The defendants, Richard Garcia and Filipe Pichardo, were indicted for the crimes of trafficking in cocaine and possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. Pichardo also was indicted for possession of marihuana. After a hearing, a Superior Court judge denied the defendants’ motions to suppress all evidence obtained as a result of a warrantless search of an automobile. After trial, a jury returned a guilty verdict against Garcia on the indictment charging him with trafficking in cocaine and a not guilty verdict on the indictment charging him with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. Pichardo was found guilty on all three indictments in which he had been charged. 2
On appeal, both defendants claim that the motion judge committed error in denying their suppression motions. Garcia also claims error in the denial of his motion for a required finding of not guilty. He further claims that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel as guaranteed by the United States Constitution and the Declaration of Rights of the Massachusetts Constitution.
After the hearing on the defendants’ motions, the motion judge filed a memorandum of decision containing his findings of fact. We summarize those facts. On October 16, 1989, at about 1:20 a.m., Trooper John Hackett of the Massachusetts State police was on duty in uniform and in a marked cruiser on Route 84 near Sturbridge. He observed a Pontiac Grand Prix automobile pass his cruiser. The trooper noted that the Pontiac’s rear license plate was not illuminated. He pulled his cruiser onto the highway and, with his blinker lights on, proceeded to follow the automobile. After driving a short distance, the automobile drove into a rest area and stopped; the cruiser followed, stopping about ten feet behind the automobile. The trooper got out of his cruiser and approached the automobile.
The trooper returned to his cruiser to check the registration. He learned that the vehicle was registered to a Dorchester resident; the registration was valid, and the automobile had not been reported stolen. The trooper then returned to the automobile. It was his intention to allow someone other than Brito to drive the automobile if a license could be produced. He also intended to issue a citation to Brito for a defective plate light and for operating a motor vehicle without a license.
As the three passengers were reaching into their pockets for their licenses, the trooper used his flashlight to illuminate the interior of the automobile. He saw a transparent glassine baggie measuring one inch by one and one-half inches. The trooper had been on the force for about three years and, in the prior ten days, had completed a controlled substance course. The trooper recognized the baggie as being a type' often used for distribution of controlled substances. 3 The baggie was on the floor of the back seat area between the left leg of the defendant, Garcia, and the driver’s side wall. As a result of seeing the baggie, the trooper ordered Brito and the three passengers, including Garcia and Pichardo, from the automobile. He ordered them to stand toward the front of the automobile and pat-frisked each of them.
The trooper next opened the door of the automobile and seized the baggie from inside the automobile. He then illuminated it with his flashlight, and it appeared to him, according to the motion judge, “to have some sort of powder residue therein,” which, based on his recent training, “made the
The trooper radioed for back-up assistance, and he was soon joined by another trooper and Officer Ford of the Sturbridge police department. Ford was accompanied by Max, a dog trained to sniff out and discover hidden narcotics. The dog sniffed out and the police removed from the springs underneath the front passenger seat, a sizeable amount of cocaine, primarily in brick form.
The motion judge ruled that the automobile in which the defendants were passengers was properly stopped for a defective license plate light. He further ruled that the “first baggie was in clear sight to [the trooper] as he sought licenses from the automobile’s passengers.” The judge concluded that “this gave [the trooper] probable cause to pursue a search of the Pontiac by himself and with the aid of the canine.” Thereupon, the judge denied the suppression motions.
The defendants claim that the motion judge committed error in ruling that the trooper’s observation of the baggie gave him probable cause to search the automobile. They argue that the warrantless search of the automobile and their subsequent arrest was in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and, therefore, the Commonwealth did not meet “its burden of establishing that the actions of the police met constitutional standards.”
Commonwealth
v.
Santaliz,
Our ruling that the initial observation of the baggie did not constitute a search does not end our analysis. After he had observed the object, the trooper opened the door and seized the bag. Although an
observation
of an item in plain view does not constitute a search, a
seizure
of an item in plain view, “intrudes upon the owner’s possessory interest in that item and thus implicates constitutional considerations.” Commonwealth v.
Figueroa,
Further, the trooper did not observe anything in the automobile or in the conduct of the occupants of the vehicle which, in conjunction with his observation of the baggie, would have supplied probable cause for the warrantless search. Contrast
Texas
v.
Brown, supra
(where the officer
We recognize that a police officer may rely on his training and experience to draw inferences and make deductions that might well elude an untrained person.
Texas
v.
Brown,
The defendants’ suppression motions should have been allowed. Therefore, all evidence of the search of the automobile should have been suppressed including the searches subsequent to the seizure of the baggie. The orders denying the motions to suppress are vacated. Because it does not appear on this record that the Commonwealth will be able to make its proof without the suppressed evidence, we reverse the judgments, set aside the verdicts, and order the entry of judgments of not guilty of trafficking in cocaine and possession of cocaine. With respect to the conviction of possession of marihuana, we set aside the verdict and order the entry of judgment of not guilty.
So ordered.
Notes
Pichardo’s conviction of possession of marihuana was placed on file.
The trooper testified that as a result of his training he thought “that it was possibly a drug packaging.” He was never asked and, therefore, did not testify that the size of the baggie played any part in his thinking.
The Commonwealth did not claim in regard to the searches of the jacket and the automobile that the trooper feared for his safety and was searching for weapons.
The trooper’s use of a flashlight to illuminate the interior of the vehicle does not constitute a search. Commonwealth v. Doulette, supra at 655.
In
Coolidge
v.
New Hampshire,
In Texas v. Brown, supra at 741, the plurality opinion stated that “the phrase ‘immediately apparent’ [in Coolidge] was very likely an unhappy choice of words, since it can be taken to imply that an unduly high degree of certainty as to the incriminatory character of evidence is necessary for an application of the plain view doctrine ... .” The opinion noted (at 742) that the words in Coolidge were intended to be merely a “statement of the rule . . . requiring probable cause for seizure in the ordinary case.” See 3 LaFave, Search and Seizure 129 n.17 (1987).
It is not disputed that it was after the trooper seized the baggie that he noticed the powder residue in it.
Indeed, the trooper testified that once he observed the apparently empty baggie, he became suspicious, based on his experience and training.
Of course, the subsequent search demonstrated that his suspicion was justified. However, “a search is not to be made legal by what it turns up,” United States v. DiRe, 332 U.S. 581, 595 (1948). See also Byars v. United States, 213 U.S. 28, 29 (1927), where the United States Supreme Court stated, “A search prosecuted in violation of the Constitution is not made lawful by what it brings to light; and the doctrine has never been recognized by this Court, nor can it be tolerated under our Constitutional system . . . .”
