The defendant was convicted on November 12, 1991, of three counts of armed robbery and four counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. Prior to trial, the defendant filed a motion to suppress evidence of a photographic identification made by one of the victims, Jerry
We recite the relevant facts found by the judge who heard the motion to suppress. These findings are “binding in the absence of clear error . . . and [we] view with particular respect the conclusions of law which are based on them” (citation omitted). Commonwealth v. Correia,
On January 6, 1991, several armed men entered the Lotus Flower Restaurant in Framingham, after closing, and robbed the employees. One of the employees, Jerry Chi, saw the face of the first robber as he entered the restaurant. The entrance hallway was well lit and Chi was near the front door when the man entered. Chi was able to describe the man’s build, facial features, and clothing.
On January 31, a few weeks after the robbery, Chi was shown an array of about 100 photographs by Boston police.
The photograph from which Chi identified the defendant was taken by a Boston police detective in November or December of 1990, some months before the robbery, pursuant to a Boston police department policy requiring police in Chinatown to conduct “Field Interrogation Observations” of young men they suspect may be involved with Asian gangs. The motion judge found: “Under this Field Interrogation Observation (FIO) procedure, the police question suspicious looking Asian males asking them to identify themselves, to give their date of birth and a physical description (including height, weight and tatoos), and to take their photograph with a Polaroid camera.” The motion judge also found that during an FIO, the individuals approached by the police officer(s) are “free to go and to refuse having their picture taken.” As to this defendant, the judge found further: “The police did not . . . give the defendant any reason to believe that he was not free to go, and they asked his permission before taking the picture. Under the totality of the circumstances, a reasonable person would have believed that he was free to leave and to refuse to be photographed. Therefore, the defendant’s constitutional rights were not violated.”
The evidence before the judge warrants his findings. Boston police Detective Waiman Lee testified that while on foot patrol in Chinatown in November or December, 1990, he conducted an FIO of the defendant and three of his friends, all youths. Lee testified that he conducts FIOs when he suspects someone of being a member of an Asian gang. Lee, dressed in full uniform, approached the group as they were walking together in a parking lot and asked them several
The question of what constitutes a “seizure” triggering an individual’s constitutional rights has been the subject of much case law and commentary over the years. The United States Supreme Court recently had occasion to address the issue once again in California v. Hodari D.,
Since the Hodari D. decision, Massachusetts courts have not been faced with a case that has required us to interpret art. 14 of the Massachusetts Constitution in light of the Hodari D. holding.
Because both the Federal and the Massachusetts Constitutions require some objective indicia that a reasonable person would not have felt free to terminate the encounter with the law enforcement officer before there can be a seizure, we analyze the facts of the instant case under that standard. Cases applying a standard such as the one we apply here are necessarily fact-specific and thus the instant case can be properly decided only on a careful examination of the circumstances surrounding the police-citizen encounter. In the case at bar, Detective Lee approached the defendant and his friends in
The defendant also points to Commonwealth v. Phillips,
Last, the defendant relies on Delaware v. Prouse,
Because there was no seizure of the defendant’s person, the photograph need not be suppressed. Additionally, as the judge found, there was evidence that the officers asked for and received the defendant’s permission before taking the photograph and that this consent did not appear in any way
There was no error. The denial of the defendant’s motion to suppress is affirmed. The convictions are affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
Chi described the-man as five feet, five inches or five feet, six inches tall, with high cheekbones and no facial hair and said that the man did not look Vietnamese. Chi also said that the man was wearing a ski hat and a dark jacket.
Subsequent to the photographic identification, Chi identified the defendant at a lineup and also made an in-court identification of the defendant during trial. The defendant does not argue in his appeal that any of the identification procedures employed by the Boston police were unnecessarily suggestive or conducive to mistaken identification in violation of his right to due process of law. See Commonwealth v. Botelho,
There was no testimony regarding the exact words spoken by Lee which led to the group’s stopping and speaking with him.
There was no testimony regarding whether Lee asked the group to wait for him to conduct the warrant check.
The Court noted that a seizure is also made whenever officers use physical force to detain an individual. California v. Hodari D., supra at 624-625.
This court did decide a case with facts similar to those in Hodari D. in 1981, ten years before the Supreme Court’s decision. Commonwealth v. Thibeau,
Distinguishable on their facts are cases such as: Commonwealth v. Helme,
The defendant makes much of the fact that race is a determinative factor in who the officers conducting FIOs in Chinatown target and seeks to suppress the FIO photograph under the exclusionary rule on the grounds that the FIO policy is a “formula for absolute tyranny.” However, the issue of discrimination is not before us, and even if it were, the proper remedy for the defendant’s concerns is not the exclusionary rule. Terry v. Ohio,
We note another case in which police conducted an unconstitutional “sweep” of a high crime area in search of a suspect, and in the process stopped and frisked the defendant without reasonable suspicion. Commonwealth v. Cheek,
We stated in Cheek, citing Phillips-. “Where there is a report of a crime in a neighborhood which police consider to be a ‘high crime area,’ law enforcement officials may not conduct a broad sweep of that neighborhood stopping individuals who happen to live in the area and be about, hoping to apprehend a suspect. To permit police investigative stops under the sparse facts present in this case would be to encourage unduly intrusive police practices.” Id. at 496-497. We continue to adhere to this principle. Our holding in the instant case is based solely on the fact that, under the circumstances, the defendant was not seized.
Since the cases are often so fact specific, we suggest that the better practice would be for officers conducting FIOs to inform the individuals approached that the encounter is consensual and that they are free to leave at any time. We also suggest that the police department develop clear guidelines for the application of the FIÓ procedure so that officers are given guidance as to the permissible scope of such encounters. See United States v. High,
