State v. Porter, Unpublished Decision (9-7-2006)
State v. Porter, Unpublished Decision (9-7-2006)
Opinion of the Court
{¶ 2} Defendant, the driver of the van, could not produce a driver's license, but he gave the police his name and social security number. With this information, they discovered that he was driving on a suspended license and arrested him. The license plate report then came back that the plates had been stolen in West Virginia. No drugs were found in the van or on defendant's person.
{¶ 3} Defendant, claiming the stop was illegal and violated his constitutional rights, filed a motion to suppress the information obtained from the stop. The trial court held a hearing, at which the only witness was the arresting officer. The trial court granted the motion to suppress, and the state appealed. Its only assignment of error follows:
I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING THE APPELLEE'S MOTION TO SUPPRESS.
{¶ 4} The state argues that the circumstances surrounding the stop of the van provided sufficient suspicion to justify the stop of defendant. It is well settled that "the state has the burden of going forward with evidence to show probable cause once the defendant has demonstrated a warrantless search or seizure and has raised lack of probable cause as a ground for attacking the legality of the search or seizure." Xenia v. Wallace (1988),
{¶ 5} The right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure is found in the Fourth Amendment of the Constitution. InTerry v. Ohio (1968),
{¶ 6} The surveillance in the case at bar resulted from a tip from an otherwise unknown arrestee. A tip, without more, rarely justifies a warrantless stop. State v. Anderson,
{¶ 7} The officer admitted at the hearing that he had no information about the person who had given the police the tip, and, to his knowledge, no other law enforcement officers had used this person as an informant before. Tr. 16-17. The officer received a dispatch that passed along the anonymous tip. This information fails both because the tip was not sufficiently reliable and because the state failed to demonstrate that the "facts precipitating the dispatch justified a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity." Id.
{¶ 8} Other factors, apart from the tip, however, could have justified the stop. In Freeman, supra, the Ohio Supreme Court discussed other factors that could support a finding of a reasonable suspicion to justify a stop. It relied on (1) a high crime area; (2) recent criminal activity in the area; (3) a late hour; (4) and the behavior of the suspect. Id. at 295.
{¶ 9} The Ohio Supreme Court reaffirmed the existence of the activity in a high crime area as a criteria supporting a warrantless search. State v. Bobo (1988),
{¶ 10} The second factor, recent criminal activity in the area, was shown only indirectly by the officer's testimony that this was a high drug sale area. The third factor, the late hour, was clearly established. The arrest occurred at 1:30 a.m.
{¶ 11} The fourth factor, however, the behavior of the suspect, is lacking. Although the officer testified that he stopped the van because "[b]ased on [his] experience, it drove through the closed parking lot — or through a parking lot of all the closed businesses at a slow rate of speed as if he were looking for somebody or up to something that was not legal," Tr. 11, he admitted that he did not observe anything illegal.
{¶ 12} In a similar case, this court held that absent criminal or at least suspicious behavior on the part of the suspect, the mere presence of the suspect in a high crime area or an area being given "special attention" pursuant to a tip "does nothing to create reasonable suspicion in a particular case. If this were so, any individual found in an area so designated would be a criminal suspect subject to a Terry stop. Even in high crime areas, a citizen is entitled to the presumption that he obeys the law. The investigatory stop in a high crime or `special attention' area still requires specific, articulable facts about the individual suspect or it is nothing more than random harassment." State v. Clark,
{¶ 13} The trial court did not err in granting defendant's motion to suppress the fruits of the illegal stop. Accordingly, this assignment of error is overruled.
Affirmed.
It is ordered that appellee recover from appellant costs herein taxed.
The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this court directing the common pleas court to carry this judgment into execution.
A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
Sweeney, P.J., and Kilbane, J., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State of Ohio v. Raeshawn Porter
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Unpublished