Crosby v State

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Crosby v State
1927 OK CR 145
257 P. 1113
37 Okl.Cr. 312
Decided: 05/14/1927
Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals

Appeal from County Court, Payne County; L.H. Woodyard, Judge.

F.E. Crosby and others were convicted of gambling, and they appeal. Modified and affirmed.

Brown Moore, for plaintiffs in error.

Edwin Dabney, Atty. Gen., for the State.

EDWARDS, J. The plaintiffs in error were convicted in the county court of Payne county on a charge of gambling and were each sentenced to pay a fine of $25 and to serve ten days in the county jail.

The evidence is brief, and in substance is that the plaintiffs in error were shooting craps on the floor of a shining parlor, and that certain officers came and the dice were thrown under a seat and some money on the floor was covered by the foot of one of the parties, but was discovered and was taken in charge by the officers. The proof of the actual playing of the game is largely circumstantial, although a witness who was in business next door, which was in the room occupied by the shining parlor, but separated by a beaver board, gave direct testimony. The plaintiff in error Crosby was outside the building, and at the approach of the officers slapped the closed door of the building, apparently as a warning to those inside.

It is argued that the going to the place by the officers and entering the building was an illegal search. To this we cannot assent. The offense was committed in a public place, open to the public, and the mere going into the building was not such a search as required a search warrant.

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