Thе defendant, Mark Narcisse, was charged with carrying a firearm without a license, G. L. c. 269, § 10
(a),
and possession of ammunition without a firearms identification card, G. L. c. 269, § 10
(h),
after he was pat frisked by police officers during a consensual encounter referred to in police parlance as a “field interrogation observation.”
1
The defendant moved to suppress the firearm, the ammunition, and the statements he made to the police, claiming that the patfrisk constituted an unlawful stop and seizure by the policе under both the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and art. 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. The motion was denied after a hearing, and following a jury-waived trial, the defendant was convicted of both charges. The Appeals Court affirmed his convictions,
Commonwealth
v.
Narcisse,
1.
Background.
We summarize the motion judge’s findings of fact, with supplementation from uncontested testimony, noting that all his findings, save one,
2
are supported by the evidence
*3
he found credible. Consequently, we accept them. See
Commonwealth
v. Sparks,
a. The stop and frisk. On January 30, 2005, Officer Stephen Romano, Officer David Yee, and Sergeant Stephen McLaughlin were directed to patrol the Geneva Avenue area of the Dorches-ter section of Boston. The area, which Officer Romano had patrolled for nine years, was considered a “hot spot,” with nightly gunfire and drug activity occurring. Indeed, at around 7 p.m. that evening, there had been shots fired into an apartment on East Street, about one-half mile from Geneva Avenue. The officers were also aware that one of the “impact players” who lived in thе area had been killed in Randolph the previous night, and that the Boston police department was concerned about the possibility of retaliatory attacks in the Geneva Avenue area. However, the police had no information about the identity of the individuals involved in either the shooting on East Street or the murder in Randolph.
At 10 p.m., the officers drove down Charles Street in an unmarked cruiser. They observed two black men walking on Charles Street turn left onto Geneva Avenue. The officers pulled alongside and, not recognizing the men, decided to conduct a field interrogation observation in order to discover what the men were doing. While still in their cruiser, the officers asked the men who they were and whether they lived in the area. The men provided their names to the officers, and the defendant told the officers he was from Randolph. He also told the officers that he was coming from a store. Officer Romano knew that there were stores nearby, although not on Charles Street, but for some reason he found the defendant’s response implausible. 3
Officer Romano asked the men if they could step over to the sidewalk for further discussion, and the men complied. The officers got out of their vehicle and informed the men that there had been “activity in the area.” After some conversation with the two men (the content of which was not specified), Officer Romano informed them that the officers were going to pat frisk them. In doing so, the officers recovered a loaded .22 caliber firearm from the front poсket of the defendant’s jacket. Sergeant *4 McLaughlin ascertained that the defendant did not have a license authorizing him to carry the firearm, and arrested him. After the defendant received the Miranda warnings, he stated that he had found the weapon under a nearby bridge.
b. Motion to suppress. The defendant moved to suppress the firearm, ammunition, and his subsequent statements. After finding that the defendant was “seized” when the officers announced their intention to pat frisk him, and noting that the circumstances presented a “very close casе,” the motion judge set out the factors weighing for and against suppression. In the defendant’s favor, the judge acknowledged that (1) the defendant made no furtive or sudden movements during the encounter; (2) the police had no reason to suspect that the defendant was linked to the earlier shooting on East Street; (3) the police had no reason to believe that either the defendant or his companion was involved in criminal activity; and (4) the defendant did not flee the police but, rather, cooperated fully. Cutting against suppression, the judge found that the actions of the police officers were justified because (1) the encounter occurred in a high crime area where several firearms incidents recently had taken place; (2) the police officers had been told to patrol the area to prevent potential retaliation from the Randolph homicide the night before; (3) the defendant said he was from Randolph; (4) the police officers did not recognize the defendant, despite having patrolled the area for many years; (5) the defendant gave an implausible answer about having come from a store; and (6) there had been a shooting incident nearby several hours earlier. Based on these factors, the judge concluded that the police officers were justified in seizing the defendant. 4 He also determined that the police officers were justified in pat frisking the defendant because, based on the same factors, the police officers had a reasonable bаsis for believing that the defendant “pose[d] a danger” to them. Therefore, the judge denied the defendant’s motion to suppress.
c.
The Appeals Court’s decision.
The Appeals Court affirmed the denial of the defendant’s motion to suppress, but did so on slightly different grounds. Unlike the motion judge, the Appeals Court recognized that in the factual circumstances of this case,
*5
the seizure of the defendant and the patftisk could not be separated analytically.
Commonwealth
v.
Narcisse,
2.
Discussion.
Absent clear error, we accept and adopt the findings of the motion judge, but we “independently determine the correctness of the judge’s application of constitutional principles to the facts as found.”
Commonwealth
v.
DePeiza,
We begin by determining when the defendant was seized. See
DePeiza, supra
at 369. “Not every encounter between a law enforcement official and a member of the public constitutes an intrusion of constitutional dimensions that requires justification.”
Commonwealth
v.
Gomes,
With this in mind, and contrary to the defendant’s contention, the officers in this case did not exceed the bounds of a consensual field interrogation observation when they pulled alongside the defendant and got out of their vehicle. The evidence reveals that the officers engaged in a brief, albeit unspecified, conversation with the defendant and his companion after they got out of their cruiser, informing the men that there had been “activity” nearby and asking what the two men were doing in the area. This was a consensual encounter, not a seizure, because a reasonable person would have believed he was free to leave. Commonwealth v. Gomes, supra (defendant not seized when officers quickly approached him and engaged in short conversation); DePeiza, supra at 370 (samе). However, once the officers told the defendant that they intended to pat frisk him, they seized his person within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment and art. 14. DePeiza, supra at 371 (defendant seized when officers announced their intention to frisk him).
We turn now to whether the officers possessed the requisite constitutional justification to seize the defendant after initiating a consensual encounter, as well as the necessary justification to frisk him.
5
See
Terry
v.
Ohio,
In this case, the Appeals Court did not analyze the stop and frisk of the defendant to ensure that both the stop
and
the frisk were justified. Of particular concern is its reliance on our decision in
Fraser
to hold that a reasonable suspiciоn of criminal activity is not required before subjecting an individual to a protective frisk during a consensual encounter.
Commonwealth
v.
Narcisse,
In
Fraser,
we said that the circumstances of the case were “anomalous” because “the pat-down of the defendant was not preceded by a forcible stop, the prototypical situation addressed
*8
in
Terry.” Fraser, supra
at 544 n.4. However, as the present case suggests, “anomalous” was not a well-chosen adjective. As reflected in decisions of this court and the Appeals Court, as well as of courts in other jurisdictions, consensual encounters between police officers and citizens frequently escalate to the point of a search without being preceded by an analytically distinct stop. See, e.g.,
Commonwealth
v.
Fisher, supra; Commonwealth
v.
Foster,
In Fraser, supra at 542, a police officer responded to a radio call reporting that there was “a man with a gun inside a brown Toyota at 35 High Street.” When the police responded to the scene, which was in a high crime area, the brown Toyota vehicle was gone, but the defendant stood among a group of young men at that location. Id. As one of two officers got out of the unmarked police vehicle to investigate, he saw the defendant bend down behind a vehicle “as though to pick something up or put something down.” Id. The officer walked over to the defendant, idеntified himself as a police officer, and asked him to remove his hands from his pockets, which the defendant refused to do. Id. at 542-543 & n.2. The officer then pat frisked the defendant and recovered a loaded handgun, for which the defendant had no license to carry. Id. at 542-543.
Examining only whether the officer reasonably believed that the defendant was armed and posed a danger to the officer and others nearby, we concluded that the patfrisk, which was not preceded by a stop, did not violate that defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights. Id. at 544-546 & n.4. We determined that the officer reasonably believed that his safety and the safety of others were at risk based on four factors: “(1) the radio call describing a man with a gun; (2) the fact that the encounter occurred in a ‘high crime area’; (3) the defendant’s bending down *9 behind [a] truck ‘as though to pick something up or put something down’; and (4) the fact that at all critical times the defendant kept his hands in his pockets [despite being asked by the officer to remove them].” Id. at 545.
We did not address whether the officer could have reasonably believed that the defendant was engaged or about to engage in criminal activity, and disavow any suggestion in
Fraser
that we were establishing a new or lesser standard in our stop and frisk jurisprudence. We have since pointed out that “decisions in these cases are highly fact specific” and that “[t]oo broad an application of this exception [in Fraser] would undercut the important principle that intrusions on a citizen’s liberty must ordinarily be based on reasonable suspicion that criminal aсtivity is afoot.”
Commonwealth
v.
Knowles,
Today we mark the end of
Fraser’s
role as an exception, and we state expressly that police officers may not escalate a consensual encounter into a protective frisk absent a reasonable suspicion that an individual has committed, is committing, or is about to commit a criminal offense
and
is' armed and dangerous.
6
However, this is not to say that such suspicions must arise sequentially; it is clear that they may occur simultaneously. In such cases, a reasonable belief that an individual has a weapon and appears inclined to use it acts to satisfy both prongs of the
Terry
analysis. When an individual appears to be ready to commit violence, either against police officers or bystanders, it is reasonable to believe that he is “about to commit a crime,” thus
*10
satisfying
Terry’s
first prong.
Commonwealth
v.
Wilson,
The
Fraser
case fits within this analysis. Having responded to a scene where they reasonably believed a gun was likеly to be present, the police officers could fairly interpret the defendant’s furtive conduct of bending down as though picking up something, followed by his refusal to remove his hands from his pockets, as evidence that the defendant had armed himself and was about to undertake some action against them with a weapon. These circumstances justified the escalation of the encounter. We have implicitly applied this analysis in other cases as well. Compare
Commonwealth
v.
Knowles, supra
(defendant “did nothing to suggest that he might be attempting to secure or draw a weapon”), with
Commonwealth
v.
Pagan,
Courts that have considered whether a patfrisk search may be conducted in the absence of both
Terry
requirements largely have reached the same conclusion that we do in this case. In
United States
v.
Burton,
Similarly, in
United States
v.
Gray,
Returning to the case at hand, the defendant clearly did not manifest behavior that indicated that he was engaged in criminal activity or that he was armed and dangerous. As the motion judge found, neither the defendant nor his compаnion did anything that would arouse suspicion that criminal activity was “afoot,” including the possibility that they posed a present threat to the officers themselves. See
United States
v.
Burton, supra
at 529 (no evidence defendant “made any moves”). Indeed, the men did not even appear to be armed. Contrast
DePeiza, supra
at 371 (defendant walked in manner suggesting he was carrying gun and proceeded to shield his side from officers’ view);
Fraser, supra
at 542 (defendant bent down as if to pick something up and refused to remove hands from pockets). Moreover, the only connеction between the two men and the murder in Randolph was the defendant’s stated residence, which was, at best, a tenuous link. See
Commonwealth
v.
Cheek,
3. Conclusion. The order denying the defendant’s motion to suppress is vacated, and an order shall be entered allowing that motion. The evidence obtained as a result of the illegal seizure must be exсluded. The case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
“A ‘field interrogation observation’ has been described as an interaction in which a police officer identifies an individual and finds out that person’s business for being in a particular area.”
Commonwealth
v.
Lyles,
See note 3, infra.
Officer Romano’s explanation was not transcribed because it was inaudible. However, finding the testimony credible, the motion judge incorporated the conclusion that the defendant’s answer was “implausible” into his findings.
The judge did not articulate whаt test he applied to determine whether the seizure was permissible, other than that it was “reasonable.”
While a police officer, like any citizen, may lawfully encounter and ask another person a question, such encounters are governed by significant limitations. Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 32 (1968) (Harlan, J., concurring) (Jerry) (“in the absence of state authority, policemen have no more right to ‘pat down’ the outer clothing of passers-by, or of persons to whom they address casual questions, than does any other citizen”). As Justice Harlan wrote *7 in his concurrence in Terry, supra at 32-33, the right of а police officer to frisk someone in his presence depends on the right to be in his presence, and “[t]hat right must be more than the liberty (again, possessed by every citizen) to address questions to other persons, for ordinarily the person addressed has an equal right to ignore his interrogator and walk away; he certainly need not submit to a frisk for the questioner’s protection.” See 4 W.R. LaFave, Search and Seizure § 9.6(a), at 617 (4th ed. 2004) (“if an officer, lacking the quantum of suspicion required by Terry to make a forcible stoр, instead conducts a non-seizure field interrogation, he may not frisk the person interrogated upon suspicion he is armed”).
There are, of course, circumstances other than consensual encounters in which police officers may pat frisk a person in the absence of a reasonable suspicion that the person is (or has been) engaged in criminal activity. For example, the police may perform a protective patfrisk on a person who is in the company of a person being arrested and whom the officer reasonably believes may be armed and dangerous. See
Commonwealth
v.
Johnson,
Of course, the first prong of
Terry
does not require reasonable suspicion that the individual is engaged or is about to engage in a crime of violence. It is satisfied by a reasonable suspicion that an individual has committed, is committing, or is about to commit
any
criminal offense. However, where the first prong is satisfied and the crime is one of violence or of the type for which the offender would likely be armed (including the unlawful carrying of a firearm), little more is required after the stop to justify a protective frisk. See, e.g.,
Terry, supra
at 28 (officer justified in performing stop and frisk after observing individuals preparing for likely “stick-up”);
United States ex rel. Richardson
v.
Rundle,
