State v. Matheson , 424 P.3d 1080 ( 2018 )


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    2018 UT App 63
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee,
    v.
    MELAINE NICOLE MATHESON,
    Appellant.
    Opinion
    No. 20160162-CA
    Filed April 12, 2018
    Fifth District Court, St. George Department
    The Honorable G. Michael Westfall
    No. 131501261
    Gary W. Pendleton, Attorney for Appellant
    Sean D. Reyes and Karen A. Klucznik, Attorneys
    for Appellee
    JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES
    DAVID N. MORTENSEN and JILL M. POHLMAN concurred.
    ORME, Judge:
    ¶1     With our permission, granted in accordance with rule 5 of
    the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure, Appellant Melaine
    Nicole Matheson (Defendant) appeals an interlocutory order of
    the district court denying her motion to suppress the evidence
    against her. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2    An experienced narcotics officer presented an affidavit in
    support of a warrant to search a residence in St. George for
    State v. Matheson
    specified drug-related evidence. In addition, the affidavit sought
    authority to search “[a]ll persons” and “[a]ll vehicles present at
    the time of execution” of the warrant, as well as authority to
    search two specifically named individuals. Defendant was one of
    these two individuals.
    ¶3      In his affidavit, the officer identified several grounds for
    believing that a search would uncover the evidence he
    described. To begin with, he explained that the Washington
    County Drug Task Force had received information that the
    target home was “being used as a drug stash house.” He also
    stated that Task Force officers had “observed a consistent
    amount of short term traffic” in and out of the home “during the
    evening hours” and that drug paraphernalia—syringes, a meth
    pipe, and several marijuana pipes—had been discovered during
    a recent search of garbage left curbside for pickup. He noted that
    the meth pipe had tested positive for methamphetamine. He
    then explained that Task Force officers had recently made a
    traffic stop after observing a car leave the target residence, that
    the officers had found suspected methamphetamine and drug
    paraphernalia in the vehicle, and that both occupants had
    admitted to having just left the residence. The vehicle’s
    occupants had also informed the officers that a man named
    “Dino” resided at the home and that a woman named “Melaine”
    was often there as well.
    ¶4     The officer’s affidavit recited that, after further
    investigation, the Task Force had identified “Dino” and
    “Melaine” as Dean Carrell and Defendant. Upon checking utility
    records for the residence, officers discovered an active account in
    Carrell’s name, and while surveilling the residence, they
    observed Carrell “coming and going freely.” Carrell had been
    arrested “several times for distribution of illicit narcotics.” As for
    Defendant, Task Force officers observed her at the residence “on
    several different occasions.” They also learned from
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    “[c]onfidential sources” that she had been “distributing a large
    amount of illicit narcotics into [the] community.” 1
    ¶5     Based on the officer’s affidavit, a district court judge,
    acting as a magistrate, issued a warrant (the First Warrant)
    authorizing Task Force officers to search the target residence,
    “the person(s) of” Dean Carrell and Defendant, and “[a]ll
    persons” and “[a]ll vehicles present at the time of execution.”
    ¶6     Four days after the First Warrant was issued, while an
    entry team prepared to execute the warrant on the target
    residence, two detectives conducted surveillance in an
    unmarked police vehicle approximately 100 yards from the
    residence. Before the entry team arrived, the two detectives
    spotted Defendant leaving the residence and watched as she
    stepped into a red Mazda pickup truck and drove off. After
    alerting the entry team, the detectives followed Defendant for
    about four blocks before signaling her to pull over.
    ¶7     One of the detectives detained Defendant and placed her
    in his vehicle after informing her of the First Warrant. He then
    proceeded to drive Defendant to the police station, which was no
    more than three or four blocks away from where they had
    stopped her, while the other detective followed in Defendant’s
    truck. The first detective later testified that his decision to
    1. Although the officer did not outline specific information about
    the “[c]onfidential sources,” his routine exposure to multiple
    potential sources was outlined in a general way. He explained
    that over the course of his three years with the Task Force he had
    “conducted hundreds of interviews with gang members,” been
    “the case officer on several drug arrests,” “executed several
    search warrants where substantial amounts of narcotics have
    been seized,” and “interviewed several persons in the drug
    culture and gained information . . . directly from them.”
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    State v. Matheson
    remove Defendant from the area was predicated on his fear that
    she might “call someone or notify someone at the residence that
    she was being detained.” Such an eventuality, he explained,
    would compromise “the safety of the entry team.”
    ¶8    When they arrived at the police station, the first detective
    immediately conducted a search of Defendant’s person. He
    found a bag of marijuana in one pocket and a bag of
    methamphetamine in another. The detective then asked
    Defendant for permission to search her vehicle. She replied,
    “Not without a warrant.”
    ¶9     The detective retrieved a dog to perform a drug sniff of
    Defendant’s truck, now parked at the station, and the dog
    alerted him to the presence of a controlled substance in the area
    of the driver’s side door. Based on the evidence found on
    Defendant’s person and the dog’s alert, the detective sought and
    obtained a warrant to search the truck (the Second Warrant).
    Upon executing it, the detectives “located a significant amount
    of drugs and paraphernalia,” as well as a firearm.
    ¶10 The State charged Defendant with possession of
    methamphetamine with intent to distribute, a first degree felony;
    possession of marijuana, a third degree felony; possession of a
    dangerous weapon by a restricted person, a third degree felony;
    and possession of drug paraphernalia, a class A misdemeanor.
    Defendant moved to quash both warrants and to suppress all
    evidence discovered under color of their authority, arguing that
    the searches exceeded the warrants’ grant of authority and that
    the warrants were not supported by probable cause.
    Unpersuaded, the district court denied the motion in a detailed,
    nine-page order. This appeal followed.
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    State v. Matheson
    ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶11 Defendant ascribes error to the district court’s decision
    denying her motion to suppress. “We review a trial court’s
    decision to grant or deny a motion to suppress for an alleged
    Fourth Amendment violation as a mixed question of law and
    fact.” State v. Fuller, 
    2014 UT 29
    , ¶ 17, 
    332 P.3d 937
    . Under this
    standard, “[w]hile the court’s factual findings are reviewed for
    clear error, its legal conclusions are reviewed for correctness,
    including its application of law to the facts of the case.” 
    Id.
    ANALYSIS
    ¶12 Defendant challenges the district court’s denial of her
    suppression motion on four grounds. First, she maintains that
    the evidence contained in the affidavit submitted in support of
    the First Warrant was insufficient to establish probable cause
    justifying “a search of [her] person independent of the search of
    the target location.” Second, she argues that even if the evidence
    contained in the affidavit might have justified a broader grant of
    authority, as written the First Warrant did not authorize officers
    to conduct a search of her person at any location other than the
    target residence. Third, Defendant argues that neither the
    transport of her truck to the police station nor its subsequent
    search at the station was authorized under the First Warrant. 2
    And fourth, Defendant maintains that the search of her truck
    was not authorized under the Second Warrant because it was
    obtained on the basis of evidence uncovered “through the
    2. Defendant also argues that the detectives had no grounds to
    effect a warrantless seizure of the truck. However, our conclusion
    that the detectives lawfully seized the truck under the authority
    conferred on them by the First Warrant, see infra Section III,
    carries with it the necessary conclusion that the seizure was not
    warrantless. We therefore do not address this argument further.
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    State v. Matheson
    exploitation of the illegal seizure of [her] person and her
    vehicle.”
    I. The Officer’s Affidavit
    ¶13 Defendant argues that “the affidavit supporting the
    issuance of [the First Warrant] does not establish probable cause
    to believe that, if . . . Defendant were located and subjected to
    search at some location other than the target residence, she
    would be found in possession of a contraband substance.” In
    support, she asserts that the officer’s affidavit “provides
    absolutely no way of evaluating the credibility or reliability of”
    his information regarding her distribution of drugs into the
    community because the identity of his confidential sources is
    undisclosed, and there is no indication that the unnamed sources
    “claimed to have personal knowledge.” Rather, she maintains,
    the “only information” related to Defendant “that was
    corroborated on any level involved her somewhat casual
    relationship to the target residence.” Taking the totality of the
    circumstances into account, we conclude that the information in
    the affidavit established probable cause to believe that
    contraband could be found on Defendant’s person regardless of
    where she was searched.
    ¶14 Consistent with the jurisprudence of the United States
    Supreme Court, the Utah Supreme Court has stated that when
    reviewing the issuance of a search warrant, “the issue is whether
    the magistrate had a substantial basis to conclude that in the
    totality of the circumstances, the affidavit adequately established
    probable cause.” State v. Hansen, 
    732 P.2d 127
    , 129 (Utah 1987)
    (per curiam). See Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 238 (1983). Under
    the totality-of-the-circumstances approach, “[s]earch warrant
    affidavits are to be construed in a common-sense, reasonable
    manner,” and “excessive technical dissection of an informant’s
    tip . . . is ill-suited to this task.” Hansen, 732 P.2d at 130. Accord
    State v. Rowan, 
    2017 UT 88
    , ¶ 16 (“We afford the magistrate’s
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    decision great deference and consider the affidavit relied upon
    by the magistrate in its entirety and in a common sense
    fashion.”) (brackets, citation, and internal quotation marks
    omitted). While “an informant’s reliability and basis of
    knowledge” are relevant considerations, “[a] weakness in one or
    the other is not fatal to the warrant.” Hansen, 732 P.2d at 130
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). We instead look
    to the affidavit in its entirety for indications of “veracity,
    reliability, and basis of knowledge,” which are “nonexclusive
    elements to be evaluated in reaching the practical, common-
    sense decision whether, given all the circumstances, there is a
    fair probability that the contraband will be found in the place
    described.” Id. See Rowan, 
    2017 UT 88
    , ¶ 16.
    ¶15 Applying this standard to the affidavit before us, we
    conclude that probable cause existed to believe that Defendant
    would likely be found in possession of contraband regardless of
    her location. It is true that the officer did not disclose in his
    affidavit the identity of the confidential sources who tipped him
    off to the fact that Defendant “ha[d] been distributing a large
    amount of illicit narcotics into [the] community,” nor did he
    identify the basis of their knowledge. Admittedly, then, the
    confidential sources’ credibility was not directly established by
    the officer, and their information was not necessarily reliable.
    But when applying the totality-of-the-circumstances test, the
    credibility and reliability of informants’ tips “are but two
    relevant considerations, among others, in determining the
    existence of probable cause.” See Hansen, 732 P.2d at 130.
    ¶16 When considering the affidavit in its entirety, its relative
    weaknesses are offset by the fact that the officer identified other
    reliable information connecting Defendant to the drug-related
    activities apparently taking place at the target residence. In our
    view, Task Force officers had sufficient information to establish
    probable cause for believing that illegal drugs were being
    distributed at the residence. Significant amounts of drug
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    State v. Matheson
    paraphernalia were discovered in the trash outside the home,
    and officers witnessed an unusual “amount of short term traffic
    during the evening hours.” Task Force officers also discovered
    illegal drugs in a vehicle that they pulled over immediately after
    it had left the residence.
    ¶17 Given these facts, any reliable information that linked
    Defendant to the target residence would naturally buttress the
    reliability of the confidential sources’ otherwise dubitable
    information. And indeed, the officer’s affidavit did contain such
    information. For instance, after Task Force officers found illegal
    drugs in the vehicle that had just departed from the residence,
    the vehicle’s occupants identified Defendant by name and
    informed the officers that she “frequented the residence.”
    Further, upon conducting surveillance of the home, Task Force
    officers themselves observed Defendant entering and exiting on
    several occasions.
    ¶18 Of course, one might object that citing the reliability of
    one source in an effort to enhance the reliability of another is
    problematic where the information provided by the two sources
    is not identical, or where neither source’s information is
    conclusive on its own. And indeed, it must be acknowledged
    that, while the confidential sources claimed that Defendant was
    personally engaged in the distribution of narcotics, the
    information provided by the driver and passenger, as well as the
    officer’s surveillance observations, solidified Defendant’s
    connection to the residence where drug-related activity
    appeared to be taking place without directly pointing to
    Defendant’s personal involvement. But such “[e]xcessive
    technical dissection” is “ill-suited” to the task before us. See
    Hansen, 732 P.2d at 130. Because a probable cause determination
    involves a “practical, common-sense decision,” id., the totality of
    the information Task Force officers accumulated meaningfully
    bolstered the credibility of the confidential sources.
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    State v. Matheson
    ¶19 Accordingly, upon considering the totality of the
    circumstances, we conclude that the reliability of the confidential
    sources’ tip was enhanced in light of the other information
    contained in the officer’s affidavit. We are therefore persuaded
    that probable cause existed to believe Defendant would likely be
    in possession of illegal drugs or paraphernalia.
    II. The Scope of the First Warrant
    ¶20 Defendant next maintains that, as written, the First
    Warrant did not authorize the detectives to carry out a search of
    her person at any location other than the target home. In support
    of her argument, Defendant cites two cases from the Court of
    Appeals of New York, People v. Green, 
    310 N.E.2d 533
     (N.Y.
    1974), and People v. Kerrigan, 
    374 N.Y.S.2d 22
     (App. Div. 1975).
    Neither is binding on us, and both are distinguishable.
    ¶21 The court in Green determined that a search warrant was
    not “a personal warrant that could be executed anywhere”
    because its language was “directed to a designated place and
    only incidentally authorized the search of any person ‘found
    therein.’” 310 N.E.2d at 534. In that case, the criminal activity
    described in the police officer’s affidavit had been limited to a
    single apartment, and the affiant had identified the individual
    named in the warrant—“Vino”—simply as the apartment’s
    “occup[ant].” Id. When rendering its decision, the court
    emphasized that “the search authority requested and granted
    was limited to the premises where the contraband was believed
    to be . . . and extended only to those individuals, . . . who being
    found therein, might reasonably be expected to conceal the
    contraband on their persons.” Id.
    ¶22 Likewise, in Kerrigan, the court held that a search warrant
    “was not ‘personal’” in nature because it was directed “to [a]
    shop as a center of gambling operations, and to defendant only
    had [he] been found therein.” 374 N.Y.S.2d at 23–24. The court
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    explained that, aside from an ambiguous statement overheard
    by the police during a telephone conversation, the supporting
    affidavit described “nothing even remotely connecting
    defendant with gambling, as distinguished from [his] connection
    with the shop itself.” Id. at 24. Thus, the court concluded, the
    warrant’s “concern was with the shop and the operations in and
    around it.” Id. at 23.
    ¶23 Here, the First Warrant and its supporting affidavit were
    not restricted in their focus to the target residence. The warrant
    itself specifically identified Defendant and Carrell, individually
    and by name, without giving any indication that the authority to
    search them was limited to their being found at the target
    residence. On the contrary, the warrant identified three primary
    search targets: the residence, Dean Carrell, and Defendant.
    Unlike the individual identified in the warrant in Green,
    Defendant is not identified as a resident of the home, nor is she
    even identified as someone likely to be found inside it at any
    particular time. Similarly, as we discussed in the previous
    section, the affidavit submitted in support of the warrant recites
    that Defendant’s involvement with drug dealing extends beyond
    her frequent presence at the residence, and thus the officer’s
    affidavit recounted his information that Defendant had been
    “distributing a large amount of illicit narcotics into [the]
    community.”
    ¶24 Thus, we conclude that the warrant was, to the extent
    directed at Defendant, “personal in nature.” See id. (internal
    quotation marks omitted). We therefore conclude that the
    execution of the First Warrant on Defendant was not conditioned
    on finding her at the target residence. 3
    3. Anticipating a fallback argument from the State, Defendant
    also maintains that the detectives’ search was not authorized
    under the First Warrant’s language permitting officers to search
    (continued…)
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    State v. Matheson
    III. The Seizure of the Truck
    ¶25 Defendant also argues that, “[e]ven if [the First Warrant]
    is properly read to authorize a search of [her] person wherever
    she could be found, it did not authorize the search or the seizure
    of her Mazda pickup truck.” We conclude that, on the contrary,
    the First Warrant authorized the detectives to seize the truck and
    transport it the short distance to the police station to be
    searched. 4
    ¶26 Under the warrant, Task Force officers had the authority
    to search “[a]ll vehicles present at the time of execution.”
    Defendant does not maintain that this grant of authority was
    unsupported by probable cause. Rather, she argues that this
    language could not have authorized the search of her truck at
    the time of the stop, much less later at the police station, because
    the stop was not made “at the time of,” nor was the vehicle
    “present at,” the warrant’s execution on the target residence.
    After all, she argues, the entry team had not yet arrived at the
    target home when the detectives pulled her over, and the stop
    took place roughly four blocks away from the home. We reject
    this argument. Given what we have already concluded, the
    (…continued)
    “[a]ll persons present at the time of execution.” Because we
    conclude that the search of Defendant’s person was permissible
    given that she was specifically named in the warrant, we need
    not further address this argument.
    4. Because we conclude that the detectives’ probable cause to
    seize Defendant’s truck arose from the facts alleged in the First
    Warrant’s supporting affidavit, we have no need to address
    Defendant’s additional argument that probable cause to search
    the truck did not arise simply from the discovery of illegal drugs
    on her person.
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    State v. Matheson
    truck’s temporal and geographic proximity to execution of the
    warrant at the residence is irrelevant. The truck was a “vehicle[]
    present at the time of execution” of the warrant on
    Defendant―another of the warrant’s primary targets.
    ¶27 We concluded above that the officer’s affidavit alleged
    facts sufficient to establish the requisite probable cause for the
    First Warrant. We further concluded that the First Warrant was
    “personal” to Defendant, meaning that, in addition to
    authorizing Task Force officers to search any and all persons
    present at the target residence, it also authorized them to search
    Defendant anywhere she might be found. It therefore follows
    that, when the detectives stopped Defendant while she was in
    her truck, they were executing the First Warrant, even if they
    were not accompanying the entry team to the target residence.
    For this reason, we conclude that the truck was properly
    searchable as a “vehicle[] present at the time of the execution” of
    the First Warrant on Defendant.
    ¶28 And given our conclusion that the First Warrant lawfully
    authorized the detectives to search the truck at the time of the
    stop, we further conclude that they had the authority to
    transport it to the police station to be searched later. The Utah
    Supreme Court has explained that “where officers have probable
    cause to search an automobile and seize evidence of a crime,
    they have the permissible alternative to seize the vehicle, take it
    to the police station and search it there.” State v. Ballenberger, 
    652 P.2d 927
    , 930 (Utah 1982). Because the detectives could have
    lawfully searched the car at the time of the stop pursuant to the
    First Warrant, they had “the permissible alternative” to seize it
    for a later search at the police station.
    IV. The Second Warrant
    ¶29 Finally, Defendant argues that the Second Warrant “must
    be quashed because it was clearly obtained through the
    exploitation of the illegal seizure of . . . Defendant’s person and
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    State v. Matheson
    her vehicle and their unauthorized transportation to the . . .
    police station.” Given our conclusions above and the thrust of
    Defendant’s argument, we have no need to address the validity
    of the Second Warrant.
    ¶30 In the previous sections, we concluded that the detectives
    were authorized under the First Warrant to search Defendant’s
    truck and that they were entitled to transport it to the police
    station to effect the search there. The detectives were thus not
    required to obtain the Second Warrant prior to searching
    Defendant’s truck, although erring on the side of adherence to
    the Fourth Amendment was surely the more prudent way to
    proceed.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶31 We conclude that the district court did not err in denying
    Defendant’s motion to suppress the State’s evidence against
    Defendant, as her Fourth Amendment rights were not violated.
    We therefore affirm the denial of her suppression motion.
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Document Info

Docket Number: 20160162-CA

Citation Numbers: 2018 UT App 63, 424 P.3d 1080

Filed Date: 4/12/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023