This case is before us on remand from the Supreme Court, which vacated our prior decision,
State v. Dudley,
The Supreme Court’s overriding analysis in
Ashbaugh II
requires a more complete recitation of the facts of this case than we set out
in Dudley I.
Accordingly, we take the uncontroverted facts from our review of the record, and, where the trial court made findings of fact, we are bound by those findings to the extent that they are supported by evidence in the record.
State v. Stevens,
After conducting the field sobriety tests, Smith decided to arrest the driver. He did so and then left the scene with the driver in custody. After Smith left, DeBolt asked defendant if she had a ride home or knew of anyone who could pick her up. Defendant, who was still seated in the passenger seat, called two friends and received no answer. Defendant then asked DeBolt if she could walk home, and he said “sure.” Because he intended to search the car before having it towed from the scene, DeBolt asked defendant to get out of the car. She did so. DeBolt then asked defendant if she had any drugs or weapons in her possession. Defendant answered “[n]o.” DeBolt also asked defendant for consent to search both her person and her purse. Defendant consented to both searches, and DeBolt found controlled substances in defendant’s purse.
Before trial, defendant moved to suppress the evidence that DeBolt had found. Defendant argued that DeBolt had unlawfully seized her by asking her about drugs and weapons after she stepped out of the car, and, thus, her consent to the searches had been the unattenuated product of that prior illegal seizure. The prosecutor replied that defendant had been free to go at the moment she stepped out of the car and that Debolt’s question regarding drugs and weapons “d[id not] create all of a sudden some compelling circumstances that makes any consent obtained
“I don’t believe [defendant’s] version of what happened. * * * [T]his was a consensual search, * * * [defendant] knew she was free to go at any time. That she could just as easily have said no to the officer. So I’m going to find that the — the search was a lawful search, then, and it was a consent search.”
Defendant was tried by the trial court on stipulated facts and convicted. This appeal followed.
In
Dudley I,
in light of our then-controlling analysis in
Ashbaugh I,
we concluded that “it was objectively reasonable for defendant to believe that she was not free to leave.”
In Ashbaugh II, the Supreme Court reversed our decision in Ashbaugh I, “abandoned] forthrightly the subjective component” of its prior case law, and set out the following template for determining whether a person has been seized:
“A ‘seizure’ of a person occurs under Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution: (a) if a law enforcement officer intentionally and significantly restricts, interferes with, or otherwise deprives an individual of that individual’s liberty or freedom of movement; or (b) if a reasonable person under the totality of the circumstances would believe that (a) above has occurred.”
Applying that template to this case demonstrates that our reliance on defendant’s subjective belief as part of our determination that she had been stopped was erroneous. Our recent opinion in
State v. Lantzsch,
Applying the template set out in Ashbaugh II, we concluded that the officer’s actions, including his question about whether the defendant had any drugs or weapons in his possession, had not amounted to a “show of authority” that restricted the defendant’s movement. As we explained:
“[A]lthough * * * the deputy here did not tell defendant that he was free to leave, there were no weapons drawn and no evidence that the deputy raised his voice or otherwise spoke in a non-conversational manner when he asked defendant to step out of the car. Although a second officer was standing ‘a few feet’ behind the deputy, there was no evidence in the record that the second officer made any show of authority toward defendant or, indeed, had any interaction with defendant at all. In that regard, the Supreme Court’s observation in Ashbaugh II is pertinent: here, the deputy ‘did not, for example, position himself and his fellow officer in a way thatwould suggest to defendant that [he] was surrounded,’ and, thus, the mere presence of a second officer is, on this record, not a sufficient basis for us to conclude that the deputy’s ‘manner or actions’ involved a ‘show of authority.’ Ashbaugh II, 349 Or at 317-18 .”
Lantzsch,
The same result obtains here. In this case, the officer’s actions toward defendant did not amount to a “show of authority” that restricted her movement such that she was “stopped” when she consented to the officer’s search of her purse. As in
Lantzsch,
the officer’s question whether defendant possessed any drugs or weapons was not a constitutionally significant “show of authority,” and neither was his request that she step out of the car. Unlike in
State v. Courtney,
Affirmed.
