Lead Opinion
FOR THE COURT:
¶ 1. David Lee May was convicted of possession of one-tenth but less than two grams of cocaine and sentenced as a habitual offender to life without parole. On appeal, May argues he was subject to an illegal search and seizure under the Fourth Amendment. We agree. The State failed to prove that May consented to the search that resulted in the discovery of the cocaine or that the police had probable cause to conduct the search. Therefore, we find that May’s conviction and sentence must be reversed and rendered.
FACTS
¶2. Around midnight on November 3, 2010, Biloxi Police Department Officer Doug DeGeorge saw a vehicle veer over the fog line and into the median on Interstate 10. May was a passenger in the vehicle. Officer DeGeorge conducted a traffic stop for careless driving. The driver could not produce a driver’s license, so Officer DeGeorge asked him to exit the vehicle. In frisking the driver for weapons, he felt “an unusually large bulge” in the driver’s pants. The driver admitted it was drugs. The driver was placed under arrest, and Officer DeGeorge called for backup.
¶ 3. Officer DeGeorge asked May if he had a driver’s license. May had a Mississippi identification card, but his license was suspended. Because the driver had been arrested and May’s license was suspended, Officer DeGeorge began the process to have the vehicle towed. Officer DeGeorge asked May to exit the vehicle so it could be inventoried. May was directed to sit on the ground next to the front driver’s side tire of Officer DeGeorge’s patrol car.
¶ 4. As May sat on the ground, Officer DeGeorge noticed that he was acting “extremely nervous” and was “[ejxtremely fidgety.” Officer DeGeorge observed that May held onto his right shoe and looked down at it if anyone talked to him or he thought anyone was looking at him. Officer DeGeorge asked May if he had anything illegal in his possession. May said no. According to Officer DeGeorge, he then asked May if he would mind removing his shoes. Officer DeGeorge testified that May said he did not mind and took off his shoes. A Zippo lighter fell out of one of his shoes. Officer DeGeorge picked up the lighter to examine it. He testified: “[W]ith a Zippo, you can actually pull the center out to refill it. And so I did so. And a plastic bag containing marijuana, a small amount of marijuana[,] and a small amount of crack cocaine fell out of the center of that.” May was arrested. At the police station, he gave a voluntary statement, admitting that the cocaine and marijuana were his.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 6. We apply a mixed standard of review to Fourth Amendment issues. Cook v. State,
DISCUSSION
¶ 7. May raises one issue on appeal: whether the search of the lighter that fell from his shoe violated the Fourth Amendment. “The Fourth Amendment of the U[nited] S[tates] Constitution and Article 3, Section 23 of the Mississippi Constitution guarantee a person’s right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.” Cooper v. State,
¶8, One exception to the warrant requirement is consent. Galloway,
1. Consent
¶ 9. To provide an exception to the warrant requirement, a person’s consent to search must be knowing and voluntary. Moore v. State,
whether the circumstances were coercive, occurred while in the custody of law enforcement or occurred in the course of a station house investigation. The court must also look to the individual’s maturity^ impressionability, experience and education. Further, the court should consider whether the person was excited, under the influence of drugs or alcohol, or mentally incompetent. If the consent occurred while the defendant was being generally cooperative,' the consent is more likely to be voluntary; however, if the defendant agreed and then changed his mind, the consent should be suspect.
Id. (citing Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
¶ 10, May argues his consent was involuntary under the circumstances—he was afraid because he had just seen his companion arrested, and he was sitting on the side of the interstate with no way to leave. For these same reasons, May argues that he was subjected to a custodial interrogation, as he was in a custodial situation when Officer DeGeorge asked him to remove his shoe, and he was not read his rights under Miranda v. Arizona,
¶ 11. As May points out- on appeal, practically speaking, it may have been difficult for him to leave the scene, as it was the middle of the night and the traffic stop occurred on the interstate. But there was no testimony to this effect. Nor was there any testimony that Officer DeGeorge used coercive tactics to detain May or make May remove his shoe. May bore the burden to prove his consent was involuntary. He has provided no such proof. Rather, the evidence showed May was being generally cooperative and was allowed to sit with minimal supervision to use his phone. Based on the facts presented, we find May voluntarily consented to the removal of his shoe.
¶ 12. We must next examine whether May’s voluntary consent to remove his shoe extended to the search of the lightеr that fell from his shoe. The State argues, and the dissent agrees, that May’s consent and voluntary removal of his shoe imputed consent to search all
¶ 13. In Gales,
¶ 14. This case is distinguishable from Gales. When Gales voluntarily removed the cash from his pocket, it was immediately viewable as inсriminating because the officer was looking for an 'armed-robbery suspect matching Gales’s description who had stolen cash. And Gales voluntarily showed the officer the cash, removing any reasonable expectation of privacy. Here, however, when May voluntarily removed his shoe, only the lighter was revealed. There was no testimony that the lighter was inherently incriminating or illegal, that the lighter was a weapon or could contain a weapon, or that Officer De-George was concerned for his safety because of the lighter. Thus, unless the scope of May’s consent to remove his shoes extended to a search of the .interior of the lighter, the search of the lighter was illegal.
¶ 15. The scope of consent under the Fourth Amendmеnt is examined for “objective reasonableness.” O’Donnell v. State,
2. Probable Cause
¶ 16. May asserts that Officer DeGeorge’s search of the lighter was not reasonably related to the scope of the initial stop nor was probable cause to search the lighter developed during the stop. See Terry,
¶ 17. We agree that the scope of the search was not reasonably related to the circumstances warranting the interference—the traffic stop. At the time May was asked to remove his shoe, the traffic stop had been completed, and the driver was under arrest. Officers were making arrangements for the vehicle to be inventoried and towed. Therefore, our analysis is limited to whether Officer DeGeorge had probable cause to determine that May was involved in illegal activity.
¶ 18. Probable cause for a war-rantless search “exists where the facts and circumstances within the arresting officer’s knowledge and of which [he] had reasonably trustworthy information are sufficient in themselves to warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that an offense has been or is being committed.” Walker,
¶ 19. As the supreme court has explained:
[Probable cause] is not what some officer thought[;] it is not some conduct that was simply unusual, not some conduct which simply roused the suspicion that illegal activity could be afoot when there was at the same time just as likely a possibility that nothing at all illegal was transpiring. Rather, it must be information reasonably leading an officer to believe that then and there contraband or evidence material to a criminal investigation would be found.
Rooks v. State,
¶20. Officer DeGeorge testified at the suppression hearing as follows regarding his observations of May’s behavior:
Q. And what, if anything, did you observe about Mr. May as he was sitting there in front of your vehicle?
A. .Mr. May was extremely nervous. Extremely fidgety. He continued to keep holding on to his right shoe, kept looking ;down at it anytime anybody was talking to him or if he thought somebody was looking at him. I made note of that.
*1082 Q. And what did his demeanor tell you from your experience as a police officer?
A. Usually when people start looking at things or putting their hand in their pockets or a certain pocket, they are trying to conceal something or hide something.
Q. And what did you do then?
A. I asked Mr. May if he had anything illegal on him. He told me no. I asked him if he would mind taking his shoes off. He said, no. He took his shoes off and a Zippo lighter fell out.
¶ 21. At trial, Officer DeGeorge testified as follows:
Q. What was [May]’s demeanor as he was removed from the vehicle and sitting on the ground in front of your patrol vehicle?
A.... I noticed that he continued to stare at his right shoe. He started reaching and grabbing for it as if he wаs trying to hide something. Anytime somebody would look at it, he would hold it. If somebody wasn’t looking at him, he would hold it and kind of look at it. It kind of brought my attention, obviously, to his right shoe.
Q. And based on your training and experience, what did ... his actions suggest to you?
A. Normally if people are—if they will stick their hand in their pocket, say, their right pocket, but their other hand is not in a pocket, they are usually trying to conceal something in the pocket. Especially if they look down at them hand. Most of the time, if something is illegal, such as narcotics or weapons, it’s almost as if they’re touching it that it doesn’t exist and you can’t see it.
¶ 22. We cannot find probable cause existed for a search based on Officer De-George’s testimony. Officer DeGeorge merely testified that he became suspicious that May could have something illegal in his shoe because May acted nervous and looked at and held onto his right shoe as he sat on the ground. But to establish probable cause, an officer must have “information reasonably leading [the] officer to believe that then and there contraband or evidence material to a criminal investigation would be found.” Rooks,
¶ 23. We find the facts here analogous to the following eases, in which no probable cause was found under the plain-view or plain-feel doctrine for сontainers that typically hold innocuous materials. In Anderson,
¶ 24. In Anderson v. State,
¶ 25. In a similar case, Ferrell,
¶ 26. Here, like the foregoing cases, Officer DeGeorge could not articulate anything more than speculation that May might have had something illegal in his possession. When the lighter fell from May’s shoe, nothing illegal came into plain view or could be inferred from the lighter’s outward appearance. Nor did the testimony show that there was anything inherently dangerous about the lighter that would have justified a search for officer safety. Finally, there was no testimony that Officer DeGeorge’s handling of the lighter led him to believe under the plain-touch doctrine that something illegal may be inside.
¶27. Because Officer DeGeorge lacked probable cause for the search of the lighter and no exception to the warrant requirement applied, his search of the lighter was a Fourth Amendment violation. It follows that the cocaine seized as a result of the search should have been suppressed. With no evidence to support May’s possession-of-cocaine conviction, the conviction must be reversed and rendered.
3. Waiver
¶28. The State argues “several of the issues raised,” including May’s assertions of lack of consent and improper custodial interrogation, are procedurally barred because they were not “sufficiently raised” in May’s general motion to suppress. See Evans v. State,
¶ 29. In addressing this assertion, we must consider that May filed his motion to suppress pro se and proceeded pro se at trial with standby counsel. May’s standby counsel did not assist at the suppression hearing or during the questioning of Officer DeGeorge at trial. “While pro se litigants are afforded some leniency, they must be held to substantially the same standards of litigation conduct as members of the bar.” Sumrell v. State,
¶ 30:' Although inartfully drafted, we find May’s motion to suppress was sufficient to preserve this issue for review. And, even if it was not, we find review for plain errоr appropriate. “The plain-error doctrine is implicated when an error at trial affects substantial rights and results in a manifest .miscarriage of justice.” Hearn v. State,
¶ 31. THE JUDGMENT OF THE HARRISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT, IS REVERSED AND RENDERED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO HARRISON COUNTY.
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENTING:
¶ 32. I respectfully dissent from the majority’s opinion. I find thаt May consented
¶ 33. After arresting the vehicle’s driver and discovering that May’s driver’s license was suspended, Officer DeGeorge concluded that the vehicle would have to be towed. Officer DeGeorge therefore asked May to exit the vehicle and sit on the ground so officers could inventory the vehicle’s contents before the vehiclе was towed. Officer DeGeorge testified that May was not yet in custody when he asked May to exit the vehicle and sit on the ground. However, Officer DeGeorge further stated that it was not safe for the officers to inventory the vehicle while someone was still inside the car.
¶ 34. Although May was not yet in custody, Officer DeGeorge noticed that May acted extremely nervous and fidgety. According to Officer DeGeorge’s testimony, May kept grabbing and holding onto his right shoe as though he were trying to hide something. Whenever anyone spoke to May or looked in his direction, Officer DeGeorge observed that May would grab and hold onto his right shoe. Due to May’s behavior, Officer DeGeorge asked whether May had anything illegal in his possession. After May answered that he did not, Officer DeGеorge asked May whether he would mind taking off his shoes. Officer DeGeorge testified that May consented to the request.
¶ 35. As May voluntarily took off his shoe, a Zippo cigarette lighter fell to the ground. Officer DeGeorge testified that the center part of Zippo cigarette lighters come out so that a person can refill the lighter. When Officer DeGeorge pulled out the center part of May’s cigarette lighter, he found two small plastic bags containing marijuana and crack cocaine. After discovering the narcotics, Officer DeGeorge arrested May and searched May’s person. Upon arriving at the police station, May waived his constitutional rights and gave a statement. During his statement, May admitted that the cocaine and mаrijuana belonged to him. Testing later revealed that May’s cigarette lighter had contained 0.3 grams of cocaine,
¶ 36. May was subsequently indicted and charged with “knowingly, willfully, unlawfully!;,] and feloniously possessing] 0.1 grams or more but less than 2.0 grams of cocaine, a Schedule II Controlled Substance[.]” See Miss. Code Ann. § 41-29-139(c)(1) (Rev. 2013). The indictment further charged that May was a habitual offender under Mississippi Code Annotated section 99-19-83 (Rev. 2015) and had been previously convicted of the following felonies: (1) burglary in cause number B2402-2007-00714, with a sentence of five years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC); (2) unlawful possession of a firearm or a weapon by a convicted felon in cause number B2402-2003-622, with a sentence of three years in MDOC’s custody; and (3) attempted robbery, a crime of violence, in cause number 91-7245, with a sentence of fifteen years in MDOC’s custody.
¶37. Prior to his trial, May moved to suppress the evidence of the cocaine found in his lighter during the traffic stop. However, the circuit court denied May’s pretrial motion and allowed the State to introduce the evidence during the trial. After considering the evidence and testimony presented at trial, the jury found May guilty of possession of a controlled sub
¶ 38. On appeal, May asserts no dispute that probable cause existed for Officer De-George’s initial traffic stop. Nor does May challenge Officer DeGeorge’s right to conduct a pat down of May for the safety of Officer DeGeorge and the other police officers. Instead, May asserts that Officer De-George’s search of his cigarette lighter and seizure of the cocaine inside the lighter violated the Fourth Amendment. As a result, May argues the circuit court erred by denying his pretrial motion to suppress the evidence of the cocaine found in his lighter.
¶ 39. According to May’s argument, Officer DeGeorge’s search was unreasonable, lacked probable cause, and occurred without valid consent. Specifically, May argues Officer DeGeorge’s search was not reasonably related to the scope of the initial traffic stop and was not justified by probable cause developed during the traffic stop. Furthermore, May contends Officer De-George lacked valid consent to search the lighter. May therefore asks this Court to either reverse and render his conviction or to remand the case for a new trial.
¶ 40. With regard to the applicable standard of review, the Mississippi Supreme Court has previously stated:
When reviewing a trial court’s denial of a motion to suppress, [the appellate court] adopts a mixed standard of review. Determinations of reasonable suspicion and probable cause- are reviewed de novo. However, [the appellatе court] should take care both to review findings of historical fact only for clear error and to give due weight to inferences drawn from those facts by resident judges and local law enforcement officers. Thus, [the appellate court] is restricted to a de novo review of the trial judge’s findings using the applicable substantial evidence/clearly erroneous standard. Finally, [the appellate court] reviews the admission or exclusion of evidence for abuse of discretion.
Gillett v. State,
¶ 41. I also acknowledge that this case addresses the discovery of incriminating evidence found upon May’s voluntary removal of his shoe and the revelation to Officer DeGeorge of the lighter concealed within the shoe. As our caselaw establishes, the voluntariness of one’s consent to a search is a question of fact to be determined from the surrounding circumstances. See Gilbreath v. State,
¶ 42. “The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 3 Section 23 of the Mississippi Constitution provide that an individual has the right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.” Shelton v. State,
¶43. Although May raises no dispute that probable cause existed for Officer De-George’s initial traffic stop, I briefly ad
¶ 44. “To stop and temporarily detain is not an arrest, and the cases hold that[,] given reasonable circumstances[,] an officer may stop and detain a person to resolve an ambiguous situation without having sufficient knowledge to justify an arrest.” Gonzales v. State,
¶ 45. In the present case, Officer De-George was able to reasonably articulate the behavior that led him to suspect “some criminal activity in addition to ... that initially suspeeted[.]” Id. Officer DeGeorge testified that he noticed May acting extremely nervous and fidgety as he sat on the ground. Specifically, Officer DeGeorge observed that May appeared preoccupied with his right shoe and constantly grabbed the shoe whenever anyone spoke to him or looked at him. Based on his experience and training as a police officer, Officer De-George testified that May’s behavior indicated that May was attempting to hide something in his shoe. According to Officer DeGeorgе’s testimony, May voluntarily consented to remove his shoes. On appeal, the State argues this indicates May also consented to the search of the cigarette lighter that fell out of his shoe.
¶ 46. In addition to arguing that he never consented to the search of the lighter, May contends that Officer DeGeorge’s search of the lighter was an illegal attempt to find evidence without probable cause. May asserts that, at the time the cigarette lighter fell to the ground, Officer De-George had completed his “safety search” of May. Therefore, because the lighter was a closed container and was neither a weapon nor contraband, May argues that the ensuing search of his lighter was unreasonable and lacked probable cause.
¶ 47. In addressing May’s assignment of error, I again emphasize that “consenting to a search is an exception to the requirement that searches are to be conducted pursuant to a valid warrant or probable cause.” Lee,
¶ 48. In Gales, a police officer was in pursuit of an armed-robbery suspect when he encountered the defendant. Id, at 640-41 (¶ 19). The officer had reason to suspect that Gales possessed a' weapon, and he therefore conducted a search of Gales’s person. Id. at 641 (¶ 19). Even though the officer felt no weapon, he did feel an unknown bulge in Gales’s back pocket. Id. Although concerned for his safety, the officer did not search Gales’s. pockets. Id. Instead, the officer testified that he asked Gales wha,t was in his pocket. Id. The officer further testified that Gales voluntarily emptied his pockets, shoving the officer the money in his pocket and claiming that he had won the money while gambling. Id.
¶ 49. Prior to his trial for armed robbery and conspiracy to cоmmit armed robbery, Gales argued the officer’s search was unreasonable, and he unsuccessfully tried to suppress all evidence seized as a result of the search. Id. at 637 (¶ 10). In upholding the trial court’s finding that the officer performed, a constitutional search, the supreme court stated, “Because Gales voluntarily showed [the officer] the money, Gales no longer had a ‘reasonable expectation of privacy’ as to the money under the Fourth Amendment.” Id. at 639 (¶ 17) (quoting Katz v. United States,
¶ 50. In the present case, May consented to the removal of his shoe, - which led him to voluntarily reveal to Officer DeGeorge the cigarette lighter concealed within the shoe. The record reflects substantial evidence to support the circuit court’s factual finding that May consented to Officer De-George’s search,- The record also reflects that May’s behavior created probable cause for the search, thereby rendering consent unnecessary. Like -the defendant in Gales, May lacked any reasonable expectation of privacy as to the incriminating evidence that he voluntarily revealed by removing his shoe. See id, As a result, I find no merit to May’s claims that Officer DeGeorge’s search of his cigarette lighter and seizure of the cocaine inside the lighter violated the Fourth- Amendment. I therefore would find no abuse of discretion in the circuit court’s denial of May’s motion to suppress. See Gillett,
