After a jury-waived trial in Superior Court, the defendant was convicted of unarmed robbery in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 19(A). Prior to trial, the defendant filed a motion to suppress in which he argued that he was unlawfully stopped
Facts. The motion judge’s findings may be summarized as follows. On December 1, 2003, at approximately 3:50 p.m., Detective Stephen Lyons of the Cambridge police department responded to a call regarding an armed robbery on Brookline Street in Cambridge. The victim described his assailants as two black males, one “heavier than the other,” wearing “a black Raiders jacket with a hat under a hat[,] and the other [wearing] white Converse sneakers.” The assailant in the Raiders jacket was reported as having a gun. The assailants were also said to be “fleeing” down Hamilton Street in the direction of Sidney Street.
Lyons, in plain clothes and driving an unmarked police cruiser, responded to the area of Hamilton and Sidney Streets, which is approximately three blocks from the scene of the robbery. As he drove around the area, Lyons observed two black males walking on Henry Street near the intersection with Sidney Street. The clothing worn by the pair “was bulky and different from that described except that one of the men was wearing Converse sneakers.”
Detective Anthony Grassi was also driving in the area in an unmarked cruiser and, after speaking to Lyons via the police radio, pulled over and stopped his cruiser. The suspects crossed the street, and the detectives got out of their cruisers and ap
Noting that the question was close, the motion judge reasoned as follows. Although “[t]he description of the perpetrators of the armed robbery was less than stellar in its details . . . , that description in combination with other factors was sufficient to justify the stop in this case.” The suspects were “within three blocks of the crime scene minutes after [the detectives] receiv[ed] the report of the armed robbery. They were the only persons seen who generally fit the description given via the radio dispatch.”
Discussion. For purposes of reviewing a ruling on a suppression motion, we accept a judge’s subsidiary findings of fact absent clear error. See Commonwealth v. Sanna,
While we accept the motion judge’s subsidiary findings of fact absent clear error, we review independently her ultimate findings and conclusions of law. Commonwealth v. Jimenez,
The motion judge was correct in her determination as to when a stop of the defendant in the constitutional sense, i.e., a seizure, occurred. When the police first approached the defendant they did so by way of a field encounter, which is not a constitutional stop. See Commonwealth v. Stoute,
We agree with the motion judge that the case is a close one, and is factually similar but distinguishable from the facts in Commonwealth v. Cheek,
Cheek filed a motion to suppress the evidence obtained as a result of the police searches. The motion judge relied on the following factors “to support the conclusion that the police acted reasonably in stopping [Cheek]”: (1) the radio broadcast; (2) Cheek’s jacket, which matched the description given in the broadcast; (3) that Cheek was “ ‘in proximity’ to where the stabbing occurred”; and (4) “that the area where the defendant was stopped was known to the officers as a ‘high crime area.’ ” Id. at 495. The Supreme Judicial Court reversed the decision of the motion judge, concluding that these factors could not have provided the police with reasonable suspicion that the defendant was the perpetrator of the reported stabbing. It wrote, “Significantly, the description of the suspect as a ‘black male with a black
In the case at bar, the judge found that the specific facts on which the detectives based the stop of the defendant were the broadcast received by the detectives, the proximity of the suspects to the scene of the crime,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
We have been supplied with the trial transcript. However, without a transcript of the motion hearing or a reconstruction of that record pursuant to Mass. R.A.P. 8(c), as amended,
The defendant was identified as the one not wearing the Converse sneakers.
In Cheek, supra at 493, the defendant was indicted not as the perpetrator of the stabbing, but for the unlawful carrying of a handgun, possession of ammunition, and possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.
Unlike the defendant in Cheek, the defendant here was a mere three blocks from the scene of the crime.
