A judge in the District Court Department allowed the defendant’s motion to suppress evidence, specifically, two packets that contained “crack” cocaine, where the judge concluded that police had obtained that evidence as a result of an unlawful stop. A single justice of this court allowed the Commonwealth to pursue an interlocutory appeal to the Appeals
Background. On May 19, 2006, at 2 a.m., the defendant was riding a bicycle over a bridge from Holyoke into South Hadley. In full uniform and a marked cruiser, Sergeant David Strycharz followed the defendant onto Main Street. He stopped the cruiser, and motioning at the defendant to come to him, he asked, “Can I speak with you?” In her marked cruiser, Officer Trudy Ro-manovich pulled up behind Strycharz. Fully uniformed, Ro-manovich stepped out of her cruiser and approached the defendant. There is no evidence that the officers physically blocked the defendant from leaving. The defendant placed his bicycle on the sidewalk and walked to Strycharz. Romanovich observed that the defendant had dropped something near his bicycle. She approached and found two clear packets containing a white substance later determined to be crack cocaine. After finding the packets, the officers placed the defendant under arrest.
Charged with possession of a class B drug, the defendant moved to suppress the packets containing drugs as fruits of an unlawful seizure. In her order on the motion to suppress, the judge found that “[the defendant] filed an affidavit in support of this Motion stating that: T did not feel free to disobey the order and continue riding’ and also she found that “there was a show of authority by the . . . police officers when they followed [the defendant] in two cmisers and ordered him to stop and speak to them.” The judge wrote, in addition, that “the cyclist was halt[ed] in his route. He had to dismount to approach the officers. At this point, the stop began. There was no lawful reason for the stop . . . .” The judge suppressed the packets containing crack cocaine as fruits of an unlawful seizure.
Discussion. The defendant argues that the judge was correct when she found that the police officers “ordered” him to stop, a fact that, if true, would help to establish that the officers had seized him. See Commonwealth v. Barros,
“In reviewing a ruling on a motion to suppress, we accept the judge’s subsidiary findings of fact absent clear error ‘but conduct an independent review of [her] ultimate findings and conclusions of law.’ ” Commonwealth v. Scott,
In the present case, Sergeant Strycharz testified at the motion hearing that he motioned at the defendant to come to him and asked the defendant, “Can I speak with you?” The judge credited this testimony in her findings of fact. Although she concluded, in addition, that the officers “ordered” the defendant to stop, there was no testimony that the officers made any statements in addition to “Can I speak with you?” before the defendant approached Strycharz. Furthermore, Strycharz testified that he did not say anything other than this initial question as the defendant approached him, and the judge said that there was no dispute as to the facts in this case. Finally, neither the defendant nor the Commonwealth contends in their briefs that the police officers made any statements in addition to “Can I speak with you?” Instead, they both argue whether Strycharz’s question should be considered an order on account of the circumstances in which it was asked.
We must consider, then, whether this question was an order. The defendant argues that an order may take the form of a question. A question, however, is typically not an order. A question is an inquiry; an order is a command. A question requests an answer, while an order demands obedience. To recognize that questions and orders are different creatures is not, of course, to ignore the fact that circumstances of an encounter with police may be sufficiently intimidating that a reasonable person would feel compelled to respond to a police officer’s question as he believes the officer would wish him to. See Commonwealth v. Fraser,
A person has been seized by a police officer “if, in view of all of the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would have believed that he was not free to leave.” Commonwealth v. Borges,
In Commonwealth v. Barros,
Similarly, in Commonwealth v. DePeiza,
Likewise, in Commonwealth v. Rock,
Finally, in Commonwealth v. Gunther G.,
In numerous cases with facts similar to those presently before us, we consistently have held no seizure was effected by a request to speak with a citizen. We reach the same conclusion here. The officers had not seized the defendant at the time they obtained the drugs. It was therefore improper for the judge to suppress those drugs as the result of an unlawful seizure.
So ordered.
Notes
The police officer in Commonwealth v. Barros,
The defendant argues that a reasonable person would not have felt free to leave because police officers followed him in two marked cruisers. Police pursuit of a fleeing suspect may constitute a seizure where he plainly is the object of an official assertion of authority that does not intend to be denied. See Commonwealth v. Stoute,
The defendant argues that the fact that he stopped riding his bicycle supports the conclusion that a reasonable person would not have felt free to leave. See Commonwealth v. Barros, supra at 173-174. As common sense, however, and the Rock case indicate, the fact that a person chooses to stop and talk when requested to do so does not indicate that a reasonable person in that situation necessarily would have felt unable to leave. See Commonwealth v. Rock, supra at 610-612. See also Commonwealth v. DePeiza,
Because we hold that the suppression order was improper on these grounds, we need not consider whether the order also was improper on other grounds raised by the Commonwealth.
