Jovaughn Parsons appeals his conviction of one count of possession of a controlled substance (cocaine), in violation of D.C.Code § 48-904.01(d) (2001). Parsons argues that the trial court erred whеn it denied his motion to suppress evidence obtained during a search based on an informant’s tip. We agree and hold that Parsons’s conviction must be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.
I. Facts and Procedural Background
On May 13, 2008, United States Park Police Detective Wayne Humberson received an informant’s tip about a “narcotics violation” in the 300 block of Livingston Terrace, Southeast. Pursuant to the tip, he detаined and searched Parsons, who matched the informant’s description. Detective Humberson’s search produced a pink zip-lock bag containing cocaine, which was tucked into Parsons’s left sock. Parsons was subsequently arrested and charged with unlawful possession of a controlled substance.
During cross-examination at Parsons’s bench trial, Detective Humberson admitted that he was “not the рersonal handler of [the] specific confidential source” of information that led to Parsons’s arrest, but that a Detective Freeman 1 was the informant’s “main handler.” According to Detective Humberson, Detective Freeman was off duty when the informant contacted him, so he directed the informant to call Detective Humberson and relay the tip. Parsons’s counsel immediately made an oral motion to suppress the search, arguing that because Humberson did not personally know the informant to be reliable, “the reason for stopping Mr. Parson[s] was not justified.” The trial court denied Parsons’s mоtion, holding that on the basis of the collective knowledge doctrine, Detective Humberson “[did]n’t have to know that [the source was] reliable.... He [did]n’t have to know it personally.... What one knows, they all know.” Parsons’s counsel initially argued that that was not “necessarily the standard,” but after the trial judge repeated her conclusion, counsel did not object further. He revisited the issue during his closing, however, and аrgued that despite the court’s ruling that “what one officer knows, the other officers know,” there was still no evidence of the informant’s reliability, and Humberson’s “affidavit that was submitted for the arrest warrant ... [was] insufficient and not correct.” The trial judge still was not persuaded, ruling: “The Court was not troubled with the issue about the confidential informant, because the Court understood Detective Humber-son to basically say that thе confidential informant was ... Detective Freeman’s confidential informant.... And whatever information they received, the defendant matched the description and when they searched defendant, thеy found the drugs.”
II. Discussion
As a preliminary matter, we reject the government’s argument that Parsons waived his objection to the search by not filing a pretrial motion to suppress
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evidence. The record indicates that Parsons’s counsel became aware that Detective Humberson lacked personal knowledge of the informant’s reliability only upon cross-examination. “Objections to the admission of еvidence are waived when they are not raised in a pretrial motion to suppress the evidence, unless opportunity therefor did not exist or the
defendant was not aware of the grounds for the motion.” Simmons v. United States,
We also reject the government’s argument that this issue is unpreserved on appeal. The essence of Parsons’s Fourth Amendment claim was made clear during his closing argument, when his counsel argued that Detective Humberson’s unsupported assertion of the informant’s reliability, standing alone, was “insufficient and not correct.” Combined with Parsons’s initiаl objection to the admission of the drugs, the trial court was fairly apprised that he was challenging the sufficiency of the government’s evidence that the informant was reliable.
See Tindle v. United States,
The doctrine of collective knowledge is “firmly established in this jurisdiction,” and provides that although individual officers may not have sufficiеnt knowledge to establish probable cause, the “information collectively known, even if not communicated by one officer to the other, [can be] sufficient.”
In re M.E.B.,
The Fourth Amendment protects a person “from unreasonable searches and seizures, and the reasonableness of an infringement on personal liberty is determined by whether the information on which the police actеd provided reasonable articulable suspicion or probable cause.”
United States v. Boxley,
When determining if an informant’s tip suppliеd law enforcement with probable cause, “a judicial officer should consider the totality of the circumstances, taking into account ‘an informant’s veracity, reliability, and basis of knowledge.’ ”
Barrie v. United States,
Indeed, our case law reflects the importance of an informant’s “track record” to the reliability analysis.
See, e.g., Porter v. United States,
The prоblem in the present case is that, even applying the collective knowledge doctrine, there was no testimony from which the trial court could have judged the informant’s credibility. Detective Hum-berson was not the confidential informant’s handler; in fact he had never dealt with the informant prior to the day of Parsons’s arrest. Detective Freeman, who
was
the handler, presumably could have testified at
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Parsons’s trial as to the informant’s track record аnd the existence of other virtuous qualities, but he did not. It appears from the record that the trial court “simply reified] on [Detective Humberson’s] con-clusory assertions in deciding whether [his search of Pаrsons] was justified” and did not, as required by our case law, “evaluate the facts underlying those assertions.”
Milline,
The trial court’s error certainly was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, because Parsons’s conviction was based entirely upon the fruits of a search for which probable cause was not established at trial. We therefore reverse Parsons’s conviction and remand for a new trial.
See Thomas v. United States,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Detective Freeman’s first name is not in the record.
