OPINION
Appellant was convicted of conspiracy to commit first-degree controlled substance crime. In a direct appeal, he challenges the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence obtained as a result of the protective sweep search conducted immediately after his arrest. In his associated postconviction appeal, appellant contests the summary denial of his petition for relief for ineffective assistance of counsel. Because we see no valid basis for suppressing the evidence and no abuse of discretion in the denial of the postconviction petition, we affirm.
FACTS
Two Anoka County deputies attempted to execute an arrest warrant on appellant Daniel Bergerson. When the deputies arrived at appellant’s parents’ residence, a rural farmhouse, they followed a driveway leading to an unattached pole barn near the house because they saw that the overhead, garage-style door of the barn was raised about four feet from the ground.
The deputies approached and peered under the open door into the pole barn. Both saw an individual from the waist down who was standing near a vehicle. The deputies announced their presence and one knocked on the service door adjacent to the overhead door. The other deputy noticed the individual’s feet turn away from the doorway. After the deputies called out several times, a man emerged from underneath the overhead door and identified himself as John Hanson. He was the subject of an arrest
The deputies asked Hanson if appellant was inside the pole barn. Hanson denied that appellant was in the pole barn and gave other evasive answers. After Hanson was told that he could be charged with aiding and abetting for lying, he admitted that appellant was inside the pole barn. The deputies placed Hanson in one of the squad cars and called for backup.
Several minutes later, the deputies returned to the overhead door and shouted for appellant to come out. When appellant came to the door, the deputies arrested him. After appellant was secured by other officers, two deputies returned to the pole barn to make sure no one else remained inside. They searched the interior of the pole barn and the vehicles inside it. Both deputies had their service revolvers drawn during the search, which lasted two to four minutes. The deputies found no other persons, but they observed evidence indicating the manufacture of methamphetamine, which was later used to convict appellant.
Appellant and Hanson were charged with conspiracy to commit controlled substance crime in the first degree (manufacture of methamphetamine). Appellant moved to suppress the evidence obtained from the pole barn on the ground that the deputies’ initial search of the pole barn violated the Fourth Amendment. The district court denied appellant’s motion, finding that the deputies had a reasonable suspicion that someone else was in the pole barn. Appellant was convicted; he petitioned for postconviction relief. The district court denied the petition without a hearing. Appellant challenges the validity of the search of the pole barn and the denial of his motion.
ISSUES
1. Was the initial search of the pole barn justified as a protective sweep search?
2. Did the postconviction court abuse its discretion in denying appellant relief based on ineffective assistance of counsel?
ANALYSIS
1. Protective Sweep Search
When reviewing pretrial orders on motions to suppress evidence where the facts are undisputed, We may independently review the facts to determine, as a matter of law, whether evidence need be suppressed.
State v. Othoudt,
The validity of a “protective sweep” search is an issue of first impression in Minnesota.
1
Relying. on
Maryland v. Buie,
Buie
authorized two types of protective searches in conjunction with an arrest. The first type permits officers who have neither probable cause nor reasonable suspicion to look in spaces immediately adjoining the place of arrest, such as closets, “from which an attack could be immediately launched.”
Buie,
[Tjhere must be articulable facts which, taken together with the rational inferences from those facts, would warrant a reasonably prudent officer in believing that the area to be swept harbors an individual posing a danger to those on the arrest scene. This is no more and no less than was required in Terry [v. Ohio,392 U.S. 1 ,88 S.Ct. 1868 ,20 L.Ed.2d 889 (1968) ] and [Michigan v.] Long [463 U.S. 1032 ,103 S.Ct. 3469 (1983) ], and as in those cases, we think this balance is the proper one.
Id.
A protective sweep search is limited and “may extend only to a cursory inspection of those spaces where a person may be found.”
Id.
at 335,
The
Buie
standard for protective sweep searches has been routinely utilized in the federal circuits and adopted in many states.
3
We are persuaded that the ratio
Appellant argues that in the instant case, the law enforcement officers did not have a reasonable suspicion that another individual was in the pole barn. Specifically, appellant challenges five of the district court’s eight factual findings supporting the court’s conclusion that there was a reasonable suspicion. Findings of fact are subject to a clearly erroneous standard of review.
State v. Wiernasz,
First, appellant challenges the finding that the deputies knew he had avoided service of the arrest warrant in the past. One deputy testified that he had previously tried to serve the warrant several times; the other deputy testified that he had twice tried to serve the warrant at appellant’s parents’ residence; and appellant’s father testified that deputies had been to his residence “probably three or four times.” Appellant’s father also admitted lying to officers by telling them that appellant did not live at his residence. The record supports the finding of avoidance.
Second, appellant challenges the finding that the deputies knew of appellant’s potential for violence. One deputy testified about a prior domestic incident involving appellant, his then-girlfriend, and some burned clothing at a site that had surveillance equipment and a large dog. While this incident is not direct evidence of appellant’s violent nature, it is adequate to support the finding that the deputies knew of appellant’s “potential for violence” (emphasis added).
Third, appellant challenges the finding that 'the deputies were surprised by Hanson’s presence. This finding could easily be inferred from the fact that the deputies were seeking and expecting to find appellant, not another suspect, at his parents’ residence.
See State v. Victorsen,
Fourth, appellant challenges the finding that the deputies perceived facts that inferred methamphetamine manufacturing inside or outside the pole barn. One deputy testified that, when peering underneath the overhead door, he saw a can of acetone, a high-pressure tank, and a fan blowing fresh air into the pole barn. The other deputy testified about an ether-ammonia odor that he noticed before entering the pole barn. This finding supports a reasonable suspicion of methamphetamine involvement. 5
Finally, appellant challenges the finding that the deputies reasonably inferred that appellant would associate himself with others who engaged in similar behaviors. But the deputies testified that they already knew that appellant was associating with at least one other person and that before Hanson appeared they had perceived evidence that they suspected was linked to the manufacture of methamphetamine.
See Victorsen,
We conclude that, because the district court’s factual findings are supported either directly or by reasonable inferences from the evidence, they are not clearly erroneous.
Appellant nonetheless argues that, even if the district court’s factual findings are not clearly erroneous, they do not support a conclusion that officers had a reasonable suspicion. Courts must look to the totality of the circumstances involved in the case to determine whether the officers had a particularized and objective basis for their suspicions.
United States v. Arvizu,
Here, the deputies had a reasonable suspicion that someone sympathetic to appellant who was a threat to their safety was present in the pole barn. The deputies were not expecting to find Hanson in the pole barn, and Hanson was evasive in answering the questions as to whether anyone else was in the pole barn.
See United States v. Brown,
While both deputies acknowledged that Hanson eventually honestly named appellant, who was inside the pole barn, they could not have known this until after their protective sweep search. Given appellant’s potential for violence, Hanson’s evasive answers, and the evidence of methamphetamine manufacturing, we conclude that the deputies had a reasonable suspicion that another individual who posed a danger to the deputies’ safety was inside the pole barn. 6
The decisions of a postconviction court will not be disturbed absent an abuse of discretion.
Dukes v. State,
Under the deficiency prong, appellant has the burden of showing by a preponderance of the evidence that his counsel’s performance fell below an “objective standard of reasonableness.”
Dukes,
Appellant argues that his counsel’s performance was deficient in not eliciting specific information as to the layout of the pole barn during the omnibus hearing. But trial counsel has broad discretion to determine trial tactics, including decisions of what evidence to present. Id. Moreover, “[a]ppellate courts, which have the benefit of hindsight, do not review for competency matters of trial strategy.” Id.
As to the prejudice prong, appellant is required to “show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
Strickland,
The postconviction court did not abuse its discretion in summarily denying appellant’s petition.
DECISION
The deputies articulated a reasonable suspicion that other dangerous individuals remained inside the pole barn following appellant’s arrest, which justified their search of the pole barn as a protective sweep within the exception to the warrant requirement. The evidence found in the pole barn was lawfully admitted into evidence. The failure of appellant’s trial counsel to elicit certain testimony was a tactical decision that, in any event, would not have altered the result.
Affirmed; appellant’s motion to strike denied; respondent’s motion to strike granted.
Notes
. However, the Minnesota Supreme Court declined to address whether a cursory search to prevent the destruction of evidence constituted a protective sweep because the officers had probable cause to search the premises.
State v. Alayon,
. As a threshold matter, appellant argues that we need not reach a reasonable suspicion analysis under
Buie
because the deputies could have safely departed with him and Hanson once they were in custody. But the deputies' reasonable suspicion of danger continued after appellant was taken into custody.
See United States v. Henry,
.
See, e.g., United States v. Gould,
. For purposes of this opinion, we assume, without deciding, that the sweep search here took place in an area near, but not adjacent to, the place of appellant's arrest, thereby invoking the more strict standard of reasonable suspicion to justify the sweep.
. The parties neither raised nor litigated whether there was probable cause to enter the pole bam.
. Both parties brought motions to strike. Appellant moves to strike portions of respondent's brief, claiming that factual assertions were not supported by the record. We conclude that the assertions that appellant wants stricken are adequately addressed in appellant’s challenges to the district court's factual findings, are supported by the record, or are simply irrelevant and immaterial, and therefore deny the motion.
Respondent moves to strike the portion of appellant’s reply brief, in which appellant argues for the first time that, even if the protec
