In re S.B., Appellant.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
*950 Jejomar Untalan was on the brief for appellant.
Irvin B. Nathan, Attorney General for the District of Columbia, with whom John J. Woykovsky, Assistant Attorney General, Todd S. Kim, Solicitor General, and Rosalyn Calbert Groce, Deputy Solicitor General, were on the brief for appellee.
Before WASHINGTON, Chief Judge, OBERLY, Associate Judge, and PRYOR, Senior Judge.
WASHINGTON, Chief Judge:
After denying S.B.'s motion to suppress evidence, the trial court found him guilty of possession of a B-B gun, in violation of 24 DCMR § 2301.3 (2008). On appeal, S.B. argues, as he did before the trial court, that the police officers did not have reasonable suspicion to stop and frisk him. For the reasons stated below, we agree and reverse.
I.
On the night of May 30, 2010, at 9:30 p.m., Officer Travis Reed was on duty at the corner of 6th Street and Alabama Avenue in Southeast, Washington, D.C., recovering a stolen automobile. A male citizen approached Officer Reed and stated that there was a black male wearing white pants, possibly a juvenile, that had a gun in his possession and was "messing around" with a female on the playground in the 600 block of Alabama Avenue. After speaking with the citizen for about thirty seconds, Officer Reed broadcasted a lookout for a black male with white pants, possibly a juvenile, armed with a handgun at the rear of the 600 block of Alabama Avenue on the playground. Officer Reed did not ask the citizen for his name.
At the time Officer Reed broadcast the lookout, Officer Douglas Sarsfield was on patrol in a scout car. Officer Sarsfield made his way toward the 600 block of Savannah Street near the park referenced in the lookout. It took Officer Sarsfield two minutes to arrive at that location. Officer Sarsfield went to the rear of the field where there were about four black males, juveniles, congregated in the park area. One of them had white colored clothing on. Officer Sarsfield was by himself for about a minute and a half before other officers arrived on the scene. Officer Sarsfield told the group of juveniles to stop, and he *951 conducted a protective pat down. Finding no weapons, Officer Sarsfield let the juveniles go.
Officer Sarsfield testified that he and the other officers remained in the area, and that about three or four minutes later, a number of juveniles came walking through the tennis court area, one of whom was a black male wearing white pants. At the motion hearing, which was incorporated into a bench trial, Officer Sarsfield identified that individual as S.B. Officer Sarsfield approached S.B. from behind and told him to stop. He began to conduct a protective pat down on him. At the same time, Officer Robinson approached S.B. from the front and recovered a B-B gun from S.B.'s front waistband.
S.B. was charged with possession of a B-B gun in violation of 24 DCMR § 2301.3. Prior to trial, S.B. filed a motion to suppress evidence of the B-B gun, arguing that the officers lacked probable cause or reasonable suspicion to stop and frisk him. The trial court denied S.B.'s motion to suppress and found him guilty as charged. This appeal followed.
II.
S.B. claims that the tip in this case was unreliable, likening the citizen tipster here to the unknown caller in Florida v. J.L.,
We hold that the officers lacked reasonable suspicion to stop S.B. Although the tip in this case was somewhat more reliable than the tip in J.L., the tip did not provide the officers with the particularized, individualized suspicion needed to stop and frisk S.B. Therefore we reverse.
A.
"In reviewing a trial court order denying a motion to suppress, the facts and all reasonable inferences therefrom must be viewed in favor of sustaining the trial court ruling." Green v. United States,
To justify an investigatory stop, "a police officer must have a reasonable, articulable suspicion that criminal activity may be afoot," Howard v. United States,
An officer may justify an investigatory stop based on an informant's tip, rather than personal observation, depending on the tip's reliability. A tip's reliability, "like all other clues and evidence coming to a policeman on the scene, may vary greatly." Adams v. Williams,
The Supreme Court has provided clear guidance on the reliability of certain tips. At one end of the spectrum, Adams involved a tip that "carried enough indicia of reliability to justify the officer's forcible stop" of the defendant,
Consistent with Adams and J.L., we have suggested that, all other things being equal, an in-person tip is more reliable than a telephone tip. See, e.g., Nixon v. United States,
The advantageous features of in-person tips have been characterized as inherent, Thompson,
*954 In this case, the face-to-face aspect of the encounter between Officer Reed and the unidentified citizen meaningfully enhanced the tip's reliability. The citizen approached Officer Reed at 9:30 p.m., in a residential neighborhood that is somewhat distant from areas generally populated by tourists and other more transient visitors to the District, to report a crime that was occurring nearby. Thus, under the circumstances, the tip could be confirmed or disconfirmed quickly, and the citizenwho was on footrisked being located by the police had the tip proven false.[5] In addition, Officer Reed had the opportunity to assess the citizen's credibility while he attempted to gather information about the crime being reported, even if the duration of his encounter with the citizen was brief. The degree to which these circumstances elevate the reliability of the in-person tip over a purely anonymous telephone tip can be debated, but there can be no doubt that these factors differentiate the tip in this case from the tip in J.L.
Moreover, the tip in this case was more reliable than the tip in J.L. because, unlike the tipster in that case, the citizen here appears to have been a witness to the crime. The citizen approached Officer Reed at 6th Street and Alabama Avenue, close to the playground mentioned in the tip. While the citizen did not tell the officer that he personally witnessed the criminal conduct, viewing the facts and all reasonable inferences in favor of sustaining the trial court's ruling, see Green,
B.
In addition to the reliability of the information possessed by the police, reasonable suspicion depends on the content of such information. White,
Our cases involving in-person tips from unidentified citizen informants seldom involve descriptions applicable to more than one person, as demonstrated by the cases the government cites in its brief. In Nixon,
By contrast, In re A.S., cited by the court below, involved a description applicable to large numbers of people.[6] There, an undercover officer engaged in a drug transaction with appellant, who was standing on a corner with four other youths. Id.,
Like A.S., Turner,
In this case, as in A.S., the officers acted upon information that was potentially applicable to a large number of individuals. First, unlike A.S. and Turner, this was not a case in which officers had information that isolated criminal activity to a particular street corner or a particular address. The tip in this case indicated that the individual who was in possession of a gun was on a playground that was part of a larger park area which included a field area and a "whole bunch of sports courts," including basketball and tennis courts.
Second, although the officers arrived on the scene within two minutes, their swift arrival did not provide a basis for individualized suspicion of S.B. The record suggests that the second group of juveniles was not even in the park when the officers arrived on the scene. Meanwhile, the record does not reveal anything about how close the second group of juveniles was to the playground area identified in the tip or what direction the group was traveling when Officer Sarsfield spotted them.
Third, and most significant, the officers failed to corroborate almost every detail of the tip. When Officer Sarsfield arrived on the scene and spotted the first group of juveniles, they were not in the playground, there was no visible evidence that any of them possessed a weapon, and there were no young women or girls in their presence. The only factor that was consistent with the tip was that one of them was wearing white clothing. Nonetheless, Officer Sarsfield approached, stopped, and patted down the entire group. Later, officers spotted a second group of juveniles, including S.B., walking through the tennis courts *957 into a grassy area near more sports courts. As with the first group of juveniles, the young men were not in the playground area, and the officers did not see anyone with a gun or observe anything to suggest that anyone in the group might have a gun, and the officers did not see anyone in the group in the presence of a young woman. As with the pat down of the first group, all the police had to go on was the fact that one of the young men, S.B., was wearing white pants. At that point, not only did the officers lack a rational basis for differentiating S.B. from the individual in white clothing whom they had just searched (or any other juvenile in white pants who might come along), but the officers now had reason to doubt the accuracy of the information provided by the citizen informant. Based on the totality of the circumstances, the officers lacked reasonable, particularized suspicion to stop S.B. without some additional corroboration that he was likely the individual whom the tipster had identified as the young man holding a gun and messing with a young woman in the playground.
III.
In light of the foregoing, we reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Terry v. Ohio,
[2] Of course, even anonymous telephone tips can give rise to reasonable suspicion if sufficiently corroborated. See, e.g., White,
[3] United States v. Romain,
[4] As Justice Kennedy pointed out in J.L., the perceived advantages of in-person tips in terms of accountability rely on assumptions related to the difficulties of tracking telephone tips, see J.L.,
[5] If the citizen had been disposed to provide a false report, "it would have been safer to telephone the police station, and such a plan would have minimized the prospect of his apprehension." Davis,
[6] A.S. involved a different paradigm than that presented here: the information possessed by the police officers came from other officers, and thus its reliability was unquestioned. Nonetheless, while the officers in this case had a greater obligation to seek out corroborating details than they would have had the information come from another police officer, A.S. and United States v. Turner,
[7] We also explained that the officers could have requested additional information as "the three youths did not run or act in an unusual manner when the arrest team saw them," and that a more detailed description was possible under the circumstances.
