Defendant was charged with first degree murder, a capital offense, under U.C.A., 1953, § 76-5-202(l)(d). After electing to be tried without a jury, defendant was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment. On appeal, defendant challenges his conviction on the following grounds: improper search and seizure, Miranda violations, lack of jurisdiction based on delay in holding a preliminary hearing, and insufficiency of the evidence. For the reasons stated below, we affirm.
In the early morning of February 10, 1982, Salt Lake City police received a report of a disturbance in an apartment house on Sixth South and Fifth East. Police officers responded to the call and found the body of the victim in her upstairs apartment. The victim was partially clothed and had been stabbed numerous times. The victim also had a number of bruises and scrapes on her body, and a toothbrush had been inserted in her vagina. The autopsy later performed on the body indicated that the victim had two vaginal wounds consisting of a cut and a bruise. Also, during the course of the autopsy, three foreign pubic hairs were found on the victim’s buttocks.
After discovering the body, police officers spoke with the two residents of the apartment directly below that of the victim. The residents, one of whom had called the police, stated that they had heard a scream and loud noises and later heard footsteps leaving the apartment and going downstairs. They then saw a man, wearing dark pants, light gloves, and a dark ski jacket with a colored design on the back, *388 standing on the front porch. One of the residents stated that he watched the man leave and walk east on Sixth South.
Because it had snowed earlier that evening, the police found and were able to follow a set of distinct footprints which left the building and headed east. The police followed the footprints, which led intermittently to defendant’s residence.
One of the investigating officers, Officer Farnsworth, went to the door of defendant’s residence, knocked, and identified himself. Defendant came to the door, and the officer again identified himself and stated that he was investigating a homicide and had followed some footprints from the scene of the crime to defendant’s front yard. The officer asked if he could come in, and defendant opened the door and stepped back to let the officer in. As soon as he was inside, the officer noticed a dark blue and beige ski parka with a red stripe lying on the couch by the door. The officer then asked if defendant had been out that night. Defendant stated that he had been to the Tri-Arc and that he had been home for two hours. Defendant, who was in his underwear, then walked into his bedroom to put on some pants, and Officer Farns-worth followed him; at about the same time, two other officers, who had been standing outside, came in the open front door of the residence. Officer Farnsworth later testified that defendant was not under arrest at that point and that Officer Farnsworth followed defendant into the bedroom for self-protection. Officer Farnsworth then asked defendant what shoes he had been wearing that night, and defendant indicated a pair of wet tennis shoes on the floor. The shoes appeared to have an unusual tread that matched the footprints in the snow. Officer Farns-worth asked defendant if he had killed anybody that night, to which defendant responded, “Are you serious?” Shortly thereafter, the officer told defendant that he was going to read defendant his rights, as dictated by
Miranda v. Arizona,
Before leaving defendant’s house, the police conducted a sweep search to determine if anyone else was in the house. There was testimony at the preliminary hearing that defendant gave his permission for the search. Although no one else was found in the house, the officers did find a pair of gloves on the bathroom floor. The gloves, which had dark spots on them, were also taken into evidence.
Defendant was placed in a patrol car and taken to the scene of the crime and then to the police station. While in the car, defendant talked to the officers rather freely. He also asked the officers to handcuff him and, during the stop at the victim’s building, defendant became visibly upset when the victim’s children were taken away. At that point, defendant made a statement to the effect, “If only Darla had been there.” *389 Darla Cates was a friend of defendant and had been living next door to the victim.
After defendant was taken from his house, the house was secured, and a search warrant was later obtained. The only evidence seized under that warrant which was introduced at trial was a shoelace with human blood on it. Testimony at trial indicated that there were traces of human blood found on defendant’s pants, undershorts, parka, gloves, shoes, and the shoelace; the blood on the pants and shoelace was identified by type and enzymes and found to be consistent with the victim’s blood and inconsistent with that of defendant. Further, a pubic hair found on the victim’s buttock matched a pubic hair sample taken from defendant.
Defendant was convicted of first degree murder based on the aggravating circumstance that the homicide was committed in the course of a rape, attempted rape, or aggravated sexual assault. The trial court sentenced defendant to life imprisonment.
On appeal, defendant first challenges the warrantless seizure of his shoes and other clothing. He argues that although he gave consent for the officer to enter his home, there was no legal authority for the officer to follow defendant into his bedroom. Further, even if Officer Farnsworth had a right to be in the bedroom, the seizure of the shoes did not fall within the plain view exception to the warrant requirement. We disagree.
Defendant admitted Officer Farns-worth to his home and made no objection when the officer followed defendant into his bedroom. Having consented to the officer’s entry into his home, defendant’s expectation of privacy was substantially reduced. Nor was defendant’s consent mere acquiescence to perceived police authority. Defendant’s reliance on
Bumper v. North Carolina,
Defendant next asserts that the officer’s warrantless seizure of the shoes was improper because evidence taken in a plain view seizure must be “clearly incriminating,” and the shoes “were not obviously contraband or weapons.” This argument, however, is unpersuasive. In
State v. Romero,
Utah,
Defendant contends that the only connection between the shoes and the homicide was his pre-Miranda admission that he had been wearing the shoes that night. However, this contention ignores the fact that Officer Farnsworth arrived at defendant’s house having followed footprints in the snow which were obviously made by some sort of tennis shoe. We believe that the discovery of defendant’s wet tennis shoes in plain view on the bedroom floor satisfies the standard set out above, irrespective of any statement made by defendant. Therefore, we find that the seizure of defendant’s shoes was proper.
Defendant similarly challenges the warrantless seizure of the pants and gloves. In regard to the pants, defendant claims that as the bloodstains on the pants were not apparent until after they were seized and analyzed, the only connection between the pants and the homicide was defendant’s statement, made after he had been given a
Miranda
warning, that he had been wearing them. As defendant challenges the validity of his waiver of
Miranda
rights (see below), he claims that the pants were illegally seized. However, the pants were a dark color, thus matching the description given by the witness, and were lying discarded near defendant’s bed, indicating that they had been recently worn; thus, even assuming that defendant’s statement must be disregarded, the foregoing facts were sufficient to provide the officer with a reasonable belief that the pants might be “useful as evidence of a crime,”
Brown,
Defendant’s argument against the seizure of the gloves is similarly unpersuasive. Defendant claims that the gloves were seized pursuant to an illegal search of the rest of his home and that the gloves were not obviously incriminating until after they had been picked up and the officer
*391
identified dark spots on them. Before leaving defendant’s apartment, the officers briefly surveyed the house to determine if anyone else was there. Such action is known as a protective sweep and has been upheld as a security measure.
See United States v. Briddle,
Defendant next argues that from the moment the officer entered defendant’s home, defendant was subjected to custodial interrogation and that any statements made prior to the
Miranda
warning should be suppressed as a violation of defendant’s rights.
Miranda v. Arizona,
Defendant’s next claim is that he did not make a valid waiver of his rights under
Miranda
and that therefore all statements made following the warning should be suppressed. Waiver of
Miranda
rights must be voluntary, knowing, and intelligent.
See State v. Newton,
Utah,
Defendant makes several arguments relating to suppression of evidence obtained through execution of the search warrants in this case. His first argument attacks the search warrants because the probable cause for their issuance involved defendant’s shoes which he claims were improperly seized. Based on our previous determination that the shoes were properly seized, this argument is without merit. Defendant also urges this Court to require suppression of the evidence obtained pursuant to the warrants because defendant’s house was illegally searched and impounded following his arrest. In this regard, defendant contends that because there were no exigent circumstances to justify that action, the warrantless securing of the premises was illegal and the subsequently issued search warrants do not cure the error. However, because we have determined that the sources of the warrants were independently legal and unrelated to the impounding of the house, we find no reason to order suppression of the evidence obtained pursuant to the valid search warrants.
See Segura v. United States,
Defendant next argues that the information charging him with capital homicide should have been dismissed based on *393 lack of jurisdiction because his preliminary hearing was not held within ten days pursuant to U.C.A., 1953, § 77-35-7(c). The information was filed on February 11,1982, defendant was arraigned on February 12, and his preliminary hearing was held on April 4, 1982, following two continuances. The first continuance was apparently granted because the State had not yet received certain evidence which had been sent to the FBI for analysis. The second was granted because the assigned judge was unavailable. Defendant first filed a motion to dismiss on April 5, which was denied by the circuit court, although a transcript from that hearing has not been provided. On December 7, defendant again brought a motion to dismiss and the district court determined that a ruling had already been made on that motion.
The record on this issue is not entirely clear and provides an incomplete basis on which to fully examine defendant’s claim. In such circumstances, we generally assume the validity of the actions of the court below.
State v. Seymour,
Defendant, however, contends that the error was jurisdictional and on that basis requires dismissal. In support of his argument on appeal, defendant relies on
State v. Moore,
Utah,
In
State v. Poteet,
Utah,
Finally, defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to convict him of first degree homicide and argues that it was error not to dismiss the aggravating circumstances with which defendant was charged. In disputing the existence of the aggravating circumstances, defendant indicates that there was insufficient evidence to establish that a rape had occurred and contends that the only evidence which links him with a rape or attempted rape is a single Negroid hair. However, while defendant emphasizes that there was no external vaginal bruising and no evidence of sperm or seminal fluid in the victim’s vagina, he ignores the testimony which established that the absence of those factors does not rule out the occurrence of rape, let alone attempted rape. Further, the medical examiner found two internal vaginal injuries: a bruise and a cut. In all likelihood, the cut was caused by the toothbrush and, although it was possible that the bruise could have been caused by the toothbrush as well, it was similarly possible that the bruise could have been caused by the insertion of a penis. More significantly, defendant’s undershorts had blood on them, as did the victim’s underpants, which were found a few feet from the body.
Although defendant disputes the validity of the pubic hair evidence, the State’s expert witness testified that the hair found on the victim’s buttock was a Negroid pubic hair that had been forcibly removed. The expert stated that the hair was indistinguishable from the pubic hair sample taken from defendant. Further, the expert testified that in his experience there were only two out of 10,000 cases where hairs from two separate individuals were indistinguishable. Although hair samples are unlike fingerprints in that a positive identification cannot be made, the expert testified that to have come from someone other than defendant, that person’s hair would have to have “exactly the same twenty characteristics [on which the comparison was made] and exactly the same arrangement as did Mr. Kelley’s [sic] hair.” And that person would have had to have been in a place where the hair could be deposited where the hair in this case was found. In response, the defense presented some evidence which tended to contradict the State’s expert. However, the finder of fact was free to weigh the merits of the conflicting evidence presented and to draw its own conclusion.
State v. Wulffenstein,
Utah,
As defendant bases his claim of error relating to the aggravating circumstances on sufficiency of the evidence, we apply a strict standard, which is that the evidence must be so lacking or insubstantial that reasonable minds could not possibly have found defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
State v. Howell,
Utah,
In a related argument, defendant contends that there was insufficient evidence to find him guilty of first degree homicide. Defendant argues that the next-door neighbor to the victim had access to her apartment and had a possible motive for harming her. Defendant also points out that the blood found on his clothing, while inconsistent with his blood and consistent with that of the victim, was also consistent with the blood of a large segment of the population. As well, the pubic hair found *395 on the victim’s buttock could have been transferred by static electricity and could have come from someone else with hair characteristics similar to those of defendant. However, as noted above, the standard of review on such a claim is very strict. In view of the evidence presented in this case, including the description given by witnesses who saw the assailant leaving the building and the discovery at defendant’s home of clothing which matched the description, the footprints leading to defendant’s home and defendant’s possession of shoes which matched those footprints, as well as the blood and pubic hair evidence, we cannot say that the evidence was so insubstantial as to warrant reversal.
Having considered all of defendant’s claims, we find no basis for reversal. Accordingly, defendant’s conviction is affirmed.
Notes
. The doctrine established in
Coolidge
was that there be "a prior justification for an intrusion in the course of which [the officer] came inadvertently across a piece of evidence incriminating the accused_ [It must be] immediately apparent to the police that they have evidence before them_”
. In
Agapito,
