Joann H. DEES, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*1167 Michael E. Allen, Public Defender, and Lynn A. Williams, Asst. Public Defender, for appellant.
Robert A. Butterworth, Atty. Gen., and Amelia L. Beisner, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.
ERVIN, Judge.
Joann Dees, appellant, appeals the trial court's denial of her motion to suppress cocaine, marijuana, and drug paraphernalia on the ground that they were seized pursuant to an illegal stop. We agree and reverse and remand.
Gwen Salter, deputy with the Escambia County Sheriff's Department, testified that on February 13, 1989, she and other deputies were conducting what she referred to as a "throw down" "checking I.D., stuff like that on Fields Lane." They were returning to their unmarked police van when Willie Johnson, the driver, and Joann Dees drove into the area in a van. Johnson left the van and approached the men to whom Salter and other deputies had just been talking. Johnson soon turned away from the men and walked back toward his van. Salter testified that Sergeant Doyle Thomas said, "Let's stop them and just check them out."
While some of the officers stood at the driver's side of the van next to Johnson, Deputy Salter and Deputy Mark Schaefer began walking around to the passenger's side where they observed Dees take something from the dash area and place it under the front seat. Salter asked Dees to step out of the vehicle, claiming that she was unsure whether Dees had put a weapon under the seat. She said that Dees was hesitant to leave the van, and that when Dees got out she had put her hand in her left pocket. Salter asked Dees several times to remove her hand from her pocket, again stating that she did not know whether Dees had access to a weapon. When Dees removed a small baggie containing marijuana from her pocket, Salter placed her under arrest. Deputy Schaefer later searched under the seat and found Dees' purse, containing a crack-cocaine smoking device with residue on it, and a small vial containing cocaine residue.
The trial court denied Dees' motion to suppress the cocaine, marijuana, and paraphernalia. Dees was adjudicated guilty and sentenced to three years' probation on the charge of possession of cocaine, with concurrent one-year probations on the remaining charges of marijuana and paraphernalia possession.
There are two issues to be resolved in this case. First, did Deputy Salter's actions with regard to Dees constitute a consensual encounter or an investigatory stop? Second, if a stop occurred, was it based upon a founded suspicion that a crime was being committed? While conceding that this type of case does not lend itself to bright-line rules of law, we conclude that the facts support our conclusion that the case at bar involves an illegal stop rather than a lawful encounter.
I.
Under Florida law, police officers must have a founded suspicion to justify detaining a person suspected of having committed, committing, or being about to commit a crime. § 901.151(2), Fla. Stat. (1989). If a stop merely amounts to a consensual encounter, a citizen's fourth amendment protections are not triggered. Jacobson v. State,
In McCreary v. State,
the officers' actions of parking their patrol car behind the vehicle in which appellant was sitting, ordering the occupants out of the car, and asking their identities, constituted an investigatory stop. See Currens v. State,363 So.2d 1116 (Fla. 4th DCA 1978) (officer conducted investigatory stop where he observed a legally parked vehicle, stationed himself where he could observe the car for a few minutes, saw no unusual activity, pulled his motorcycle up to and adjacent with the vehicle, noticed the defendant make a quick motion with his hand between his legs, and then ordered the defendant out of the vehicle.)
McCreary,
In Evans v. State,
In the case at bar, Deputy Salter's directions to Dees to exit the vehicle and to remove her hand from her pocket constituted a show of authority that restrained Dees' freedom of movement, because a reasonable person would conclude that she was required to comply with the officer's directives. Merely stating that the officer "asked" Dees to get out of the van and "asked" her to take her hand from her pocket, does not change the fact that these statements were directives from a law enforcement officer, rather than simple requests that Dees was free to disregard.
II.
Turning to the second issue, the state argues that even if Deputy Salter's conduct did amount to an investigatory stop, Salter had a founded suspicion to detain Dees, because she was unsure whether Dees had taken a weapon from the dash and placed it underneath the seat, or whether she had a weapon in her pocket. On the contrary, Salter's testimony indicates that she merely suspected, at best, that Dees had a weapon, but those "articulable facts" provide little basis for a founded suspicion that she and her fellow officers were in danger. Indeed, in numerous cases, courts have held that a furtive motion, with no other facts to support the suspicion that the defendant has a weapon, does not constitute founded suspicion for a weapons search or investigatory stop. See, e.g., Baggett v. State,
In the case before us, the officers had received no report connecting the van or its passengers with criminal activity. Dees' furtive movement in and of itself was insufficient to give rise to a founded suspicion to justify a stop to investigate whether she was or had been committing a crime. Moreover, because the cocaine and the paraphernalia were seized from Dees' purse during a search incident to the illegal arrest for possession of marijuana, that contraband should also have been suppressed. Wong Sun v. United States,
REVERSED and REMANDED for further proceedings.
MINER, J., concurs.
WENTWORTH, J., agrees to conclusion.
