The appellant, Philip Sam Jean-Laurent, was convicted of possession of cocaine with the intent to distribute. Jean-Laurent contends on appeal that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence. He alleges that the police violated his Fourth Amendment rights by removing his luggage from a bus and searching those bags without his consent and that any evidence discovered as a result of this unlawful seizure and search should have been suppressed. Because we find that Jean-Laurent did not consent to the seizure and subsequent search of his bags, we reverse Jean-Laurent’s conviction and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings.
*77 BACKGROUND
Guided by well established principles, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the party prevailing below.
Juares v. Commonwealth,
When Jean-Laurent left the terminal, Armstead followed and approached Jean-Laurent just outside the terminal. Armstead explained that he was a narcotics officer trying to “stop the flow of illegal narcotics.” Armstead informed Jean-Laurent that he was not under arrest or detention and asked Jean-Laurent where he was going. Jean-Laurent replied that he was going to High Point, North Carolina. Armstead asked Jean-Laurent about his ticket and whether he had any bags. Jean-Laurent responded that his ticket was on the bus and that he had bags both underneath and inside the bus. Armstead asked Jean-Laurent whether he had “any illegal narcotics on his person or in his bags,” and Jean-Laurent replied, “no.” When Armstead asked Jean-Laurent if he could “search his person,” Jean-Laurent responded by removing items from his pockets, including two baggage claim tickets. Armstead “asked him about that [the claim ticket] and he [Jean-Laurent] pulled it out and gave it to me [Arm-stead].” Armstead retained the tickets and asked Jean-Laurent to point out his luggage.
The two walked over to the bus and Jean-Laurent pointed to a white bag and then a black bag, the latter being on the other side of the bus. After Armstead removed the white bag from the bus, he proceeded to the other side of the bus and retrieved the black bag. While Armstead went around the bus to retrieve the black bag, another officer, Detective Ste *78 phanie Ruffin, asked Jean-Laurent if he had any contraband in the white bag. Jean-Laurent replied, “yeah, a knife.” Ruffin told Jean-Laurent that she needed to see it, whereupon Jean-Laurent bent over and unzipped the bag. Ruffin then searched the bag. As Armstead was returning with the black bag, he walked by another officer, who had a canine passive glove dog with him. The dog alerted on the black bag, and on that basis, Armstead searched it. In the course of their search, the officers found knives in the white bag and cocaine in the black bag.
Armstead and Ruffin both testified that Jean-Laurent did not object to the search of either bag. Armstead stated, “He didn’t even walk around the bus with me. He just stood over on the other side. He said that’s the bag right there. I went and retrieved it and brought it around and the drug dog hit on it, alerted to it.” Armstead, however, never asked Jean-Laurent for permission to retrieve or search his bags.
ANALYSIS
“[A] seizure of personal property [is] per se unreasonable within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment unless it is accomplished pursuant to a judicial warrant issued upon probable cause ... [or unless] some [ ] recognized exception to the warrant requirement is present.”
United States v. Place,
“ ‘Consent to a search ... must be unequivocal, specific and intelligently given ... and it is not lightly to be inferred.’ ”
Elliotte v. Commonwealth,
Courts have found consent to a
specific request
to search a person when evidenced by conduct alone, such as turning and “placing [one’s] hands against the wall without prompting,”
Bynum,
However, conduct which evidences nothing more than acquiescence, particularly when no request to search has been made, has been held insufficient to constitute consent. In
Parker v. Commonwealth,
In
Crosby v. Commonwealth,
In this case, the challenged evidence was seized as a result of the canine’s alert to Jean-Laurent’s black bag as Armstead carried it from one side of the bus to the other. The propriety of the dog alert and the search it led to turn, however, on the lawfulness of the officer’s seizure of the black bag from the bus, because the evidence fails to show that the dog would have alerted to the bag had it not been carried by the officer to the dog’s location.
In this case, the officer asked to search Jean-Laurent’s person. In response, Jean-Laurent pulled the claim tickets out of his pocket, along with some other items. When Armstead asked Jean-Laurent about the tickets, he handed them over. However, Jean-Laurent did not hand over the claim tickets in response to a request to retrieve or search Jean-Laurent’s bags. In fact, at no point during the encounter did Armstead ever ask if he could seize or search Jean-Laurent’s bags. Jean-Laurent merely pointed out his bags when asked to do so. Although Jean-Laurent did not object to the seizure of the black bag, he was not required to do so in order to preserve the non-consensual nature of the seizure. The burden was upon the officer to obtain consent, not on Jean-Laurent to affirmatively deny consent.
See Walls,
We disagree with the Commonwealth’s argument that Jean-Laurent’s alleged consent to the search of the white bag constituted implied consent to search the black bag.
*81
First, the record discloses that Armstead unlawfully seized Jean-Laurent’s black bag before he became aware of Jean-Laurent’s alleged consent for Ruffin to search the white bag. Second, any consent given was not voluntary. After asking Jean-Laurent if he had any contraband in his bag, to which Jean-Laurent replied, “yeah, a knife,” Ruffin told Jean-Laurent that she needed to see it. In response to this command, Jean-Laurent unzipped the white bag. The burden of proving that consent “was freely and voluntarily given ... is not satisfied by showing a mere submission to a claim of lawful authority.”
Florida v. Royer,
Because Jean-Laurent did not give consent for Armstead to seize his black bag, the cocaine obtained as a result of that unlawful seizure was inadmissible.
Mapp v. Ohio,
Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s judgment, reverse Jean-Laurent’s conviction, and we remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings if the Commonwealth be so advised.
Reversed and remanded.
