Thе defendant was a passenger in a taxicab that was pulled over by a State trooper for a routine traffic violation. Because the defendant was not wearing a seat belt, the trooper asked for his license, which the defendant stated he did not have. Perceiving the defendant to be “nervous,” the trooper
1. Facts. The judge’s findings were based on the testimony of the sole witness, State Trooper Mark Cohen, which the judge explicitly credited. We summarize the findings and uncontradicted testimony. See Commonwealth v. Isaiah I.,
Noticing that the passengers were not wearing their seat belts, Cohen admonished them for failing to do so. In response, the passengers became agitated. According to Cohen, they had “tense, nervous looks on their face[s]” and “said that they were just [being driven] in a taxi.” Cohen thought their responses “an overreaction” to the situation, аnd at that point decided “to get their information” in order to write each a citation for not wearing a seat belt. Cohen testified that when he asked the passenger seated behind the driver for a driver’s license, the passenger responded that he “did not want to give [Cohen] a license.” Cohen told the passenger that “he was in violation, he wasn’t wearing a seat belt,” and that he, Cohen, “needed to see a license.” The passenger then informed Cohen that he did not have one. Cohen then requested, and the passenger provided, his name and
As Cohen was questioning the passengers, a uniformed Brock-ton police officer, who happened to be patrolling the same street, stopped to inquire if Cohen was “all set.” Cohen askеd him to “stick around for a couple of minutes.” The officer parked behind Cohen’s cruiser and joined the trooper next to the driver’s side of the taxicab.
At this point, according to Cohen, both passengers having stated that they did not have identification, he “just wanted to get some information from each party, separate them and talk with them and get some information.” Cohen told the passenger seated behind the driver to step out of the vehicle, and he then pat frisked him “for safety.” Finding no identification or anything else of consequence as a result of the patfrisk, he told the passenger to resume his seat in the taxicab.
Cohen and the officer then walked to the rear passenger side of the taxicab, where the defendant was seated, and told him to step out of the vehicle. On cross-examination, Cohen agreed that at this point he “had not seen either [passenger] make any sudden movements,” nor had he “seen them make any furtive movements as if they were trying to bend over and hide something.” Cohen testified, “At that point, I was going to pat frisk him for my safety and, same thing, I wanted to get some information from him just to write it down.” The trooper pat frisked the defendant and discovered a revolver in defendant’s pants pocket.
2. Discussion. We are concerned once more with deciding whether a particular constellation of facts was constitutionally sufficient to justify the exit order and patfrisk of the defendant.
We accept the motion judge’s subsidiary findings of fact,
That an automobile stop may pose a danger to the officer involved is a fact beyond contention. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Gonsalves,
The Commonwealth argues that the exit order was justified by the following facts: the defendant and the other passenger appeared nervous; both lacked documentary forms of identification; the police were outnumbered; and the stop took place in a high crime area.
Our appellate courts have considered a defendant’s nervousness along with certain other factors in determining the reasonableness of an exit order or a patfrisk. Suppression is appropriately denied where, in addition to the defendant’s nervous appearance, other factors exist, including in particular police observation of a furtive gesture. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Ciaramitaro,
Nervous behavior in combination with the observation of a suspected weapon also has been held to justify police concern for safety. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Sinforoso,
Reasonable suspicion that a defendant is armed has been justified on evidence that the defendant was nervous and provided evasive or inconsistent answers regarding identification. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Feyenord,
But nervous or anxious behaviоr in combination with factors that add nothing to the equation will not support a reasonable suspicion that an officer’s safety may be compromised. In Commonwealth v. King,
In Commonwealth v. Hooker,
b. Identification. As noted, we will assume, without deciding, that Trooper Cohen could reasonably request the passengers to provide their driver’s licenses in order to verify their identities so that he could issue citations. See notes 3 and 5, supra. The defendant’s inability to provide a license was unremarkable — he was, after all, traveling by taxicab and therefore was not required to carry one. When asked, he provided his name and address, and there is no evidence that the information was false. Compаre Commonwealth v. Feyenord,
Even if we assume that the exit order of the other passenger was justified on the basis that that passenger’s statements were evasive or inconsistent,
This was no “ ‘swiftly developing situation’ that prevented verification or disproof of the officer’s suspicions regarding the defendant’s identity . . . through routine computer or radio checks.” Commonwealth v. Santos,
c. Character of the area. “[T]hat these events occurred in proximity to a high crime area, by itself, [does not] operate to justify the exit order [to the defendant passenger from a taxicab].” Commonwealth v. Hooker,
The location of the encounter may be given inappropriate
d. Police outnumbered. The Commonwealth also argues that because the trooper was alone when he first stopped the taxicab, he was outnumbered. The Brockton police officer arrived after both passengers had told Trooper Cohen that they did not have licenses. At the time that Cohen gave the exit order, there were two law enforcement officials and two passengers seated in the back of a taxicab. The officers were not outnumbered.
Conclusion. The dangers that police officers face in automobile stops like the one that occurred here should not be taken lightly. Nonetheless, the exit order issued to the defendant in this case was based on a hunch and a desire to “get some information from each party, separate them and talk with them and get some information from them.” “Although in hindsight [Trooper
So ordered.
Notes
The driver explained that he thought the taxicab’s tending towards the left might be the result of an accident in which he had been involved earlier that day.
The defendant wаs charged with carrying a firearm without a license, G. L. c. 269, § 10(a); having a prior conviction of a violent crime or serious drug offense, G. L. c. 269, § 10G(a); carrying a firearm with ammunition, G. L. c. 269, § 10(re); and possessing a firearm without a firearm identification card, G. L. c. 269, § 10(h).
We will assume, without deciding, that the trooper could properly ask for the defendant’s license in connection with the issuance of a citation for a seat belt violation and, after learning he had none, for his name and other identifying information. Cf. Commonwealth v. Goewey, 452 Mass. 399, 405-406
The motion judge concluded that “the trooper had reason for his own safety and the safety of the public simply to ask the defendant to alight from the car and to provide some basic information so that a citation might issue. He could have returned to the cab and the matter might have closed. Hоwever, the response was unusual, inappropriate, the manner in which the agitation has been described for the Court suggests] that there was reasonable suspicion and that the pat-frisk and recovery of the weapon and any ammunition was appropriate.”
The motion judge alluded to the possibility that the passengers may not have been required to wear seat belts. Cf. United States v. Twilley,
“No person shall operate a private passengеr motor vehicle or ride in a private passenger motor vehicle . . . unless such person is wearing a safety belt which is properly adjusted and fastened; provided, however, that this provision shall not apply to: . . .
“(e) anyone involved in the operation of taxis, liveries, tractors, trucks with gross weight of eighteen thousand pounds or over, buses, and passengers of authorized emergency vehicles.”
Whether the citation properly issued was an issue not raised below, and wе do not reach it in this appeal.
The officer in that case acknowledged that “it was not uncommon for people to become nervous when questioned by a uniformed State trooper.” Commonwealth v. King, supra. As noted, supra, our decisional law reflects consistent and appropriate caution when too much reliance is placed on what a police officer perceives to be manifestations of nervousness or anxiety in the course of an encounter with а citizen.
The trooper testified that the passenger first told him he did not want to provide a license; then when the trooper said that it was needed to issue a citation, the passenger stated that he did not have a license or identification. Even assuming that the first exit order and the patfnsk of the other passenger were justified, a point we need not and do not resolve, the result of the frisk was consistent with what the other passenger had told the trooper, in particular that he did not have identification on his person. Thus, before the trooper ordered the defendant to step out of the vehicle, his initial concerns had been neither confirmed nor heightened. Indeed, some of the facts that may have initially supported a reasonable suspicion that the trooper’s safety was in jeopardy — the agitated response to his admonition that the two passengers should wear their seat belts and the other passenger’s inconsistency about whether he had identification — had been superseded by the time the defendant was ordered to step out of the taxicab.
Cases in which a motion to suppress was denied based on factors that include the factor of a high-crime area involve additional factors not present here. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Almeida,
We also reject the Commonwealth’s suggestion that the trooper was “outnumbered by three to one,” because there is nothing in the evidence to suggest that the trooper regarded the driver as a potential threat to safety, or that the driver had any relationship to the passengers such that he could be expected to join them in any violent interaction with police.
