The jury convicted Keanaaina for one count of prohibited
    acts related to drug paraphernalia; one count of promoting a
    dangerous drug in the third degree; one count of promoting a
    detrimental drug in the third degree; and one count of attempted
    promoting a controlled substance in, on, or near schools, school
    vehicles, public parks, or public housing projects or complexes.
    The circuit court entered its Judgment of Conviction
    and Sentence on November 17, 2017.
    D.    ICA Memorandum Opinion
    Keanaaina appealed the circuit court’s Judgment of
    Conviction and Sentence to the ICA, arguing, inter alia, that
    the circuit court should have granted Keanaaina’s motion to
    suppress.12    The ICA affirmed the circuit court decision.
    First, the ICA concluded that the officers “complied
    with the requirements and purposes of HRS § 803-37 and the
    Circuit Court did not err when it denied Keanaaina’s Motion to
    Suppress.”     Citing State v. Dixon, 83 Hawaiʻi 13, 14, 
    924 P.2d 181
    , 182 (1996), the ICA noted that “[t]he purposes of this so-
    called knock and announce rule are to ‘(1) reduce the potential
    12    Keanaaina also asserted that the trial court should have dismissed a
    juror for potential bias and that he received ineffective assistance of
    counsel. Keanaaina repeats these claims in his application for writ of
    certiorari. These arguments lack merit for the reasons discussed in the
    ICA’s memorandum opinion.
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    of violence to both occupants and police resulting from an
    unannounced entry; (2) prevent unnecessary property damage; and
    (3) protect the occupant’s right to privacy.’”          The ICA
    explained that the statute did not require the officers to
    “knock” on the tent, but merely to announce their presence,
    which the officers did repeatedly.        The ICA added that there was
    little risk of property damage or injury when the officers could
    see into the tent structure and waited a reasonable time before
    entering to wake Keanaaina.      The ICA acknowledged that the
    waiting period also “protected Keanaaina’s privacy as much as
    possible.”
    Second, the ICA held that the officers were authorized
    to search the gray backpack.       The ICA reasoned that, under this
    court’s precedent in State v. Nabarro, 
    55 Haw. 583
    , 587-88, 
    525 P.2d 573
    , 576-77 (1974), a valid search warrant authorizes
    officers to inspect bags in the specified search area so long as
    the officers did not have “notice of some sort of the ownership
    of a belonging[.]”    The ICA pointed out that “[t]here is no
    evidence in the record that the police knew that the gray
    backpack belonged to Keanaaina prior to searching it.”            The ICA
    further noted that the officers did not identify the gray
    backpack as Keanaaina’s until the police station search, at
    which point the bag’s contents were admissible under the plain
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    view doctrine because they were “observed after warrant-
    authorized opening of the backpack[.]”
    II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    A.    Motion to Suppress
    “[W]e review questions of constitutional law under the
    ‘right/wrong’ standard.”        State v. Jenkins, 93 Hawaiʻi 87, 100,
    
    997 P.2d 13
    , 26 (2000) (citing State v. Toyomura, 80 Hawaiʻi 8,
    15, 
    904 P.2d 893
    , 900 (1995)).         Accordingly, “[w]e review the
    circuit court’s ruling on a motion to suppress de novo to
    determine whether the ruling was ‘right’ or ‘wrong.’”              State v.
    Kauhi, 86 Hawaiʻi 195, 197, 
    948 P.2d 1036
    , 1038 (1997) (citing
    State v. Navas, 81 Hawaiʻi 113, 123, 
    913 P.2d 39
    , 49 (1996)).
    III. DISCUSSION
    A.    The officers complied with the requirements of HRS § 803-
    37.
    The text of HRS § 803-37 provides in relevant part:
    The officer charged with the warrant, if a house,
    store, or other building is designated as the place to be
    searched, may enter it without demanding permission if the
    officer finds it open. If the doors are shut the officer
    must declare the officer’s office and the officer’s
    business, and demand entrance. If the doors, gates, or
    other bars to the entrance are not immediately opened, the
    officer may break them.
    The statute thus creates a two-stage inquiry for determining
    whether and how an officer may enter a building to execute a
    search warrant.      We first ask whether the structure is “open.”
    If so, an officer may enter without taking any further action,
    and that is the end of the inquiry.          If not, we then ask if the
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    officer “demand[ed] entrance.”       If so, the officer may “break”
    any bars to entrance if they are not immediately opened and
    enter.   If not, the officer should not enter the building or
    break its bars to entrance.
    Applying this order of inquiry to the present case,
    the circuit court correctly determined that HRS § 803-37 did not
    require the officers to demand entrance because (1) Wright’s
    tent structure was open and (2) Detective Hardie’s actions
    consequently did not constitute a breaking.          Additionally,
    although HRS § 803-37 did not require the officers to demand
    entrance, we note that they effectively carried out the
    statute’s policy goals.
    1.    The officers did not need to demand entrance into the
    open tent structure.
    According to Keanaaina, HRS § 803-37 obligated the
    officers to demand entrance to Wright’s tent structure because
    Detective Hardie used force to lift a sheet and move a couch
    before entering.
    This contention improperly reverses HRS § 803-37’s
    order of inquiry by assuming that the existence of any bars to
    entrance into a building renders the building shut for purposes
    of HRS § 803-37.    Common sense proves otherwise.         For example, a
    building may have a double door entry.         If one of the two doors
    is shut, it would form a bar to entrance.         However, so long as
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    the other door is open, the building is also open for purposes
    of HRS § 803-37.
    That is precisely the case here.         The record shows
    that there were numerous openings into Wright’s tent structure.13
    Notably, Wright used one of these openings to exit the tent
    structure.14    The tent structure was consequently open insofar as
    there was an entrance that the officers could have used to enter
    the structure without lifting or moving any of the tarpaulins or
    materials that formed its walls.           Under these circumstances,
    HRS § 803-37’s mandate that an officer “demand entrance” when
    “the doors are shut” is inapplicable.           See HRS § 803-37.
    2.    Detective Hardie’s actions could not constitute a
    breaking that required the officers to demand
    entrance.
    Citing State v. Harada, 98 Hawaiʻi 18, 
    41 P.3d 174
    (2002), Keanaaina further argues that Detective Hardie’s uses of
    force to lift a sheet of fabric and move a couch constituted
    breakings that triggered HRS § 803-37’s requirement that the
    officers demand entrance.        However, this argument incorrectly
    assumes that any use of force causes a breaking for which the
    13    For the purposes of this proceeding, this court assumes without
    deciding that Wright’s tent structure constituted “a house . . . or other
    building” under the terms of HRS § 803-37.
    14    Keanaaina argues in passing that Wright “did not open the door for
    police entry.” However, this court’s precedent makes clear that a building
    occupant’s reason for opening a door is irrelevant. See Dixon, 83 Hawaiʻi at
    21, 
    924 P.2d at 189
     (holding that officers need not demand entrance when
    using a ruse to persuade an occupant to open a door).
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    officers had to demand entrance.           Rather, Harada makes clear
    that a breaking only occurs when the force is “used to gain
    entry.”     98 Hawaiʻi at 24, 
    41 P.3d at 180
    .
    This distinction is particularly important where, as
    here, an officer’s use of force to enter a building is merely
    incidental – and not necessary – to their entry.             For instance,
    in Harada, we held that officers had to demand entrance because
    “a breaking occurred when Officer Bermudes used force to prevent
    Harada from closing the door.”         98 Hawaiʻi at 30, 
    41 P.3d at 186
    .
    Similarly, we explained in State v. Monay, 85 Hawaiʻi 282, 283,
    
    943 P.2d 908
    , 909 (1997), that an officer opening an apartment’s
    closed, unlocked front door by using force to turn the door knob
    is required to demand entrance.         In both of these situations,
    the officers were only able to gain entry to the building at
    issue because of their use of force.
    The record shows that Detective Hardie’s use of force
    was incidental to his entry, and therefore did not constitute a
    breaking.     Notably, Detective Hardie could have entered the tent
    structure using the same opening Wright used as an exit.15
    15    The dissent contends that because Wright moved a tarp to the side to
    exit the tent, this opening was “shut” to Detective Hardie. This reasoning
    is flawed for two reasons. First, as our double door example illustrates,
    the mere fact that an obstruction may be present does not render a structure
    shut.
    Second, by the dissent’s logic, if a person opens the entrance to a
    structure and leaves it open, the fact that the person opened the entrance
    door would obligate the officers to demand entry. However, this court has
    16
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    Detective Hardie’s act of lifting a sheet of fabric consequently
    was not necessary to gain entry to the tent.            Additionally,
    Keanaaina’s own testimony indicated that Detective Hardie could
    have walked around the couch.         Detective Hardie’s movement of
    the couch was, in turn, unnecessary to gain entry.
    In sum, HRS § 803-37’s requirement that officers
    demand entrance to a shut building was not triggered because
    (1) Wright’s tent structure was open and (2) Detective Hardie’s
    uses of force therefore did not constitute “breakings” because
    the force was not necessary to gain entry.16
    3.    The officers nevertheless satisfied the objectives of
    HRS § 803-37’s requirement to demand entrance.
    Despite the fact that HRS § 803-37 did not obligate
    the officers to demand entrance, Keanaaina proclaims that the
    purposes of the rule “were in fact frustrated.”            This is
    incorrect.     The legislature enacted the “knock and announce”
    rule to: “(1) reduce the potential of violence to both occupants
    and police resulting from an unannounced entry; (2) prevent
    already determined that such is not the case. See Dixon, 83 Hawaiʻi at 21,
    
    924 P.2d at 189
     (holding that officers need not demand entrance after an
    occupant opened the entry door).
    16    Other courts have similarly held that an incidental use of force does
    not constitute a breaking. See, e.g., United States v. Thorne, 
    997 F.2d 1504
    , 1513 (D.C. Cir. 1993) (holding that no breaking occurred where “door
    was ajar” and officer “knocked twice and the force of the knocks further
    opened the door.”); State v. Campana, 
    678 N.E.2d 626
    , 629 (Ohio App. 1996)
    (“the officers knocked and then walked into the workshop through an unlocked
    door that was ajar. In that they did not have to break down the door or
    break a window to effectuate the arrest, [the knock and announce statute] is
    inapplicable to this case.”) (emphasis added).
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    unnecessary property damage; and (3) protect the occupant’s
    right of privacy.”    Dixon, 83 Hawaiʻi at 14, 
    924 P.2d at 182
    ; see
    also State v. Eleneki, 92 Hawaiʻi 562, 565, 
    993 P.2d 1191
    , 1194
    (2000) (“Although the language of HRS §§ 803-11 and 803-37
    differs, the purposes of the ‘knock and announce rule’ are
    identical in each context . . . .”).        The officers’ actions
    fulfilled each of these goals.
    First, the officers reduced the potential of violence
    to both occupants and police by loudly announcing their presence
    and demanding that Wright and Keanaaina exit the tent structure.
    Although Keanaaina contends that “an unannounced entry had the
    potential of violence,” the record proves otherwise.            Detective
    Hardie looked into the tent from a large opening.           From this
    vantage point, Detective Hardie saw that both Wright and
    Keanaaina were sleeping.      Detective Hardie attempted to wake
    Wright and Keanaaina and to order both to exit the tent.            If
    anything, these instructions reduced the potential of violence
    since the tent was a small, confined area where the occupants
    would be in close proximity to the officers and could have
    access to concealed weapons.       Once Wright exited the tent
    structure, the only remaining occupant was Keanaaina, who
    continued sleeping.     Under these circumstances, Detective
    Hardie’s entrance into the tent after ordering the occupants to
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    exit did not create any potential of violence to either
    Detective Hardie or Keanaaina.
    Second, Detective Hardie’s entry into the tent did not
    create any risk of unnecessary property damage.          Keanaaina
    insists that “moving a couch or opening a closed flap/barrier
    causes damages at least in the form of disrupting the living
    quarters.”     However, this argument disregards the knock and
    announce rule’s purpose of preventing unnecessary property
    damage.   See Dixon, 83 Hawaiʻi at 14, 
    924 P.2d at 182
    .
    Regardless, given that there was no potential for violence from
    Detective Hardie’s entry, it was similarly unlikely that the
    entry would have led to any property damage.
    Third, Detective Hardie acted with all due respect for
    Keanaaina’s privacy.     The officers began their announcements
    when they entered the tent encampment, at least fifteen feet
    away from Wright’s tent structure.        This gave Wright and
    Keanaaina some time to wake up and collect themselves before the
    officers arrived at Wright’s tent structure.          Additionally,
    Keanaaina had, at best, a limited expectation of privacy inside
    of the tent.    See State v. Kaaheena, 
    59 Haw. 23
    , 28-29, 
    575 P.2d 462
    , 466-67 (1978) (explaining that there is no reasonable
    expectation of privacy when observations can be made from “a
    non-intrusive vantage point.”).       The record reveals that there
    was at least one large, pre-existing opening in the tent
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    structure that allowed passersby to look into the tent
    structure.   Thus, Detective Hardie’s observations through the
    opening did not intrude upon Keanaaina’s privacy inside the tent
    structure.   Kaaheena, 59 Haw. at 28-29, 
    575 P.2d at 466-67
    .
    Detective Hardie also gave Keanaaina a reasonable
    period of time to respond before entering the tent.           “[W]hat
    would constitute a reasonable period of time to respond to a
    knock and announcement must be determined by the circumstances
    of each case.”    Monay, 85 Hawaiʻi at 284, 
    943 P.2d at 910
    (quoting State v. Garcia, 77 Hawaiʻi 461, 468, 
    887 P.2d 671
    , 678
    (App. 1995)).    Once Wright exited the tent, Detective Hardie
    continued trying to wake up Keanaaina from outside of the tent
    for a few minutes.    Given that Detective Hardie could see that
    Keanaaina was non-responsive and knew that Keanaaina was hard of
    hearing, it appears that Detective Hardie waited a reasonable
    amount of time before entering the tent structure.           Monay, 85
    Hawaiʻi at 284, 
    943 P.2d at 910
    .
    The officers’ entry into Wright’s tent structure
    consequently satisfied HRS § 803-37’s purposes.          Dixon, 83
    Hawaiʻi at 15, 
    924 P.2d at 182
    ; Eleneki, 92 Hawaiʻi at 565, 
    993 P.2d at 1194
    .
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    B.    The search warrant authorized the officers to search
    Keanaaina’s backpack.
    Keanaaina also claims that the ICA erred in ruling
    that the warrant authorized the officers to search Keanaaina’s
    backpack.     Keanaaina points out that the warrant authorized the
    officers to search items “found to be under the control of a
    female party identified as Michelle WRIGHT.”            However, Keanaaina
    argues that Wright “could not have been in control of the
    backpack” because she was not in the tent next to the backpack
    at the time it was seized by the officers.           Keanaaina further
    asserts that the officers had notice that the backpack was
    Keanaaina’s – not Wright’s – because it “was found next to
    [Keanaaina] on a bed where he was sleeping and the police
    identified the [leopard-print] backpack as belonging to Michelle
    Wright.”    These arguments are unavailing.
    First, Keanaaina’s insistence that Wright had to be in
    the tent to control the backpack – and thereby bring the
    backpack within the warrant’s ambit – is nonsensical.              By
    Keanaaina’s reasoning, Wright lost control over all objects in
    the tent the moment she walked out.          A defendant may not so
    easily evade a lawful search of their possessions.             Black’s Law
    Dictionary 416 (11th ed. 2019) defines “control” as “[t]he
    direct or indirect power to govern the management” of an object.
    (Emphasis added.)      It also defines the act of control as “[t]o
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    exercise power or influence over.”        
    Id.
        These definitions
    indicate that a person may “control” an object without actual
    physical possession of or proximity to the item.
    Our precedent regarding possession confirms this.             For
    instance, a person may exercise actual possession, meaning that
    she “has direct physical control over a thing at a given time.”
    State v. Jenkins, 93 Hawaiʻi 87, 110, 
    997 P.2d 13
    , 36 (2000).
    Alternatively, this person may exercise constructive possession,
    where she possesses “both the power and the intention at a given
    time to exercise dominion over [the] thing, either directly or
    through another person or persons.”        
    Id.
       Thus, Wright could
    still have possessed and controlled the gray backpack without
    actually being inside of the tent, and the officers were
    therefore not precluded from searching the gray backpack.
    Second, the officers lacked sufficient notice to
    determine that Keanaaina owned the backpack.          Keanaaina claims
    that the facts that his “gray camo backpack was found next to
    him . . . and [that] the police identified the [leopard-print]
    backpack as belonging to Michelle Wright” were sufficient to
    notify the officers that Keanaaina had “some sort of ownership
    of the backpack.”    This court’s decision in Nabarro leads us to
    a different conclusion.     See 
    55 Haw. 583
    , 
    525 P.2d 573
    .
    There, officers conducted a search of a hotel room
    pursuant to a warrant identifying two male occupants.            
    Id.
     at
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    583-84, 
    525 P.2d at 574
    .      During the search, Nabarro, who was a
    female visitor in the room, grabbed her purse before attempting
    to enter the bathroom.     
    Id.
       The officers searched Nabarro’s
    purse and found marijuana and paraphernalia.          
    Id. at 584
    , 
    525 P.2d at 574-75
    .    This court held that the evidence found in
    Nabarro’s purse should have been suppressed because “there was
    no question that the police had notice, prior to the search,
    that Miss Nabarro . . . was the owner of the purse.”            
    Id. at 588
    , 585 P.2d at 577.     This conclusion was based upon the facts
    that (1) the warrant identified two males as the occupants of
    the room, making it unlikely that the purse belonged to either
    of the warrant’s targets; (2) the purse was in Miss Nabarro’s
    immediate vicinity; and (3) Miss Nabarro picked up the purse “in
    circumstances that made it highly unlikely that the purse
    belonged to anyone else.”      Id.
    None of these factors are present here.           First, it is
    unreasonable for Keanaaina to imply that Wright could only
    possess one backpack.     It is plausible that, as a person without
    permanent housing, Wright owned multiple backpacks to keep her
    possessions easily mobile.       Indeed, the warrant recognized as
    much when it authorized the search of “backpacks.”           Furthermore,
    the backpack’s gray coloration did not provide notice that the
    bag did not belong to Wright.        Nothing prevents a woman from
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    owning both a leopard-print backpack and a dark-colored
    backpack.
    Second, the fact that the bag was in close proximity
    to Keanaaina also did not provide notice that the backpack
    belonged to Keanaaina.       As a preliminary matter, we clarify that
    Nabarro’s identification that the purse was in Nabarro’s
    immediate vicinity must be considered in the context that purses
    are “characteristically female attire.”17          See id. at 588, 
    525 P.2d at 577
    .     No similar context clues existed here.           Nothing
    about the backpack’s color indicated that it belonged to
    Keanaaina.     Furthermore, the officers only knew that Keanaaina
    might be in Wright’s tent.        The officers therefore could have
    fairly assumed that the items in the tent belonged to Wright
    regardless of their proximity to Keanaaina.
    Lastly, Keanaaina did not take any action that
    indicated that the gray backpack was his.           Keanaaina did not
    testify that he described his bag to the officers.             At most, he
    17    There would be significant issues in relying on proximity alone as a
    dispositive factor. As this court explained in Nabarro, placing a visitor’s
    possible possessions beyond the reach of a search warrant would render
    effective execution impossible “since the police could never be sure that a
    plausible repository for items named in the warrant belongs to a resident,
    and hence is searchable, or to a non-resident, and hence is not searchable.”
    
    Id. at 587-88
    , 
    525 P.2d at 576-77
    .
    Keanaaina’s proposed use of proximity as a dispositive factor would
    lead to an even more untenable circumstance than the one this court sought to
    avoid in Nabarro. Instead of merely preventing police from searching items
    that clearly belong to a visitor, Keanaaina suggests that police should not
    be able to search items that are near a known visitor. This would have
    rendered the execution of the search warrant impossible by preventing the
    officers from searching any items or places near Keanaaina. Contra 
    id. at 587-88
    , 
    525 P.2d at 576-77
    .
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    asked Detective Hardie “where’s my backpack?”          Although this
    inquiry would have indicated that Keanaaina may have owned a
    backpack in the tent, it was not sufficient to inform the
    officers that Keanaaina owned the gray backpack.
    Under these circumstances, the officers did not have
    notice that Keanaaina was the owner of the backpack, and were
    therefore entitled to assume that the backpack was subject to
    search under the warrant.      See 
    id. at 588
    , 
    525 P.2d at 577
    (“without notice of some sort of ownership of a belonging, the
    police are entitled to assume that all objects within premises
    lawfully subject to search under a warrant are part of those
    premises for the purpose of executing the warrant.”).
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the ICA’s June 5,
    2020 Judgment on Appeal, which affirmed the circuit court’s
    November 17, 2017 Judgment of Conviction and Sentence.
    Victor M. Cox for                        /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
    for petitioner
    /s/ Paula A. Nakayama
    Stephen L. Frye
    /s/ Jeffrey P. Crabtree
    for respondent
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