People v. Smith
People v. Smith
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent and vote to affirm the order of the Appellate Division. To be sure, the investigatory stop of the defendant may not have been based upon sufficient suspicion to authorize a search of his person. But he was not searched nor does defendant seek to suppress any contraband discovered as a fruit of the arguably illegal stop. Instead, defendant moves to suppress a .32 caliber revolver which the
It is a well-recognized, fundamental, and traditional police practice to shine lights into dark places, including hallways, closed stores, areaways, under stairs and stoops, around trees and bushes, and, most relevant here, parked automobiles. Such reasonable conduct by police personnel on night patrol in a large metropolitan area is essential for the protection of
The majority’s reliance on People v Allende (39 NY2d 474) is misplaced. In Allende we held that officers had seized the occupants of a parked vehicle, whose motor was running, by approaching the car with drawn guns. The majority concedes, in its memorandum, that no guns were drawn by the officers in this case. The most critical fact in Allende—the drawn guns—is totally absent from this case. In the Miller case, the court pointedly stated the controlling, and vital, distinction. The situations in cases like Allende, it wrote, are "very far from the present situation where appellant was neither prevented from doing anything he wanted to do nor directed to do anything nor was his car stopped or blocked by the police until after the police officer had seen the gun. Thus [we] think there was no 'seizure.’ ” (52 AD2d, at p 428.) Here, no guns were drawn, nor was the car stopped, nor was the defendant prevented from driving it away. Nor was there a search. As in Miller, "the police officer did not reach into the car, did not open a door or window, did not lay his hand on the car or on the door until he saw the gun; he merely flashed a light through the window of the car and then saw the gun.” (52 AD2d, at p 428.)
To conclude, it is my view that the conduct of the police officers was proper and reasonable under the circumstances. Both controlling decisional law and common sense dictate affirmance of the Appellate Division. The contrary conclusion reached by the majority is unfortunate. I dissent.
Chief Judge Breitel and Judges Gabrielli, Jones, Wachtler, Fuchsberg and Cooke concur in memorandum; Judge
Opinion of the Court
Memorandum. Order of the Appellate Division reversed, the motion to suppress granted, and the indictment dismissed. Connection with a rented automobile alone did not give the police sufficient cause to stop defendant. The use of the flashlight in the circumstances of this case which resulted in the discovery of the firearm and the drugs was an unwarranted intrusion into the interior of the vehicle. There was no basis for suspicion other than defendant’s prior presence in a rented car and his walking about the block. At best this gave the police by way of subjective "hunch” "cause” to investigate. Had it not been for the "hunch” the police would not have directed their attention to the interior of the car. They were not making a routine check of this or other parked cars, attended or unattended. Certainly, there was no inevitable discovery following a proper arrest, as in People v Fitzpatrick (32 NY2d 499, 506-507, cert den 414 US 1033), the authority cited by the Appellate Division for its affirmance. More applicable and precisely in point is People v Allende (39 NY2d 474), involving a seizure of a weapon in a parked automobile, except for the fact that in the Allende case the police approached defendant with drawn guns.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The People of the State of New York v. Clarence Smith
- Cited By
- 19 cases
- Status
- Published