A judge of the District Court granted the defendant’s motion to suppress evidence that came into plain view when a police officer, believing that the defendant might, be under the influence of narcotics, ordеred him to step out of his parked vehicle. The Appeals Court reversed, ruling that the police officer’s order was reasonable in the circumstances. Commonwealth v. Murdough,
I
The defendant was parked alone in a rest area of an interstate highway on a bright, cold January morning. Two State troopers, who had seen the same vehicle earlier that morning, pulled into the rest area. The defendant’s was the only vehicle in the rest area. The officers noticed that the vehicle’s brake lights were on and that the defendant was asleep. The officers both approached the vehicle and one of them knocked on the window several times. It required two or three minutes of knocking before the defendant awoke, rolled down his window and asked what the officers wanted. The defendant was disheveled and was not wearing shoes. He was asked to show his license and registration. He produced a valid license, but said he did not know where the registration was. When asked who owned the vehicle, the defendant answered, “Scott.” By checking the registration plate, one of the officers confirmed that the registered owner’s first name was Scott, but the judge did not find when this was ascertained. While the officer was talking to him, the defendant became incoherent and fell asleep. The officer again awakened him and told him to get out of the vehiсle. The defendant was unsteady and appeared dazed. As the defendant got out of the vehicle, some marihuana and cocaine came into plain view. The defendant was arrested for pоssession of controlled substances, and the marihuana and cocaine were seized. The defendant moved to suppress the narcotics.
The motion judge found that:
“The Troopers testified that they stopped at the rest аrea and approached the [vehicle] the second time for a ‘well being’ check. They asked the Defendant to get out of the vehicle for possible medical problems and in the back of thеir minds was the thought that the Defendant might have been on a narcotics bender and thought the fresh air might do him good.
“I find that they in fact had a hunch that the Defendant had used narcotics and that they would find evidence when he exited the vehicle.”
The motion judge went on to conclude that our decision in
The Appeals Court reversed.
n
The Appeals Court’s analysis is correct.
The defendant complains that the Appeals Court substituted its own view of the facts for those of the motion judge, who heard the testimony and saw the witnesses. While the defendаnt
But even on the facts as found, thе motion to suppress should not have been granted. The judge’s analysis was mistaken. First, he assumed that the officers were required to have some reasonable basis for their initial approach and inquiry, but it is quite clear that officers may make inquiry of anyone they wish and knock on any door, so long as they do not implicitly or explicitly assert that the person inquired of is not free to ignore their inquiries. See Florida v. Bostick,
The judge noted, and the record reflects, that the officers suspected that the defendant was under the influence of narcotics. It is not a crime to be under the influenсe of narcotics, although certainly it is a crime to operate a motor vehicle while under such influence. And operation of a vehicle when in a narcotic stupor presents a danger tо the driver and to the public. If the community caretaking function, to which both the judge and the Appeals Court refer, means anything, surely it allows a police officer to determine whether a driver is in such a condition that if he resumes operation of the vehicle, in which he is seated at a highway rest stop, he will pose such an extreme danger to himself and others. The officers testified that they asked the defendant to stеp out of the vehicle to be able further to observe his condition and because they thought that the cold air would sober him up. The judge suppressed the evidence that came into plain view as the dеfendant stepped out of the vehicle because he concluded “they went beyond the caretaking function and were looking for evidence of a narcotics violation.” Nothing better illustrates thе good sense of the Whren rule. If the judge had believed the officers’ stated reasons, then their action could only be viewed as eminently reasonable. But the judge did not believe the officers’ stated reasons. Or, rаther, he thought that they had an ulterior motive as well, because in his
The order allowing the motion to suppress is reversed.
So ordered.
Notes
The defendant testified that before the officer asked him to step out of the vehiсle, he asked whether the defendant was “an IV drug user” and why the defendant was shivering. He did not recall being asked any other questions.
If the defendant had continued to ignore the officers’ inquiry or had refused to producе a license and registration and the officers had chosen to take this recalcitrance as a justification for more intrusive action, a different set of questions would arise. Such recalcitrancе alone may not, but together with other circumstances may, justify a brief investigatory detention. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Silva,
