Thе state appeals from a pretrial order suppressing evidence. The trial court ruled that defendant’s offer to sell two women a controlled substance was insufficient to establish probable cause to believe that he attempted to transfer the controlled substance to them. We reverse and remand.
We state the facts consistently with the trial court’s written findings. On March 28, 2001, Officer Brian Hubbard was on patrol in Old Town in Portland. At approximately 1:00 a.m., Iran Johnson flagged Hubbard down. Johnson told him that “[a] gal at Fourth and Burnside was sick and had possibly been given drugs by a guy at Dаnte’s,” a local bar. Hubbard spoke with the woman, Katie Andersen, who appeared to be sick. Her hands were shaking, her head was down, and she showed signs of being nauseated. Andersen and a friend, Greer Carver, “told [Hubbard] that a guy in Dante’s tried to sell them ecstasy[ 1 ] and offered to put it in their drinks. They told the officer that they declined and, ‘after persisting a bit, he left.’ When Andersen started feeling bad, she thought that he might possibly have put the drug in her drink.”
Johnson told the officer that he knew who the man was and where he was sitting in the bar. “He described him as a big blond guy and told the officer that he had seen him with the women in the bar and that he had ‘kept an eye on him.’ ” Johnson, however, had not seen the man put anything in Andersen’s drink. Based on what he learned from Andersen, Carver, and Johnson, the officer entered Dante’s and, after Johnson pointed defendant out, placed him under arrest. During a search incident to arrest, the officer found what appeared to be a controlled substance and over $2,000 in cash on defendant.
Defendant moved to suppress the evidence found during the search incident to arrest. He reasoned that, because the officer lacked probable cause to arrest him, the evidence resulting from the arrest should be suppressed. The state responded that the officer had probable cause to believe that defendant had put ecstasy in Andersen’s drink. Alternatively, it contended that defendant’s offer to sell the two women ecstasy, which the women had refused, gave the officer probable cause to believe that defendant had attempted to transfer ecstasy to them.
Regarding the state’s initial argument, the trial court ruled that the evidence that defendant
We begin from settled principles. An officer may arrest a person without a warrant “if the officer has probable cause to believe that the person has committed * * * [a] felony.” ORS 133.310(l)(a);
State v. Martin,
We agree with the trial court, for the reasons it stated, that the officer lacked probable cause to believe that defendant had transferred a controlled substance by putting ecstasy into Andersen’s drink. 2 We accordingly turn to thе question whether defendant’s offer to sell Andersen and Carver ecstasy gave the officer probable cause to believe an attempted transfer had occurred. When, as in this case, an officer makes a warrantless arrest based on information from another person, the question whether the officer had probable cause entails two issues. The first is whether the information was sufficiently reliable to establish probable cause. If it was, the remaining issue is whether the information establishes probable cause to believe that a crime hаs occurred. More specifically, the issue in this case is whether an offer to sell a controlled substance is sufficient to establish an attempted transfer of that substance.
In determining whether information from third persons is sufficiently reliable to establish probable cause, we lоok to the totality of the circumstances, including the citizen’s reliability and basis of knowledge.
State v. Rasheed,
The remaining question is whether an offer to sell a controlled substance is sufficient to establish an attempted transfer of that substance. On that point, we note that the prohibition against the delivery of a controlled substance applies to attempted as well as completed transfers.
See
ORS 475.992 (prohibiting the delivery of controlled substances); ORS 475.005(8) (“ ‘deliver/ means the actual, constructive or attempted transfer * * * from one person to another of a controlled substance”). When the state relies on an attempted transfer to prove delivery, it must show that the defendant “intentionally engage [d] in conduct which constitutes a substantial step toward commission of [a completed transfer].” ORS 161.405(1);
see State v. Boyd,
We conclude that offering to sell a controlled substance constitutes a substantial step toward a completed transfer of that substance. As the court explained in
State v. Walters,
Defendant argues, however, that Officer Hubbard lacked probable cause for three reasons. He argues initially that the variation in Andersen’s statements to the officer undermines her reliability. Andersen made two statements to the officer. First, Andersen “told the officer that a guy in Dante’s tried to sell [her and Carver] ecstasy and offered to put it in their drinks.” Second, she told him that, after she and Carver persuaded defendant to stop trying to sell them ecstasy, she became sick, “leading her to believe that [defendant] had possibly given her ecstasy because she suddenly just didn’t feel good.” The inference that Andersen drew from the sudden onset of her illness may have been incorrect. But the fact that Andersen drew an unwarranted inference from the facts provides no reason to question her and Carver’s reliability. 5
Boyd
and its progeny neither hold nor suggest that there is only one way in which to establish an attempted transfer or that proof of possession is necessary to prove that crime.
Cf. Martin,
A final theme runs through defendant’s argument. He suggests that the officer’s failure to take additional steps to corroborate what Andersen and Carver told him means that he lacked probable cause. Defendant identifies no authority for that proposition, however. Here, two reliable named citizens reported their first-hand observations of defendant’s conduct to the officer, which gave the officer probable cause to believe that defendant had committed a crime. At that point, the officer had authority to arrest defendant. To be sure, the officer could have declined to arrest defendant at that point and could have sought additional
information.
See State v. Dinsmore,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
“Ecstasy” is the colloquial name of a Schedule I controlled substance, 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA). See OAR 855-080-0021(3)(j).
The trial court observed that Andersen identified no basis other than the sudden onset of her physical symptoms for suspecting thаt defendant had put ecstasy into her drink. As the trial court also found, however, Andersen’s symptoms were consistent with alcohol intoxication, and the officer did not testify to any knowledge of ecstasy or its effects that would give him probable cause to believe that her symptoms wеre attributable to ingesting ecstasy. We agree with the trial court that, on this record, the officer lacked probable cause to believe that a completed transfer had occurred.
Johnson confirmed that Andersen and Carver had been talking with defendant in Dante’s and wаs able to describe and then identify for the officer the person whom he had seen talking with the two women.
Indeed, the information on which the officer based his probable cause determination was sufficiently reliable under the
AguillarlSpinelli
test.
See Montigue,
Defendant argues that Andersen made a third statement tо the officer. Citing page 40 of the transcript, he contends that, in addition to the two statements noted above, “complainant indicated that she had been ‘given’ drugs by a patron at Dante’s.” The statement that defendant cites was made by Johnson, not Andersen. Johnson told the officеr that “[a] gal at Four[th] and Burnside was sick and had possibly been given drugs by a guy at Dante’s.” Even if Johnson were repeating what Andersen had told him, any variation in Johnson’s report does not undermine Andersen’s credibility. Beyond that, Johnson’s report of Andersen’s statement is consistent with what Andersen said to the officer.
We explained in Sargent:
“[I]f a person solicits another to engage in conduct constituting an element of the crime of delivery, e.g., to provide to the person a controlled substance for the purpose of distribution to third parties, the person has taken a substantial step toward committing the crime of attempted delivery under ORS 475.992(1).”
