State of Washington v. Jason Charles Youker ( 2014 )


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  •                                                                        FILED
    JAN. 28, 2014
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    W A State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DMSION THREE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                          )
    )         No. 30977-1-111
    Appellant,             )
    )
    v.                                     )
    )
    JASON CHARLES YOUKER,                         )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    Respondent.            )
    FEARING, J. -    Okanogan County law enforcement officers executed a search
    warrant on defendant J ason Youker's residence. After the filing of criminal charges,
    Youker moved to suppress evidence gathered during the search, arguing the affidavit in
    support of the search warrant lacked information sufficient to establish probable cause.
    The trial court agreed, suppressed the evidence, and dismissed the case without prejudice.
    The State appeals, arguing the trial court applied the wrong standard of review when
    examining the earlier search warrant and asserting the affidavit averred facts sufficient to
    establish probable cause. We affrrm the trial court's decision to suppress the evidence
    against Jason Youker because the search warrant affidavit lacked a sufficient nexus
    between Youker's residence and criminal activity. Allegations that Youker engaged in
    No.30977-1-III
    State v. Youker
    criminal activity were conc1usory and prevented the magistrate from performing its role
    as a neutral and independent evaluator of the evidence.
    FACTS
    I
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    On March 28,2012, police obtained from a magistrate and executed a search
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    warrant at Jason Youker's residence, 1134 22nd Avenue, Oroville, Washington. The
    I    police seized marijuana, methamphetamine, heroin, scales, paraphernalia, and $9,000 in
    I
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    cash.
    I              Starting in early 2011, anonymous sources and fellow law enforcement officers
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    informed the North Central Washington Narcotics Task Force (Task Force) that a person
    nicknamed "Iceman" or "Ice Cream Man" sold heroin and methamphetamine in the
    Oroville area. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 19. These tips began a year-long investigation and
    ended with the application for a search warrant of Jason Youker's home. The Task Force
    provided the magistrate a 19-page affidavit, signed by Detective Steven D. Brown,
    sergeant and commander of the Task Force, to attain the warrant. The facts in this
    opinion arise principally from this affidavit. The affidavit seeks to connect Youker to
    people with a history of drug use or reputation for drug trafficking. The affidavit also
    seeks to identify Jason Youker as the Iceman and his home and truck as the tools for drug
    transactions.
    On March 25,2011, Task Force officers noticed Jason Hotchkiss parked next to
    Paulette Robertson's trailer in Oroville. The Task Force earlier purchased drugs from
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    State v. Youker
    Robertson, so officers followed Hotchkiss when he retrieved Robertson and drove her to
    -
    Prince Hardware. Hotchkiss and Robertson sat in Hotchkiss' truck in the store parking
    lot, rather than enter the store. When their vehicle left the parking lot, police executed a
    traffic stop. A drug detecting dog smelled around and in the car. The dog alerted officers
    to the center console, but officers did not find any contraband in the location.
    According to Oroville police officers and individuals claiming they purchased
    drugs from the Iceman, the Iceman did not like people coming to his house to purchase
    drugs. The Iceman asked buyers to park near Prince Hardware, located just east of Jason
    Youker's residence.
    On March 30, police learned from a recording of a conversation between a
    confidential informant (CI) and Paulette Robertson that Robertson hid the drugs, during
    the traffic stop, inside her pants.
    On April 19, a CI purchased methamphetamine from Paulette Robertson, at her
    trailer, in Oroville. Task Force officers observed a car arrive at the trailer and the officers
    assume one or both female occupants of the car delivered the methamphetamine for the
    purchase. Someone came from the trailer to greet the car occupants. The affidavit does
    not state that the officers saw any item passed between an occupant and the person from
    the trailer. After the purchase, the CI told the Task Force that he or she "could not be
    sure but believed" Robertson called a female named Cassie to deliver the drugs. CP at
    20. The search warrant affidavit reads:
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    State v. Youker
    It was later learned that Cassandra J. Vandeveer is the girlfriend
    of Jason Youker, who goes by the nick [sic] name
    ice man/ice cream man.
    CP at 20. The affidavit does not disclose how officers learned that Vandeveer is the girl
    friend of Jason Youker; if "Cassie" is the same as Vandeveer; or the basis for asserting
    that Jason Youker is the Iceman.
    On May 17, Paulette Robertson called a Task Force CI to inquire whether he or
    she wanted to purchase heroin. Task Force Commander Steven Brown approved a
    "controlled buy," and the CI, with Brown surreptitiously following, went to Robertson's
    trailer to purchase heroin. CP at 20. With the CI in the trailer, Brown observed an
    unidentified male drive a maroon and silver Dodge Dakota pickup truck to Robertson's
    home. The unidentified male entered Robertson's trailer.
    On May 17, Sergeant Wilson and Detective Kim, of the Task Force, covertly
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    arrived in a separate car at Robertson's Oroville trailer. The two recorded the license
    plate number of the maroon and silver truck. Officers later identified the owners of the
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    I    truck as Dorothy and Jason Youker, but the warrant affidavit does not identity Youker as
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    the man who drove the truck on May 17. Dorothy Youker is Jason's deceased mother.
    I          After leaving the Robertson trailer on May 17, the CI called Detective Brown and
    informed him that he or she purchased heroin. The two met to discuss the transaction and
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    to transfer the heroin to Brown. The CI told Brown that Robertson had four bags of
    heroin and the CI purchased two of the bags with the control buy money. The CI asked
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    State v. Youker
    Robertson where she got "her stuff," and Robertson replied that her supplier was "the ice
    cream man." CP at 21. The CI told Brown that he or she believed the driver of the
    maroon and silver truck to be "the ice cream man" and that he or she "believed" the ice
    cream man arrived to retrieve the purchase money. CP at 21. The CI, however, never
    saw the unidentified male deliver any drugs or take any money.
    On May 17, the driver of the maroon and silver Dodge Dakota left the Robertson
    trailer as the CI left. Police followed the unidentified driver to Youker's 22nd Avenue
    residence in Oroville. The search warrant affidavit lacks any information as to whether
    the tailing officers saw who exited from the pickup.
    On June 2, police executed a search warrant at Paulette Robertson's trailer. Police
    seized marijuana, methamphetamine, and a digital scale, for which she was arrested.
    On September 24, Oroville Police Officer Todd Hill stopped Cassandra J.
    Vandaveer, a felon with a conviction for possessing a controlled substance. Vandaveer
    drove Youker's truck. When Officer Hill approached the truck, he saw a pistol tucked
    between the seats. Vandaveer told Hill it was just a pellet pistol. Hill arrested Vandaveer
    for driving with a revoked license and asked for consent to search. Vandaveer declined.
    Hill called Border Patrol, who ran a drug detecting dog around the car. The dog caught a
    scent at the passenger side door. While police awaited a telephonic search warrant,
    Youker arrived at the scene to recover his truck. Police informed him that he could not
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    I   State v. Youker
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    take his truck home because a drug dog alerted officers to the presence of drugs. The
    police executed a search warrant, but did not find any drugs in the truck.
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    !          The search warrant affidavit declares that police identified, from the September 24
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    encounter, Jason Youker as the Iceman. The affidavit does not explain how officers
    I       made this identification.
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    On December 16, a CI sought to purchase methamphetamine from Jeffrey Clark, a
    felon with a conviction for the possession of marijuana. Clark told the CI that she or he
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    could purchase methamphetamine at the Iceman's house. Clark brought the CI to Jason
    Youker's residence, but they were unable to buy methamphetamine because the Iceman
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    was not home. According to the CI, Clark called the Iceman and was told that he was at
    the casino in Okanogan.
    I              Detective Brown in the search warrant affidavit states that the Iceman is likely
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    Jason Youker because law enforcement officers had recently followed Youker two miles
    south outside of Oroville, in the direction of the Okanogan casino. But as the trial court
    noted at the suppression hearing, the casino is 50 miles from Oroville.
    On January 14,2012, Ledawn Marie 10nes-Morish told Detective Thomas of the
    Task Force that she purchased methamphetamine and heroin from the Iceman in the past.
    She purchased through a wooden fence located on the east side of his home because he
    did not want traffic at his home. She told police she saw the Iceman and could identify
    his voice. The search warrant affidavit contains no identification or confirmation of a
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    No. 30977-1-111
    State v. Youker
    hole in the fence. At the suppression hearing, Jason Youker noted that his eastside fence
    is three feet tall. He asserted one could not hide by selling drugs from behind the fence,
    so Jones-Morish's statement is incredible.
    On February 1, Elizabeth Barton and Efren Federico Lopez parked in an orchard
    near Jason Youker's residence, when police arrested Lopez for outstanding warrants.
    When the arresting officer asked why the two waited in the orchard, Lopez replied that he
    desired to purchase methamphetamine, but his dealer asked buyers not to come to his
    house. The officer asked Lopez ifhe intended to purchase from Youker. Lopez did not
    know the name of the dealer.
    Detective Brown included in his search warrant affidavit recorded jail
    conversations dated February 2, 2012, between Arthur Leroy Sims, Jr. and unidentified
    females. In the telephone calls, Sims tells the ladies he believes that the police have
    jailed the Iceman, and the Iceman is selling dope for the cops.
    On February 3, officers responded to a report of a heroin overdose at the Camaray
    Motel in Oroville. Officers discovered, at the hotel, an unconscious female suspected of
    overdosing on heroin and an unidentified female. The unidentified female left while
    officers tended to the unconscious female. After reviewing motel tapes and talking with
    the cab driver who drove the unidentified woman to the motel, Officer Chris Patterson
    identified the woman as Teresa Marie Munsey. The tapes showed she entered before the
    overdose occurred and remained until after the police arrived. According to Brown's
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    State v. Youker
    affidavit, Munsey then lived at Jason Youker's residence. Police later cited Munsey for
    driving with a suspended license at a time she drove Youker's truck.
    Teresa Munsey was known to maintain a relationship with Chad Inscore. Inscore
    has a conviction for drug paraphernalia in Nevada and was arrested for possession of
    methamphetamine in Ferry County, Washington.
    On March 2, police identified a car registered to Edward Boekel parked at Jason
    Youker's residence. Boekel is a felon convicted of selling morphine, heroin, and other
    drugs. Based upon information obtained through a search warrant served at Boekel' s
    residence and a controlled purchase from Boekel, Ferry County Detective Talon Venturo
    believed Youker supplied Boekel with controlled substances. The search warrant
    affidavit did not specifY the facts upon which Venturo relied to form his belief.
    On March 3, Oroville Police Chief Clay Warnstaff saw Calvin Duane Garrison
    leave Jason Youker's residence and drive into Prince Hardware's parking lot. Wamstaff
    followed Garrison. Garrison entered Prince's and, upon exiting, looked in the direction
    of Warnstaff. Garrison sat in his car for about five minutes before exiting the vehicle and
    returning to the store. After 20 minutes without seeing Garrison, ChiefWarnstaffleft.
    Garrison was arrested three times, in the 1980s, for drug possession.
    On March 23, Detective Thomas interviewed Ledawn Jones-Morish at the
    Okanogan County jail. Jones-Morish began the conversation by stating: "I thought you
    guys didn't want to work with me." CP at 28. Thomas questioned her anyway. Jones­
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    Morish described the Iceman's fence as wooden with knot holes and it was located on the
    downhill side or east side of the Iceman's property. She stated she sometimes retrieved
    drugs from deals with the Iceman from inside an abandoned vehicle. The last time she
    purchased from the Iceman was in his front yard. Jones-Morish stated she could identifY
    the Iceman's voice, but the search warrant affidavit gives no description of the voice.
    Ledawn Jones-Morish told Detective Thomas, during the March 23 jail interview,
    that John Meslar is the Iceman's biggest purchaser. The search warrant affidavit does not
    provide the basis for Jones-Morish's statement. The Task Force had arrested John Meslar
    for purchasing, during controlled buys, controlled substances.
    At the suppression hearing, Jason Youker argued that the finding of probable
    cause entered by the judge issuing the warrant was not supported by substantial evidence.
    The trial court noted that it must grant considerable deference to the issuing magistrate
    and refrain from an overly technical examination of the affidavit. The trial court did not
    relish the role of "Monday Morning Quarterback," particularly because the court "cannot
    possibly appreciate the difficulty and frustration of narcotics investigation." CP at 3.
    Yet, after reviewing the affidavit, the trial court found "too much of the case against
    [Youker] is implied or circumstantial. No one provides clear testimony that they [sic]
    ever saw drugs at the home or got drugs from [Youker's] home." CP at 5. The court
    suppressed the evidence and dismissed the case without prejudice.
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    State v. Youker
    When dismissing the charges, the trial court entered extensive findings of fact,
    which include:
    1. 	 Of the many witnesses, not one directly stated
    that Jason Youker is the "Iceman" or "Ice Cream Man." The
    investigating officers believed this was so. (E.G. page 8, last 2
    lines of 2nd paragraph.)
    4. 	 On 5/17/2011 the informant purchased heroin
    from Paulette Robertson at her trailer. While the informant was in
    the trailer[,] observers saw Defendant's pickup truck arrive. An
    unidentified male got out of the truck and walked toward the trailer.
    Paulette said she got the heroin from the Iceman. The informant
    stated that he believed the Iceman was driving the truck and that he
    came to Paulette's to get his money. However the informant did
    not know the identity of the driver; did not see him get money and
    did not see him deliver drugs. The affidavit is not clear on this point
    but it appears that Paulette had the heroin before the Iceman arrived.
    The informant was never later asked to identify the Defendant as the
    driver. The truck departed and was followed back to Defendant's
    home. This information establishes that the Iceman used Defendant's
    truck and returned to Defendant's home. It provides circumstantial
    evidence of the Iceman's identity. However, it does not convincingly
    show that the Iceman delivered the heroin.
    5. 	 On 9/24111 police stopped Cassandra Vandeveer
    driving Defendant's truck. Defendant arrived and verified ownership.
    A search warrant produces no drugs or paraphernalia. The affidavit
    states that this stop helped them identify the male they knew as
    Iceman or Ice Cream Man. The supporting facts are not provided.
    6. 	 On 1114/12 LaDawn Jones-Morish told officers that
    she buys meth and heroin from Iceman. The last buy was December 29,
    2011. She always made purchases through a hole in the fence near his
    home. She said the fence was wood with knotholes and was located on
    the down-hill side of the house. She did not identify the house by
    address or photograph. She did not provide a description or identify
    Iceman by photograph. Photographs of Defendant's home included
    in the affidavit do not clearly support her testimony. (They may
    contradict her testimony but the business of interpreting photos is
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    State v. Youker
    risky.) No explanation or elaboration was provided to the Magistrate.
    No infonnation about her credibility was provided.
    CP at 3-4.
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    Findings ofFact
    Before addressing the merits of the appeal, we address an error assigned by the
    State and one argument of Jason Youker. The State assigns error to four findings of fact.
    In tum, because the State does not pen four discrete assignments of error, but assigns
    error to the four findings with one assignment of error, Youker argues the State waived
    the assignments of error. RAP 10.3(g) directs the appellant to include, in its brief, a
    separate assignment of error for each finding of fact it challenges.
    We decline to entertain either party's contention. The trial court based its decision
    solely on a review of Detective Brown's search warrant affidavit. The trial court did not
    entertain any live testimony. We are in the same position as the trial court since the
    factual record consists solely of documentary evidence and an affidavit. Cornu-Labat v.
    Hosp. Dist. No.2 Grant County, 177 Wn.2d 221,229,298 P.3d 741 (2013). Under such
    circumstances, the reviewing court is not bound by the trial court's factual findings. ld.
    We examine the warrant de novo, State v. Perez, 92 Wn. App. 1,4,963 P.2d 881 (1998),
    and thus consider the findings of fact superfluous.
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    State v. Youker
    Trial Court's Standard of Review
    The State argues that the trial court did not give deference to the magistrate's
    decision to issue the search warrant. The issuance of a search warrant is reviewed only
    for abuse of discretion. State v. Maddox, 
    152 Wash. 2d 499
    , 509,98 P.3d 1199 (2004).
    Trial courts accord a magistrate's determination of probable cause "great deference."
    
    Maddox, 152 Wash. 2d at 509
    ; State v. Clark, 143 Wn.2d 731,748,24 P.3d 1006 (2001)
    (emphasis added).
    The trial court wrote that it gave "considerable deference" to the magistrate. CP
    at 3 (emphasis added). We do not believe there to be a significant difference in quantum
    of deference between "great" and "considerable" deference, particularly since both terms
    are qualitative in nature and our high court has used both "considerable" and "great"
    when describing the deference due the magistrate. State v. Kalakovsky, 
    121 Wash. 2d 525
    ,
    531, 
    852 P.2d 1064
    (1993).
    We conclude that the trial court gave due deference to the magistrate. The
    deference to be afforded "is not boundless." 
    Perez, 92 Wash. App. at 4
    . Courts will not
    defer to a magistrate's decision when it is based on information insufficient to establish
    probable cause. 
    Id. Deference should
    not allow the reviewing court to add a missing link
    in the chain needed to connect the criminal activity to the area to be searched. "We
    examine the warrant de novo," 
    Perez, 92 Wash. App. at 4
    , and as analyzed below, we like
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    State v. Youker
    the trial court, find a lack of probable cause even with due deference given the
    magistrate.
    Probable Cause
    The key question raised below and on appeal is whether the affidavit of Detective
    Steven Brown provided probable cause for the issuance of the search warrant of Jason
    Youker's residence. Probable cause exists if a reasonable, prudent person would
    understand from the facts contained in the affidavit in support of the warrant that the
    defendant is probably involved in criminal activity and that evidence of the crime can be
    found in the place to be searched. 
    Maddox, 152 Wash. 2d at 509
    ; In re Yim, 139 Wn.2d
    581,594-95,989 P.2d 512 (1999). Accordingly, '''probable cause requires a nexus
    between criminal activity and the item to be seized, and also a nexus between the item to
    be seized and the place to be searched.'" State v. Thein, 
    138 Wash. 2d 133
    , 140,977 P.2d
    582 (1999) (quoting State v. Goble, 
    88 Wash. App. 503
    , 509, 
    945 P.2d 263
    (1997)).
    Several critical principles behind probable cause compel our decision. "'Probable
    cause cannot be made out by conclusory affidavits. '" Thein, 
    13 8 Wash. 2d at 140
    (quoting
    State v. Helmlca, 
    86 Wash. 2d 91
    , 92,542 P.2d 115 (1975)). The information contained in
    the warrant "'must state the underlying facts and circumstances on which it is based in
    order to facilitate a detached and independent evaluation of the evidence by the issuing
    magistrate." 
    Thein, 138 Wash. 2d at 140
    (citing State v. Smith, 93 Wn.2d 329,352,610
    P.2d 869 (1980)). "[T]he record must show the existence of objective criteria going
    13
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    State v. Youker
    beyond personal beliefs and suspicions of the applicants for the warrant." State v.
    Patterson, 83 Wn.2d 49,61, 
    515 P.2d 496
    (1973». "Absent a sufficient basis in fact
    from which to conclude evidence of illegal activity will likely be found at the place to be
    searched, a reasonable nexus is not established as a matter oflaw." 
    Thein, 138 Wash. 2d at 147
    . "[T]hat nexus may be established either through direct observation or through
    normal inferences." State v. O'Neil, 74 Wn. App. 820,824-25, 
    879 P.2d 950
    (1994)
    overruled on other grounds by 
    Thein, 138 Wash. 2d at 149
    (quoting United States v.
    Freeman, 685 F.2d 942,949 (1982».
    The State contends that, regardless of whether the information in the affidavit was
    sufficient to identify Jason Youker as the "Iceman," substantial evidence established
    criminal drug activity occurred at his residence and contraband would be found there.
    Along these lines, the State contends a nexus is established by direct evidence of drug
    activity originating from the residence. Nevertheless, the affidavit of probable cause does
    not identify a single incident tying drug activity to Jason Youker's residence. On May
    17,2011, police followed a person driving Youker's truck from a controlled drug buy at
    Paulette Robertson's trailer to Youker's residence. But the CI inside Robertson's trailer
    during the controlled buy never observed the driver handle money or drugs.
    On December 16, Jeffrey Clark, a dealer of methamphetamine, told a CI he could
    get methamphetamine at the Iceman's house. Clark and the CI went to Youker's
    residence twice to purchase methamphetamine. However, the Iceman was not home.
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    Police terminated that attempt to buy and no other attempts to purchase drugs from the
    Iceman or from that house were ever made.
    Without a witness who can attest to observing criminal activity at Youker's
    residence, the State relies on what Clark told a CI. But Clark's credibility is not
    established in the affidavit. Thus, there is no objective basis to evaluate Clark's
    allegation that the CI could purchase methamphetamine from Youker's residence.
    Law enforcement also failed to establish the credibility of Ledawn Jones-Morish.
    Even accepting her testimony as true, however, she does not establish probable cause
    because she does not implicate Jason Youker's residence. Jones-Morish told police she
    buys methamphetamine and heroin from the Iceman through a hole in the fence located
    on the eastside of his home. She did not identify the house by address or photograph.
    She did not accompany law enforcement to the location where she claimed she purchased
    drugs. She did not provide a description or identify Iceman by photograph. Photographs
    of Jason Youker's home included in the affidavit do not support and may contradict her
    testimony.
    The claim that Jason Youker supplied Edward Boekel drugs is insufficient to
    establish probable cause because the affidavit contains no objective basis for the
    magistrate to evaluate the claim. Police identified a car registered to Edward Boekel, a
    known drug dealer, parked at Youker's residence. Ferry County Detective Venturo
    believed Youker is BoekePs supplier based on "prior investigation, information received,
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    State v. Youker
    search warrant served at Edward and Lisa's home and the controlled purchases made
    from Edward." CP at 27. But none of the underlying facts and circumstances on which
    his belief is based is contained in the affidavit. Boekel was never seen purchasing drugs
    at the Oroville residence.
    Two people are alleged to live at Jason Youker's residence, Teresa Munsey and
    Youker. When Teresa Munsey was stopped while driving Jason Youker's truck and a
    drug dog alerted police to the passenger-side door, no drugs or paraphernalia were found.
    While Munsey lived at Youker's residence, police identified her at the scene of a drug
    overdose at the Camaray Motel. But police did not implicate her in any criminal activity.
    The State does not allege Munsey has a criminal record or reputation. None of the
    information in the affidavit refers to Marie Munsey or Jason Youker using or distributing
    drugs.
    In short, the State's affidavit of probable cause did not support the likelihood that
    criminal activity was occurring in Jason Youker's home.
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the trial court's suppression of evidence and dismissal of the charges
    without prejudice.
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    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    A~s
    Fearing, J.      <' ")
    WE CONCUR:
    Side:!dtv
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 30977-1

Filed Date: 1/28/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021