Police Sniff Dog Found Reliable to Court Despite Signaling the Presence of Narcotics That Did Not Exist

We have all seen it. Police pull over a car. The driver of the car gets out and the police bring a dog to the car. The dog is often a German Shepherd. The dog jumps into the car and sniffs around. The dog may signal to the police handler that it smells something and the police officer investigates further.

The following case seems to test the limits of what is a reliable “sniff dog” for purposes of supporting a conviction for possession of narcotics.

Darla Stillwell and Robin Briggs were stopped by Marysville Police in May, 2009 while driving through downtown Marysville, California. The stated reason for the stop was that the rear license plate on their pick up truck was blocked by the bumper.

When one of the officers spoke to Briggs, the officer noticed Briggs’ eyes were glassy and his pupils were fixed and not reacting to light. Briggs explained that he had taken methadone earlier in the day.

Another officer then arrived at the scene with a police narcotic detection dog, Tommy. That officer then asked Briggs if he could take a look inside the truck. Briggs said no.

The officer handling Tommy then asked Briggs if his dog could check the exterior of the truck and Briggs consented.

Tommy was trained, qualified and current in his annual qualification to detect the odors of cocaine base, cocaine powder, methamphetamines, marijuana and heroin.

Tommy was then led around Briggs’ truck. As he got to the rear of the truck, he jumped up on his hind legs and put his front paws on the side of the truck. He then sniffed at a small backpack in the bed of the truck. Tommy then sat down and gave his handler the signal that he smelled something in the pick up truck.

The handler then looked into the backpack and found chemical bottles, a 500 milliliter glass beaker, a metal can of xylene, denatured alcohol and several white pills that officers believed might contain ephedrine. The handler did not find cocaine base, cocaine powder, methamphetamines, marijuana or heroin, however, the officer recognized the materials as parts of a meth lab.

The officer then obtained a search warrant to search Briggs’ and Stillwell’s residence, where they found numerous additional items used in a meth lab, as well as a syringe filled with heroin.

Briggs and Stillwell moved to suppress all evidence obtained from Tommy’s signal that he smelled something of interest based on the prosecution failing to establish Tommy was a reliable narcotics detection dog and that the dog’s signal did not establish probable cause for the warrantless search of the backpack. The trial court denied the motion.

Defendants appealed to the Third Appellate District. In People v Stillwell (2011 DJDAR 11132), the Court affirmed the trial court’s ruling. In ruling on the reliability of Tommy, the Court pointed out that the backpack was never tested for the presence of those drugs that Tommy was qualified to detect, so such drugs actually may have been present. Moreover, even if there were an error by Tommy in signaling for narcotics that actually were not there, “a single error does not make Tommy unreliable.”

As to Tommy’s signal to his handler establishing probable cause to search, the Court took a different angle, explaining that because the backpack was in an automobile, the automobile exception to the warrant requirement applied and the warrantless search was not unconstitutional.

Greg Hill is a criminal defense attorney in Torrance, California. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy (Bachelor of Science, 1987), Boston University (M.B.A. 1994) and Loyola Law School (J.D. 1998). Visit his firm’s website is at http://www.greghillassociates.com or call him at (310) 782-2500.

Greg Hill is a criminal defense attorney in Torrance, California. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy (Bachelor of Science, 1987), Boston University (M.B.A. 1994) and Loyola Law School (J.D. 1998). Visit his firm’s website is at http://www.greghillassociates.com or call him at (310) 782-2500.

Author Bio: Greg Hill is a criminal defense attorney in Torrance, California. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy (Bachelor of Science, 1987), Boston University (M.B.A. 1994) and Loyola Law School (J.D. 1998). Visit his firm’s website is at http://www.greghillassociates.com or call him at (310) 782-2500.

Category: Legal
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