Michael JACOBY, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*914 James Marion Moorman, Public Defender, and Steven L. Bolotin, Assistant Public Defender, Bartow, for Appellant.
Charles J. Crist, Jr., Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Helene S. Parnes, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for Appellee.
NORTHCUTT, Judge.
Michael Jacoby appeals his convictions for possession of methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia. He pleaded no contest to the charges after the circuit court denied his dispositive motion to suppress physical evidence. Fla. R.App. P. 9.140(b)(2)(A)(i). The court should have granted the motion because *915 the evidence was seized during an illegal detention. Therefore, we reverse and remand with directions to discharge Jacoby.
At the hearing on Jacoby's motion, the arresting officer testified that she received an anonymous tip that people in a car parked behind a Hungry Howie's restaurant were smoking drugs. No evidence was presented that the tipster described anything about the car other than its location. The officer arrived at the scene shortly after midnight. She did not find a car parked behind the restaurant, but she noticed one parked behind another business in the same strip center.
The officer approached the car's occupants, asked them for identification, and asked why they were parked at that location. The passenger, a woman, said she lived nearby, but she and Jacoby were talking in the car because her roommate did not permit men in their residence. The officer asked the passenger and Jacoby to get out of the car, and they complied. The passenger consented to the officer's request to search her purse, and Jacoby consented to a search of his person. No drugs were discovered in either search. Then the officer asked for consent to search the car, but Jacoby refused.
At this point the officer retrieved her detection dog, Bailey, whom she had tied to a nearby fence. Bailey sniffed the car and alerted to the passenger door and a window. The officer then searched the car and found syringes, one containing methamphetamine and the other containing residue, as well as a silver spoon with methamphetamine residue. The contraband was not in plain view.
The officer was certainly free to ask the car's occupants why they were parked behind a closed business at such a late hour. This type of consensual policecitizen encounter does not implicate constitutional safeguards. Popple v. State,
When a police officer asks a person to exit his car, the encounter becomes an investigatory stop. Popple,
When an officer acts on an informant's tip, the reliability of the information must be established before the officer can make an investigatory stop. See Travers v. State,
In this case the anonymous tip lacked any indicia of reliability. The record does not even establish that the tip accurately described Jacoby. His car was not parked at the location the tipster gave, nor was there evidence that the informant related the make, model, or color of the car, or that Jacoby's car matched any such description. Moreover, the tip contained no "predictive information." Rather, it described a crime in progress, i.e., people smoking drugs. But the officer did not say that she saw or smelled smoke coming from the car. Thus, the officer's own observations during the consensual encounter cast doubt on the reliability of the tip. Because the anonymous tip lacked sufficient indicia of reliability, the officer lacked the well-founded suspicion necessary to justify an investigatory stop. For this reason the stop was illegal, the drugs and paraphernalia found in the car were the fruit of an unconstitutional seizure, and the evidence should have been suppressed. Popple,
The State contends that the alert by the detection dog Bailey gave the officer probable cause to search Jacoby's car. But even assuming the State had made the showing necessary to support a finding of probable cause based on the alert, see Matheson v. State,
Reversed and remanded with directions to discharge Jacoby.
DAVIS and SILBERMAN, JJ., Concur.
