Lead Opinion
OPINION
Aрpellant-Defendant David A. Neuhoff was charged with dealing in marijuana as a Class C felony. A jury found him guilty of the included offense of attempted dealing in marijuana, also a Class C felony. Neuhoff now appeals raising three issues for our review which we rephrase as: (1) did the trial court err in denying Neuhoffs motion to suppress the evidence, (2) was the trial court’s instruction on attempted dealing in marijuana erroneous, and (3) was the evidence sufficient to sustain the conviction.
We affirm.
On June 10,1997, postal inspectors in Texas intercepted a package being mailed from Brownsville, Texas to an address in Evansville, Indiana. The addressee was Robert Nelson. The inspectors were suspicious of the packagе because of its size, weight, and city of origin. Wfiien the package was presented to a drug sniffing dog in Texas, the dog alerted to the presence of drugs. The package was forwarded to Indiana and the Texas authorities notified Indiana postal inspector Steven Sadowitz. When the package arrived Sadowitz shook it and believed it cоntained narcotics. A trained dog from the Indianapolis Police Department sniffed the package and alerted to the presence of drugs. Thereafter Sadowitz sought and received a search warrant for the package, and as a result discovered therein over eleven pounds of marijuana.
Disguised as a mail earner, Sadowitz delivered the package to the Evansville address.
I.
Neuhoff first contends the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress because there was insufficient probable cause for the issuance of the search warrant. According to Neuhoff the only justification for authorizing the search was the alert by the two dogs. Continuing, Neuhoff argues the affidavit in support of the search warrant was deficient because it did not specify the dogs’ reliability as drug detectors.
We first observe that smell testing by a trained dog is not a search within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. Kenner v. State, 703 N.E.2d.1122, 1125 (Ind.Ct.App.1999), reh’g denied; State v. Watkins,
The smell testing by the Indiana dog was sufficient in itself to support the issuance of the search warrant. However there was additional informatiоn in the affidavit to justify the warrant in this case. The package contained several indicia enumerated in the drug smuggling profile utilized by postal inspectors in determining the suspiciousness of parcels sent through the United States mail. The profile contains the following elements: 1) the source city is known for its illegal drug trade; 2) the package is an unusual size and shаpe; and 3) the return addressee is fictitious. People v. May,
Probable cause has never been capable of precise definition, аnd its existence is fact sensitive to each ease. Figert v. State,
II.
Neuhoff next complains the trial court’s jury instructiоn on attempted dealing in marijuana was erroneous. The instruction dictates in pertinent part:
[t]o convict the defendant of attempted Dealing in Marijuana, the state must have proved each one of the following elements: The Defendant
1. acting with specific intent to commit Dealing in Marijuana by knowingly possessing marijuana in an amount over ten (10) pounds with the intent to deliver it;.
2. did enter 930 Douglas Drive in Evansville, Indiana, to pick up a box containing more than ten (10) pounds of marijuana, and did physically move the box from one place to another.
3.which was conduct constituting a substantial step toward the commission of the intended crime of Dealing in Marijuana.
If the state failed to prove each of these elements beyond a reasonable doubt, you should find the Defendant [not] guilty of the crime of attempted Dealing in Marijuana, a Class C felony.
R. at 238-39. Pointing to sections 2 and 3 Neuhoff contends the instruction is mandatory because it compelled the jury to return a guilty verdict should the jury find the existence' of certain facts. More specificаlly Neuhoff argues that what constitutes a substantial step is a question for the jury to decide. The argument continues that here the trial court did not leave the matter to the jury, but rather instructed the jury on what constituted a substantial step.
A mandatory instruction is one which “attempts] to set up a factual situation directing the jury to a certain result.” Ajabu v. State,
The Court now instructs you that if you should find that [the defendant was] guilty of cruelty or neglect of [the victim] and that as a result of such cruelty or neglect beyond a reasonable doubt [the victim] did sicken, languish and die, then you shall find such defendant guilty of involuntary manslaughter.
Id. at 417 (emphasis in original). In finding this language to be erroneous, our supreme court held that a mandatory instruction which binds the minds and consciences of the jury to return a verdict of guilty upon finding certain facts, invades the constitutional province of the jury. Id. at 421.
We first observe that not only does the instruction in this case track the language of the Indiana Pattеrn Jury Instruc
III.
Lastly, Neuhoff contends there was insufficient evidence to sustain the conviction because his actions did not exhibit the requisite intеnt nor constitute a substantial step toward maintaining control of the package. "When reviewing a challenge to the sufficiency of evidence our standard of review is well settled. We neither reweigh evidence nor judge witness credibility. Minter v. State,
Intent involves a person’s state of mind, and the fact finder “must infer its existence from surrounding circumstances when determining whether the requisite intent exists.” Goodner v. State,
The evidence also demonstrates that Neuhoff engaged in a substantial step toward possessing the package. What constitutes a substantial step is dependent upon the facts of each case, but the rеquirement is a minimal one, often defined as any overt act in furtherance of the crime. State v. Van Cleave,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. Other indicators- of contraband include heavily-taped packages, hand-written labels, unusual odor сoming from packages, destination of parcel, and a nonexistent return address. United States v. Martinez,
. In relevant part the pattern jury instruction . reads as follows:
To convict the Defendant of attempted [name object crime ], the State must have proved each of the following elements: The Defendant
1. acting with the specific intent to commit [name object crime ] by [set out elements of object crime as charged ]
2. did [set out conduct charged as substantial step ]
3. which was conduct constituting a substantial step toward the commission of the intended crime of [name object crime ].
Indiana Pattern Jury Instruction 2.03 (Supp. 1995)
.In that case the Defendant wаs convicted of attempted escape as a Class C felony. The relevant instruction provided in pertinent part:
To convict the defendant, the State must have proved each of the following elements:
1. William Fred Taylor
2. intentionally
3. engaged in conduct of fleeing from lawful detention
4. which was a substantial step toward the commission of the crime of escape, the intentional fleeing from lawful detention.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in result.
I concur with the majority’s affirmance, in Part I, of the trial court’s denial of appellant’s Motion to Suppress. In doing so, however, I must respectfully note that the majority cites to Kenner v. State (1999) Ind.App.,
In Kenner, however, the majority held that, “[t]he dog’s alert to the presence of marijuana provided Officer McDonald with probable cause to search Kenner’s car.” Kenner, supra,
I would add a further cautionary note with respect to the seeming reliance for probable cause placed by the majority upon the use of a drug smuggling profile. The use of allegedly objective and verifiable profiles as a predominant tool in the “War 'Against Drugs” is fraught with the danger of misapplication and risks a consequent violation of the right of privacy held by innocent persons. The factors set forth by the majority here as justification for the actions of the postаl inspectors are consistent with innocent conduct upon the part'of a sender and an addressee.
This conclusion is reached by analogizing the case to the use of drug courier profiles. Drug profiles list factors consistent with innocent passenger behavior. Use of drug profiles to identify narcotics traffickers has been seriously questiоned. As one scholar has observed, “[use of the drug courier profile] permits searches and seizures of travelers whose conduct is facially innocent because they conform to a formula which purports to describe an entire class of criminals.” Morgan Cloud, Search and Seizure by the Numbers: The Drug Profile and Judicial Review of Investigative Formulas, 65 B.U.L.Rev. 843, 920. Another has stated that, “[w]ith the entrenchment of the drug courier profile, agents may randomly stop citizens for arbitrary reasons or for innocent differences in their appearance from fellow passengers. Agents may then detain citizens until the agents gather enough evidence to ‘call out the dogs’ or conduct a search themsеlves.” Charles L. Beeton, The Drug Courier Profile: “All Seems Infected to th’ Infected Spy, As All Looks Yellow to the Jaundic’d Eye,” 65 N.C. L.Rev. 417, 470-71. See Andrew Jay Flame, CRIMINAL PROCEDURE — Drug Courier Profiles and Terry-Type Seizures, 65 Temp. L.Rev. 323, 335 (1992) (observing that, “[a]ll airline travelers meet several drug courier characteristics just by entering the terminal, boarding the plane, and deplaning”).
Packages sent through the mail may contain contraband. This however does not justify the seizure of all private packages merely because such packages may be argued to fall within an overly broad range of profile characteristics. As noted by Becton, supra at 471:
“[The role of drug profiles] is not to establish in court that agents had a reasonable suspicion before the stop. Rather it*895 should serve as a tool for DEA agents to use in identifying suspects, following or investigating further, and stopping suspects once reasonable suspicion actually exists.... [There should be] a showing in each ease that the agent had reasonable suspicion to stop and detain a person from observations judged on their own merit, rather than as a part of a larger composite and all encompassing prоfile.”
Although detention of a package and use of dogs to sniff is not so intrusive as. is the detention of a traveling citizen, Fourth Amendment privacy implications are similarly involved.
The use of drug courier profiles, whether with regard to individuals suspected of carrying drugs or with regard to packages in the mail “lend[s] an arguably false sense of legitimacy to searches based on no more than an artfully disguised hunch.” Alexandra Coulter, Drug Couriers and the Fourth Amendment: Vanishing Privacy Rights for Commercial Passengers, 43 Vand. L.Rev. 1311, 1326. While I do not endorse the use of drug profiles to establish probable cause, on the whole, nevertheless, I conclude that there was adequate probable cause for the issuance of the search warrant in this case and that the trial court did not err in denying Neu-hoffs Motion to Suppress.
I concur in full as to Parts II and III of the majority opinion.
