Following the denial of his motion to suppress evidence under Penal Code section 1538.5, Harold Lee Britton pleaded guilty to a charge under Health and Safety Code section 11350, subdivision (a), for possession of heroin. He asserts the magistrate erred by permitting the prosecution to respond orally to his motion rather than requiring it to file and serve a timely written response, thereby violating his rights to due process and a fair trial. In addition, defendant maintains the trial court erroneously concluded the arresting police officer articulated adequate facts to justify a reasonable suspicion of defendant’s likely involvement in criminal wrongdoing sufficient to warrant his detention. We disagree with both assertions and affirm.
I
Facts
One afternoon, a uniformed Santa Ana Police Officer, Charles Lipton, responded to a dispatched call at a residence on South Daisy Street in Santa Ana. Lipton parked his cruiser at the curb and approached the house on foot. He noticed,
When the man facing him made eye contact with Lipton, he bolted, running away from Lipton to the other side of the house and escaping through the front yard. He was not apprehended. Moments later, defendant sprang to his feet, turned to glimpse Officer Lipton moving rapidly toward him, and, while clutching something in one hand, also took flight. Lipton gave chase, glancing at the makeshift table as he ran by it. He noticed several items on top of the table that, based on 22 years of experience as an officer during which he made hundreds of narcotics arrests and received many hours of training concerning narcotics, Lipton believed to be narcotics paraphernalia. Lipton drew his gun and exclaimed, “Stop or I’ll shoot.” Defendant complied. During a search of defendant’s person, officers found a hypodermic syringe and needle and part of an aluminum can in defendant’s hand and a small quantity of tar heroin in his shirt pocket. A later booking search yielded two more small bindles containing heroin. The table contained a glass pipe, a cigarette lighter, a knife, the bottom of an aluminum can, and baking powder in a plastic bag.
Pursuant to Penal Code section 1538.5, subdivision (f)(2), defendant filed and served a motion to suppress evidence challenging Lipton’s detention and search prior to the preliminary hearing. (All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise stated.) The prosecution filed no written opposition to the motion. On the day of the preliminary hearing, defendant filed another motion, this one to preclude the prosecution from presenting any opposition to defendant’s suppression motion on the ground that it had failed to file and serve a timely written response, which defendant contended is required by section 1538.5, subdivision (f)(3).
Subdivision (f)(3) of section 1538.5 in pertinent part provides, “Any written response” to a suppression motion “shall be filed . . . and personally served ... at least two court days prior to the hearing.” The magistrate interpreted the words “any written response [to] mean[] that if there is going to be a written response, it has to be filed two days prior to the hearing. I don’t read that language to mandate a written response nor in the absence of a written response to preclude the people from proceeding on the motion and making oral argument.”
As to the propriety of Lipton’s initial detention of defendant, the court noted that, in addition to defendant’s flight, officer Lipton articulated at least two additional important facts: (1) based on his experience, Lipton believed he saw narcotics paraphernalia on the suspects’ makeshift table; and (2) he saw something in defendant’s hand that could have been a weapon. The court concluded that under the totality of circumstances, Lipton had reasonable grounds to detain defendant.
Defendant renewed his motion to suppress in the superior court. (§ 1538.5, subd. (i).) Basing its decision upon the preliminary hearing transcript, additional briefing by defendant and the prosecution, and oral argument, the court rejected both defense arguments.
Discussion
Prosecutor’s oral response to motion
Prior to the 1997 statutory amendment that added section 1538.5, subdivision (f)(2) and (3), defendants were, permitted to move for suppression at any time during the preliminary hearing without notice.
(Cox v. Superior Court
(1993)
As a threshold matter, the pleading burden imposed by section 1538.5, subdivision (f)(2), is relatively light. It does not require defendant to speculate about the prosecution’s possible justifications for a warrantless seizure
or to disprove a fact on which the prosecution bears the burden of proof. As the Supreme Court explained in
People
v.
Williams
(1999)
Defendant’s assertion that permitting an oral prosecutorial opposition puts him at a disadvantage largely evaporates when one considers the preliminary hearing in tandem with a special hearing on a renewed suppression motion in superior court. Indeed, in the event of an unsuccessful suppression motion at a preliminary hearing, a defendant may then renew the motion in superior-court, “introducing any evidence that could not reasonably have been presented at the preliminary hearing . . . giv[ing] defendants every opportunity necessary to present their claims fully.”
(People
v.
Hansel
(1992)
Detention of defendant
Defendant contends the trial court erroneously denied his motion to suppress evidence. An appellate court’s review of a ruling on such a motion is governed by well-settled principles: We defer to the trial court’s findings of fact that are supported by substantial evidence, but in all other respects the court’s ruling is subject to independent review.
(People v. Ayala
(2000)
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 13 of the California Constitution proscribe seizures of persons, even brief investigative detentions, that are
unreasonable. (People
v.
Souza
(1994)
To warrant an investigatory detention, a police officer must be able to “ ‘point to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts,’ would warrant the intrusion.”
(People
v.
Souza, supra, 9
Cal.4th at p. 229, quoting
Terry
v.
Ohio
(1968)
Did Lipton articulate sufficient facts to warrant a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity in which defendant was involved? We conclude he did. More than simple unprovoked flight occurred here. Rather, Lipton testified to what might be dubbed “flight plus.”
(People
v.
Souza, supra, 9
Cal.4th at p. 236.) Defendant and his confederate immediately decamped upon sighting the officer. This evasive conduct by two people instead of just one person,
we believe, bolsters the reasonableness of the suspicion that there is criminal activity brewing. (See
Illinois
v.
Wardlow
(2000)
m
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Sills, P. J., and O’Leary, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied November 14, 2001.
