¶ 1 After a jury trial, Jack Jude Martinez, Jr. was convicted of second-degree burglary. The trial court sentenced him to an aggravated, seven-year prison term. On appeal, Martinez contends the court erred by admitting evidence of Martinez’s statements to a neighboring jail inmate and a letter he sent his girlfriend. He also argues the prosecutor committed misconduct. Finding no error, we affirm.
Background
¶ 2 “We view the facts in the light most favorable to sustaining the eonvietion[ ].”
State v. Robles,
¶ 3 Martinez, in turn, learned of the marijuana stored at Cano’s house and told a number of acquaintances about it. He told at least one friend that taking the marijuana “would be an easy way to make money.” A few days later, Martinez went to work in the morning at his construction job. At about 10 a.m., during his lunch break, Martinez left the job site with two co-workers, T. and C., in T.’s truck. The job foreman testified none of them had returned to work that day and they had removed “extra tools” and “junk” from the back of T.’s truck when they left.
¶ 4 Around noon that same day, a motorist saw a body lying on a walkway outside Cano’s residence and called 911. The body was C., who had been shot and was dead when police arrived. Officers found and confiscated 569 pounds of marijuana from Cano’s laundry room. Police also found signs of forced entry into that room. Martinez’s fingerprints were subsequently discovered on some plastic garbage bags covering the marijuana.
¶ 5 Martinez was charged with first-degree felony murder, attempted aggravated robbery, and second-degree burglary.
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He testified at trial that his fingerprints were on the garbage bags because he had placed his dirty clothes in them and his girlfriend had done laundry at Cano’s residence. He also claimed T. and C. had left him downtown during the lunch hour and he eventually had taken a bus home after learning he had been fired from his job. Martinez testified he had first learned of the homicide from a television news report that night and denied having been at Cano’s residence at all that day or
Discussion
1. Admissibility of inmate’s testimony
¶ 6 Martinez first contends the trial court erred in denying his pretrial motion to preclude the testimony of H. Jones, a fellow jail inmate, about statements Martinez had made while in jail awaiting trial. The day after his arrest, on September 28, 2005, Martinez was taken to the Pima County Jail and placed in a cell adjacent to Jones, an inmate charged with armed robbery and aggravated assault. Within an hour after Martinez’s arrival, Jones had a scheduled meeting at the jail with his attorney. Jones told his counsel that the man in the cell next to him, Martinez, had been discussing his ease with Jones. After the meeting, Jones’s attorney contacted the prosecutor about arranging a “free talk” with Jones. 3 Jones was then returned to his same cell.
¶ 7 The next day, Jones’s change-of-plea hearing was continued because “extraordinary circumstances exist and delay is indispensable to the interests of justice.” The free talk between Jones and a police detective occurred on October 14, 2005. Jones ■was relocated to another jail cell about a week later. Thereafter, the prosecutor decided to use Jones as a witness in this ease in exchange for lowering the possible sentencing range Jones would face in his own case. Jones ultimately was offered and accepted a revised plea that reduced his maximum exposure to prison by eleven years.
¶ 8 In July 2006, Martinez moved to preclude Jones’s testimony, arguing that Jones had acted as a state agent in obtaining incriminating statements from Martinez, thus violating his Sixth Amendment right to counsel.
See Massiah v. United States,
¶ 9 At the hearing, Martinez contradicted Jones’s testimony, explaining Jones had initiated their first conversation through the vents by asking Martinez why he was in jail. According to Martinez, Jones also initiated the later conversations. The trial court later denied Martinez’s motion to preclude, ruling Jones’s testimony admissible because he had not acted as a state agent when he spoke ■with Martinez. At trial, Jones testified Martinez had told him he had forcibly “broken into” Cano’s residence, taken some marijuana and, that during “a struggle” inside the residence between T. and C., C. had been shot. Martinez denied having made any incriminating statements to Jones.
¶ 10 As he did below, Martinez contends Jones’s testimony about Martinez’s statements violated his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. Generally, we review a trial court’s ruling on the admission of evidence for an abuse of discretion.
State v. Roscoe,
¶ 11 The Sixth Amendment right to counsel is triggered “at or after the time that judicial proceedings have been initiated.”
Fellers v. United States,
¶ 12 The state, however, only violates a defendant’s right to counsel if the informant is acting as a state agent when he obtains the statements.
See Smith,
¶ 13 Martinez asserts, however, either an “implied or express” agency relationship was created on September 28, when Jones met with his attorney, because that same day the prosecutor and lead detective in Martinez’s case were contacted and Jones “receiv[ed] a benefit” the next day when his ease was continued. 4 Additionally, Martinez emphasizes the following facts: Jones remained in the same cell adjacent to Martinez from September until a week after the free talk; the trial court found Jones must have obtained additional information from Martinez after September 28; Martinez testified Jones had initiated the conversations; and some testimony by Jones’s counsel suggested the state disclosed Jones as a witness before his free talk on October 14. 5 In response, the state points out Martinez initiated conversation with Jones by “spilling his guts” about his ease; the state “did not even know what information [Jones] had to offer until after the free talk”; and the state never communicated with Jones on or after September 28 until the free talk in October and did not direct or encourage Jones to elicit more information from Martinez.
¶ 14 We view the evidence adduced at the hearing on Martinez’s motion to preclude in the light most favorable to sustaining the trial court’s ruling. See
State v. Weekley,
¶ 15 Viewed in light of the foregoing principles, the record supports the trial court’s finding that no agency relationship existed between the state and Jones before his free talk on October 14. Even if Jones initiated the conversations and purposefully elicited statements from Martinez in the hopes of receiving a more favorable sentence for himself, nothing in the record suggests the state directed or encouraged him to do so. As the court stated in Smith:
[I]t should be emphasized that law enforcement officials have the right, and indeed the obligation in the prosecution of crimes to use all information that comes into their hands pointing to the guilt of an accused. This is true even though the persons supplying that information may harbor expressed or unexpressed motives of expectation of lenient treatment in exchange for such information. It is only when the state actively enters into the picture to obtain the desired information in contravention of constitutionally protected rights that the sanction of inadmissibility becomes pertinent.
¶ 16 Jones testified at the hearing that he hoped Martinez’s statements would help his case but he “didn’t know that at the time.” In the time frame during which Jones talked with Martinez, the state did not promise Jones a more lenient sentence in exchange for information. In addition, Jones was not a known police informant, received no direction from the state about whether or how to question Martinez, and had no communication with the state between September 28 and his free talk in October.
See State v. Stevens,
II. Admissibility of letter
¶ 17 Martinez next argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress letters he had sent his girlfriend L. from jail, but which Cano, L.’s mother, had intercepted and then turned over to the state. Although Martinez contests the admissibility of all the letters Cano found and seized, we need only address the last letter Martinez sent because it was the only letter actually admitted into evidence at trial. In that letter, Martinez told L. she must testify she had taken a box of “old,” “used” garbage bags to her mother’s house and left it in the laundry room. He wrote that it was “important” for L. to “remember these details precisely or [he was] f-.” He also instructed L. to burn the part of the letter in which he had told her what to say.
¶ 18 The state responds, as it did below, that Martinez lacks standing to challenge on Fourth Amendment grounds Cano’s seizure of the letter and that she had not been acting as a state agent when she took the letter from her mailbox. The trial court denied the motion to suppress, agreeing with the state that Martinez lacked standing. “We review the court’s ruling for an abuse of discretion, considering only the evidence presented at the suppression hearing and viewing that evidence in the light most favorable to sustaining the trial court’s ruling.”
6
State v. Moreno-Medrano,
¶ 19 After Martinez’s arrest, his girlfriend L. lived with Cano while Martinez was in jail
¶ 20 A few days before Martinez’s scheduled trial date, on or about December 7, 2006, Cano took directly from her mailbox the most recent letter Martinez had sent to L., before L. received or saw it. She opened the sealed letter, made a copy, and called her attorney, who picked up that and other letters Cano had collected. Her attorney told Cano “[t]hey were going to look through them.” In a defense interview, Cano stated the “only reason” she had searched for and taken the letters was because she was “trying to save Lher] daughter” from committing a crime. She also was concerned because Martinez was older than her daughter and was capable of easily “brainwashing] her.”
A. Standing
¶ 21 The trial court denied Martinez’s motion to suppress, ruling he lacked “standing to urge the motion.” On appeal, Martinez maintains he has standing because the letter is an “effect” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment and, as the sender of the letter, he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in it. The Fourth Amendment provides that persons shall be “secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV;
see also Weekley,
¶ 22 The state does not dispute that a letter is an “effect” protected by the Fourth Anendment.
See United States v. Jacobsen,
¶ 23 In contrast, Martinez maintains his expectation of privacy did not end until L. “took possession of the letter” because “[m]ail is not deemed delivered until it is received by the person to whom it is addressed.” In support of his argument, Martinez cites 18 U.S.C. § 1702, which defines “[obstruction of correspondence” as a person “tak[ing] any letter, postal card, or package
¶ 24 Although not cited by the parties,
State v. Hubka,
¶ 25 The cases the state cites for its argument that Martinez’s expectation of privacy ended when his letter was delivered are distinguishable because in those cases, the addressee actually received the letters.
See United States v. Dunning,
¶ 26 The state also argues, however, Martinez lacked standing because inmates in prison or jail have no legitimate expectation of privacy in their outgoing mail. “Prison officials may inspect and examine the communications of inmates without depriving them of their constitutional rights,”
State v. Jeffers,
¶ 27 Nonetheless, even “convicted prisoners do not forfeit all constitutional protections by reason of their conviction and confinement in prison.”
Bell,
¶ 28 “[T]he threshold determination of whether a prisoner’s expectation is ‘legitimate’ or ‘reasonable,’ and thus deserving of the Fourth Amendment’s protection, necessarily entails a balancing of the security interest of the penal institution against the privacy interest of the prisoner.”
Wiley,
¶ 29 In sum, “[g]iven the realities of institutional confinement, any reasonable expectation of privacy a detainee retains necessarily is of diminished scope.”
Wiley,
B. State agency
¶ 30 Although Martinez had standing to challenge Cano’s seizure of the letter, which the state then obtained and introduced at trial, we must also address whether Cano was acting as a state agent. Before ultimately concluding that Martinez lacked standing, the trial court, relying on
State v. Weinstein,
“While a certain degree of governmental participation is necessary before a citizen is transformed into an agent of the state, de minimis or incidental contacts between the citizen and law enforcement agents prior to or during the course of a search or seizure will not subject the search to [F]ourth [A]mendment scrutiny. The government must be involved either directly as a participant or indirectly as an encourager of the private citizen’s actions....”
Id.
at 309,
¶ 31 An unreasonable search performed “by a private citizen does not violate the Fourth Amendment unless the citizen is acting as an agent of the state.”
Estrada,
¶ 32 We first examine to what extent the state had knowledge of Cano’s actions and whether it acquiesced in her seizure of Martinez’s letter to L.
See Weinstein,
¶ 33 But even assuming the prosecutor’s reply indirectly encouraged Cano to seize the letter or manifested the state’s “knowledge and acquiescence” in her doing so,
see id.,
Martinez’s Fourth Anendment rights are implicated only if Cano acted on behalf of the state without “a legitimate independent motivation for conducting the search.”
Walther,
¶ 34 Martinez argues Cano intended to assist the state in proving its case, at least in part, because she was in “potential criminal trouble” for having marijuana stored at her house. But the record reflects the charges against Cano were dropped in March 2006, before Martinez wrote the letter in December 2006 and before Cano retrieved and gave it to her attorney, who apparently then gave it to the state.
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Thus, her motive in seizing Martinez’s letter and giving it to the prosecutor was personal in nature rather than based on a desire to assist law enforcement.
Cf. Weinstein,
III. Prosecutorial misconduct
¶35 Finally, Martinez argues the prosecutor engaged in misconduct in two respects: (1) “sending Mr. Jones back to his cell and in failing to .instruct [him] not to elicit information from [Martinez] about his case,” and (2) “allowing Ms. Cano [to] unlawfully seize the letters.” Martinez failed to raise any claims of prosecutorial misconduct below at any stage of the proceedings. Therefore, we review for fundamental, prejudicial error, which Martinez first asserts, be
latedly,
¶36 “To prevail on a claim of prosecutorial misconduct, a defendant must demonstrate that the prosecutor’s misconduct ‘so infected the trial with unfairness as to make the resulting conviction a denial of due process.’ ”
State v. Hughes,
¶ 37 Martinez maintains the prosecutor used “improper methods calculated to produce a wrongful conviction” by using Jones and Cano to elicit incriminating information because the state had a weak case. But as we discussed above, neither Jones nor Cano was a state agent or acted under the state’s authority. Therefore, Martinez has not established the prosecutor acted intentionally,
Bocharski,
Disposition
¶ 38 Martinez’s conviction and sentence are affirmed.
Notes
. Cano and her roommate also were charged with felony murder, possession of marijuana for sale, and attempted sale of marijuana, but those charges were later dropped.
. The state dismissed the attempted aggravated robbery charge during trial.
. At that time, the same prosecutor was assigned to both this case and Jones’s.
. Martinez also claims that, via the call by Jones's attorney to the prosecutor on September 28, “the State obtained information it intended to use at the grand jury hearing to secure an indictment.” But we find no factual support for that argument in either the grand jury transcript or any testimony at the evidentiary hearing on Martinez's motion to preclude.
. Martinez does not cite, nor have we found, any such disclosure in the record.
. The trial court did not hold an evidentiary hearing on the motion to suppress because the parties agreed to allow the court to examine the standing issue based on transcripts of defense interviews with Cano and her daughter. We similarly rely solely on those transcripts in reviewing the court's ruling.
See Moreno-Medra-no,
. On appeal, the parties address this issue as one of standing, as did the trial court below. But in
Rakas,
the Supreme Court concluded that the traditional "standing requirement ... is more properly subsumed under substantive Fourth Amendment doctrine.”
. The parties do not say, nor does the record reflect, precisely how or when the state obtained the letter in question. In his motion to suppress, however, Martinez claimed the state had disclosed all of the letters shortly after Cano had seized them, several months before the case ultimately was tried.
