Court Opinion

ID: 4688655
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-05-20 17:03:12.563399+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:04:48.764177
License: Public Domain

The summaries of the Colorado Court of Appeals published opinions
  constitute no part of the opinion of the division but have been prepared by
  the division for the convenience of the reader. The summaries may not be
    cited or relied upon as they are not the official language of the division.
  Any discrepancy between the language in the summary and in the opinion
           should be resolved in favor of the language in the opinion.

                                                                   SUMMARY
                                                                 May 20, 2021

                                2021COA69

No. 17CA1745, People v. Alemayehu — Constitutional Law —
Fourth Amendment — Search and Seizures — Warrantless
Search — Plain View Exception

     A division of the court of appeals considers a rather intricate

Fourth Amendment issue involving the application of the plain view

seizure exception to justify a warrantless seizure and search of

several prescription pill bottles found in a compartment of an

opened car door. Because the division concludes that the police

illegally seized, then searched, the pill bottles, the illegal drugs

found therein must be suppressed and the matter remanded for a

new trial.

     Otherwise, the division addresses issues pertaining to the

sufficiency of evidence to support a conviction for possession of a

controlled substance; the admissibility of statements purportedly
obtained from the defendant in violation of Miranda v. Arizona, 384

U.S. 436 (1966); the admission of footage from four deputies’ body

cameras; and prosecutorial misconduct in closing argument.
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS                                          2021COA69

Court of Appeals No. 17CA1745
Douglas County District Court No. 16CR1131
Honorable Shay K. Whitaker, Judge

The People of the State of Colorado,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

Henoke Alemayehu,

Defendant-Appellant.

             JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART,
                 AND CASE REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS

                                   Division I
                          Opinion by JUDGE DAILEY
                          Berger and Tow, JJ., concur

                           Announced May 20, 2021

Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General, Gabriel P. Olivares, Assistant Attorney
General, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee

Megan A. Ring, Colorado State Public Defender, Karen Mahlman Gerash,
Deputy State Public Defender, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant
¶1    Defendant, Henoke Alemayehu, appeals the judgment of

 conviction entered on jury verdicts finding him guilty of failing to

 report an accident and possession of a controlled substance

 (oxycodone). In this case we consider the validity of a warrantless

 search and seizure of several prescription pill bottles found in a

 visible compartment of an opened car door. Because we conclude

 that the police illegally seized and searched those bottles, we

 reverse Alemayehu’s conviction for possession of a controlled

 substance and remand for a new trial on that count. We otherwise

 affirm Alemayehu’s conviction for failing to report an accident.

                           I.    Background

¶2    Alemayehu backed into another car in a Target parking lot, left

 a torn lottery ticket — instead of his name and phone number — on

 the other car’s window, and parked twenty to thirty yards away in

 the same lot with the engine running.

¶3    A bystander reported the accident to a Douglas County

 Sheriff’s deputy (Lieutenant Paul Rogers) who, along with another

 deputy, happened to be nearby responding to an unrelated

 accident. Lieutenant Rogers approached Alemayehu and ordered

 him to turn off his engine. Instead, Alemayehu got out of his car,

                                    1
 leaving the driver’s side door open and his engine still running.

 When Alemayehu told Lieutenant Rogers that he had “left a note,”

 Lieutenant Rogers responded that the note had no information on

 it. Alemayehu then said that he had mistakenly put the wrong

 piece of paper on the car he had hit. However, the second piece of

 paper that Alemayehu produced had a fake name and phone

 number on it.

¶4    Lieutenant Rogers called for backup and directed Alemayehu

 to stand and stay next to a shopping cart return. Other deputies

 arrived on the scene too. Lieutenant Rogers reached into

 Alemayehu’s car and turned it off. At some point, it appears a

 deputy closed the car door. But, when asked for his registration

 and insurance, Alemayehu directed Deputy Jeff Creighton to the

 driver’s sun visor area. Deputy Creighton then opened the driver’s

 door again to look there.

¶5    Deputy Brad Proulx walked over to the open driver’s door and

 looked at it. Inside a pocket at the bottom of the driver’s side door,

 he saw unlabeled orange prescription pill bottles. He pointed them

 out to Deputy Creighton, who said, “Yeah, I saw these without any

 labels.”

                                    2
¶6    Deputy Proulx took three bottles out of the compartment and

 asked Alemayehu, “What are all these pills?” After giving an evasive

 answer and being asked multiple times if the pills were his,

 Alemayehu denied ownership of the pills, saying, instead, that they

 belonged to a lawyer friend who had hurt his back, was taking

 medication, and had left them in the car.

¶7    Deputy Proulx opened the pill bottles, looked at the pills, and

 after researching their imprint code on his cell phone, determined

 that they were oxycodone.

¶8    Meanwhile, Deputy Creighton had walked to the passenger

 side of the car and looked in the glove box for Alemayehu’s

 registration and insurance paperwork. There, he came upon

 another bottle of pills.1

 1 At trial and at the suppression hearing, Deputy Creighton testified
 that this pill bottle also lacked a label and was one of the three
 bottles with oxycodone. However, Deputy Creighton’s body camera
 footage — which was admitted both at the suppression hearing and
 at trial — clearly shows that the bottle in the glove box was a
 fourth, labeled bottle and that, rather than opening it, he inspected
 its exterior and tossed it back into the car.

 The three bottles identified at trial as containing oxycodone — and
 shown on the body cameras — all appear to have come from the
 compartment in the driver’s side door.

                                   3
¶9     The deputies then arrested Alemayehu.

¶ 10   At trial, Alemayehu did not testify or present any witnesses.

  His theory of defense, however, was that the deputies “made up

  their mind[s] very early that [Alemayehu] had committed a traffic

  crime” after talking to witnesses and before engaging with him.

  Regarding the controlled substance charge, he argued that he did

  not know the pills were a controlled substance.

¶ 11   The jury convicted Alemayehu as charged and he was

  sentenced to a term of two years’ probation.

¶ 12   On appeal, Alemayehu contends that the trial court erred by

  (1) concluding that the prosecution had presented sufficient

  evidence to support a conviction on the possession of a controlled

  substance charge; (2) not suppressing evidence related to the

  discovery of oxycodone in his car; (3) not suppressing statements he

  made to the deputies in the parking lot; (4) admitting four DVDs of

  the deputies’ body camera footage; (5) allowing prosecutorial

  misconduct during closing argument; and (6) responding to a jury

  inquiry.

¶ 13   We conclude that the evidence was sufficient to sustain

  Alemayehu’s conviction for possession of a controlled substance.

                                   4
  But because his second contention has merit, we reverse that

  conviction and remand for a new trial on the underlying count. We

  reject all but the last of Alemayehu’s remaining contentions,

  inasmuch as they could affect his conviction for failing to report an

  accident. As to the last contention, we do not address it because it

  is not likely to recur on retrial.

                      II.   Sufficiency of the Evidence

¶ 14   A person commits the crime of possession of a controlled

  substance if he knowingly possesses a controlled substance. § 18-

  18-403.5, C.R.S. 2020. “The ‘knowing’ element applies both to

  knowledge of possession, and to knowledge that the thing

  possessed is a controlled substance.” People v. Perea, 126 P.3d

  241, 244 (Colo. App. 2005) (citations omitted). It does not, however,

  require “that [a defendant] know the precise controlled substance

  possessed.” Id. at 245.

¶ 15   Alemayehu contends the evidence was insufficient to sustain

  his conviction for possession of a controlled substance because (1)

  in his statements to the deputies, he “denied knowledge of the

  contents of the pill bottles” and “never affirmed knowledge of their

                                       5
  contents”; and (2) “the prosecution never proved he had such

  knowledge.” We are not persuaded.2

¶ 16   Part of Alemayehu’s contention appears to assume that the

  jury had to believe what he told the deputies. This is not the case.

  Cf. People v. Kessler, 2018 COA 60, ¶ 12 (“[A] fact finder is not

  required to accept or reject a witness’s testimony in its entirety; it

  may believe all, part, or none of a witness’s testimony. . . .”)

  (emphasis added).

¶ 17   Further,

             [i]n assessing the sufficiency of the evidence
             supporting a guilty verdict, a reviewing court
             must determine whether any rational trier of
             fact might accept the evidence, taken as a
             whole and in the light most favorable to the
             prosecution, as sufficient to support a finding
             of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

  2 In a separate argument, Alemayehu contends that the court erred
  in admitting any evidence pertaining to the discovery of oxycodone
  in his car. In reviewing a sufficiency of evidence contention, an
  appellate court must consider evidence that should have been
  excluded at trial. See, e.g., People v. Ramirez, 155 P.3d 371, 377
  (Colo. 2007) (“Whether the evidence is sufficient to support a
  judgment is a separate question from whether the evidence should
  be admitted in the first place.”); People v. Hard, 2014 COA 132, ¶ 39
  (“In assessing the sufficiency of the evidence, we must consider all
  the evidence admitted at trial, including the erroneously admitted
  evidence . . . .”).

                                      6
  People v. Atencio, 140 P.3d 73, 75 (Colo. App. 2005).

¶ 18   In undertaking this analysis, we recognize that (1) “[a]n actor’s

  state of mind is normally not subject to direct proof and must be

  inferred from his or her actions and the circumstances surrounding

  the occurrence,” People v. Joosten, 2018 COA 115, ¶ 26 (citation

  omitted); (2) the prosecution must be given the benefit of every

  inference that may fairly be drawn from the evidence, Kessler, ¶ 12;

  (3) “[i]f there is evidence upon which one may reasonably infer an

  element of the crime, the evidence is sufficient to sustain that

  element,” id. (quoting People v. Chase, 2013 COA 27, ¶ 50); and (4)

  “[w]here reasonable minds could differ, the evidence is sufficient to

  sustain a conviction,” People v. Bondurant, 2012 COA 50, ¶ 58

  (citation omitted).

¶ 19   When a “defendant has exclusive possession of the premises in

  which drugs are found, the jury may infer knowledge from the fact

  of possession.” People v. Yeadon, 2018 COA 104, ¶ 25 (citation

  omitted), aff’d and remanded, 2020 CO 38. “[K]nowledge can be

  inferred from the fact that the defendant is the driver and sole

  occupant of a vehicle, irrespective of whether he is also the vehicle’s

  owner.” Id.

                                     7
¶ 20   Here, Alemayehu’s knowledge that he possessed the pills and

  that they were a controlled substance can readily be inferred from

  the following facts: (1) he was the owner, driver, and sole occupant

  of the car; (2) he was in close proximity to the visible bottles of

  oxycodone in the driver’s side pocket; and (3) his statements to the

  deputies indicated he was aware of the nature of the pills by

  attributing their ownership to someone else, noting their purpose

  was to relieve back pain, and intimating that he needed to move

  them out of view since he used the car for work.

¶ 21   The evidence was, then, sufficient to sustain Alemayehu’s

  conviction for possession of a controlled substance. See, e.g.,

  Yeadon, ¶¶ 27-29 (discovery of methamphetamine in driver’s side

  pocket was sufficient to support driver’s conviction for knowing

  possession of a controlled substance).

          III.   Seizure and Search of Closed Prescription Bottles

¶ 22   Alemayehu contends that the trial court erred by not

  suppressing evidence that, according to him, was obtained as a

  result of an illegal seizure and search of the pill bottles. We agree.

¶ 23   When reviewing a trial court’s suppression ruling, we are

  limited to considering only evidence presented at the suppression

                                      8
  hearing. Moody v. People, 159 P.3d 611, 614 (Colo. 2007); accord

  People v. Bryant, 2018 COA 53, ¶ 19.

¶ 24   The trial court’s rulings present mixed questions of fact and

  law. People v. Gutierrez, 2020 CO 60, ¶ 11. Ordinarily, we defer to

  the trial court’s findings of fact when they are supported by the

  record but review its legal conclusions de novo. People v. Pappan,

  2018 CO 71, ¶ 6 (search and seizure issues). Our analysis is not,

  however, limited to the factual findings that form the basis of the

  trial court’s order; we may also consider undisputed facts evident in

  the record. See Gutierrez, ¶ 11. Further, where pertinent

  circumstances

            “are audio- and video-recorded, and there are
            no disputed facts outside the recording
            controlling the issue of suppression, we are in
            a similar position as the trial court to
            determine whether the [evidence] should be
            suppressed.” Thus, we may undertake an
            independent review of the audio or video
            recording. . . .

  People v. Davis, 2019 CO 84, ¶ 18 (quoting People v. Kutlak, 2016

  CO 1, ¶ 13); see People v. Chavez-Barragan, 2016 CO 66, ¶ 5 n.1

  (noting, in a search and seizure context, that the supreme court

  had “independently reviewed the [dashboard camera] recording as

                                    9
  we have done in other cases”); People v. Platt, 81 P.3d 1060, 1067

  (Colo. 2004) (“When considering recorded statements — whether

  documentary, audio-taped, or video-taped — the trial and appellate

  courts are in a similar review position.”).

                                A.    Facts

¶ 25   Lieutenant Rogers and Deputies Creighton, Proulx, and Ryan

  Wolfe testified at the suppression hearing. A DVD of footage

  captured on the four body cameras worn by them, and still photos

  from Lieutenant Rogers’s and Deputy Proulx’s body camera footage,

  were also admitted into evidence.

¶ 26   Even though Deputy Creighton can be heard saying in Deputy

  Proulx’s body camera footage, “Yeah, I saw these without any

  labels” (emphasis added), the deputies’ testimony at the hearing

  was that only “a bottle” lacking a proper label was clearly visible

  without having to be picked up or manipulated by them. A still

  photo from Deputy Proulx’s body camera footage shows two bottles

  (and perhaps a third).3 However, only one bottle in the photo visibly

  3 The still photo is attached to this opinion as Appendix A. The
  pink lines on the photo were added by the division to show where
  the bottles were located.

                                     10
  has its label missing. There is, so far as we can tell, no evidence of

  more than one bottle with its label visibly missing prior to Deputy

  Proulx picking them up and looking at them.

¶ 27   The trial court denied Alemayehu’s motion to suppress

  evidence because

           From the one picture, a pill bottle in the “driver’s side

            door” is visible and “does not contain a prescription label”

            but instead, “what appears to have been some type of

            either a torn label or some type of labeling or paper that

            was on that has since been removed.”

           “Based on the officer’s training and experience . . . that

            often illegal narcotics are kept in prescription drug

            containers . . . there was reasonable suspicion based on

            the [plain view] observation of that prescription bottle

            and the observation that the label on that prescription

            bottle had been removed for the officer to conduct further

            investigation regarding that particular pill bottle.”

           “Upon that further investigation,” the deputies learned

            that “the substance contained within that pill bottle is

            [oxycodone].”

                                    11
¶ 28   The trial court also found that Deputy Creighton’s subsequent

  search of Alemayehu’s glove box was reasonable under Arizona v.

  Gant, 556 U.S. 332, 351 (2009), as a search of a car incident to

  arrest:

             [B]ased on the location of the original pill
             bottles in the door of the vehicle it would have
             potentially subjected the entire vehicle to a
             more thorough search, indicating that there
             was a reason to search for further evidence of
             a crime, having located the pill bottles in the
             door.

                              B.    Analysis

¶ 29   The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution

  protects individuals from unreasonable searches and seizures by

  law enforcement. Gutierrez, ¶ 13. A warrantless search or seizure

  is presumptively invalid unless justified by one of the established

  exceptions to the warrant requirement. People v. Cattaneo, 2020

  COA 40, ¶ 17.

¶ 30   The People rely on the “plain view” exception, see People v.

  Swietlicki, 2015 CO 67, ¶ 18, combined (in the case of the pill bottle

  in the glove box) with a (type of) “vehicle paperwork” exception, see

  People v. Pryor, 896 N.Y.S.2d 575, 581-82 (Sup. Ct. 2009), to justify

  the deputies’ seizure of the pill bottles. They rely on the

                                    12
“automobile” exception, see People v. Allen, 2019 CO 88, ¶ 16, to

justify their warrantless search of the pill bottles. See, e.g., United

States v. Murillo-Salgado, 854 F.3d 407, 417 (8th Cir. 2017)

(recognizing that a search of the concealed contents of a seized

container must be either accompanied by a search warrant or

justified by an exception to the warrant requirement); United States

v. Davis, 690 F.3d 226, 233-34 (4th Cir. 2012) (same); United States

v. Jackson, 381 F.3d 984, 989 (10th Cir. 2004) (same).4

4 The People relied on the “plain view” exception — but not the
“vehicle paperwork” or “automobile” exceptions — in the trial court.
See People v. Aarness, 150 P.3d 1271, 1277 (Colo. 2006) (“On
appeal, a party may defend the trial court’s judgment on any
ground supported by the record, whether relied upon or even
considered by the trial court.”).

For good reason, the People do not rely on the trial court’s
alternative ground for upholding the deputies’ seizure and searches
of the pill bottles via the inventory exception: the People never
attempted to show that an impoundment of Alemayehu’s car before
the discovery of the unlabeled pill bottles would have been
reasonable, see People v. Brown, 2016 COA 150, aff’d, 2018 CO 27,
much less that the car would have been impounded and inventoried
pursuant to standard criteria in departmental regulations, see
People v. Milligan, 77 P.3d 771, 776-77 (Colo. App. 2003).

                                   13
        1.    Seizure of the Pill Bottles in the Driver’s Side Pocket:
                            the Plain View Exception

¶ 31   The People rely on the plain view exception as justification for

  the deputies’ seizure of the pill bottles in the driver’s side pocket.

             Under the plain view exception, a warrantless
             seizure of a container is reasonable for Fourth
             Amendment purposes if police observed the
             container in plain view and if the seizure
             satisfies three requirements: (1) the police were
             lawfully in the position from which they viewed
             the container, (2) the incriminating nature of
             the container was immediately apparent, and
             (3) the police had a lawful right of access to the
             container.

  Swietlicki, ¶ 19.

¶ 32   However, the fact that a container is lawfully seized under the

  plain view exception does not automatically mean that it may be

  opened and searched without a warrant. The Fourth Amendment

  provides protection to the owner of a container that conceals its

  contents from plain view, and a search of the concealed contents of

  a seized container must be either accompanied by a search warrant

  or justified by an exception to the warrant requirement.5 Jackson,

  5Although the pill bottle here was translucent enough to see that it
  contained pill-shaped objects, it was opaque in that it concealed the
  specific appearance or identity of the pills.

                                     14
  381 F.3d at 989 (a container may be properly be searched without a

  warrant, independent of lawfulness of its seizure, if its contents are

  apparent or a “foregone conclusion”); see also, e.g., Murillo-Salgado,

  854 F.3d at 417 (same); Davis, 690 F.3d at 233-34 (same); Clay v.

  State, 725 S.E.2d 260, 269 (Ga. 2012) (same); State v. Holmes, 139

  N.E.3d 574, 590 (Ohio Ct. App. 2019) (same); State v. Cardwell, 778

  S.E.2d 483, 492 (S.C. Ct. App. 2015) (same); Vassar v. State, 99

  P.3d 987, 995 (Wyo. 2004) (same).

¶ 33   Alemayehu does not dispute that the first and third elements

  of the plain view seizure exception were satisfied. His argument is

  with the application of the second element, that is, whether the

  incriminating nature of the plainly visible pill bottles was

  “immediately apparent” to the deputies.

             A naked reading of this phrase could fairly
             lead to the conclusion that, for the
             incriminating nature of an object to be
             “immediately apparent,” the seizing officer
             must experience a split-second revelation — a
             product not of thought but of reflex — in which
             he knows, at the moment he lays eyes upon
             the object, that the object is incriminating.
             But more than three decades of jurisprudence
             conclusively forecloses such an interpretation.

             Instead, the Supreme Court has long equated
             this language to probable cause. More

                                    15
             specifically, what has been required is that the
             seizing officer have “probable cause to
             associate the item with criminal activity
             without conducting a further search.”

  Swietlicki, ¶¶ 21-22 (citations omitted); see 2 Wayne R.

  LaFave, Search & Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment

  § 4.11(d), Westlaw (6th ed. database updated Sept. 2020) (“It must

  be emphasized that the ‘immediately apparent’ requirement relates

  only to probable cause, not certainty. That is, if the police are able

  to establish probable cause that the object is a fruit,

  instrumentality or evidence of crime without [searching it], this is

  all that is required . . . .”) (footnotes omitted).

¶ 34   The trial court did not find that, upon discovering that the

  prescription bottle was unlabeled, the deputies had probable cause

  to associate it with criminal activity. It found that the deputies had

  “reasonable suspicion” to continue investigating the pills’ nature.

¶ 35   “Reasonable suspicion” is not the same as “probable cause.”

  The reasonable suspicion standard is satisfied if the “police possess

  some minimal level of objective suspicion (as distinguished from a

  mere hunch or intuition)” that a person is committing, has

                                       16
  committed, or is about to commit a crime. People v. Polander, 41

  P.3d 698, 703 (Colo. 2001).

¶ 36   Probable cause “is [a] more demanding [standard] than

  reasonable suspicion.” People v. McKnight, 2019 CO 36, ¶ 51.

  Probable cause exists “when, under the totality of the

  circumstances, the objective facts and circumstances warrant the

  belief by a reasonable and prudent person, in light of that person’s

  training and experience,” that the object viewed is associated with

  criminal activity. See People v. McKay, 10 P.3d 704, 706 (Colo. App.

  2000) (assessing probable cause to arrest).

            “The probable cause standard does not lend
            itself to mathematical certainties and should
            not be laden with hypertechnical
            interpretations or rigid legal rules.”
            Instead, . . . we are required to “make a
            practical, common-sense decision whether a
            fair probability exists that a search of a
            particular place will reveal contraband or
            evidence of a crime.” Thus, a fair probability
            does not refer to a “mathematical probability”;
            “[r]ather, probable cause must be equated with
            reasonable grounds.” As such, a probable
            cause determination is “based on factual and
            practical considerations of everyday life on
            which reasonable and prudent people, not
            legal technicians, act.”

                                   17
  People v. Bailey, 2018 CO 84, ¶ 21 (alteration in original) (citations

  omitted); see also Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 232 (1983)

  (“[P]robable cause is a fluid concept — turning on the assessment of

  probabilities in particular factual contexts — not readily, or even

  usefully, reduced to a neat set of legal rules.”).

¶ 37   Whether probable cause for a warrantless search or seizure

  existed is a question of law that we review de novo. People v.

  Matheny, 46 P.3d 453, 461 (Colo. 2002).

¶ 38   In evaluating probable cause, due consideration should be

  given to a law enforcement officer’s experience and training.

  Henderson v. People, 879 P.2d 383, 392 (Colo. 1994); see United

  States v. Guerrero, 472 F.3d 784, 787 (10th Cir. 2007) (Officers may

  “draw on their own experience and specialized training to make

  inferences from and deductions about the cumulative information

  available to them that ‘might well elude an untrained person.’”

  (quoting United States v. Arvizu, 534 U.S. 266, 273 (2002))).

¶ 39   At the suppression hearing, Deputy Proulx testified that,

  based on his experience and training, people “can sometimes” carry

  illegal pills in pill bottles, so he’ll “look to see if the name is to the

  person we’re in contact with.” Here, he could see, without having to

                                       18
  move the bottle, that there was “no label” on it and “it’s illegal to

  have pills in a bottle without a label on it.”

¶ 40   Neither the prosecution in the trial court nor the People on

  appeal, however, have identified a statutory provision prohibiting

  the removal or alteration of labels per se on prescription bottles.

¶ 41   Deputy Creighton testified about the significance of a missing

  label on a prescription pill bottle, too. When asked what a

  prescription pill bottle with a torn-off label indicated, he responded,

             Oftentimes it could be something as simple as
             the label being just torn accidentally but more
             often than not it is a situation where the pill
             container either belongs to someone else than
             the person in possession of it or the substance
             inside the pill container is no longer the same
             substance that was originally prescribed in the
             container.

¶ 42   The People assert that Deputy Creighton’s “more often than

  not” scenario provides probable cause to believe that Alemayehu

  violated section 18-18-413, C.R.S. 2020, which states,

             [a] person to whom or for whose use any
             controlled substance has been prescribed or
             dispensed by a practitioner may lawfully
             possess it, but only in the container in which it
             was delivered to him unless he is able to show
             that he is the legal owner or a person acting at
             the direction of the legal owner of the
             controlled substance.

                                     19
¶ 43   However, as Alemayehu points out,

             [t]he statute allows possession of a controlled
             substance so long as it is in the container in
             which it was delivered. But here, whether the
             bottles contained a controlled substance is the
             query, and the deputies did not know and
             could not learn their contents absent further
             investigation beyond what [they could see].

¶ 44   Deputy Creighton did agree that, based on his training and

  experience, “it would be reasonable to say there may be illegal drugs

  or narcotics in that pill bottle.”

¶ 45   But did that testimony warrant a finding of probable cause to

  believe the pill bottles were associated with criminal activity?

¶ 46   To be sure, there is something to be said for the idea that “[a]

  prescription bottle bearing anything other than the defendant’s

  name would indicate that the defendant is in possession of drugs

  belonging to someone other than himself.” State v. Grevas, 881

  N.E.2d 946, 953 (Ohio Ct. Com. Pl. 2007) (concluding that this

  circumstance alone “gave the officer the requisite probable cause to

  seize the prescription bottles”).

¶ 47   But most authorities reject the idea that an unlabeled pill

  bottle, in and of itself, constitutes probable cause for a search or

  seizure. See State v. Meichel, 290 So. 2d 878, 880 (La. 1974) (“[T]he

                                       20
testimony of the officer making the seizure is clearly to the effect

that he did not know the nature of the pills until after he had

picked up the bottle and examined it. He did not know at the time

he saw the pills that there was a probability that they were

contraband and probably evidence.”); see also United States v.

Crawford, No. 3:19-CR-65-TAV-DCP, 2020 WL 2029959, at *9 (E.D.

Tenn. Apr. 6, 2020) (unpublished report and recommendation)

(“[T]he Court does not find that the ‘intrinsic nature’ of the pill

bottle [with its wrapper torn and partially off] led to probable cause

to believe that it is contraband. Even if the pill bottle appeared

suspicious to law enforcement, further investigation would have

been required to establish probable cause as to its association with

criminal activity.”) (citations omitted), adopted, 2020 WL 2025612

(E.D. Tenn. Apr. 27, 2020) (unpublished order); United States v.

Cooks, 222 F. Supp. 3d 965, 966-72 (D. Kan. 2016) (officer finding

pill bottle with missing label in console created only a reasonable

articulable suspicion of criminal activity); People v. Williamson, 608

N.E.2d 943, 950 (Ill. App. Ct. 1993) (“While there is a chance a

prescription bottle [without the defendant’s name on it] may contain

a controlled substance, it is equally, if not more, likely to contain a

                                   21
number of innocent objects such as a valid prescription, aspirin,

thumbtacks or nothing at all. Probable cause requires more than

simply having seen an item associated with criminal activity on an

earlier occasion.”), abrogated on other grounds by People v. Gipson,

786 N.E.2d 540 (Ill. 2003); Corwin v. State, 962 N.E.2d 118, 124

(Ind. Ct. App. 2011) (“The altered label might create reasonable

suspicion to further investigate the identity of the true owner of the

bottle. But the State has not demonstrated the altered label created

probable cause to arrest [defendant] for illegal possession of a

controlled substance before [the officer] opened the bottle to see the

pills.”); Commonwealth v. Hudson, 92 A.3d 1235, 1243 n.6 (Pa.

Super. Ct. 2014) (In a case involving police observation of two

prescription pill bottles with their labels partially removed, the

court stated, “[i]n none of the above-cited cases did the courts find

that the mere observation of a container or package, the likes of

which an officer has known, in the past, to contain narcotics, was

sufficient to establish probable cause.”), abrogation on other grounds

recognized by Commonwealth v. Byrd, 185 A.3d 1015 (Pa. Super.

Ct. 2018).

                                  22
¶ 48   Most of the authorities require other “unusual” circumstances

  in addition to these types of pill bottles to support a finding of

  probable cause. See State v. Cheatwood, 267 So. 3d 882, 887-88

  (Ala. Crim. App. 2018) (“The surrounding circumstances, namely,

  the fact that [the defendant] smelled of alcohol, that he admitted to

  drinking alcohol, and that he was passed out in a public place, gave

  rise to a ‘practical, nontechnical’ probability that the unlabeled pill

  bottle he carried contained contraband.”) (citation omitted); Ball v.

  United States, 803 A.2d 971, 982 (D.C. 2002) (“[A]lthough neither

  the officer’s recognition of the object in appellant’s pocket as a

  medicine bottle that could be used to conceal drugs nor appellant’s

  conduct independently establish probable cause in this case, the

  combination of the officer’s plain feel of the medicine bottle, the fact

  that the bottle was a large plastic container, the officer’s experience

  with the packaging of narcotics in this kind of container and, most

  important, the defendant’s numerous attempts to access the pocket

  where the medicine bottle was detected despite the officer’s multiple

  orders to the contrary, satisfy us that the officer could reasonably

  infer that the medicine bottle contained contraband and was thus

  authorized to seize the medicine bottle from appellant’s jacket

                                     23
  pursuant to the ‘plain feel’ exception to the warrant requirement.”)

  (citation omitted); State v. Miguel, 263 So. 3d 873, 875 (La.

  2019) (The officer was aware that the driver was driving with a

  suspended driver’s license, the vehicle had a fraudulent license

  plate, the driver and his passengers all disclaimed ownership of the

  pill bottle, and the driver admitted that he recently smoked

  marijuana, which, “in conjunction with the suspiciously torn label,

  when weighed by an experienced law enforcement officer, provided

  probable cause to believe the prescription bottle contained

  contraband.”); State v. Renaudin, No. 2007 KA 2359, 2008 WL

  2065936, at *3 (La. Ct. App. May 2, 2008) (“The report of the

  defendant’s erratic driving; the defendant’s droopy, glazed eyes and

  slurred speech; and the veiled discarding of a pill bottle with

  a torn off label all contributed to the totality of the evidence

  supporting [the deputy’s] probable cause.”).

¶ 49   In light of these authorities, we conclude that the mere

  observation of an unlabeled prescription pill bottle did not provide

  the deputies with probable cause to associate it with criminal

                                     24
  activity.6 Consequently, unless there were other unusual

  circumstances which would have elevated the deputies’ suspicion to

  probable cause, the deputies would have lacked the authority to

  seize the item for further inspection under the plain view exception.

¶ 50   The People assert that there were such “other” circumstances.

  They point to Alemaheyu’s having “just been in an accident, left a

  fake name and number, [driven] to the other end of the parking lot,

  6At trial, Deputy Proulx testified that “the first thing [he] noticed”
  about the open driver’s side door was that there were “multiple pill
  containers” that “didn’t have a label on them.” (Emphasis added.)
  And Deputy Creighton is overheard on Deputy Proulx’s body
  camera footage saying, “Yeah, I saw these without any labels” before
  Deputy Proulx picked up the first bottle.

  But both deputies testified at the suppression hearing that they had
  noticed only a bottle with a missing label. Deputy Creighton
  testified that only “that bottle” caught his attention “from the way it
  was arranged and that the label had been torn off”; Deputy Proulx
  similarly testified that he saw “a pill bottle” with “no label on [it].”
  (Emphasis added.)

  Had evidence been presented at the suppression hearing that the
  deputies had seen, without touching or otherwise moving anything
  in the driver’s side pocket, multiple unlabeled pill bottles, we might
  have reached a different conclusion about the existence of probable
  cause. But we have found no such evidence in the testimony,
  pictures, or body camera footage presented at the suppression
  hearing. See Moody v. People, 159 P.3d 611, 616 (Colo. 2007)
  (When reviewing a trial court’s suppression ruling, we are limited to
  considering only “evidence presented at the suppression hearing.”).

                                    25
  and [failed] to comply with the deputies’ requests. Thus, it would

  have been reasonable for them to believe that he was under the

  influence of a controlled substance.”

¶ 51   We are not persuaded. Unlike slurred speech, inability to

  perform physical maneuvers easily, or even nonsensical actions or

  answers, the circumstances on which the People rely, hardly (much

  less naturally) point to someone who others would suspect to be

  under the influence of an intoxicating substance.

¶ 52   Consequently, we conclude that the trial court erred by

  determining that the deputies were authorized to seize (and,

  consequently, search) the pill bottles found in the driver’s side

  pocket of Alemayehu’s car.

                2.   Seizure of the Pill Bottle in the Glove Box:
               the Vehicle Documentation and Plain View Exceptions

¶ 53   What, though, about the pill bottle found in the glove box?

  The People argue that (1) the deputies’ search of the glove box was

  justifiable under a type of “vehicle paperwork” exception and (2) the

  deputies’ seizure of the pill bottle was proper under the plain view

  exception.

                                    26
¶ 54   The propriety of a warrantless search of an automobile’s glove

  box for vehicle paperwork has been approved in, for instance, New

  York, see Pryor, 896 N.Y.S.2d at 581-82, and New Jersey, see State

  v. Terry, 179 A.3d 378, 388 (N.J. 2018) (Consistent with the Fourth

  Amendment, “[w]hen the operator of a vehicle is unable or unwilling

  to produce the registration or ownership papers . . . [the police may

  engage in] a quick, pinpointed search for the documents in the

  glove compartment . . . .”).

¶ 55   The California Supreme Court, however, has rejected this type

  of police action. See People v. Lopez, 453 P.3d 150, 152 (Cal. 2019)

  (“Considering the issue in light of more recent decisions from both

  the United States Supreme Court and our sister states, we now

  conclude that the desire to obtain a driver’s identification following

  a traffic stop does not constitute an independent, categorical

  exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement.”).

¶ 56   Even if we were to endorse this exception, it would not benefit

  the People in this case. Application of the exception would, at most,

  put the deputy in a legitimate position from which he could “plainly

  view” a pill bottle. But, as noted earlier, that does not automatically

  mean that he could pick up the pill bottle and search it. Its

                                    27
  incriminating nature had to be “immediately apparent,” that is, the

  deputy had to have probable cause to associate it with criminal

  activity. See Swietlicki, ¶ 19. But, as discussed above, the lack of a

  proper label on a pill bottle7 would not, in and of itself, have made

  its incriminating nature “immediately apparent” to the deputy.

¶ 57     Nor, contrary to the People’s argument, would the deputies

  have had additional grounds for associating the pill bottle found in

  the glove box with criminal activity because (1) the deputies had

  seized the three unlabeled pill bottles in the driver’s side pocket or

  (2) it was seized after Alemayehu had told Deputy Proulx that the

  initial unlabeled pill bottles contained someone else’s medication.

  Both circumstances either involved or arose as a result of, and

  indeed were linked closely in time to, the initial, illegal seizure of the

  pill bottles in the driver’s door. See People v. Dyer, 2019 COA 161,

  ¶ 27 (“[T]he caseworkers’ observations, the paramedics’

  observations, and [the defendant’s] statements during the hospital

  interview were all obtained by exploiting the caseworkers’ and police

  officers’ illegal entries into [the defendant’s] home. The

  7   If, indeed, it was unlabeled. See supra note 1.

                                      28
  exclusionary rule therefore required suppression of all of this

  evidence.”).

¶ 58   Consequently, the trial court also erred by determining that

  the deputies were authorized to seize — much less search — the pill

  bottle in the glove box.

                    C.       Harmless or Reversible Error

¶ 59   Because the error in admitting illegally seized evidence was

  one of constitutional magnitude, we must reverse unless we are

  persuaded that it was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. People

  v. Harmon, 284 P.3d 124, 128 (Colo. App. 2011). An error is not

  harmless beyond a reasonable doubt if there is a reasonable

  possibility that the defendant could have been prejudiced. People v.

  Stroud, 2014 COA 58, ¶ 6.

¶ 60   Here, the improperly seized oxycodone evidence was critical to

  the prosecution’s case on the possession of a controlled substance

  count. Consequently, the admission of that evidence cannot be

  considered harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See McKnight,

  ¶ 60 (determining that an unconstitutional search was not

  harmless beyond a reasonable doubt where the search uncovered

  the drug evidence used to convict the defendant). Thus,

                                       29
  Alemayehu’s conviction for possession of a controlled substance

  must be reversed and the matter remanded for a new trial.

                     IV.   Alemayehu’s Statements

¶ 61   Alemayehu contends that the trial court erred in admitting

  statements the deputies obtained in violation of Miranda v. Arizona,

  384 U.S. 436 (1966). We disagree.

¶ 62   Notably, we assess Alemayehu’s contention under the same

  standards of review used in evaluating his search and seizure

  contention: the admissibility of his statements presents a mixed

  question of law and fact, and we may consider undisputed evidence

  and undertake independent review of audio and video recordings.

  See Davis, 2019 CO 84, ¶ 18.

                               A.   Facts

¶ 63   From the testimony and the body camera footage introduced

  at the suppression hearing, we glean the following facts:

¶ 64   Upon approaching Alemayehu in the parking lot, Lieutenant

  Rogers directed him to “turn [his] car off.” Instead, Alemayehu got

  out of his car and left it running. Lieutenant Rogers directed him to

  stand at a nearby shopping cart return.

                                    30
¶ 65   Four other deputies arrived on the scene. At most, only three

  interacted with Alemayehu at any one time.8

¶ 66   A few times, Alemayehu started to walk away from the

  shopping cart return and was told by one or more of the deputies to

  “get back against the rail,” to “[s]tay leaning against the rail,” or to

  “[s]tay there.”

¶ 67   Deputy Creighton asked about the torn lottery ticket that

  Alemayehu had left on the windshield of the car he’d hit: “[S]o you

  really thought this was a note? . . . Explain to me how you can put

  this in someone’s car and not see that this is not a note.” When

  Alemayehu responded that he had left the lottery ticket by mistake,

  Deputy Creighton said, “That’s bullshit, dude, I’m gonna call it out,

  alright?” He added, sarcastically, “That’s a good story, okay,” in

  response to Alemayehu’s attempted explanation. While Deputy

  Creighton looked for vehicle paperwork in the driver’s sun visor

  area, as Alemayehu had suggested, Deputy Wolfe offered

  Alemayehu a “piece of advice”: that “this particular cop really

  8 One of them, Deputy Mark O’Harold, arrived later to take
  inventory of Alemayehu’s car and did not, so far as we can tell, have
  any interaction with Alemayehu.

                                     31
  doesn’t like being lied to.” Deputy Wolfe also said, “We know

  exactly what happened . . . . It’s all on tape so we know you’re

  lying.”

¶ 68   Deputy Creighton then questioned Alemayehu about the name

  “Danny” appearing on the note Alemayehu said he meant to leave

  on the windshield. When Alemayehu answered that “Danny” was

  his nickname, Deputy Creighton replied that “those level of lies

  you’re getting yourself into aren’t helping you, sir.” After Deputy

  Creighton unsuccessfully attempted to contact someone at the

  phone number written on the same note, he told Alemayehu that he

  was “tired of excuses,” had “listened to enough garbage already,”

  and knew “this was horse crap.”

¶ 69   Deputy Wolfe then interjected, “At this point, unless the truth

  comes out, I’m going to recommend that we start looking at

  attempting to influence a public official, which is a criminal act.

  Because that’s a bunch of nonsense.”

¶ 70   After the prescription pill bottles were found in the driver’s

  side pocket, Deputy Proulx questioned Alemayehu about the type of

  pills, whether they were his, how he had gotten them, and whether

  he owned the car in which the pills were found. Alemayehu

                                    32
  admitted that he was the owner of the car. He said he did not know

  what the pills were, as he did not “do drugs” or take “any”

  medication and the pills belonged to a friend with an injured back

  who had left the pills in his car, so he moved the pills out of sight

  because he used the car for work.

¶ 71   The deputies arrested Alemayehu approximately seventeen

  minutes after first contacting him. They did not advise him of any

  constitutional rights until after they arrested him.

¶ 72   The trial court denied Alemayehu’s motion to suppress his

  statements, finding that

           the statements were made “during the course of the

             investigation” into an “alleged hit-and-run accident”;

           although several officers were present, “most of the

             officers, with the exception of Deputy Creighton” were “at

             a further distance from the defendant, some standing

             toward the back of the vehicle in question”;

           “[t]he officers are also engaged in several other matters

             that are going on,” such as speaking with the victim of

             the alleged hit-and-run, and locating the pill bottles in

                                    33
            the car, rather than “being up close or being with the

            defendant specifically”; and

          “from the body cams themselves it doesn’t appear to be

            anything coercive that that the police officers have done

            other than conducting their investigation and questioning

            the defendant regarding the situation and, in particular,

            on the piece of paper that was left on the victim’s

            vehicle.”

                             B.   Analysis

¶ 73   Under Miranda, the prosecution may not use in its case-in-

  chief a statement obtained by law enforcement during custodial

  interrogation unless the suspect was warned about and validly

  waived certain Fifth Amendment rights. 384 U.S. at 444; see People

  v. Wood, 135 P.3d 744, 749 (Colo. 2006) (same).9 Two prerequisites

  must therefore exist before a Miranda warning is required: the

  9 “[T]he person must be warned that he has a right to remain silent,
  that any statement he does make may be used as evidence against
  him, and that he has a right to the presence of an attorney, either
  retained or appointed.” Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 444
  (1966).

                                   34
  defendant must be in custody and subjected to interrogation by law

  enforcement. People v. Padilla, 2021 CO 18, ¶ 15.

¶ 74   For good reason, the People do not dispute that Alemayehu

  was subjected to interrogation. See Rhode Island v. Innis, 446 U.S.

  291, 301 (1980) (Interrogation refers “not only to express

  questioning, but also to any words or actions on the part of the

  police (other than those normally attendant to arrest and custody)

  that the police should know are reasonably likely to elicit an

  incriminating response from the suspect.”) (footnotes omitted);

  accord People v. Bonilla-Barraza, 209 P.3d 1090, 1094 (Colo. 2009).

  Consequently, we limit our analysis to whether Alemayehu was in

  custody.

¶ 75   In the Miranda context, “‘custody’ is a term of art that specifies

  circumstances that are thought generally to present a serious

  danger of coercion.” Davis, 2019 CO 84, ¶ 17 (quoting Howes v.

  Fields, 565 U.S. 499, 508-09 (2012)). A person is not, for Miranda

  purposes, in custody simply because a reasonable person in his or

  her position would believe he or she was not free to leave the

  presence of the police. People v. Stephenson, 159 P.3d 617, 620

  (Colo. 2007). A person is in custody for Miranda purposes only

                                    35
  when a reasonable person in the suspect’s position “would believe

  himself to be deprived of his freedom of action to the degree

  associated with a formal arrest.” Davis, 2019 CO 84, ¶ 17

  (quoting People v. Hankins, 201 P.3d 1215, 1218 (Colo. 2009)).

¶ 76   In deciding whether a reasonable person in the suspect’s

  position would believe himself to be deprived of his freedom of

  action, a court considers the totality of the circumstances,

  including (1) the time, place, and purpose of the encounter; (2) the

  persons present during the interrogation; (3) the words spoken by

  the officer to the defendant; (4) the officer’s tone of voice and general

  demeanor; (5) the length and mood of the interrogation; (6) whether

  any limitation of movement or other form of restraint was placed on

  the defendant during the interrogation; (7) the officer’s response to

  any questions asked by the defendant; (8) whether directions were

  given to the defendant during the interrogation; and (9) the

  defendant’s verbal or nonverbal response to such directions. Id. at

  ¶ 19 (citing Mumford v. People, 2012 CO 2, ¶ 13).10 “None of these

  10 The supreme court has recognized that these factors are of
  limited use to a Miranda custody determination because they
  primarily address whether a person has been “stopped” rather than

                                     36
  factors alone is determinative.” People v. Pleshakov, 2013 CO 18,

  ¶ 20.

¶ 77      Alemayehu points to the following circumstances as indicative

  of custody:

             Four uniformed and armed deputies were present.

             At times, three of them were standing with Alemayehu.

             The deputies had restrained his freedom of movement by

               ordering him to remain at a certain place (the shopping

               cart return).

             The deputies were accusatory and confrontational with

               him, as well as dismissive of the credibility of his

               responses and explanations.

             One of the deputies threatened to have him charged with

               attempting to influence a public servant.

¶ 78      The presence of four to five deputies would not, in and of itself,

  lead a reasonable person to believe that he or she had been

  whether he has been subjected to a degree of restraint associated
  with an arrest. See People v. Figueroa-Ortega, 2012 CO 51, ¶ 8.

                                       37
subjected to restraint akin to a formal arrest.11 See People v.

Barraza, 2013 CO 20, ¶ 20 (holding the defendant was not in

custody, despite the presence of four officers). And in People v.

Figueroa-Ortega, 2012 CO 51, the supreme court rejected a trial

court’s determination that a detective had engaged in custodial

interrogation when he “confronted the defendant with the evidence

against him, indicated his confidence in the defendant’s guilt and

that he was merely seeking a confession, and told the defendant

that he would be charged for the burglary”:

          The extent to which a police officer’s tone of
          voice and demeanor can be characterized as
          confrontational and accusatory is more
          typically relevant to the determination whether
          an encounter is consensual or is more
          appropriately categorized as one in which a
          reasonable person would feel he was not free
          to leave. And while notifying a person who has
          already been seized that he will be charged
          with an arrestable offense before being
          released may well elevate the seizure beyond
          an investigatory stop, merely confronting a

11This is particularly true since the deputies, for the most part,
kept their distance and did not crowd Alemayehu. Most of his
interaction was with only two of the deputies and he never
interacted with more than three at one time. Cf. People v.
Pleshakov, 2013 CO 18, ¶ 30 (holding that the defendant was not in
custody because, “[a]lthough there were four officers present at the
scene,” the police officer and the defendant “conversed alone while
the remaining officers engaged in other tasks”).

                                  38
             suspect with the evidence against him and
             threatening, no matter how confidently, to
             charge him with a crime at some point in the
             future does not, by itself, constitute an
             infringement on his liberty, much less the kind
             of infringement associated with a formal
             arrest.

  Id. at ¶¶ 9-10.

¶ 79   More pertinent, we think, are that the following occurred prior

  to Alemayehu’s arrest.

           The deputies were investigating a report of a hit-and-run

             accident.

           The deputies spoke with Alemayehu for only about

             seventeen minutes, in a public place, in the middle of the

             day. See People v. Begay, 2014 CO 41, ¶ 27 (The

             defendant “was questioned in a public setting, near a

             road, where passersby could see him, . . . for less than

             [twenty] minutes . . . .”).

           Alemayehu “was neither patted down nor handcuffed,”

             id., or otherwise touched.

           “[H]e was not told that he was under arrest” or would not

             be released. See id.

                                      39
¶ 80   Considering the totality of the circumstances, we conclude

  that a reasonable person in Alemayehu’s position would not believe

  he had been deprived of freedom of action to the degree associated

  with a formal arrest. Because Alemayehu had not been subjected

  to “custodial” interrogation, then, the deputies were not required to

  advise him of his Miranda rights. Consequently, the trial court

  properly determined that Alemayehu’s statements were not

  inadmissible on Miranda grounds.

                        V.    Evidentiary Issues

¶ 81   Alemayehu contends that the trial court reversibly erred by

  admitting into evidence at trial redacted footage from four deputies’

  body cameras.12 We disagree.

  12 As at the suppression hearing, footage was presented from the
  body cameras of Lieutenant Rogers and Deputies Creighton and
  Proulx. Unlike at the suppression hearing, however, Deputy Wolfe,
  did not testify at trial nor was footage from his body camera
  admitted. The footage from the fourth body camera admitted at
  trial came from Deputy O’Harold, who testified to inventorying
  Alemayehu’s car after his arrest. Deputy O’Harold had not
  interacted with Alemayehu at all; consequently, no statements were
  recorded on Deputy O’Harold’s camera. Indeed, he was alone and
  did not speak during the recording.

                                   40
¶ 82   In footage from his body camera, Lieutenant Rogers is

  overheard saying to the victim of the accident that Alemayehu

  “doesn’t want to cooperate” and saying to the witness that

  Alemayehu was “a piece of work.”13

¶ 83   In footage from his body camera, Deputy Creighton is shown

  confronting Alemayehu about the lottery ticket and the “note” with

  a name and number on it. He tells Alemayehu that his responses

  were “excuses,” “B.S.,” “horse crap,” and that “these levels of lies

  that you’re getting yourself into aren’t helping you sir.” Then,

  Deputy Creighton asks Alemayehu, “[A]re we ready for the truth?”

¶ 84   Also in the footage from Deputy Creighton’s body camera,

  Deputy Wolfe is recorded saying to Alemayehu, “At this point,

  unless the truth comes out, I’m going to recommend that we start

  looking at attempting to influence a public official, which is a

  criminal act. Because that’s a bunch of nonsense.”

  13 Alemayehu’s opening brief asserts that Lieutenant Rogers also
  said Alemayehu “doesn’t want to accept responsibility.” However,
  we were unable to locate that phrase at or near the place in the
  footage cited by Alemayehu. See Pastrana v. Hudock, 140 P.3d 188,
  189 (Colo. App. 2006) (“[W]e will not search the record for evidence
  to support allegations of error.”).

                                    41
¶ 85   Alemayehu asserts that these parts of the footage contained (1)

  hearsay, the admission of which violated his constitutional right to

  confront adverse witnesses; and (2) impermissible comments about

  his veracity.

¶ 86   Because Alemayehu did not object to the admission of any of

  the body camera footage at trial, reversal is not warranted in the

  absence of plain error. People v. Ujaama, 2012 COA 36, ¶ 38.

¶ 87   Plain error is error that is both “obvious” and “substantial.”

  Hagos v. People, 2012 CO 63, ¶ 14. For plain error purposes, to be

  “obvious,” an error must ordinarily contravene (1) a clear statutory

  command; (2) a well-settled legal principle; or (3) Colorado case law.

  Scott v. People, 2017 CO 16, ¶ 16. “An error is substantial if it

  ‘undermined the fundamental fairness of the trial itself so as to cast

  serious doubt on the reliability of the judgment of conviction.’”

  People v. Koper, 2018 COA 137, ¶ 43 (citation omitted).

                     A.   Hearsay and Confrontation

¶ 88   “‘Hearsay’ is a statement other than one made by the

  declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence

  to prove the truth of the matter asserted,” CRE 801(c), and is

                                     42
  generally inadmissible unless it falls within an exception to the rule

  against hearsay, People v. Phillips, 2012 COA 176, ¶ 61.

            A statement made by a party is not hearsay if
            it is offered against that party. CRE
            801(d)(2)(A). And statements offered for other
            purposes — such as showing the statement’s
            effect on the listener or to give context to a
            defendant’s statements — are not offered for
            their truth and are not hearsay.

  People v. Abad, 2021 COA 6, ¶ 52; see also, e.g., People v. Faussett,

  2016 COA 94M, ¶ 47 n.8.

¶ 89   All but one of the deputies’ statements referenced above were

  admissible as nonhearsay to provide context for Alemayehu’s

  statements. And the admission of those statements did not

  implicate Alemayehu’s confrontation rights. See, e.g., Crawford v.

  Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 59 n.9 (2004) (“The [Confrontation]

  Clause . . . does not bar the use of testimonial statements for

  purposes other than establishing the truth of the matter asserted.”);

  People v. Godinez, 2018 COA 170M, ¶ 78 (“[T]he admission of

  nonhearsay does not implicate a defendant’s confrontation rights

  under either the United States or Colorado Constitutions.”).

¶ 90   These authorities and this line of reasoning would not, of

  course, apply to Lieutenant Rogers’s statement to the victim of the

                                    43
  accident that Alemayehu “doesn’t want to cooperate” and was “a

  piece of work.” Even if that statement qualified as hearsay,

  however, its admission would not violate Alemayehu’s confrontation

  rights, given that Lieutenant Rogers testified at trial and was

  subject to cross-examination. See People v. Acosta, 2014 COA 82,

  ¶ 82 (“Where a witness testifies at trial and is therefore subject to

  cross-examination, admission of the witness’s prior out-of-court

  statements does not violate a defendant’s Confrontation Clause

  rights.”). Nor would its admission constitute plain error: in light of

  the other evidence in the case,14 the error would not cast serious

  doubt on the reliability of Alemayehu’s conviction for leaving the

  scene of an accident.

                          B.   Veracity Evidence

¶ 91   “A witness may not opine with respect to whether another

  person was telling the truth on a specific occasion.” People v.

  Cernazanu, 2015 COA 122, ¶ 11.

  14That is, the physical lottery ticket and fake number, the
  testimony of witnesses to the accident, and Alemayehu’s own
  conduct when confronted by the deputies.

                                    44
¶ 92   But that rule does not appear to have been crossed in any

  “obvious” manner here.

¶ 93   In People v. Cardman, 2016 COA 135, cert. granted, judgment

  vacated, and case remanded on other grounds, No. 16SC789, 2017

  WL 1369883 (Colo. Apr. 10, 2017) (unpublished order), another

  division of this court rejected the identical argument made here. In

  that case, the “recording of the interview admitted at trial included

  the detective’s assertions that he believed the victim and did not

  believe defendant’s denials of the victim’s allegations . . . .” Id. at

  ¶ 85. The division analyzed the problem thusly:

             In Davis v. People, 2013 CO 57, ¶¶ 1, 17, 310
             P.3d 58, the Colorado Supreme Court held
             that a law enforcement officer may
             testify about his perception of a witness’s
             credibility during an investigative interview if
             the testimony is offered to provide context for
             the officer’s interrogation tactics and
             investigative decisions rather than as a
             comment on the witness’s credibility. It
             necessarily follows that similar statements by
             police officers made during the interrogation
             itself are admissible for the same purpose.

             Here, the statements made by the detective
             during the interview fall within the purview
             of [Davis v. People, 2013 CO 57]. The
             detective told defendant numerous times
             during the interview that he did not believe
             him after defendant had denied certain sexual

                                      45
              contact with the victim, and the detective also
              said that he believed at least some of the
              victim’s allegations.

  Id. at ¶¶ 88-89 (emphasis added).

¶ 94   We recognize that the division’s judgment was vacated by the

  supreme court. But it was vacated on an entirely different ground

  (i.e., the voluntariness of statements to the police) from the one at

  issue here. With respect to the matter at issue here, we find the

  division’s rationale persuasive and, adopting it as our own,

  conclude that Alemayehu is not entitled to reversal on this

  ground.15

  15 We note that Alemayehu also similarly challenges that part of
  Lieutenant Rogers’s trial testimony where, again without any
  objection from the defense, Lieutenant Rogers answered “no” when
  asked if Alemayehu had “plausible” explanations for (1) why he
  hadn’t pulled back into the same parking space he’d been in near
  the accident and (2) why he had left a piece of a lottery ticket on the
  car. Lieutenant Rogers’s testimony may well amount to a comment
  on Alemayehu’s truthfulness on another occasion. Cf. People v.
  Gaffney, 769 P.2d 1081, 1085-86 (Colo.1989) (holding inadmissible
  a doctor’s testimony that a child victim’s description of a sexual
  crime was “very believable”); People v. Cook, 197 P.3d 269, 276
  (Colo. App. 2008) (holding that the trial court erred when it allowed
  an investigating officer to expressly state, on multiple occasions,
  that victims were “credible” in their accusations). But if error, it
  was not “obvious” (and hence, “plain”) error, though, because of
  case law allowing police to testify about “why they took particular
  actions even if their testimony ‘touches upon prohibited subjects.’”

                                     46
¶ 95   Even though reversal is not warranted on this basis here, a

  cautionary warning is: a “course of investigation” type exception is

  not a blank check authorizing the admission generally of otherwise

  improper testimony by police officers. See People v. Vialpando,

  2020 COA 42, ¶¶ 62-66 (cert. granted on other grounds Oct. 12,

  2020); United States v. Cass, 127 F.3d 1218 (10th Cir. 1977); 2

  Kenneth S. Broun et al., McCormick on Evidence § 249, Westlaw

  (8th ed. database updated Jan. 2020).

                     VI.   Prosecutorial Misconduct

¶ 96   Alemayehu contends that reversal is required because of

  prosecutorial misconduct. We disagree.

¶ 97   During closing argument, the prosecutor, in discussing

  Alemayehu’s interaction with the deputies, said, “He’s walking

  away. He’s refusing to provide his information. . . . He’s escalating

  things to that point. And then he subsequently starts

  manufacturing these lies, members of the jury, and —”

  People v. Godinez, 2018 COA 170M, ¶ 78 (quoting People v. Penn,
  2016 CO 32, ¶ 32); see Davis v. People, 2013 CO 57, ¶¶ 1, 17. As
  explained above, Deputy Creighton testified that he confronts
  someone with their own inconsistent statements. It is just as
  possible that the other deputies, such as Lieutenant Rogers, used
  the same tactic, which would make the statements nonhearsay.

                                   47
¶ 98    At that point, defense counsel objected, and the trial court

  ordered the prosecutor to “[r]ephrase.” The prosecutor then said

  Alemayehu “starts manufacturing these untruths. And the officers

  are responding to that. They’re getting frustrated because he keeps

  telling them things that are just not the case.”

¶ 99    Defense counsel did not object further or ask for any further

  relief.

¶ 100   On appeal, Alemayehu argues that the prosecutor committed

  misconduct when he asserted that he “start[ed] manufacturing

  these lies.” He is correct. See Crider v. People, 186 P.3d 39, 41

  (Colo. 2008) (“[I]t is improper for a lawyer to use any form of the

  word ‘lie’ in characterizing for a jury a witness’s testimony or his

  truthfulness.”). But he is not entitled to relief.

¶ 101   By ordering the prosecutor to rephrase the comment, the trial

  court sustained (without explicitly using that word) Alemayehu’s

  objection to it. See State v. Hartley, 414 S.E.2d 182, 186 (S.C. Ct.

  App. 1992). Because Alemayehu requested no additional relief, we

  will not consider this alleged error further. See People v. Douglas,

  2012 COA 57, ¶ 65 (declining to review allegedly improper comment

                                     48
  by prosecutor where the defendant’s objection to the comment was

  sustained and he requested no further relief).

                             VII. Jury Inquiry

¶ 102   Finally, Alemayehu contends that the trial court erred by

  responding to a jury inquiry about the elemental instruction for

  possession of a controlled substance by simply redirecting the jury

  back to the original instructions. Because, however, this issue

  affects only the possession of controlled substances conviction,

  which we have reversed, and we have no basis for assuming that

  the issue will arise on retrial, we do not address it.

                             VIII. Disposition

¶ 103   That part of the judgment pertaining to Alemayehu’s

  conviction for possession of a controlled substance is reversed and

  the matter is remanded for a new trial on that count; that part of

  the judgment pertaining to Alemayehu’s conviction and sentence for

  failure to report an accident is affirmed.

        JUDGE BERGER and JUDGE TOW concur.

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APPENDIX A

  1