Appellant Antonio Green was arrested and charged with carrying a pistol without a license and possession of an unregistered firearm and ammunition after he was stopped and frisked by a police officer. Green moved to suppress the pistol and ammunition as the product of an unconstitutional search. After the trial court denied the motion, Green pled guilty to the charges, reserving his right to appeal the denial of the suppression motion. Because the triаl court erred in denying the suppression motion, we reverse.
i.
The government defended the stop and search as lawful pursuant to
Terry v. Ohio,
At the suppression hearing, the government presented as its only witness Officer Edward Torrence, who made the stop and conducted the search. Green presented no evidence. The trial court made the following findings, which we find are supported by the record: Torrence and three other officers were рarked in a car in the 3200 block of Wheeler Road, Southeast, for the purpose of investigating reports of gunfire. After observing the activities in the area, the officers alighted from them vehicle and stopped several individuals in front of an apartment building.
While they had those persons detained on the ground, Torrence looked up and saw that Green was about to come out of the building. When Green saw the activity outside, however, he backed into the building. Green also placed something into his pocket, but Tor-rence could not tell what it was. Torrence told Green to stop and identified himself as a police officer. Green did not stop, however, and continued his retreat into the building.
Arother person in the building let Tor-rence inside. Torrence followed Green as he retreated and ultimately stopped Green when Torrence found him in the basement, “peeping around the corner.” At that point, Tor-rence brought Green out of the building and friskеd him, finding the pistol giving rise to the charges and the suppression motion.
*1390 II.
At the outset, we must ascertain when the
Terry
stop occurred.
Smith v. United States,
The question becomes whether Torrence had a reasonable, articulable suspicion that Green was engaged in criminal activity and was armed and dangerous, justifying both the stop and the seаrch.
Terry, supra,
In evaluating whether these facts establish grounds for reasonable suspicion, we “examine all these factors both individually and collectively, for to adequately evaluate the whole, it is helpful to evaluate the constituent parts.”
Smith, supra,
The government’s reliance on the fact that the officers had been assigned to the scene based on a report of a disрute involving guns and gunshots is misplaced. It is true that we have had occasion in finding-articulable suspicion to rely in part upon testimony that a particular area has a high incidence of crime.
See, e.g., Cousart v. United States,
In
Cauthen v. United States,
*1391
In addition to the reports of gunfire, the government relied on Green’s pocketing of “a small, dark object” and his actions to distance himself from the police activity. We view these actions first individually and morе importantly, as contributing to the totality of the circumstances confronting Torrence. Either action, taken individually, would be insufficient.
See, e.g., Duhart v. United States,
Even taken together, however, the two facts are insufficient to establish grounds for a
Terry
stop. Our recent decision in
Anderson v. United States,
(1) the area was a high crime area where drag transactions take place; (2) appellant was standing with another man in the backyard of a house on a[n] alley during a cold winter night around midnight; (3) appellant quickly walked away from the police; (4) neither appellant nor the other man resided in the house; (5) appellant denied that he had been in the backyard despite being seen by the officers; (6) appellant placed his hands back in his pocket after being asked to remove them; and (7) appellant became nervous, rocked back and forth, and got wide-eyed upon questioning.
Id. at 1038.
We noted in
Anderson
that, as in
Duhaii,
the officer had not seen anything that he identified as a potential wеapon, nor had the officer observed any criminal activity. Moreover, we noted that in
Duhart
we had relied in part on the rule that “ ‘citizens have no legal duty to speak to police.’ ”
Anderson,
Likewise, in the present ease, Torrence did not identify the object Green placed in his pocket as appearing to be a weapon. This case is distinguishable from cases such as
In re D.E.W.,
As the defendant in
Anderson
did, Green walked away from the police activity. In
Anderson,
that fact was not sufficient to establish articulable suspicion even in conjunction with the several other facts present in that case that are not present in the instant case. The only conceivable distinction is that in the present case, Torrence found Green “peeping.” We think, however, that if a person has a right to walk away to avoid contact with the police, he also has a right to attempt to observe an area to learn whether the police have left. The mere fact that a person does so cannot be construed, without more, as evidence of consciousness of guilt sufficient to warrant a
Terry
stop.
Cf.
*1392
Smith, supra,
The government urges that our decision in
Peay, supra,
is controlling. We find
Peay
to be distinguishable. In
Peay,
we held articulable suspicion to be established by the facts that (1) upon the arrival of the police, defendant hurriedly walked
into
a building known to be a place for drug transactions, and (2) the defendant was found standing at the top of the third floor stairs holding something in his hand that appeared to the officer to possibly be a weapon. The court specifically noted that the defendant’s actions were not consistent with those of a resident.
III.
The facts in Anderson, supra, went further in supporting a finding of articulable suspicion than those established in the present case. Yet we found no articulable suspicion to be established in Anderson; a fortiori, sufficient grounds for articulable suspicion were not established in the present case. Green’s conviction must be reversed.
Reversed.
Notes
. Neither party has questioned — and we do not decide — whether the flight analysis we adopted in Smith should be modified in light of Hodari D.
