OPINION
Case Summary
After a police officer ordered Kevin Cole (“Cole”) back into the car from which he had just exited, Cole fled on foot and then forcibly resisted the officer when the officer later caught up with him. Following Cole’s arrest for resisting law enforcement, a pat down search revealed a handgun, and Cole was ultimately convicted of Count I: Carrying a Handgun Without a License as a Class C Felony, Count II:
Facts and Procedural History
On August 20, 2006, in the early evening, Indianapolis Police Department Officer Shane Decker (“Office Decker”) was patrolling the 1400 Block of North King Avenue in Indianapolis, which is in an area known as Haughville, when he noticed a parked, white vehicle with several men standing around it and two men sitting inside. As Officer Decker drove by, some of the men slowly walked away. This behavior caught Officer Decker’s attention. So, he parked his car on 12th Street, walked up King Avenue, and observed for fifteen to twenty minutes. During that time, Officer Decker noticed that one of the men who had walked away was outside the car again, leaning in and talking to the two men inside. Additionally, a few of the other men had returned and were standing on the sidewalk next to the car. Officer Decker watched a car pull up and stop alongside the white vehicle for a few moments. Shortly after another car did the same. While the cars were stopped, Officer Decker saw one of the men who was standing outside the white vehicle walk back and forth between it and each of the visiting cars. Moreover, Officer Decker observed a couple of people approach the white vehicle on foot, converse shortly with the men inside, and walk away.
Although Officer Decker did not see anything exchanged and merely saw the men in the white vehicle conversing with the various passersby, he called for backup, returned to his patrol car, and pulled up alongside the white vehicle. The men standing outside the vehicle dispersed as Officer Decker exited his car and asked the driver and Cole, who was seated in the passenger’s seat, for their identification. At that time, Cole exited the car and began walking away. Officer Decker ordered Cole back into the car. Cole immediately stopped, turned around, and placed both of his hands on the roof of the car. As Officer Decker began to walk around the back of the car, Cole walked toward the front. Then, when Officer Decker walked the other direction, Cole did as well. So, Officer Decker again ordered Cole back into the car. Cole ran.
Officer Decker chased Cole on foot, continuously ordering him to stop and lie on the ground. Officer Decker and Cole fell, Officer Decker grabbed Cole, and Cole broke free by pushing Officer Decker away and continued to run through backyards and alleys. In the meantime, Officer Decker’s backup, Officer Julian Wilkerson (“Officer Wilkerson”), arrived on the scene. As Cole ran into a front yard, Officer Wilkerson tasered him. Subsequently, Officer Decker handcuffed Cole, placed him under arrest for resisting law enforcement, and read him his
Miranda
rights. Although Officer Decker briefly patted Cole down, he did not perform a thorough pat down because Cole urinated on himself and Officer Decker did not have rubber gloves. However, once the wagon arrived to transport Cole, another officer performed a complete pat down and found
Thereafter, the State charged Cole with Count I: Carrying a Handgun Without a License as a Class C Felony, 1 Count II: Resisting Law Enforcement as a Class A Misdemeanor (by resisting), 2 and Count III: Resisting Law Enforcement as a Class A Misdemeanor (by fleeing). 3 Before trial, Cole filed a motion to suppress the handgun. The trial court denied the motion, holding that watching people going back and forth between cars provided Officer Decker with reasonable suspicion that criminal activity was afoot. See Appellant’s App. p. 31-33; Tr. p. 50-51. At his bench trial, Cole was found guilty of all three counts and sentenced to two years on Count I and one year each for Counts II and III, all sentences to be served concurrently on Community Corrections home detention. Cole now appeals.
Discussion and Decision
On appeal, Cole contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the handgun because Officer Decker did not have reasonable suspicion to order him back into the car and therefore the handgun later found on his person must be suppressed pursuant to the exclusionary rule under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
4
Although Cole originally challenged the admission of the handgun through a pre-trial motion to suppress, he appeals following a completed bench trial and thus challenges the admission of such evidence at trial. Accordingly, “the issue is more appropriately framed as whether the trial court abused its discretion by admitting the evidence at trial.”
Washington v. State,
In
Terry v. Ohio,
Here, in light of the fact that Officer Decker did not observe any items exchanged during the fifteen to twenty minute time period but rather only saw the
Although our appellate courts have applied this rule, we have not expounded upon its rationale. Other states have. For instance, the New Jersey Supreme Court recently explained:
[A]ny flight from police detention is fraught with the potential for violence because flight will incite a pursuit, which in turn will endanger the suspect, the police, and innocent bystanders. Cases abound in which a suspect’s flight from the police set in motion an ensuing chase that resulted in death or serious injury either to a police officer, a suspect, or a bystander. For practical and public-policy-based reasons, constitutional deci-sionmaking cannot be left to a suspect in the street, even one who has done no wrong; a suspect cannot be the judge of his own cause and take matters into his own hands and resist or take flight. This reasoned approach encourages persons to avail themselves of judicial remedies, and signals that if a person peaceably submits to an unconstitutional stop the result will be suppression of the evidence seized from him.
State v. Williams,
As for resisting law enforcement by forcible resistance, Indiana Code § 35-44-3 — 3(a)(1) provides that a person who “forcibly resists, obstructs, or interferes with a law enforcement officer or a person assisting the officer while the officer is lawfully engaged in the execution of the officer’s duties” commits resisting law enforcement. Unlike resisting law enforcement by fleeing, the rationale for this rule is well developed in Indiana law. Indiana used to follow the common law rule that permitted an individual to resist an unlawful arrest with reasonable force.
See Heichelbech v. State,
Applying these principles to the present case, we conclude that even though Officer Decker may not have had reasonable suspicion to stop Cole, he did have probable cause to believe that Cole violated the resisting law enforcement statute by fleeing after being ordered to stop and by forcibly resisting him. Because Officer Decker had probable cause to arrest Cole for these crimes, it follows that the handgun was seized incident to a lawful arrest. Nevertheless, Cole appears to argue that the taint from the earlier unconstitutional stop was not extinguished by his lawful arrest for resisting law enforcement. 5 This question requires an examination of the exclusionary rule.
The exclusionary rule “is a judicially created remedy designed to safeguard” the right of the people to be free from “unreasonable searches and seizures.”
United States v. Calandra,
Here, in analyzing the first factor, we acknowledge that the time elapsed be
Other courts in this country have held that eluding the police and resisting arrest in response to an unconstitutional stop or pat down constitute intervening acts and therefore the evidence seized incident to those intervening criminal acts will not be subject to suppression.
See Williams,
As the New Jersey Supreme Court recognized in Williams, this approach balances both the right of the people to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures and their right to be free from the dangers created by suspects who physically resist the police and provides sufficient disincentives to deter both police misconduct and criminal misconduct by suspects. Id. As a result, “it would be farfetched to believe that police officers will attempt suspicionless investigatory stops or pat downs — to which the exclusionary rule applies — in the hope that a suspect will commit an independent crime that will be the basis for a lawful search.” Id. at 350.
Cole’s flight from Officer Decker after being ordered to stop and forcible resistance once Officer Decker caught up with him were intervening acts — the crimes of resisting law enforcement — that completely purged the taint from the unconstitutional investigatory stop.
See Quinn,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Ind.Code §§ 35-47-2-1, -23(c)(2)(B). This charge was elevated to a Class C felony because Cole had been convicted of a felony within fifteen years of the date of this offense.
. Ind.Code § 35-44-3-3(a)(l).
. Ind.Code § 35-44-3-3(a)(3).
.Notably, Cole does not argue what convictions should be reversed if we determine that the handgun should be excluded. For purposes of this opinion, we assume that Cole is asking us to reverse all of his convictions, not just his conviction for carrying a handgun without a license.
. In his brief, Cole relies on this Court's recent opinion in
Greeno
v.
State,
. Although Cole addresses Article I, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution in his brief, it is only with respect to whether the stop of him was reasonable. See Appellant’s Br. p. 11. As discussed above, we reach the result in this case based on the assumption that the investigatory stop was unconstitutional.
