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EIGHTH CIRCUIT FINDS CONSENT TO BE VOLUNTARY
Posted on February 16th, 2010 1 commentThe Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the conviction and 180 month sentence for possession of a firearm by a convicted felon in United States v, Kelley
Kelley was convicted after a bench trial in the District Court for the Western District of Missouri of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Two burglars were interviewed by the Greene County Sheriff’s Department. They admitted being involved in a string of burglaries and said that stolen guns could be found at the residence of Karlin Kelley. They called the residence and spoke to Kelley’s sister Tanya. Tanya told the burglars and Sergeant Stanley that the weapons were indeed at the house and she invited the officer to come over and get them. When Stanley and a number of other officers arrived Tanya invited them into the house and Kelley gave them written permission to search the house.
Kelley told the officers that the weapons were in a shed behind the house and he showed them the way to the shed.They seized the weapons. He was interviewed on at least two occasions and read his Miranda rights. He told the officers that the weapons were brought to his house and he agreed to keep them until sometime when they could go hunting without the kids there. Since he was a convicted felon and not allowed to possess guns in his house he put the guns in the shed.
On appeal, two issues were raised, the legality of the search and the denial of Kelley’s motion for judgment of acquittal at trial.
As to the motion to suppress, the court found that Kelley gave valid consent to the search. Kelley argued that his consent was a fruit of Tanya’s permission to enter the house and that she was coerced into doing so by the officer’s statements that he did not want another Waco, that he did not want anyone to get hurt, and that he did not want anyone else to raise her children. But the court found that there was sufficient evidence that the consent was given voluntarily. Tanya testified at the suppression hearing that she would have let the officers in without the threats. Therefore the court found that the permission was voluntary.
Furthermore the court found that there was sufficient evidence that Kelley knowing possesed the firearm. Possession can be either constructive or actual. “[C]onstructive possession requires knowledge of an object, the ability to control it, and the intent to do so.” The court found that there was sufficient evidence of constructive possession. Kelly admitted that he knew the guns were in the shed. In fact he moved them from the house to the shed. Furthermore he planned to go hunting with them.
The lesson for Karlin Kelley, and everyone else, particularly if you are suspected of a crime is not to talk to the police and not to give consent to any search. Anything you say MAY and WILL be used against you.
But, 180 months seem like a long time to spend in prison for holding on to the guns. The court said it reviewed the records and found the sentence to be legal.
Consent Exception, Fourth Amendment, Search and seizure, weapons consent, Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, Firearms, Fourth Amendment, weapons 1 Comment »One Response to “EIGHTH CIRCUIT FINDS CONSENT TO BE VOLUNTARY”
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