Monday, December 15, 2025
50.0°F

Judge tosses drug evidence

Keith KINNAIRD<br | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 16 years, 2 months AGO
by Keith KINNAIRD<br
| September 17, 2009 9:00 PM

SANDPOINT — A marijuana trafficking case pending against a Bonner County couple has been stripped of evidence and incriminating statements made by the accused growers.

Although Seth Matthan Walser and Kimberly Sue Brown ultimately agreed to the search that led to the discovery of indoor grow rooms, 1st District Judge Steve Verby concluded that — under the totality of the circumstances — their consent was not voluntary.

Verby issued an 18-page order Wednesday granting defense motions to suppress the physical evidence and statements the couple made to a sheriff’s deputy who uncovered the 100 plants.

The ruling could prove to be a death blow to the state’s case and a triumph for the defense.

“This is an awesome decision,” Chief Public Defender Isabella Robertson, who represents Brown, said on Thursday. “I don’t see how they can take this to trial. That doesn’t mean they won’t try, but I don’t see how it could go.”

The state’s wishes were unclear Thursday. Deputy Prosecutor Shane Greenbank was unavailable for comment.

Walser, 32, and Brown, 28, are free while the case is pending.

The couple was charged with trafficking following a Jan. 28 search of an outbuilding at their home on Rapid Lightning Road. Deputy Marty Ryan went to the home after 9 p.m. to check on anonymous tip that pot was being grown on the property.

During the hour-long discussion that preceded the couple giving consent, Ryan presented Walser and Brown with two options — consent to a search and be summoned to court or face immediate arrest and have their children placed in the custody of the Idaho Department of Health & Welfare.

But Verby noted that during the discussion, Ryan tried to dissuade them from contacting an attorney, restricted their movements, prohibited them from making phone calls and advised them that their decision not to consent would expose them to a range of even harsher consequences.

Verby characterized Ryan’s demeanor during the discussion as polite yet firm, but found that the deputy created a situation that was anything but free of coercion.

“The professed good intentions of Deputy Ryan may have been humane, but such a constructed scenario did not result in voluntary consent,” Verby said in the ruling.

ARTICLES BY KEITH KINNAIRD<BR

September 30, 2010 9 p.m.

Appeals court rules in cattle truck spill case

SANDPOINT — Idaho’s Court of Appeals is upholding the vacated judgment against a Canadian cattle truck driver accused of spilling a mixture of feces, urine and rainwater on U.S. Highway 95 in Boundary County.

October 21, 2010 9 p.m.

Constitutional amendments on Nov. 2 ballot

SANDPOINT — Idaho voters will get a chance to weigh in on Idaho constitutional amendments concerning funding for the University of Idaho and public airports, hospitals and electrical systems.

May 13, 2010 9 p.m.

Man with child porn arrested by Border Patrol

PORTHILL — A United States citizen was arrested earlier this month after allegedly getting his car stuck while attempting to sneak into Canada with a laptop computer containing child pornography.