Filed 7/18/22 P. v. Sharp CA5
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
THE PEOPLE,
F081374
Plaintiff and Respondent,
(Super. Ct. No. SF019630A)
v.
ORDER MODIFYING OPINION AND
KEVIN SHARP, DENYING REHEARING
[NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT]
Defendant and Appellant.
THE COURT:
It is ordered that the nonpublished opinion filed on June 21, 2022, be modified as
follows:
1. On page 5, the second full paragraph, the three sentences beginning with
“Immediately upon being informed that he was being detained … ” are
deleted and replaced with:
As Nakabayashi directed defendant to be seated on the curb, Deputy
Jackson arrived and said to defendant from his patrol car, “You are on
probation, man.”1 Defendant responded, “Yeah, but I’m on probation …”
and was interrupted by Nakabayashi directing him to sit down.
1 At the hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress, Nakabayashi testified Jackson
was “very familiar with everybody in Wasco” and “had priors with [defendant] …”; he
knew defendant was on probation when he saw him. That testimony is consistent with
Jackson’s later interaction with defendant during the same detention, demonstrating his
familiarity with defendant by asking: “You’re not living with Larry anymore?” after
defendant provided his address.
Nakabayashi then approached defendant and asked, “You say you’re on
probation?” to which defendant probably responded, “I shouldn’t be” and
shook his head slightly.2 Nakabayashi then called dispatch for a records
check and received confirmation that defendant was on active probation.
Approximately four minutes into the detention, after the dispatcher
confirmed to Nakabayashi that defendant was on “three types of probation,”
defendant unequivocally denied being on probation.”
2. On page 11, the third full paragraph, delete remainder of the paragraph after
the sentence beginning with “Defendant next contends that his detention
was prolonged in violation … ” and insert the following:
As noted above, Nakabayashi’s initial detention of defendant was supported
by a reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing because defendant matched the
description of the suspect from the motel incident. Within 30 seconds of
the start of the detention, Jackson arrived and identified defendant as being
on probation. An officer may not ordinarily detain a suspect longer than
necessary to complete the original purpose of the detention “ ‘unless the
officer has an independent reasonable suspicion that the [detainee] has
committed unrelated offenses.’ ” (See People v. Brown (1998) 62
Cal.App.4th 493, 498–499.) However, defendant’s known status as a
probationer was crucial to a determination of whether the stop was
ordinary, because neither reasonable suspicion nor probable cause is
required for a probation search: “An adult probationer consents to a waiver
of his Fourth Amendment rights in exchange for the opportunity to avoid
serving a state prison sentence.” (People v. Reyes (1998) 19 Cal.4th 743,
749.) As soon as Jackson identified defendant as a probationer, the
ordinary nature of the encounter changed, because appellant was not an
ordinary citizen with full constitutional rights. (People v. Peck (1996) 52
Cal.App.4th 351, 362.) That the deputies properly confirmed that
defendant’s probation was active and included search conditions before
conducting the search does not impact our conclusion. Officers may briefly
extend the detention of a person they believe to be on probation to verify
probation status. (See People v. Suennen (1980) 114 Cal.App.3d 192, 200–
201 [if additional cause to detain develops after initial stop, additional time
2 The trial court watched the portion of the body camera footage where defendant
responded to Nakabayashi’s questions regarding his probation status multiple times, as
have we. After watching that portion of the video at least three times, the trial court
summarized, “The officer asked if he was on probation. I think [defendant] said, ‘I
should be.’ Or he might have said, ‘I shouldn’t be.’ ” After also having reviewed that
portion of the video multiple times, we note that it remains a close factual question.
2.
to investigate is allowed].) Based on his probation status, and separate
from the initial detention, defendant was independently subject to search
without probable cause or reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing. (Reyes, at
p. 749; People v. Durant (2012) 205 Cal.App.4th 57, 66.) Therefore,
because the initial detention was lawful, and defendant’s probation status
gave the officers an independent basis to search defendant, the initial
detention was not unreasonably prolonged, and no Fourth Amendment
violation occurred.3
Except for the modifications set forth above, the opinion previously filed remains
unchanged. This modification does not effect a change in the judgement.
Appellant’s petition for rehearing filed on July 7, 2022, is denied.
DE SANTOS, J.
WE CONCUR:
HILL, P. J.
MEEHAN, J.
3 We note that this case did not present a situation where the officers unlawfully
initiated and/or extended a detention to indiscriminately probe into a defendant’s
probation status. There was no initial taint to be cleansed through application of the
attenuation doctrine. Nakabayashi stopped defendant based on a reasonable suspicion
that defendant was the suspect in the motel incident and Jackson immediately recognized
defendant as a probationer and told defendant as much. This opinion does not stand for
the proposition that law enforcement is to randomly stop those not suspected of any crime
to ferret out probation status.
3.
Filed 6/21/22 P. v. Sharp CA5 (unmodified opinion)
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
THE PEOPLE,
F081374
Plaintiff and Respondent,
(Super. Ct. No. SF019630A)
v.
KEVIN SHARP, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
THE COURT *
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Kern County. Michael G.
Bush, Judge.
Jennifer A. Gibson, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Michael P. Farrell, Assistant Attorney General, Eric L. Christoffersen and
Michael A. Canzoneri, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
-ooOoo-
* Before Hill, P. J., Meehan, J. and DeSantos, J.
Defendant Kevin Sharp contends on appeal that (1) the evidence presented at
defendant’s motion to suppress hearing failed to establish that the police officer had legal
justification to detain defendant, (2) his detention was prolonged in violation of the
Fourth Amendment, and (3) defendant’s contraband discovered during a probation search
while he was detained should have been suppressed because its discovery was not
attenuated from defendant’s unlawful detention. We affirm.
PROCEDURAL SUMMARY
On July 10, 2019, the Kern County District Attorney filed an information charging
defendant with manufacture of controlled substances (Health & Saf. Code, § 11379.6,
subd. (a) (count 1)), transportation of methamphetamine (Health & Saf. Code, § 11379,
subd. (a) (count 2)), possession of methamphetamine for sale (Health & Saf. Code,
§ 11378 (count 3)), and misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia (Health &
Saf. Code, § 11364 (count 4)). It was also alleged that defendant had a prior strike
conviction (Pen. Code, §§ 667, subds. (b)–(i),4 and 1170.12).
Defendant pled not guilty on all counts and denied the allegation.
On August 19, 2019, defendant filed a motion to suppress evidence pursuant to
section 1538.5. The trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress.
On October 18, 2019, defendant entered a plea of no contest to count 1, with an
indicated sentence of five years in prison, with the representation by the trial court that it
would dismiss the prior strike conviction allegation. On February 20, 2020, the court
sentenced defendant to five years in state prison and granted defendant’s request to strike
the prior conviction allegation, consistent with the negotiated plea agreement.
On June 30, 2020, defendant filed a notice of appeal.
4 All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise noted.
2.
FACTS5
Defendant filed a motion to suppress evidence pursuant to section 1538.5 to
challenge his detention, which was conducted without a search warrant.
On June 13, 2019, a motel clerk in Kern County told a potential customer she
could not rent him a room. He became angry. He threatened to have someone “take care
of her” and threatened to throw gasoline on the motel’s air conditioning units and set
them on fire. He then left the motel. The clerk called law enforcement. Kern County
Sheriff’s Deputy Bryan Nakabayashi received the call from dispatch and arrived at the
motel at approximately 9:55 p.m. The clerk gave him a description of the suspect, and he
reviewed the motel’s surveillance video footage showing the suspect.
Nakabayashi testified that the suspect “had a thin build. He was tall. He was
wearing a black shirt, dark pants, red hat, and had a white shopping bag, and a dark
shoulder bag.” In the recording from Nakabayashi’s body camera, Nakabayashi and
two other deputies first interviewed the clerk. She described the suspect as a tall, black
male wearing a dark shirt and blue jeans and riding a bicycle. The other deputies talked
amongst themselves at the clerk’s counter and suggested that the suspect she described
could possibly be one of the Doe brothers,6 and that Doe brother 1 was about 19 years
old. The clerk explained that she had refused to rent the suspect a room because he had
rented a room on another occasion and caused a disturbance. On that occasion, Doe
brother 1 had broken the room’s windows. The clerk recognized the suspect and thought
he was possibly nicknamed “Bubba,” but did not recall his true name. She stated that she
could not describe the suspect’s bike because she did not see it. She also stated it was
5 The parties stipulated to the investigatory report attached to defendant’s motion to
suppress as forming a factual basis for defendant’s plea.
6 The men, two brothers, named by deputies as potential suspects will be referred to
collectively as the “Doe brothers,” and separately as “Doe brother 1,” and “Doe
brother 2.”
3.
“small” when asked if it was “small” or a “mountain bike.” She stated defendant wore a
“hat” when asked if defendant wore an “orange beanie or a hat.” Nakabayashi’s body
camera then recorded some of the motel’s surveillance video footage, showing the
suspect. He appeared to be a tall, slim, black male wearing a hat, dark clothes and
holding a white shopping bag. The surveillance video footage recorded only showed the
suspect for a few seconds and was of very poor quality. The suspect’s face and other
more detailed features, including the color of his hat, were impossible to discern.7 The
body camera recording then shows, as Nakabayashi finished interviewing the clerk, that
other deputies detained Doe brother 1 and Doe brother 2. Nakabayashi brought the clerk
to the brothers for an in-field identification, where she excluded both as the suspect. The
clerk then clarified her earlier statement that the suspect was possibly related to the Doe
brothers. She explained to Nakabayashi that the suspect was not Doe brother 1 or Doe
brother 2, but that the suspect was either the Doe brothers’ “friend []or enemy[].” She
explained that when the suspect had previously rented a room at the motel, he was there
with Doe brother 1’s girlfriend. While the suspect was in the room with Doe brother 1’s
girlfriend, Doe brother 1 came to the motel and broke the windows in the suspect’s motel
room.
At defendant’s motion to suppress hearing, Nakabayashi testified that although the
clerk described the suspect’s pants as blue jeans, he wrote that the suspect’s pants were
“dark” in his report because, “[t]he description written down was a—not just a
description of what [the clerk] told [him], but a culmination of what she told [him] and
7 At the hearing on the motion to suppress, the trial court stated while viewing the
recording of the surveillance video footage, “Okay. I can see a white bag in his hand
from here, but other than that, I can’t see much more .… [¶] That’s not a true and
accurate depiction. I don’t think any of us could—the body camera—Deputy
[Nakabayashi], what you saw—when you watched the computer monitor [at the motel],
you saw it much clearer than what we’re seeing; correct?” Nakabayashi answered,
“Correct.”
4.
what she insinuated about age, and also what [he] had seen on the video surveillance.”
Nakabayashi further explained that, although he wrote in his report from the motel
incident that the suspect was in his “20s,” the clerk never actually said anything about the
suspect’s age. Nakabayashi testified that he inferred that the suspect was in his twenties
because “[the clerk] insinuated [the suspect’s] age in that she—she said that the subject
who committed the criminal threats was possibly related to [the Doe brothers] … [who]
are in their 20s.”
After interviewing the clerk and watching the motel’s surveillance video footage,
Nakabayashi and other deputies began searching the area around the motel for the
suspect. At approximately 4:00 a.m. the following morning, he saw defendant riding a
bicycle roughly one mile from the motel. He testified that he stopped defendant “[t]o
determine if he was the subject who had committed the criminal threats,” “[b]ecause
[defendant] had matched the description of the subject who had committed the criminal
threats earlier.” Nakabayashi testified that defendant was “a thin built black male. He
had a red hat, and a dark shoulder bag, and also a white shopping bag.”
Nakabayashi’s body camera recording of defendant’s detention showed
Nakabayashi approach defendant, who was on a bike, from behind and tell him he was
being detained. Defendant’s hat appeared an orange or red color in the flashing patrol car
lights. He was wearing a light gray or white shirt, and pants that were black with a white
plaid pattern on them. He was carrying a white shopping bag and a black shoulder bag
similar to a purse. Immediately upon being informed that he was being detained,
defendant stated that he was on probation, to which Nakabayashi responded, “You say
you’re on probation?” Defendant responded, “I should be.” Nakabayashi then called
dispatch for a records check, received confirmation that defendant was on active
probation, and began conducting a probation search. During the probation search,
Nakabayashi found several items of contraband on defendant’s person and in his bags
and placed him under arrest for possession of the contraband. As soon as the probation
5.
search was finished, Nakabayashi called other deputies to bring the clerk for an in-field
identification to determine whether defendant was the suspect in the motel incident,
stating to another deputy that defendant had threatened the motel clerk.
Nakabayashi testified that he did not release defendant immediately upon realizing
he was not in his twenties because he still believed him to be the suspect from the motel,
“[b]ased on the specific characteristics being the two bags that the suspect of the [threats
made at the motel] was carrying, the red hat, and the fact that he was a thin-built, black
male of—who was taller.” Nakabayashi testified that while he did “not believe that
[defendant’s] shirt and those pants look like the … suspect’s shirt and pants,” he still
stopped and detained defendant “[b]ecause there were several other pieces of clothing
and accessories that matched the description, combined with the subject’s apparent race
and him being a taller, black male, which was consistent with the … suspect’s
description.”
The trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence found during
the probation search of defendant. The trial court found Nakabayashi’s detention of
defendant was supported by reasonable suspicion that defendant was a possible suspect of
the threats made to the motel clerk. The trial court stated,
“If someone were to review Defense [Exhibit] B, which is the …
disk of the 422 [threats being made by the suspect against the clerk], we
really can’t see what’s on there. Other than a white bag, I cannot tell who
is standing at that counter. [Nakabayashi] has testified that he was able to
see it much clearer when he was actually watching the computer screen.
Within six hours[,] the defendant is riding a bike, just like the suspect. Has
a white grocery bag, just like the suspect. Has a black shoulder bag, just
like the suspect. Has a red hat, just like the suspect. Tall, thin, black male,
just like the suspect. The fact he’s changed clothes in six hours, our
experience says that defendants change clothes all the time. [¶] It does not,
for a brief detention, especially an investigatory detention, the description
does not have to match exactly. This is clearly sufficient to do a brief
detention to determine if he was the suspect. So[,] motion denied.”
6.
DISCUSSION
Defendant contends his convictions must be reversed because the evidence at the
suppression hearing failed to establish that Nakabayashi had an objectively reasonable
suspicion that defendant was the suspect who threatened the motel clerk. Defendant also
contends his detention was prolonged in violation of the Fourth Amendment because
defendant was not immediately released once the deputy saw that defendant did not
match the description of the suspect. Last, defendant argues that the contraband
discovered during Nakabayashi’s probation search of defendant should have been
suppressed because the probation search was not attenuated from defendant’s initial
detention. The People argue the trial court properly denied defendant’s motion to
suppress. We agree with the People.
A. Defendant’s Detention
Here, Nakabayashi had objectively reasonable suspicion to detain defendant,
supported by specific, articulable facts he testified to, relating to similarities between the
description of the suspect and defendant’s appearance.
A suspect may be detained if an officer has a reasonable suspicion that criminal
activity is afoot and that the suspect is connected with it. (Terry v. Ohio (1968) 392 U.S.
1, 30.) A reasonable suspicion requires a showing of specific and articulable facts that
would cause a reasonable officer in a like position, drawing on the officer’s training and
experience, to believe a violation has occurred or is about to occur. (In re Tony C. (1978)
21 Cal.3d 888, 893.) “[R]easonable suspicion is ‘something more than an “inchoate and
unparticularized suspicion or ‘hunch,’ ” ’ … but something less than” the fair probability
required for probable cause. (People v. Bennett (1998) 17 Cal.4th 373, 387.) The courts
look at the totality of the circumstances to determine whether there was a particularized
and objective basis for the officer’s suspicion. (People v. Butler (2003) 111 Cal.App.4th
150, 160.)
7.
“A vague description does not, standing alone, provide reasonable grounds to
detain all persons falling within that description.” (In re Carlos M., 220 Cal.App.3d 372,
381–382; see also In re Tony C., supra, 21 Cal.3d at p. 898 [description of “three male
blacks” in a day-old burglary report was insufficient to permit detention of all those
falling within description].) However, a more particularized description, including
characteristics such as hair, eye color, and hair length together with additional
circumstances known to the officer, such as proximity of the defendant to the crime site
within a brief amount of time from the crime, may justify the detention. (In re Carlos M.,
at pp. 381–382.) “[T]he detaining officer’s subjective suspicion must be based upon a
reasonably accurate recollection of the official description of the [suspects].” (Williams
v. Superior Court (1985) 168 Cal.App.3d 349, 361.)
“The standard of appellate review of a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress
is well established. We defer to the trial court’s factual findings, express or implied,
where supported by substantial evidence. In determining whether, on the facts so found,
the search or seizure was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment, we exercise our
independent judgment.” (People v. Glaser (1995) 11 Cal.4th 354, 362.)
Here, we defer to the trial court’s factual findings, as they are supported by
sufficient evidence. In light of these findings, we agree with the People that
Nakabayashi’s detention of defendant was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. The
recordings entered into evidence, as well as Nakabayashi’s testimony, support his
suspicion that defendant was the suspect from the motel incident, including similarities
between the suspect described by the clerk and defendant’s appearance when
Nakabayashi detained him, such as both being a tall, thin, black males, wearing red hats,
carrying white shopping bags and black shoulder bags, and riding bikes, in addition to
defendant’s proximity to the motel six hours after the suspect threatened the clerk.
Looking at the totality of the circumstances, these facts supported a particularized and
objective basis for Nakabayashi’s reasonable suspicion that defendant was the suspect.
8.
Defendant first argues that Nakabayashi’s detention of defendant lacked
reasonable suspicion because Nakabayashi could see upon detaining defendant that he
was not in his twenties. However, Nakabayashi testified that he only wrote “20s” in his
report because he made an inference about the suspect’s age. The recording of his
interview with the clerk and the surveillance video footage from the motel gave no
indication of the suspect’s age. Accordingly, the trial court was entitled to find that the
discovery that defendant was in his fifties after detaining him did not defeat
Nakabayashi’s reasonable suspicion that he was the suspect. Defendant next argues
Nakabayashi lacked reasonable suspicion to detain him because of discrepancies between
the clerk’s description of the suspect and defendant’s appearance. Defendant contends
that the clerk’s description of the suspect’s bicycle as “small” undermines Nakabayashi’s
reasonable suspicion because he was detained while riding an average size mountain
bike. He also contends that Nakabayashi did not have reasonable suspicion to detain him
because of differences between his clothes and the suspect’s clothes. However, “minor
discrepancies do not prevent development of the suspicions which justify temporary
detention for questioning. Crime victims often have limited opportunity for observation;
their reports may be hurried, perhaps garbled by fright or shock.… It is enough if there is
adequate conformity between description and fact to indicate to reasonable officers that
detention and questioning are necessary to the proper discharge of their duties.” (People
v. Smith (1970) 4 Cal.App.3d 41, 48–49.) As the trial court noted when it denied
defendant’s motion to suppress, the minor discrepancies between defendant and the
description of the suspect in clothing and the size of his bike did not require defendant’s
immediate release, because Nakabayashi testified that he based his detention on other
similarities between defendant and the suspect described by the clerk and observed by
Nakabayashi on the surveillance video footage, including his tall, thin build, red hat,
white shopping bag, black shoulder bag, bicycle, and proximity to the motel on the same
night. The trial court was entitled to credit Nakabayashi’s testimony and the recordings
9.
showing that defendant’s appearance matched other aspects of the clerk’s description of
the suspect. We defer to this factual determination.
The circumstances here show the trial court was entitled to find based on
Nakabayashi’s testimony and the recordings entered into evidence that he relied on
reasonable suspicion when detaining defendant, supported by specific, articulable facts
relating to similarities between defendant’s appearance and the suspect’s description.
These facts provided Nakabayashi with objectively reasonable suspicion under the
Fourth Amendment that defendant was the suspect.
B. Length of Detention
Defendant next argues his detention was prolonged in violation of the
Fourth Amendment. We disagree.
Generally during a detention, officers may do only what is reasonably necessary to
(1) carry out the purpose of the stop, (2) protect officer safety and the safety of others,
and (3) maintain the status quo. (Terry v. Ohio, supra, 392 U.S. 1, at p. 23; United States
v. Hensley (1985) 469 U.S. 221, 235.) Officers who have detained a suspect must carry
out their duties diligently. (People v. Russell (2000) 81 Cal.App.4th 96, 102.) A
detention, lawful at its inception, may become unlawful if it exceeds the length of time
necessary to carry out the purpose for which the detention was made. (People v. Harris
(1975) 15 Cal.3d 384, 390.) However, there is no “ ‘hard and fast rule’ ” for determining
how much time constitutes a prolonged detention, and instead the court must examine all
of the circumstances surrounding the detention and what is necessary to reasonably
confirm or dispel the need for an arrest. (Ibid.)
“In assessing whether a detention is too long in duration to be justified as an
investigative stop, we consider it appropriate to examine whether the police diligently
pursued a means of investigation that was likely to confirm or dispel their suspicions
quickly, during which time it was necessary to detain the defendant.… A court making
this assessment should take care to consider whether the police are acting in a swiftly
10.
developing situation, and in such cases the court should not indulge in unrealistic
second-guessing.… A creative judge engaged in post hoc evaluation of police conduct
can almost always imagine some alternative means by which the objectives of the police
might have been accomplished. But ‘[the] fact that the protection of the public might, in
the abstract, have been accomplished by “less intrusive” means does not, by itself, render
the search unreasonable.’ [Citations.] The question is not simply whether some other
alternative was available, but whether the police acted unreasonably in failing to
recognize or to pursue it.” (United States v. Sharpe (1985) 470 U.S. 675, 686–687.)
Detaining a suspect for an in-field identification by a victim has been encouraged
because of its potentially quick resolution of whether the detainee should be immediately
freed. (People v. Cowger (1988) 202 Cal.App.3d 1066, 1071–1072; People v. Harris,
supra, 15 Cal.3d at p. 391; People v. Craig (1978) 86 Cal.App.3d 905, 912–913 [where
the court, based on the reasoning of Harris, held that continued detention for between
five to 10 minutes was reasonable for an in-field identification].)
Defendant first argues that Nakabayashi should have released defendant
immediately upon discovering that he was 55 years old, and not in his twenties, as he
described the suspect in his report. As discussed in the previous section, Nakabayashi
initially assumed that the suspect was in his early twenties. However, the hotel clerk
never stated the suspect’s age. Because defendant’s age did not exclude defendant as a
suspect, it did not require Nakabayashi to immediately end his detention.
Defendant next contends that his detention was prolonged in violation of the
Fourth Amendment because Nakabayashi conducted the records check and probation
search of defendant before conducting an in-field identification to determine whether he
was the suspect from the motel. However, Nakabayashi diligently pursued the
investigation to determine whether defendant was the suspect who threatened the motel
clerk. Nakabayashi called for an in-field identification of defendant within eight minutes
of his detention, during a swiftly developing situation, where defendant volunteered to
11.
Nakabayashi that he was on probation as soon as he was detained. Nakabayashi did not
delay upon learning of defendant’s probation status in conducting a records check, and
upon confirming defendant was on searchable probation, conducting a probation search.
Nor did he delay upon completing the brief search with requesting an in-field
identification to determine if defendant was the suspect from the motel incident. As
defendant volunteered the information that he was on probation as soon as Nakabayashi
told defendant he was detained, Nakabayashi did not act unreasonably by conducting a
probation search of defendant immediately upon learning of his probation status, but
before calling for the motel clerk to come for the in-field identification. (See United
States v. Sharpe, supra, 470 U.S. at p. 687.)
Last, the clerk’s subsequent exclusion of defendant as the suspect did not defeat
defendant’s detention, as an in-field identification is a less onerous way of resolving the
issue of confirming whether a person detained should be arrested. (See People v.
Cowger, supra, 202 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1071–1072.) Nakabayashi had reasonable
suspicion that defendant was the suspect when he detained him, and an in-field
identification was the most efficient and reasonable way to determine if his suspicion was
correct. While he was already placed under arrest based upon the contraband discovered
during his probation search, the reasonable suspicion that defendant was the suspect from
the motel incident was quickly dispelled when the clerk excluded him during the in-field
identification.
Accordingly, Nakabayashi’s detention of defendant until the clerk arrived for an
in-field identification was not prolonged in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
Nakabayashi’s detention of defendant was lawful and continuing his detention until the
in-field identification could take place after the prompt probation search was a diligent
pursuit of the investigation, as it was a likely way for Nakabayashi to confirm or dispel
his suspicions as quickly as possible and did not exceed the length of time necessary to
12.
carry out the purpose for which the detention was made in this swiftly developing
situation.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
13.