People v. Long
People v. Long
Opinion of the Court
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 753 OPINION
This is an appeal by the People (Pen. Code, §
The facts adduced in support of the motion to compel disclosure of the informant were as follows:2 Officer Ingels of the Los Angeles Police Department received information February 3, 1973, from a confidential informant that heroin was being sold from a residence at 1030 West 38th Street by a person described only as a male Negro. The informant did not know the seller's name. The informant was an addict who had personally purchased heroin at the location within the previous three days. The informant had supplied information to the officer for over two years and was paid for his tips. Based on information previously received from the informant, the officer had made over 12 arrests which resulted in at least five felony and several misdemeanor convictions. *Page 754
Ingels did nothing with respect to the information he received regarding the residence at 1030 West 38th Street until February 16, 1973, when he undertook surveillance of the location for a period of 45 minutes. During this time he observed six people enter the location, remain about three minutes and leave. Ingels did not recognize any of the six people. Ingels believed that heroin sales were taking place because of the information he had received and his expertise in the area of narcotic trafficking.
Ingels thought that he checked the utilities at the location as part of his investigation. He could not recall to whom they were registered, but it was someone other than defendant. On February 20, 1973, Ingels returned to the location with three other officers to "make a narcotic investigation and make an arrest," based on the information he had received on February 3 and the activity he had observed on February 16.3 Upon knocking on the door, identifying himself and announcing his purpose, Ingels heard running footsteps inside the house. Fearing evidence was about to be destroyed, he forced entry to the premises. He observed defendant coming out of the bathroom. Ingels saw a balloon on the bathroom floor beside the toilet. He retrieved it and five more balloons which were inside the flushing toilet.
The informant had not indicated how many people resided at the location. There were three other men in the residence besides defendant when the officer entered. Defendant was the only one in the bathroom, however. Ingels concluded from observing defendant's appearance that he was under the influence of heroin. A hypodermic needle was found in defendant's pocket. A hypodermic needle and $250 were found on a person named Gilbreath, one of the other three people present. The remaining two occupants were described only as male Negroes.4 They were not arrested.
(1a) In support of the motion to disclose the informant's identity, defense counsel asserted that defendant neither resided at nor dealt in narcotics from the residence. He contended that the informant could corroborate those facts and that the informant's testimony that he dealt with someone else present at the time of Long's arrest would lessen the weight of the evidence against him.
On this appeal the People contend that the informant is not a material *Page 755
witness of the type whose identity must be disclosed and that the trial court therefore erred in dismissing the information. (2)
In order to establish that an informant's identity is essential to his right to a fair trial, a defendant need only demonstrate a reasonable possibility that the informant could give evidence on the issue of guilt which might result in his exoneration. (People v. Borunda,
(1b) Defendant's theory of defense is that he neither lived at the residence in question, nor sold narcotics there; that he had gone there for a fix and had handled the contraband which the People sought to use in evidence against him only momentarily for the purpose of destroying it, and that he therefore not only was not guilty of possession for sale, but that he was not guilty of simple possession either. (People v. Mijares,
The facts that the officers had no prior knowledge that defendant was in any way connected to the location, that there were others present at the location, and that defendant was under the influence of heroin all lend plausibility to the theory that the informant's testimony might assist defendant with respect to the charged offense of possession for sale. For example, there were at least two other persons in the residence at the time of defendant's arrest who fit the very limited description of the seller which the informant had supplied to the officer. A substantial sum of money was found on the fourth occupant. To prove that defendant possessed the heroin in violation of former section 11500.5 of the Health and Safety Code, the People had to show that he possessed the heroin with the specific intent to sell. (People v. Newman,
The trial court specifically relied on People v. Lamb,
"Ordinarily, the failure to identify a material witness informer results in a reversal. But, in the case at bench, there was ample and (as we have seen) admissible evidence of possession. The most that the informer could have done for defendant would have been to cast doubt on the defendant's status as a seller. Under those circumstances, the interests of justice are best served by reducing the judgment on count I to that of possession in violation of section
The People attempt to distinguish Lamb, but the attempted distinction proves too much. It is argued that in Lamb the informant's evidence would have aided the defendant because it would have negatived possession — inferred from his apparent residence at the premises — rather than possession for sale; but if that were so, the court should have reversed the judgment altogether, instead of reducing it to a conviction for simple possession.
The People, perhaps realizing the plausibility of defendant's theory, seek to postulate the following test for disclosure: Assuming that the informant were to testify precisely as indicated by the defendant in his articulated theory of defense, and that his testimony were fully credited by the trier of fact and wholly uncontradicted, if the trier of fact would nonetheless be lawfully entitled to convict the defendant, then the informant's identity need not be disclosed. This formula is in conflict, however, with the rule set forth above that the informant's identity must be disclosed if there is a possibility that his testimony might result in defendant's exoneration. (People v. Garcia, supra,
Defendant, however, is on extremely shaky ground with respect to his contention that the informant's identity is relevant to the included offense of possession. If the jury should have a reasonable doubt that it was defendant who had disposed of the balloons found in the bathroom, that would be the end of the problem. If it entertains no such doubt, we do not see how the expected evidence from the informant could create one. (Cf.People v. Goliday,
The judgment (order dismissing the information) is reversed with instructions to the trial court to reinstate a charge of possession of heroin. (Health Saf. Code, § 11350.)
Hastings, J., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
I would reverse the order of dismissal. The prosecution was under no duty to divulge the name of the informant. (Theodor v.Superior Court,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. LUMMIE LONG, Defendant and Respondent
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published