Carl T. Wilson v. State of Indiana
Carl T. Wilson v. State of Indiana
Opinion
[1] Carl T. Wilson brings an interlocutory appeal of the pretrial denial of his motion to suppress evidence. Wilson argues the evidence should have been suppressed because the search occurred after police officers arrested him without probable cause. We reverse.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] On September 6, 2016, a resident of a duplex made a 911 call complaining of a car parked in the yard on the unoccupied side of the duplex. 1 She indicated the car may be gray and she did not recognize it. Her son had approached the car, but the occupants did not respond when he knocked on the window.
*657 [3] Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department Officers Joshua Stayton and Jeremy Miller responded to the 911 call. Officer Stayton had patrolled the area for "roughly three years," ( Tr. at 5 ), and knew the area was known for prostitution and drugs. Officer Stayton described the area as "a high crime area." ( Id. ) Officer Stayton located a "brownish, grayish color" car in an apartment complex parking lot located on the same block as the 911 caller's residence. ( Id. at 16.) Shining a spotlight into the car, Officer Stayton saw two people inside the vehicle. Officer Miller arrived soon thereafter.
[4] As the officers approached the car, Officer Stayton recognized the passenger as someone with a history of "prostitution and drug use." ( Id. at 7.) A man, later identified as Wilson, exited the car but immediately bent back into it and reached toward the center console. Because of his knowledge of crime in the area and Wilson's movements inside the vehicle, Officer Stayton drew his weapon and ordered Wilson to show his hands. Wilson complied. When asked if he was hiding anything, Wilson replied, "[T]here is nothing in the vehicle, and [officers] could search the vehicle." ( Id. at 9.) The officers patted Wilson down and handcuffed him "for [officer] safety." ( Id. )
[5] After handcuffing Wilson, the officers asked Wilson "[a]t least twice" if they could search the vehicle and he said they could. ( Id. at 15.) The officers took Wilson "maybe twenty feet" away from the car after he was handcuffed. ( Id. at 34.) The officers did not give Wilson Pirtle 2 or Miranda 3 advisements. The officers also removed Wilson's passenger from the car and handcuffed her. Then they took turns searching the vehicle. Officer Stayton did not find anything in the car but found "a bag of marijuana ... located towards the rear driver side tire, approximately two feet away from the vehicle." ( Id. at 11.) Officer Miller searched the car "to make sure that the first officer don't-doesn't miss anything[.]" ( Id. at 27.) After popping open a loose part of the center console, Officer Miller found "a bag of something" which he believed to be drugs. ( Id. at 25.) Officer Stayton retrieved the bag and found it contained heroin and methamphetamine.
[6] The State charged Wilson with Level 2 felony dealing in a narcotic drug, 4 Level 3 felony possession of a narcotic drug, 5 Level 2 felony dealing in methamphetamine, 6 and Level 3 felony possession of methamphetamine. 7 On January 22, 2017, Wilson filed a motion to suppress the evidence of the drugs retrieved during the search. 8 Wilson alleged the officers' actions violated his state and federal constitutional rights to be free of illegal search and seizure. After a hearing and subsequent briefing, on March 28, 2017, the trial court *658 denied Wilson's motion without findings of fact or conclusions of law.
Discussion and Decision
[7] Our standard of review for the denial of a motion to suppress evidence is similar to that of other sufficiency issues.
Jackson v. State,
[8] Wilson asserts his Fourth Amendment right to be free of illegal search and seizure was violated when the officers "detained [him] without reasonable suspicion, and arrested him without probable cause when they handcuffed him at gunpoint." 9 (Appellant's Br. at 13.) He asserts the trial court abused its discretion when it denied his motion to suppress the evidence obtained in the search. The State counters Wilson was not under arrest as the officers were merely acting to protect themselves due to Wilson's behavior on exiting his vehicle.
[9] The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution protects citizens against unreasonable searches and seizures by prohibiting them without a warrant supported by probable cause. To deter State actors from violating that prohibition, evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment generally is not admissible in a prosecution of the citizen whose right was violated.
Clark v. State,
[10] An officer may stop and briefly detain an individual for investigatory purposes if, based upon specific and articulable facts, the officer has a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity, even if the officer lacks probable cause to make an arrest.
Armfield v. State
,
[11] An "arrest" is "the taking of a person into custody, that he may be held to answer for a crime."
[12] In
Payne v. State
,
[13] In
Reinhart
, we reviewed the totality of circumstances when the officer ordered Reinhart from his car at gunpoint.
Reinhart
,
[14] The situation here is more analogous to Reinhart . Officers Stayton and Miller were responding to a dispatch regarding a suspicious vehicle in the backyard of the unoccupied portion of the caller's duplex home. The vehicle they eventually approached was not parked in the duplex yard but rather, in the parking lot of a nearby apartment complex. As Officer Stayton approached, Wilson exited the vehicle "and immediately turn[ed] around and ben[t] forward, and ma[de] a lot of movement toward, at the center console area of the vehicle." ( Tr. at 22.) Officer Stayton drew his gun and ordered Wilson to show his hands. Wilson complied. The officers then handcuffed him. When asked if he had "anything inside of the vehicle of concern [:] guns, weapons, anything like that[,]" ( id. at 9), Wilson said there was nothing in his car and the officers could search it.
[15] Without minimizing the officers' testimony that they observed Wilson lean into the car and they were concerned about a possible firearm or narcotics, such behavior is not enough, by itself, to support reasonable suspicion, let alone probable cause.
See
Sanchez v. State
,
[16] Under the facts presented, Officer Stayton's approach with a gun drawn and the subsequent handcuffing of Wilson was more than required to either confirm or dispel the officers' suspicion Wilson had been parked at the duplex. The officers' actions exceeded the scope of an investigatory stop and became an arrest without probable cause. As the arrest was without probable cause, the admission of evidence obtained from the search was in error.
12
See
Sanchez
,
Conclusion
[17] We conclude Wilson was under arrest for the purposes of a Fourth Amendment search and seizure analysis because the officers drew their weapons and handcuffed Wilson, which restrained his freedom of movement. Therefore, because the officers lacked probable cause to arrest Wilson prior to their search of his vehicle and seizure of the drugs, the trial court abused its discretion when it denied Wilson's motion to suppress evidence.
[18] Reversed.
Vaidik, C.J., and Altice, J., concur.
The report was not anonymous as the caller provided her name and address.
Pirtle v. State
,
Miranda v. Arizona
,
Wilson was not charged with a crime based on the bag of marijuana allegedly found outside the car.
Wilson also claims the search violated Article 1, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution. However, as we hold his Fourth Amendment rights were violated, we need not address that argument.
See
Reinhart v. State
,
Loving v. State
,
Crabtree v. State
,
The State argues the search was, nevertheless, valid because Wilson consented to the search. However, as Wilson argues, his consent could not have been valid because he was under arrest and was not given the warning required by
Pirtle
.
See
Pirtle v. State
,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.