69 Mass. App. Ct. 713 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2007
The Commonwealth appeals from an order of a
The defendants, Pena, Pedro A. Valdez, Jr., and Jean C. Roy, Jr., were each charged with one count of unlicensed possession of a firearm and one count of possessing a firearm and ammunition without a firearm identification card, in violation of G. L. c. 269, § 10. Pena and Valdez were also charged with one count of possessing a firearm with a defaced serial number, in violation of G. L. c. 269, § 11C. Roy was also charged with possession of a firearm with a defaced serial number while attempting to commit a felony, in violation of G. L. c. 269, § 11B. Pena was also charged with one count of possession of marijuana, a class D substance, and another count of possession of a class B substance, in violation of G. L. c. 94C, § 34.
We take the facts from the judge’s findings, supplemented by uncontradicted evidence in the record. See Commonwealth v. Colon, 449 Mass. 207, 214 (2007); Commonwealth v. Scott, 52 Mass. App. Ct. 486, 492 (2001). On September 29, 2005, at about 1:30 a.m., Boston police Officer Joseph Holmes stopped a black Volkswagen automobile on Knapp Alley, at the corner of Knapp Street in the Chinatown section of Boston. The Volkswagen was going the wrong way on a one-way street. Chinatown is a high-crime area, and Knapp Alley had been the scene of drug deals and shootings, including a shooting of a Boston police officer, prior to September 29, 2005.
Except for the windshield, the windows of the Volkswagen were tinted, limiting visibility into the vehicle. Valdez sat in the driver’s seat, Pena sat in the front passenger seat, and Roy sat in the rear passenger seat.
Valdez asked Officer Holmes for permission to get out of the Volkswagen in order to search his pockets for his driver’s license. Valdez and Holmes went to the area between the rear of the Volkswagen and the front of Holmes’s cruiser. Officer Lynwood Jenkins, Officer Jason Reid, and Sergeant Martin Kraft arrived. Holmes obtained Valdez’s identifying information and went to his cmiser to check the status of Valdez’s license. At that point, Holmes intended only to issue a motor vehicle citation.
Officer Jenkins stood at the front passenger side of the Volkswagen, keeping watch over Pena in the front passenger seat. Officer Reid searched the driver’s seat where Valdez had been seated, looking under the seat and opening and looking into the console between the front seats.
Pena and Roy began complaining to each other about the stop of the car. Pena continually moved his hands, at times placing them out of Officer Jenkins’s sight. Jenkins alerted Sergeant Kraft, who was standing next to the front passenger door, and asked that Pena be removed from the Volkswagen for the officers’ safety.
After Pena got out of the car, Officer Jenkins conducted a patfrisk of Pena’s outer clothing. During the course of this pat-frisk, Jenkins felt a hard object in one of Pena’s pockets. Thinking that the object might be a weapon, Jenkins removed it. The object was a cigarette lighter; a plastic bag of what appeared to be marijuana also came out of Pena’s pocket with the lighter. A total of three small plastic bags of marijuana, along with a pill wrapped in plastic, were recovered from Pena. The officers arrested Pena and took him to the area between the Volkswagen and the police car.
When Roy left the back seat of the Volkswagen, Reid noticed that the back seat cushion “wasn’t seated properly.” Reid had owned two similar Volkswagens and was familiar with the car. Reid searched where Roy had been seated and pulled away the back seat cushion, lifting the upholstery under the cushion. He saw a layer of felt with lumps covering the sheet metal. The lumps felt like solid, hard objects. Lifting the felt, Reid saw two firearms. He yelled out, “Gun!” and told the other officers that he had discovered guns in the car.
At that point, Roy and Valdez were placed under arrest. The guns were later determined to be a .25 caliber firearm loaded with five rounds of ammunition, and a nine millimeter firearm loaded with ten rounds of ammunition. Neither the status of Valdez’s driver’s license nor the ownership of the Volkswagen was determined until after these events.
In allowing the motion to suppress, the judge specifically ruled that “[wjhile Mr. Roy was seated on the rear seat during the stop, he could not have gained access underneath the seat he was sitting on. Also, he could not have placed anything underneath the rear seat he was sitting on while being seated on it.”
The defendants moved to suppress the evidence obtained during the stop, claiming violations of their rights under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the United States Constitution and under arts. 12 and 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. The Boston Municipal Court judge allowed the motion as to the firearms only. A single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court allowed the Commonwealth’s application for interlocutory review and reported the appeal to the Appeals Court.
Standard of review. Our standard of review with respect to
Probable cause. The Commonwealth argues that the discovery of the plastic bag of marijuana on Pena’s person provided probable cause for the officers to search under the seat cushion for additional drugs or drug paraphernalia. We disagree.
In Commonwealth v. Alvarado, 420 Mass. 542, 555 (1995), the court held that the mere discovery of cocaine on the defendant’s person, although he had been taken from the motor vehicle, did not give the police probable cause to believe that his car contained additional drugs, even where the officer stated that he had observed the defendant with his hand near a box in the car immediately prior to his arrest.
In Commonwealth v. Moon, supra at 760, the court determined that a warrantless search of a car based on a witness description of the suspect who matched the appearance of the car’s owner, where the witness had seen the suspect carrying a knife, was illegal. “The fact that the person with the knife may have arrived in the neighborhood in the car did not by itself provide probable cause for the police to search the car in the hope of finding some material which might tend to identify or incriminate him.” Ibid.
Protective search. The Commonwealth also argues that the search was a constitutional protective search for weapons. We agree with the Commonwealth.
“[I]n appropriate circumstances a Terry type search may extend into the interior of an automobile.” Commonwealth v. Almeida, 373 Mass. 266, 270 (1977). See generally Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 21-22 (1968). “Essentially, the question is whether a reasonably prudent man in the policeman’s position would be warranted in the belief that the safety of the police or that of other persons was in danger.” Commonwealth v. Silva, 366 Mass. 402, 406 (1974). In the Almeida case, “[a]t one point the defendant twisted to the right in the seat at a time when the policeman could not observe his hands. At the time that the search took place, the police had not yet learned whether the vehicle was stolen.” Commonwealth v. Almeida, supra at 272.
Here, the potential threat to the officers was not Pena, who
On the basis of the facts known to him, the arresting officer was justified in conducting a search of the automobile for the limited purpose of ascertaining that it contained no weapons that the defendants might use to escape or retaliate against the officer. Commonwealth v. Lucido, 18 Mass. App. Ct. 941, 942 (1984).
The order allowing the motion to suppress evidence of the firearms is reversed, and the case is remanded to the Boston Municipal Court.
So ordered.
Pena has not appealed the denial of his motion to suppress the fruits of this search.
Although the trial judge found that Roy could not have gained access to anything under the seat while he was sitting on that seat, there remained the possibility of Roy suddenly returning to the car after being removed from it, or of Roy rising from his seat for the purpose of gaining access to the firearms. The police had observed and cautioned Roy about his erratic physical movements and behavior.