Judge MANNHEIMER.
Steven Carter was convicted of third-degree theft for stealing $213 from a wallet during an Easter service at the Tudor Rescue Mission in Anchorage.
The officer who was assigned to investigate Carter's case testified that he went to the Mission and asked the staff to make him a copy of the video, but he was told that the one person who knew how to do this was not available. The officer returned to the Mission at least five times to get a copy of the video, but he was never successful. Ultimately, it became too late: the security system over-wrote the video.
In this appeal, Carter claims that the Anchorage police had a duty to collect the video and preserve it — and that, because the police did not do so, the trial judge either should have dismissed the theft charge or, in the alternative, should have instructed the jurors that they should presume (contrary to all the evidence) that the video would have been exculpatory. See Thorne v. Dept. of Public Safety, 774 P.2d 1326 (Alaska 1989).
Carter's first theory is that the Anchorage police came into "constructive" possession of the video, and that they then allowed it to be destroyed. The facts of this case simply do not support an assertion of "constructive possession", at least as that phrase is normally understood. The video was in the possession of the Mission, the Mission staff were not acting as agents of the police, and the police in fact made several attempts — all unsuccessful — to obtain a copy of the video. There was no "constructive possession".
Carter argues in the alternative that if police did not constructively possess the video, they nevertheless had a due process obligation to collect the video because they knew that it was material evidence.
Carter concedes that, in general, the government does not have a duty to collect all evidence pertinent to a crime. See March v. State, 859 P.2d 714, 716 (Alaska App.1993). But Carter asserts that the facts of his case merit an exception to this general rule.
We have encountered analogous situations before. For example, in Bradley v. State, 662 P.2d 993 (Alaska App.1983), a defendant who was involved in a vehicular accident was taken to a hospital, where the hospital staff drew his blood and tested it for medical purposes.
The defendant argued that the test results should be suppressed because the State had failed to collect and preserve the blood sample.
Similarly, in Moberg v. Anchorage, 152 P.3d 1170 (Alaska App.2007), this Court held that the government had no duty to direct a hospital to preserve a sample of the defendant's blood beyond the hospital's normal seven-day retention period.
(Compare State v. Ward, 17 P.3d 87 (Alaska App.2001), where a hospital drew the defendant's blood for medical purposes and later destroyed it pursuant to hospital policy — but the police mistakenly told the defendant that his blood sample would remain available until someone asked to test it.
Carter's case presents circumstances that are analogous to the facts of Bradley and Moberg. Carter knew that the video existed; the criminal complaint in this case recites that "Carter was observed on recorded security video taking [the victim's] jacket and walking towards the restroom and then leaving the Mission." As we have already explained, the video remained on the Mission's security system hard drive for a number of weeks after this case was filed. During that time, Carter had the same means as the State to obtain a copy of this evidence, either by requesting a copy from the Mission staff or by invoking legal process. We therefore conclude that the police were under no duty to collect or preserve the video.
Finally, Carter argues that he was denied his right of confrontation because the police failed to collect and preserve the video. Basically, Carter argues that his right of confrontation
Carter analogizes his case to the situation presented in Lauderdale v. State, 548 P.2d 376 (Alaska 1976), a case dealing with prosecutions for driving under the influence in which the State wishes to offer evidence of the defendant's breath test result. Lauderdale holds that if the State wishes to introduce evidence of breath test results, the State is required to offer defendants a way to preserve independent evidence of their blood alcohol content — for example, by preserving a sample of the defendant's breath for retesting. Id. at 381-82.
But in Nicholson v. State, 570 P.2d 1058, 1064 n. 23 (Alaska 1977), the supreme court described the Lauderdale decision as resting on the State's duty to "preserv[e] ... evidence already gathered by the authorities or created by the authorities." That is not the situation in Carter's case. We therefore reject his confrontation clause argument based on Lauderdale.
The judgement of the district court is AFFIRMED.