OR: Fleeing police, wrecking car, and bailing out and running away was abandonment

Defendant fled from the police and wrecked his car and nearly totaled it, leaving it where it wrecked and running away. He sought to distinguish a state case from 1980 that predated Oregon’s expansion under the state constitution, but the court declined. Yes, he may have intended to reclaim the car at some point, but this is a classic abandonment and there is no reason to depart from the 1980 case. State v. Montiel-Delvalle, 304 Or. App. 699 (June 17, 2020).

Defendant was in custody in a patrol car, and officers went into his house without a search warrant to retrieve a gun involved in the crime. Even if the warrantless entry was unreasonable and unlawful, the admission of the gun was harmless error here. “On this record, ‘[w]e have no doubt that the jury would have reached the same verdict had the evidence … not been admitted at trial.’ (People v. Moore (2011) 51 Cal.4th 1104, 1138.)” People v. Chen, 2020 Cal. App. LEXIS 553 (4th Dist. June 18, 2020).*

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