State v. Harris

Finney, Justice:

I respectfully dissent. It is my view that the undercover operation was unlawful because at all times during the extra-jurisdictional operation, the agents were acting in their official capacity as officers of the North Myrtle Beach Police Department (Department), in utter disregard of the mandates of S. C. Code Ann. § 5-7-120 (Supp. 1988).

The majority correctly concludes that these officers did not comply with Section 5-7-120, but holds that this extra-jurisdictional action is permissible because it would have been lawful if undertaken by private citizens. The majority opinion cites statutory exceptions, which do not apply to the facts herein, and relies on the cases of People v. O’Connor, 167 Ill. App. (3d) 42, 117 Ill. Dec. 730, 520 N. E. (2d) 1081 (1988); People v. Meyer, 424 Mich. 143, 379 N. W. (2d) 59 (1985); Guthrie v. State, 668 P. (2d) 1147 (Okla. Crim. App. 1983); and Meadows v. State, 655 P. (2d) 556 (Okla. Crim. App. 1982), each of which is distinguishable from the instant case.

In this case, Officer Wade, acting with the avowed intent to “get Georgina Harris,” met with two informants who were paid by the Department, provided them with Department money to purchase narcotics, wired one informant with an electronic body transmitter provided by the Department, and instructed the informants to go to Atlantic Beach and purchase drugs from the appellant. Officer Wade waited in North Myrtle Beach, monitoring the conversations between the informants and the appellant by radio in a vehicle, both of which were owned by the Department. When the *161informants returned to North Myrtle Beach, Wade instructed them to return to Atlantic Beach and, by subterfuge, get the appellant into North Myrtle Beach, where Officer Wade subsequently effectuated her arrest under a warrant he had obtained in the interim.

The majority asserts that the officers’ only activity outside North Myrtle Beach was the monitoring of conversations between the informants and the appellant, which could have been done by private citizens, and states further that the validity of the officers’ actions is not affected by the fact that the operation was planned in North Myrtle Beach.

To the contrary, the record shows this as a carefully orchestrated reconnaissance mission continuing to its planned conclusion in the arrest of a specific individual at a designated location through the use of police personnel and Department-paid informants acting at the behest of the officers, who utilized Department resources not likely to be available to private citizens. I would hold that the foregoing, when considered with the fact that the scheme provided for the appellant to be lured into North Myrtle Beach to be arrested by North Myrtle Beach officers, would support a finding that the officers were acting under color of law.

In both Meyer, supra, and Meadows, supra, the police officers maintained their identity as private citizens to purchase drugs from the defendants then provided the information from their undercover operation to the police department in whose jurisdiction the transactions occurred. Guthrie, supra, addresses the validity of a search warrant on affidavit of a police officer whose actions were at all times consonant with his status as a private citizen. In O’Connor, supra, an officer positioned outside his jurisdiction was conducting a general highway speed surveillance of traffic on a roadway within his jurisdiction when he arrested the defendant for an offense committed in the officer’s presence.

In the instant case, the officers’ course of conduct shows a pattern or practice violative of clear legislative intent, makes a mockery of Section 5-7-120, borders on entrapment, and constitutes an abuse of orderly police process in the face of viable legal options available to conclude the apprehen*162sion and arrest of the appellant.1 Had these officers followed either of these procedures, they may not have improved their arrest record,2 but surely would have assisted in the orderly removal from the street of a person whom they considered to be a menace.

Under the majority opinion, it would be possible for officers of the Atlantic Beach Police Department, sua sponte, to conduct an investigation into activities being carried on in any other jurisdiction without complying with Section 5-7-120. Such a scenario, in my view, would be disruptive of orderly process, lead to chaos in law enforcement, and violate clear legislative mandate.

I would hold that the undercover operation was unlawful and reverse this case.

Toal, J., concurs.

If the officers had information as to the reprehensible conduct of the appellant, they had three viable legal options: (a) give the information to the County Police; (b) give the information to the S. C. Law Enforcement Division; or (c) notify the Atlantic Beach Police Department and coordinate the arrest with that agency.

The record is replete with evidence of one of the officer’s zeal to arrest the appellant and inordinate pride in his arrest record.