This appeal involves an investigatory stop and frisk in the context of rapidly unfolding events, commencing with a report of shots fired, fleeing suspects, a fleeting view by an eyewitness yielding only a fragmentary description of the shooter, quickened police patrol of the subject area, followed, within moments, by a stop on the street of a suspect believed to be armed and dangerous and, then, a patfrisk which in fact
1. Background precedent to the stop? At approximately 3:24 a.m. on January 9, 1998, the Boston police radio turret broadcast a report of gun shots at the M Street Park in South Boston. The dispatch to cruisers patrolling the area advised of a just-received 911 call from an identified citizen-witness to the gun fire. The dispatcher reported to the cruisers on patrol that a witness, whose residence was directly across the street from the park, had heard, and called the police to report, “shots fired” in the park.
Two minutes after the initial broadcast, at approximately 3:26 a.m., the turret transmitted another broadcast, reporting that an officer had stopped and frisked a man found on Second Street
Officer Young, having heard all of these bulletins, directed his patrol over a grid pattern, cruising the street blocks covering the area of Second Street and its intersecting streets, K Street to I Street, as well as the parallel streets of East Broadway and Third Street. By calibrating the time since the shooting and the distance from the park, Young calculated this segment of the grid would encompass the range that a person could reach from the park. The streets were deserted; Young saw no person within the initial sweep of this several block grid. Then, at approximately 3:36 a.m., twelve minutes after the original bulletin, as Young turned back onto Second Street from I Street, he saw the defendant walking on the left side of Second Street. The defendant was wearing a dark navy blue nylon jacket and blue jeans. This location was approximately one half mile from the park — within the zone reachable by Young’s distance calculations.
Young radioed back to the turret, providing his location and a description of the defendant: “a white male, all dark clothing.” There was a cross-response from another officer: “Bobby, be careful — my guy’s [a reference to the stopped man, Akerley] saying two people ran past him down East 2nd St. That would be probably about where you are now.” The dispatcher requested additional units to assist Officer Young.
His cruiser headlights and overhead lights were off, and Young did not activate the siren or the cruiser’s public address system. When Young’s cruiser approached, the defendant turned
2. Constitutional analysis of the investigatory stop. By longstanding precedent, our courts “have consistently sustained the right of a police office[r] to make a threshold inquiry where suspicious conduct gives the officer reason to suspect that a person has committed, is committing, or is about to commit a crime. Further, we have upheld the frisk incident thereto where the police officer has reason to believe that the individual is armed and dangerous.” Commonwealth v. Silva,
Constitutional analysis of the stop involves independent judicial review of “the historical facts to determine on our own whether an objectively reasonable police officer would have
The determination of this issue may appropriately be analyzed against the axis of four pivotal cases —■ all of which involved stops in circumstances resemblant of this case. The pivotal cases at one end of the axis are Commonwealth v. Mercado,
From the construct of these cases and the methodology of analysis therein emerges a pattern of recurring markings deemed pertinent to resolution of the question of whether a particular investigatory stop meets constitutional measure. While not all-encompassing (as no compendium of such markings can be totally inclusive), significant analytic factors identified in the caselaw include, but are not limited to, (1) the particularity of the descriptive characteristics which distinguish the suspect from other individuals; (2) the population of individuals in the area at the relevant time for which the distinguishing characteristics must serve as a separator for purposes of identifying the
Certain of these constitutional markings take on a different hue where firearms are involved, and that hue modulates even more where the report is one of criminal activity limited to possession of a firearm, versus a report of a gun having been fired or likely to be fired — the latter criminal activity being deemed to pose an imminent threat to public safety and not merely a question of possession. It is the case that “the report of the carrying of a firearm is not, standing alone, a basis for having a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity .... Our cases have not yet declared reasonable suspicion warranted simply on a report of gun possession just because this country has problems
In this case, the final analysis yields a convergence of supporting factors which place this case on the axis of the Mercado and White line of cases upholding an investigatory stop and frisk. Applying the factors of analysis employed in those cases establishes that there were present here objective, specific and articulable facts reaching the level of reasonable suspicion that this defendant had been involved in the criminal activity of the shooting in the park, and that, accordingly, the investigatory stop and frisk were constitutionally justified.
The general descriptive characteristics of a man dressed all in black — even though close in color-coordination to the dark navy jacket and the blue jeans the defendant was actually wearing — would not, standing alone, provide distinguishing traces of sufficient particularity to allow for the identification of a suspect. Compare Commonwealth v. Cheek,
Lastly, we address the point of danger. Beyond question, the officers knew that the suspect being pursued was carrying a gun just fired in a public park. The danger was palpable and real, prompting a worried message from a compatriot, “Bobby, be careful,” a warning predicated on information indicating that the armed men were likely heading towards Young’s zone. Given that danger, the frisk immediately undertaken was not only “ ‘strictly tied to and justified by’ the circumstances which rendered its initiation permissible,” Commonwealth v. Silva,
The denial of the motion to suppress, which is the sole issue presented in this appeal from the defendant’s convictions, see note 1, supra, was correct.
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
The defendant was charged with possession of an unlicensed firearm and ammunition and discharge of a firearm within five hundred feet of a building. After denial of the motion to suppress, a jury-waived trial was held. The defendant was convicted of the two unlawful possession offenses and was found not guilty of discharging a firearm. The sole issue raised on appeal challenges the denial of the motion to suppress.
The facts are taken from the motion judge’s findings, the uncontroverted evidence at the suppression hearing, and the turret tape from the Boston police department, which was admitted as an exhibit.
In the 911 call, the witness provided his telephone number and address. A police detail was immediately directed to interview him.
The streets are marked in a grid pattern of parallel streets designated by numbers and intersecting streets designated by alphabetic letters.
Young did not observe the defendant making any furtive gestures as he approached him nor any motions toward his waistband or like activity.
Because the informant provided his name, address, and telephone number to the police in his 911 call, the defendant concedes the informant’s reliability. The defendant proceeds to base his appellate claim on an alleged failure of the informant’s basis of knowledge. However, because the informant was an eyewitness to the events he described, the basis of knowledge prong was satisfied. See Commonwealth v. Smigliano,
See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Willis,
See, e.g., Commonwealth v. White,
See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Rock,
Commonwealth v. Va Meng Joe,
See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Cheek,
“Particularly when a police officer receives information concerning an individual with a gun, the ‘test for determining reasonable suspicion should include consideration of the possibility of the possession of a gun, and the government’s need for prompt investigation.’ ” Commonwealth v. Stoute,
The factor that the defendant merely looked over his shoulder and made no furtive gesture does not dispel the weight of the other facts giving rise to reasonable suspicion.
