State v. Fitzgerald, Unpublished Decision (9-4-2002)
State v. Fitzgerald, Unpublished Decision (9-4-2002)
Opinion of the Court
The prior decision in this case, State v. Fitzgerald,
{¶ 3} After a hearing on the matter, the trial court denied Appellant's motion. Appellant thereafter pleaded no contest to the count of possession of cocaine, and the remaining three counts of the indictment were dismissed. The trial court found Appellant guilty of the offense of possession of cocaine, and sentenced him to a definite term of two years of incarceration and ordered the forfeiture of $534 in cash seized by the police. Appellant has timely appealed from the order denying his motion to suppress, asserting one assignment of error.
{¶ 4} "THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN OVERRULING APPELLANT'S MOTION TO SUPPRESS WHERE, THE ENCOUNTER WAS NOT `CONSENSUAL' AND WHERE NEITHER `REASONABLE, ARTICULABLE SUSPICION OF CRIMINAL ACTIVITY' NOR `PROBABLE CAUSE' EXISTED."
{¶ 5} In his sole assignment of error, Appellant has argued that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence seized at the time of his arrest. Appellant has contended that the police did not have sufficient justification to detain him based on the events preceding his arrest, and that the contraband subsequently found on his person was unconstitutionally obtained.
{¶ 6} An appellate court reviews de novo whether an officer has reasonable suspicion or probable cause to make a warrantless seizure.State v. Bing (1999),
{¶ 7} At the suppression hearing, Officer Schismenos of the Akron Police Department testified on behalf of the state and described the following sequence of events. At approximately 11:30 p.m. on July 17, 2001, Officer Schismenos and his partner, Officer Anthony, were on patrol in an unmarked police cruiser for the Akron Metropolitan Housing Authority near Rosemary Square in Akron. There was an increased police presence in that area because of a recent increase in crime, including shooting and drug-related activity.
{¶ 8} The officers observed a red and white Cadillac in which Appellant was the sole occupant near Patapsco Place, and decided to conduct a computer check of the vehicle's license plate number. The officers discovered that the vehicle was registered in the name of one Objarahnawen Collins. There were no L.E.A.D.S. entries signifying outstanding warrants for Mr. Collins. However, the officers learned that there was a "lid," or a "hit," for an outstanding warrant in connection with the vehicle for a Mr. Anthony, aka "Brett," Flowers. The lid was an indication that Mr. Flowers had previously been arrested as a passenger in the vehicle.
{¶ 9} During the time the officers were running the plates on the Cadillac, the vehicle left the area. The officers searched for several minutes, but were unable to locate the automobile. The officers then decided to get some coffee. As they drove on South Arlington Street, they spotted the Cadillac in the parking lot of a convenience station. The officers pulled into the station's parking lot and observed Appellant walking back to his vehicle from the convenience store. Upon seeing the uniformed officers exiting the police cruiser, Appellant quickly dropped his hands to his sides so that they were out of the officers' view. Officer Anthony "told [Appellant] to hold up for a second" as Appellant stood at the open door of the Cadillac. Officer Anthony then ordered Appellant to place his hands on top of the car. Appellant did not immediately comply, so Officer Anthony drew his gun and repeated the order.
{¶ 10} While Officer Anthony was addressing Appellant, Officer Schismenos approached from the side of the vehicle. Through the passenger side window, the officer saw Appellant quickly thrust something into his right front pocket before placing his hands on the car. As Officer Schismenos drew closer to Appellant's side, he observed a plastic bag of crack cocaine sticking out of Appellant's right front pocket. The officers then handcuffed and arrested Appellant, and found more crack cocaine, ecstasy pills, marijuana, and more than five hundred dollars in cash on his person.
{¶ 11} Primus Vaughn, assistant manager on duty at the convenience station where Appellant was apprehended, also testified at the suppression hearing. Mr. Vaughn testified that Appellant approached the take-out window of the station, purchased two gallons of juice, and walked back to his car. Mr. Vaughn testified that he next heard, through a microphone on the outside of the takeout window, one of the police officers say "Freeze" and "Put your hands on top of the car." According to Mr. Vaughn, Appellant was shaking when the officer pointed the gun at him, but complied with the officer's order.
{¶ 12} The
{¶ 13} "Time and again, this Court has observed that searches and seizures conducted outside the judicial process, without prior approval by judge or magistrate, are per se unreasonable under the
Fourth Amendment — subject only to a few specifically established and well delineated exceptions." (Quotations omitted.) Minnesota v. Dickerson (1993),508 U.S. 366 ,372 ,113 S.Ct. 2130 ,124 L.Ed.2d 334 .
{¶ 14} We begin by observing that this case involves two separate, warrantless seizures — of Appellant's person, and of the drugs found on him — which must be analyzed in light of
{¶ 15} It is undisputed that the incriminating character of the crack cocaine protruding from Appellant's pocket was immediately apparent to Officer Schismenos at the time he observed it. Once the officer identified the contraband, moreover, he had a lawful right of access to it, and could lawfully seize it and arrest Appellant.1 The only question before this Court with respect to the applicability of the plain view exception is whether Officers Schismenos and Anthony were lawfully in the position from which they viewed the bag of crack cocaine hanging out of Appellant's pocket.
{¶ 16} Making this determination requires an examination of the second seizure — that of Appellant's person — to determine whether the officers unlawfully detained Appellant in the moments preceding their observation of the cocaine in his pocket. If the officers seized Appellant in violation of his
{¶ 17} Appellant has contended that the officers' warrantless seizure of Appellant's person was not based upon: 1) his consent, 2) a reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity, or 3) probable cause to believe that Appellant had committed a crime.
{¶ 18} Consensual encounters between police and citizens do not implicate
{¶ 19} In Taylor, the court distinguished consensual encounters from seizures on the basis of whether "the police officer has by either physical force or show of authority restrained the person's liberty so that a reasonable person would not feel free to decline the officer's requests or otherwise terminate the encounter." Taylor, at 748; see, also, California v. Hodari (1991),
{¶ 20} While the state argued at the suppression hearing that the encounter between the officers and Appellant was consensual in nature, we note that the state abandoned this argument on appeal. The transcript of testimony from the hearing, moreover, indicates that just before they observed the crack cocaine in Appellant's pocket, the officers had drawn their guns and ordered Appellant to place his hands on top of the car. The record also shows that Appellant complied with the order and had placed his hands on top of the car when Officer Schismenos approached and observed the contraband in Appellant's pocket. The contact between Appellant and the officers, therefore, clearly exceeded the bounds of a consensual encounter and constituted a seizure at the time critical to our analysis under the plain view exception.
{¶ 21} In the instant case, it is undisputed that Officers Schismenos and Anthony did not have probable cause to arrest Appellant at any time prior to their observation of the cocaine in his pocket. Not all seizures of the person, however, must be justified by probable cause to arrest for a crime. Royer at 498. A police officer may conduct an investigative stop where he has a reasonable suspicion, based on specific and articulable facts, that an individual is or has been engaged in criminal activity. Terry v. Ohio (1968),
{¶ 22} The officers were not aware of any outstanding warrants, "lids," or other negative information about either Appellant or Mr. Collins, the owner of the car. Nor had the officers observed Appellant commit any traffic offenses or engage in other conduct that would justify a suspicion that Appellant was engaged in criminal activity.2 The sole basis for the officers' stop of Appellant was their suspicion that he might be Mr. Flowers, the non-owner of the vehicle for whom there was an outstanding warrant and who at one time had been arrested as a passenger in the Cadillac being driven by Appellant.
{¶ 23} At the suppression hearing, Officer Schismenos testified that the lid provided a description of Mr. Flowers, which he recalled as "a black male, gave a height, weight, description and a bunch of other indicators. I believe he had some tattooing as such noted also." Officer Schismenos testified that he believed the warrant for Mr. Flowers was for a traffic offense, but that "caution notes [were attached to] the lid or the warrant indicating drug trafficking priors." The purpose of a caution note, the officer testified, was to alert officers to the possibility that the individual associated with the note might be armed.
{¶ 24} Officer Schismenos testified that when he observed Appellant returning to the Cadillac from the Citgo station, he noted that Appellant's appearance was "similar to * * * information we had off the warrant [for Mr. Flowers], and [Appellant] was the sole occupant of the vehicle at that time and — when we had saw it at Patapsco Place." When questioned whether he recalled the description on the warrant, Officer Schismenos stated: "Pretty much it was the same age, black male, moderate height, weight on the warrant." The officer also testified that there was "one year difference" between the age of Appellant and the age of Mr. Flowers. The officer could not, however, recall the height and weight of Mr. Flowers. Officer Schismenos testified that it was not until after he arrested Appellant for possession of drugs that he learned that Appellant was not Mr. Flowers.
{¶ 25} Based on Officer Schismenos' testimony that the lid indicated an outstanding warrant for Mr. Flowers and the general similarities in appearance of Mr. Flowers and Appellant, we conclude that the officers had reasonable suspicion to stop Appellant to determine whether he was Mr. Flowers. The officers therefore lawfully obtained their vantage point from which they observed the cocaine in Appellant's pocket. The "plain view" exception consequently applies to the warrantless seizure of the drugs observed in Appellant's pocket, and the balance of the contraband was lawfully seized during the search incident to his arrest. The trial court did not err in overruling Appellant's motion to suppress the evidence against him.
BAIRD, P.J. CONCURS
Dissenting Opinion
{¶ 1} I respectfully dissent. This Court was presented with circumstances similar to those in the case at bar in State v. Davis
(2000),
{¶ 2} We held in Davis that the state failed to present articulable facts sufficient to justify a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity by the appellee. Citing Ybarra v. Illinois (1979),
{¶ 3} Given the lack of any basis for reasonable suspicion particularized with respect to appellant, the officers lacked reasonable suspicion to stop appellant in the instant case. The officers therefore obtained their vantage point from which they observed the cocaine in appellant's pocket as a result of their unlawful seizure of his person. The "plain view" exception consequently does not apply, and the warrantless seizure of the drugs observed in appellant's pocket and discovered in the subsequent search incident to his arrest violated his
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