44 Mass. App. Ct. 513 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1998
A jury in Superior Court convicted the defendant of trafficking on October 27, 1994, in more than twenty-eight grams of heroin, G. L. c. 94C, § 32E(c)(2). He appeals, arguing that a judge erred in denying his pretrial motion to suppress the evidence of 1,494 bags of heroin found during the search of an
At the pretrial motion to suppress, one witness, Detective Joseph Driscoll of the Boston police department, testified. The motion judge made written findings of fact which we recount, “sometimes supplemented by uncontested testimony at the suppression hearing, in some detail because nuance and atmospherics are important in deciding cases of this kind.” Commonwealth v. Rivera, 33 Mass. App. Ct. 311, 312 (1992).
In August, 1994, Detective Driscoll, an officer with twenty-three years experience, including fourteen years in the “drug control unit,” was assigned to the “major case unit” of the Boston police department. He was working with Detective McCarthy. These officers had received information from a confidential informant, “Cl,” that there was an organized group that was transporting heroin from the Revere area into Boston using certain automobiles with “secret compartments” to hide the drugs. Cl said he had personally observed how these “hide cars” operated, and he described the cars, including their makes (mainly Chryslers and Dodges), colors, and license plate numbers. Cl also informed Driscoll that one “Junior Ramon” was a main figure in the criminal group. Driscoll followed up and obtained a picture of Junior Ramon from another enforcement agency; he did not show the picture to Cl to confirm.
Toward the beginning of September, 1994, the detectives used Cl’s information to make a pair of arrests. They followed one of the described hide cars, a gold Chrysler, from Revere to a location in Boston where they observed drug deals made from the car. They arrested two men who occupied the car and, acting in accordance with Cl’s information, they entered the car and pressed buttons which caused the back seat to move so as to reveal a stash of heroin. Driscoll testified at the present suppression hearing that the information provided by Cl in the September case had been “perfect.”
To turn to the facts of the present case. On October 27, 1994, around 9:30 p.m., Detectives Driscoll and McCarthy, from their unmarked police car in Roxbury, spotted a car previously identified by Cl as a hide car: a four-door, gray Chrysler with a
Driscoll and McCarthy, approaching the Chrysler, asked the defendant (driver and sole occupant) to go to the rear of the Chrysler. They requested license and registration. Seeing a large bulge in one of the defendant’s pants pockets, Driscoll pat-frisked him for a weapon and found $2,900 in bills. The defendant presented a Massachusetts driver’s license in the name of Rosanio Mantinez — Driscoll recognized the defendant as Junior Ramon.
At this point, McCarthy entered the Chrysler and activated the rear defrost and hit a button underneath a tin plate on the floor of the car (here following Cl’s instructions). The rear seat came down, revealing thirty “bricks” containing a large number of bags of heroin. The defendant pushed Driscoll and ran. A responding officer gave chase, apprehended the defendant five minutes later, and returned him to the rear of the Chrysler.
Analysis. The defendant claims he was arrested illegally, that is, without probable cause, before the search, and the heroin as “fruit” of this arrest should be suppressed. The answer: all that preceded the search may properly be viewed (1) as a lawful threshold inquiry (our preferred interpretation) or alternatively (2) as providing probable cause for a lawful arrest and thus tantamount to such an arrest although not consummated by formal arrest; and (3) there was probable cause for the search (in some respects not congruent with the probable cause required for an arrest).
1. A threshold inquiry. Although the defendant did not clearly argue the point to the judge below, he now claims that at some (ill-defined) moment before the car search he was under arrest, wrongly so, he contends, because “probable cause,” that is, ground for belief that he had committed a crime, was lacking. See Commonwealth v. Santaliz, 413 Mass. 238, 241 (1992). If the defendant was arrested illegally at any point before the search of the Chrysler, then the evidence procured at the time,
We suggest, however, that the defendant was not under arrest before the search, and the actions of the police to that point are better characterized as amounting to a Terry-type threshold inquiry, justified because the police had a “reasonable suspicion” that the defendant had committed a crime. See Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968). The question, stop or arrest, is fact bound,
Here the defendant was not held at gunpoint nor was he handcuffed. The intrusive acts — asking the defendant (a suspected figure in a drug distribution ring) to leave his car, requesting his license and registration, and pat-frisking him upon noting the dubious condition of his clothing — all fit within the scope of a Terry-like investigative stop: recent decisions cited in the margin confirm this conclusion.
The detectives had reason for the stop in the bank parking lot.
2. A basis for lawful arrest. After the defendant was stopped on reasonable suspicion, the detectives found $2,900 in the defendant’s pants pocket, strong evidence that they had in fact observed a drug transaction in Roxbury. And Driscoll recognized the defendant as Junior Ramon and believed that he had produced a false license. “Since there is no doubt that the initial stop was justified, events subsequent to the lawful stop, coupled with the factors that supplied the police officers with ample reasonable suspicion to make the investigatory stop, provided the police officers with probable cause to arrest ... the defendant.” Commonwealth v. Va Meng Joe, 425 Mass. 99, 106 (1997). The facts in the present case appear as strong as those held to encompass probable cause for arrest in, e.g., Va Meng Joe and Commonwealth v. Kennedy, 426 Mass. at 704.
Probable cause for an arrest, even if not acted upon by a
3. The search. “A warrantless search of an automobile generally must be based on probable cause.” Commonwealth v. White, 422 Mass. 487, 496 (1996). In order to conduct the present search, the detectives “would have to have known of enough facts and circumstances ‘to warrant a person of reasonable caution in believing’ the defendant was transporting [heroin] in the [Chrysler].” Commonwealth v. Cast, 407 Mass. 891, 895 (1990), quoting from Commonwealth v. Gullick, 386 Mass. 278, 283 (1982). After the stop, Driscoll recognized the defendant as Junior Ramon and found the $2,900. When these independent observations are taken together with the information furnished by Cl, probable cause for the search may seem to have been achieved; but the defendant protests that Cl’s information had become “stale” at the time of the search, and the total basis predicated for the search did not support a finding of probable cause.
As the motion judge wrote, where an unnamed informant’s tip is relied on to buttress probable cause for a search, art. 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights demands that the Commonwealth “demonstrate some of the underlying circumstances from which (a) the informant gleaned his information (the ‘basis of knowledge’ test), and (b) the law enforcement officials could have concluded the informant was credible or reliable (the ‘veracity’ test).” Commonwealth v. Cast, 407 Mass. at 896. Independent police corroboration of the details of a tip can compensate for deficiencies in either test. Ibid.
The defendant concedes that Cl’s personal observations of the hide car and how they operated satisfied the “basis of knowledge” test. But regarding the “veracity” phase, the defendant points out that the arrest of the two men on Cl’s information occurred six weeks before the stop in the present case, and there was no evidence about the precise time when the detectives received the description of the gray Chrysler as a hide car or of Junior Ramon as a participant in the distribution
Further attacking the Commonwealth’s satisfaction of the “veracity” test, the defendant observes that on October 27, 1994, the two men previously arrested on Cl’s tip had not yet been convicted. To be sure, “[a]n arrest may turn out to be a dud,” Commonwealth v. Grady, 33 Mass. App. Ct. 917, 917 (1992). Where, however, Cl’s information in the weeks preceding October 27 had proved perfect and led not only to the arrests but also to the recovery of heroin in an unusual location, “[t]he accuracy of such information . . . warranted an inference that the informant was reliable.” Commonwealth v. Perez-Baez, 410 Mass. 43, 46 (1991). To which may be added the police corroboration mentioned above.
We conclude, as did the motion judge, that the detectives had probable cause to believe that the Chrysler would contain evidence of a crime.
The defendant goes on to contend that the police needed proof of “exigent circumstances” to sustain the warrantless search of the Chrysler, but the court has recently held to the contrary: “[Wjhen an automobile is stopped in a public place with probable cause, no more exigent circumstances are required by art. 14 beyond the inherent mobility of an automobile itself to justify a warrantless search of the vehicle.” •Commonwealth
Judgment affirmed.
As McCarthy entered the Chrysler to search it, the defendant had already been “seized”' because, “in view of all the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would have believed that he was not free to leave.” Commonwealth v. Torres, 424 Mass. 153, 158 (1997), quoting from Commonwealth v. Borges, 395 Mass. 788, 791 (1985), which quoted from United States v. Mendenhall, 446 U.S. 544, 554 (1980). But a seizure does not necessarily rise to the level of an “arrest” as that term has been defined in Fourth Amendment and art. 14 jurisprudence. See discussion in Borges, 395 Mass. at 791-794.
For decisions examining the boundaries between Terry-type stops and arrests, see Commonwealth v. Willis, 415 Mass. 814 (1993); Commonwealth v. Williams, 422 Mass. 111 (1996); Commonwealth v. Fitzgibbons, 23 Mass. App. Ct. 301 (1986); Commonwealth v. Crowley, 29 Mass. App. Ct. 1 (1990); Commonwealth v. Andrews, 34 Mass. App. Ct. 324 (1993); Commonwealth v.
“Reasonable suspicion” exists where the police action is “ ‘based on specific, articulable facts and reasonable inferences [drawn] therefrom’ rather than on a ‘hunch.’ ” Commonwealth v. Lyons, 409 Mass. 16, 19 (1990).
The defendant argues that this belief was not reasonable because the officers did not see anything exchange hands between the man who entered the Chrysler and the defendant. But the man’s short stay and departure with hand in pocket was suggestive of a transaction. Cf. Commonwealth v. Kennedy, 426 Mass. 703, 710-711 (1998). And the officers had additional information from a reliable informant reasonably supporting their suspicion. See Commonwealth v. Alvarado, 423 Mass. 266, 268-269 (1996).
As we noted at part 2 above, the array of factors also would have allowed the detectives to arrest the defendant on probable cause before the search of the Chrysler. But “[t]he establishment of probable cause to believe that ‘a person is guilty of a crime does not necessarily constitute probable cause to search the person’s [property].’ ” Commonwealth v. Olivares, 30 Mass. App. Ct. 596, 600 (1991) (citation omitted). See 2 LaFave, Search and Seizure § 3.1(b), at 7 (3d ed. 1996): “Each requires a showing of probabilities as to somewhat different facts and circumstances — a point which is seldom made explicit in the appellate cases.” At all events, here the criminal activity (drug trafficking) is tied so closely to the object of the search (the Chrysler) that the factors we have mentioned bear on probable cause for both arrest and search.
Deciding the motion herein before the Motta opinion, the judge found exigent circumstances justifying the warrantless search in the absence of a “plain and ample” opportunity to secure a warrant to conduct a search.