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1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
3 Plaintiff-Appellee,
4 v. NO. 33,417
5 EMMANUEL SALAZAR,
6 Defendant-Appellant.
7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LEA COUNTY
8 Mark T. Sanchez, District Judge
9 Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
10 Margaret E. McLean, Assistant Attorney General
11 Joel Jacobsen, Assistant Attorney General
12 Santa Fe, NM
13 for Appellee
14 Jorge A. Alvarado, Chief Public Defender
15 Kimberly Chavez Cook, Assistant Appellate Defender
16 Santa Fe, NM
17 for Appellant
18 MEMORANDUM OPINION
19 GARCIA, Judge.
1 {1} Defendant, Emmanuel Salazar, entered a conditional plea of no contest to one
2 count of burglary under NMSA 1978, Section 30-16-3(B) (1971), a fourth degree
3 felony, and reserved the right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress. On
4 appeal, he claims that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress
5 statements and evidence obtained as a result of a traffic stop expanded to include an
6 auto burglary investigation. He primarily contends that (1) the officer who stopped
7 him for an equipment violation did not have reasonable suspicion to expand the stop
8 into an auto burglary investigation, (2) the duration of the expanded investigation was
9 unreasonable, and (3) the State failed to establish that Defendant had consented to a
10 search of his truck. We conclude that the officer had reasonable suspicion to expand
11 the traffic stop into an auto burglary investigation. We do not address the argument
12 concerning duration because Defendant did not preserve this argument. However, we
13 conclude that the State did not meet its burden to establish that Defendant voluntarily
14 consented to the search of his truck that occurred during the extended investigation.
15 Accordingly, we partially reverse the district court’s denial of Defendant’s motion to
16 suppress and remand this case to the district court for further proceedings consistent
17 with this Opinion.
18 BACKGROUND
2
1 {2} The following facts, viewed in the light most favorable to the State as the
2 prevailing party, were adduced at the hearing on the suppression motion. See State v.
3 Vandenberg, 2003-NMSC-030, ¶ 18, 134 N.M. 566, 81 P.3d 19 (stating that appellate
4 courts in reviewing a denial of a motion to suppress “review the facts in a light most
5 favorable to the prevailing party, as long as the facts are supported by substantial
6 evidence”).
7 {3} On May 23, 2012, an auto burglary occurred in the parking lot of a Walmart
8 located in Hobbs, New Mexico, and the event was recorded by Walmart’s security
9 cameras. Detective Porter of the Hobbs Police Department reviewed the security
10 videos taken in the parking lot and inside the store. The videos depicted the incident,
11 the suspect’s truck in the parking lot, and the suspect inside the store after the
12 incident. Based upon this investigation, still images of the suspect’s truck and a “body
13 shot” of the suspect were posted at the police department. Officer Benavidez of the
14 Hobbs Police Department saw these photos “every day” that he reported for duty.
15 {4} About nine days after the auto burglary, on June 1, 2012, Officer Benavidez
16 stopped Defendant’s truck for an equipment violation. During the traffic stop, the
17 officer recognized that Defendant and his truck “matched” the suspect and truck
18 depicted in the photos posted at the police department. Officer Benavidez described
19 the similarities concerning the truck: “older model, white pickup, short bed, had rims
3
1 on it—not factory rims—had chrome rims, bigger rims.” And he described the
2 similarities concerning the suspect: “about 5'5", . . . heavyset, he had on a striped shirt,
3 and you can tell he was Hispanic.” As a result of these observations, the officer asked
4 Detective Porter to respond to the scene of the traffic stop. The officer proceeded to
5 give Defendant a verbal warning for the defective equipment violation and issue him
6 a citation for failure to provide proof of insurance. The officer estimated that it had
7 taken about ten minutes for Detective Porter to arrive on scene. When asked what he
8 observed during the interaction between Detective Porter and Defendant, the officer
9 stated only that Detective Porter was “talking” to Defendant and that, although he
10 “[didn’t] recall” seeing what Detective Porter did concerning Defendant’s vehicle, he
11 thought Detective Porter “might have been looking, looking in it.”
12 {5} Pertinent here, Detective Porter’s written report stated,
13 I arrived at the scene of the traffic stop and immediately saw that the
14 white, 2000 Chevrolet pickup driven by [Defendant] was consistent with
15 the vehicle used by the suspect during the auto burglary at Walmart. . .
16 . I saw that [Defendant’s] physical appearance was consistent with the
17 subject that committed the auto burglary at Walmart on [May 23, 2012].
18 I asked [Defendant] to exit his vehicle and I continued to talk with him.
19 [Defendant] told me that he does have a large stereo speaker, in a gray
20 box, in his vehicle. [Defendant] allowed me to look at this speaker. I saw
21 that the speaker was consistent with the description given by the victim
22 of the auto burglary.
23 I continued to talk with [Defendant] and explained to him that I was
24 investigating an auto burglary that occurred at Walmart. I told
4
1 [Defendant] that the entire auto burglary was captured by surveillance
2 cameras. I then told [Defendant] that he was the person who committed
3 the auto burglary. I asked [Defendant] if the person that he stole the
4 speakers and amplifier from owed him money. [Defendant] told me that
5 the person he stole the speakers and amplifier from did owe him money.
6 I photographed the speaker in [Defendant’s] pickup.
7 Defendant was then released from the scene. About two weeks later during an
8 interview with Detective Porter, Defendant confessed to stealing the speakers. A
9 warrant was issued for Defendant’s arrest another two weeks later, on June 29, 2012,1
10 and Defendant was later charged under the criminal information with auto burglary.
11 A. The Suppression Motion
12 {6} Defendant’s motion to suppress was made under both the federal and state
13 constitutions. The motion contained three assertions that are pertinent in this appeal.
14 First, it asserted that the officer did not have reasonable suspicion to expand the traffic
15 stop for defective equipment into an investigation into the auto burglary. Second, the
16 motion asserted that “[t]he officer’s conclusory testimony that he received ‘consent’
1
16 The district court found in its order that Defendant was “arrested under a
17 warrant” before the detective obtained Defendant’s confession and concluded that the
18 “warrant and interview conducted under the warrant” were constitutional. However,
19 it appears from the record that a warrant was not issued for Defendant’s arrest until
20 two weeks after the detective interviewed Defendant and obtained his confession. It
21 appears that Defendant’s presence at the interview during which he confessed to the
22 crime was not the result of an arrest warrant, but rather the result of the detective
23 calling Defendant and Defendant agreeing to come to the police department for the
24 interview.
5
1 to search, by itself, is not enough to meet [the State’s] burden” and “testimony merely
2 showing . . . Defendant’s cooperative response is not sufficient for the State to meet
3 its burden to show voluntary consent.” And third, it asserted that “the fruits of that
4 search must be suppressed” along with “[a]ny and all items or evidence obtained from
5 Defendant’s vehicle pertaining to any alleged auto burglaries charged in the [c]riminal
6 [i]nformation[,] . . . [a]ny and all statements made by Defendant as the result of the
7 illegal search[,]” and “all physical evidence and statements flowing from the illegal
8 . . . search[.]” The State did not file a written response to the suppression motion.
9 B. The Suppression Hearing
10 {7} At the hearing on the suppression motion, the prosecutor did not address
11 Defendant’s assertions that the detective’s inspection of the speaker inside the truck
12 was a search and that there was insufficient evidence to establish that Defendant
13 consented to the search. Instead, the prosecutor’s argument focused only on the
14 assertion that the traffic stop in this case was properly expanded into an investigation
15 of the auto burglary. Detective Porter did not testify at the suppression hearing.
16 Instead, the prosecutor asked the district court to take judicial notice of the criminal
17 complaint filed in this matter, which included a copy of Detective Porter’s written
18 report. The prosecutor also did not object to any lack of particularity in Defendant’s
19 motion concerning what specific evidence should be suppressed.
6
1 C. The Order Denying the Suppression Motion
2 {8} In denying Defendant’s motion to suppress, the district court found, in pertinent
3 part,
4 Officer Benavidez formed a suspicion that . . . [D]efendant and the truck
5 driven by him were associated with the burglary that had occurred in the
6 Walmart parking lot. . . . based on the truck and the description of . . .
7 [D]efendant, and he articulated details of each that [led] him to suspect
8 . . . [D]efendant of having committed the burglary at Walmart (the make,
9 model, color, and length of the bed of the truck, the style of its tires, and
10 the build, height, and ethnicity of . . . [D]efendant).
11 ....
12 Detective Porter asked to see a stereo speaker that was with . . .
13 [D]efendant in the truck; . . . [D]efendant allowed him to see it; and
14 Detective Porter determined that it was consistent with the speaker
15 alleged to have been taken in the burglary.
16 ....
17 The questioning and search conducted by Detective Porter, which were
18 consensual, related to the newly formed suspicion, itself supported [by]
19 articulated facts, that . . . [D]efendant and his truck were involved in the
20 automobile burglary in the Walmart parking lot.
21 ....
22 With the consent of . . . [D]efendant, . . . Detective Porter examined . . .
23 [D]efendant’s speaker.
24 The district court concluded that Officer Benavidez articulated reasonable suspicion
25 for expanding the traffic stop into an auto burglary investigation and that “[t]he
7
1 actions of Detective Porter at the investigatory portion of the traffic stop of asking and
2 receiving permission to view and then photographing the stereo speaker . . . were
3 constitutionally permissible.”
4 D. Issues on Appeal
5 {9} Defendant raises three primary issues on appeal: first, whether Officer
6 Benavidez had a sufficient factual basis to justify expanding the scope of the traffic
7 stop for defective equipment to include an auto burglary investigation; second,
8 whether the duration of the extended investigation was reasonable; and third, whether
9 the evidence was sufficient to establish that Defendant knowingly and voluntarily
10 consented to Detective Porter’s search of Defendant’s truck.
11 DISCUSSION
12 A. General Standard of Review
13 {10} In a motion to suppress, defendants generally “have the burden to raise an issue
14 as to their illegal search and seizure claims.” State v. Baldonado, 1992-NMCA-140,
15 ¶ 19, 115 N.M. 106, 847 P.2d 751. Once a defendant has met this burden, “the burden
16 shifts to the state to justify the warrantless search.” Id. Review of a motion to suppress
17 involves mixed questions of law and fact. State v. Urioste, 2002-NMSC-023, ¶ 6, 132
18 N.M. 592, 52 P.3d 964. Although “[w]e view the facts in the manner most favorable
19 to the prevailing party and defer to the district court’s findings of fact if substantial
8
1 evidence exists to support those findings[,]” we review the application of the law to
2 those facts de novo. Id.
3 B. Expanding the Scope of the Traffic Stop
4 {11} In reviewing a claim of an impermissible expansion of a traffic stop, this Court
5 conducts a de novo review to determine whether the scope of the additional intrusion
6 and inquiry outside of the original traffic offense was justified by reasonable
7 suspicion. See State v. Leyva, 2011-NMSC-009, ¶ 55, 149 N.M. 435, 250 P.3d 861;
8 State v. Duarte, 2007-NMCA-012, ¶ 31, 140 N.M. 930, 149 P.3d 1027. “[O]ur
9 reasonable suspicion determination requires us to assess the totality of the
10 circumstances and precludes a divide-and-conquer analysis in which we view each
11 individual factor or circumstance in a vacuum.” State v. Neal, 2007-NMSC-043, ¶ 28,
12 142 N.M. 176, 164 P.3d 57 (alteration, omission, internal quotation marks, and
13 citation omitted). “Police officers possess reasonable suspicion when they are aware
14 of specific articulable facts that, judged objectively, would lead a reasonable person
15 to believe criminal activity occurred or was occurring.” Urioste, 2002-NMSC-023, ¶
16 6 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “[R]easonable suspicion can arise
17 out of the evolving circumstances surrounding a traffic stop and may be based upon
18 reasonable inferences drawn from those circumstances.” State v. Funderburg, 2008-
19 NMSC-026, ¶ 24, 144 N.M. 37, 183 P.3d 922.
9
1 {12} Here, the district court’s conclusion that “Officer Benavidez had become aware
2 of specific, articulable facts that, judged objectively, would lead a reasonable person
3 to suspect that . . . [D]efendant had been involved in a burglary at the Walmart parking
4 lot” was based on its findings that (1) the officer “received a briefing at the police
5 station to be on the lookout for a vehicle and driver in connection with” the auto
6 burglary; (2) “[a] picture of the truck driven by the suspect was posted at police
7 headquarters, and Officer Benavidez had seen it before he stopped . . . [D]efendant”;
8 and (3) “Officer Benavidez formed a suspicion that . . . [D]efendant and the truck
9 driven by him were associated with the burglary” based on the officer’s “articulated
10 details” of the truck and the description of the burglary suspect, including “the make,
11 model, color, and length of the bed of the truck, the style of its tires, and the build,
12 height, and ethnicity of . . . [D]efendant.”
13 {13} These findings are supported by substantial evidence in the record. Officer
14 Benavidez testified that he saw the photos of the truck and a “body shot” of the
15 suspect posted at the police department “every day” that he reported for duty after the
16 auto burglary occurred. He also testified that, during the traffic stop, he believed that
17 Defendant and his truck “matched” the suspect and truck depicted in the photos posted
18 at the police department, because the truck was an “older model, white pickup, short
19 bed, had rims on it—not factory rims—had chrome rims, some bigger rims.” And he
10
1 testified that Defendant “matched” the suspect posted in the photos because they were
2 both “about 5'5", . . . heavyset, . . . and . . . Hispanic.” The officer also emphasized that
3 Defendant was wearing “a similar type of shirt” as the suspect in the photos. We
4 conclude that the details about Defendant’s ethnicity and short, heavyset build,
5 combined with those of the white, short bed, older model pickup truck with large, non-
6 factory chrome rims were sufficiently unique to lead a reasonable person to believe
7 that Defendant and his truck may have been the same suspect and truck depicted in the
8 photos posted at the police department. See Urioste, 2002-NMSC-023, ¶ 6; Neal,
9 2007-NMSC-043, ¶ 28 (recognizing that “our reasonable suspicion determination
10 requires us to assess the totality of the circumstances and precludes a
11 divide-and-conquer analysis in which we view each individual factor or circumstance
12 in a vacuum.” (alteration, omission, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted)).
13 Therefore, the district court correctly determined that Officer Benavidez had
14 articulable, reasonable suspicion for expanding the traffic stop into an auto burglary
15 investigation.
16 C. Duration
17 {14} As to whether the duration of the expanded investigation was reasonable, we
18 need not reach this issue because Defendant did not preserve it and he does not
19 contend that any exceptions to the rule precluding us from addressing unpreserved
11
1 arguments apply in this case. See Rule 12-216 NMRA (“To preserve a question for
2 review it must appear that a ruling or decision by the district court was fairly invoked.
3 . . . This rule shall not preclude the appellate court from considering jurisdictional
4 questions or, in its discretion, questions involving: (1) general public interest; or (2)
5 fundamental error or fundamental rights of a party.”). When the district court raised
6 the duration issue sua sponte at the hearing, defense counsel stated, “I don’t think that
7 time is so much an issue,” and instead asserted that Defendant should have been
8 released, “whether it’s one second or ten minutes,” after resolution of the traffic
9 offense, “absent some . . . new set of facts that developed that cause[d the officer] to
10 want to keep him there longer.” The district court then asked, “All right, so then I
11 should focus on whether he had valid reasonable suspicion?” Defense counsel replied,
12 “Yes, Your Honor.” Therefore, because Defendant represented to the district court
13 that the duration of the investigation was not an issue in this case, that issue was not
14 preserved, and we do not address it on appeal. See Rule 12-216(A).
15 D. Consent to Search
16 {15} “The voluntariness of consent is a factual question in which the trial court must
17 weigh the evidence and decide if it is sufficient to clearly and convincingly establish
18 that the consent was voluntary.” State v. Davis, 2013-NMSC-028, ¶ 10, 304 P.3d 10
19 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). We must determine “whether the trial
12
1 court’s decision is supported by substantial evidence, not whether the trial court could
2 have reached a different conclusion[,]” and we review the court’s “application of the
3 law to the facts de novo.” Id. (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation
4 omitted). “Courts utilize a three-tiered analysis when determining voluntariness: (1)
5 there must be clear and positive testimony that the consent was specific and
6 unequivocal; (2) the consent must be given without duress or coercion; and (3) the
7 first two factors are to be viewed in light of the presumption that disfavors the waiver
8 of constitutional rights.” Id. ¶ 14. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
9 Specific and unequivocal consent can be established in a variety of ways, including
10 a defendant’s “affirmative and direct oral response to an officer’s request to search[,]
11 . . . the clarity of a question and response[,] . . . the clarity of the officer’s request,
12 followed by the defendant’s subsequent compliance[,]” or “[a] response without
13 hesitation[.]” Id. ¶ 16.
14 {16} As an initial matter, we decline the State’s invitation to affirm based on its
15 assertion made for the first time on appeal that there was no “search” because the
16 detective merely observed the speaker in plain view by peering into the window of
17 Defendant’s truck. We recognize that “[g]enerally, an appellee has no duty to preserve
18 issues for review and may advance any ground for affirmance on appeal” and that we
19 may affirm the district court’s order on such ground even though the order did not rely
13
1 upon it. Cordova v. World Fin. Corp., 2009-NMSC-021, ¶ 18, 146 N.M. 256, 208
2 P.3d 901 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); See State v. Todisco, 2000-
3 NMCA-064, ¶ 11, 129 N.M. 310, 6 P.3d 1032. However, we may do so only “so long
4 as the circumstances do not make it unfair to the appellant to affirm.” Cordova, 2009-
5 NMSC-021, ¶ 18. Here, Defendant’s motion asserted that the detective’s inspection
6 of the speaker was the result of a “search” and the district court’s order referred to it
7 as a “search[.]” The State did not assert in the district court that the Detective’s
8 inspection of the speaker was not a search or that the speaker was in plain view. This
9 failure to raise such a fact-based issue in the district court where Defendant and the
10 court have an opportunity to properly address it is problematic. See Todisco, 2000-
11 NMCA-064, ¶ 11 (noting the unfairness of affirming on a fact-dependent ground that
12 was never raised in the district court). Under these circumstances, we conclude that
13 it would be unfair to Defendant to affirm on the ground that no search actually
14 occurred because Defendant did not have an opportunity to respond to this argument
15 below.
16 {17} Defendant’s motion asserted that the officer’s conclusory statement that he
17 received Defendant’s consent to search was not, by itself, “clear and positive
18 testimony that consent was unequivocal and specific.” This assertion was sufficient
19 to “raise an issue” as to the legality of the search and it shifted the burden to the State
14
1 to justify the search. Baldonado, 1992-NMCA-140, ¶ 19; see State v. Rowell, 2008-
2 NMSC-041, ¶ 10, 144 N.M. 371, 188 P.3d 95 (stating that warrantless searches and
3 seizures “are presumed to be unreasonable and the State bears the burden of proving
4 reasonableness.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). At the suppression
5 hearing, however, the State did not present any evidence concerning the circumstances
6 under which Defendant “allowed” Detective Porter to inspect the speaker inside of
7 Defendant’s truck. Detective Porter was not present to testify about the dialogue that
8 took place between him and Defendant, and Officer Benavidez’s testimony shed no
9 light on these circumstances. At the district court level, the State did not respond at
10 all to Defendant’s claim concerning the lack of voluntary consent. Thus, the State did
11 not meet its burden to justify its warrantless search with “clear and positive testimony
12 that the consent was specific and unequivocal[.]” Davis, 2013-NMSC-028, ¶ 14
13 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); See Baldonado, 1992-NMCA-140, ¶
14 19.
15 {18} We note that the district court found in its order that the detective had “asked
16 to see a stereo speaker that was with . . . [D]efendant in the truck” before “[D]efendant
17 allowed him to see it[.]” However, the only evidence that supports this finding is
18 merely Detective Porter’s written statement that Defendant “allowed” him to see the
19 speaker. The question is whether this statement permitted the district court to infer that
15
1 the detective had first asked to see the speaker and that Defendant unequivocally
2 consented. We conclude that it does not. This sparse, conclusory statement is not
3 “clear and positive testimony” that, “in light of the presumption that disfavors the
4 waiver of constitutional rights[,]” proves “clearly and convincingly” that Defendant
5 consented to the intrusion. Davis, 2013-NMSC-028, ¶¶ 10, 14. Concluding otherwise
6 would encourage the state to remain vague and present as little evidence as possible
7 in meeting its burden to show consent, as it did in this case, which is inconsistent with
8 the requirement that the State prove “clearly and convincingly” that consent was
9 “specific and unequivocal[.]” Id.; see Black’s Law Dictionary 1616, 1760 (10th ed.
10 2014) (defining “specific” in pertinent part as “explicit” and defining “unequivocal”
11 as “[u]nambiguous; clear; free from uncertainty”).
12 CONCLUSION
13 {19} We remand this case to the district court to allow Defendant the opportunity to
14 withdraw his plea and for the district court to determine whether the evidence to be
15 suppressed includes the statements that Defendant made during and after the search,
16 as well as any evidence concerning the speaker inspected and photographed during the
17 search.
16
1 {20} IT IS SO ORDERED.
2 ______________________________
3 TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge
4 WE CONCUR:
5 _________________________________
6 CYNTHIA A. FRY, Judge
7 _________________________________
8 LINDA M. VANZI, Judge
17