delivered the opinion of the court:
Defendant, Brandon J. Cash, was charged with possession with the intent to deliver between 30 and 500 grams of cannabis while within 1,000 feet of a school (720 ILCS 550/5.2(b) (West 2006)). Defendant moved to quash his arrest and suppress the evidence. The circuit court of Winnebago County heard and granted defendant’s motion, finding that the brief activation of a police car’s emergency lights and siren constituted a seizure of defendant without reasonable suspicion. The State appeals, contending that the trial court did not properly consider the totality of the evidence and that no evidence was adduced indicating that defendant submitted to the officers’ show of authority. We affirm.
The following facts are taken from the record and the testimony of Special Agent Greg Brotan of the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) at the hearing on defendant’s motion to quash and suppress. Brotan testified that, on April 17, 2007, he and other agents were in Rockford, keeping a house belonging to Nicholas Castronovo under surveillance. Brotan testified that the surveillance was pursuant to a warrant to search the Castronovo house. The warrant had not been executed yet because Brotan had received information that Castronovo possessed an AK-47 assault rifle and other firearms in the house. In consideration of the firearm information, the agents did not want to chance a forced entry into the house; instead, they decided to wait until Castronovo left the house, at which time he could be more safely approached. Bro-tan explained that this was why they were keeping the house under surveillance.
At some point that day, Castronovo left the house, alone, apparently unarmed, and drove a maroon Lincoln Town Car. Brotan and two other officers followed Castronovo’s car. Brotan testified that he did not have either a search warrant for Castronovo’s car or an arrest warrant for Castronovo or defendant. Brotan testified that, as he followed Castronovo’s car, he did not see Castronovo commit any traffic violations. Castronovo stopped and parked his car in the 2200 block of Edgebrook Drive.
Brotan testified that there were other cars parked along Edge-brook Drive. Castronovo parked his car behind another Lincoln Town Car. Brotan did not clearly recall the color of the second Lincoln, but believed it may have been silver. Brotan testified that both cars were legally parked. Brotan testified that he was in an unmarked vehicle, as was each of the other two officers, Special Agent Hilgers of the DEA and Officer Mott.
Brotan testified that, shortly after Castronovo had parked, Hilgers and Mott pulled in behind the Castronovo vehicle. By that time, defendant had joined Castronovo in the car.
Brotan was initially unable to recall whether Hilgers used his lights and siren. After referring to his report, Brotan testified that Hilgers “hit the lights and siren real quick.” Brotan explained that Hilgers activated the lights and siren to let Castronovo know that he was behind his car.
Brotan testified that, by the time he had arrived and parked his car behind the other two police cars, Hilgers and Mott were already out of their cars and on either side of Castronovo’s car. Both defendant and Castronovo were already out of the car. Brotan testified that he did not hear Hilgers or Mott say anything to Castronovo or defendant, but he also testified that the officers had asked Castronovo and defendant to get out of the car. Brotan testified that it was reported to him that, when Castronovo and defendant opened the doors to the car, Hilgers saw a plastic bag on the seat, and both Hilgers and Mott smelled a strong odor of marijuana as soon as the car doors were opened.
Brotan testified that, as he approached Castronovo’s car, he also noticed a strong odor of marijuana. Brotan explained that, based on the pungency of the odor, he believed that the marijuana had been grown hydroponically, as that tends to concentrate the THC content and leads to a more pungent smell than observed in marijuana that is not grown hydroponically. Brotan testified that the bag inside Castronovo’s car contained a number of clear plastic bags, all of which contained marijuana. The total weight of the marijuana recovered totaled 87.5 grams. Brotan testified that $9,680 in cash was also recovered. According to Brotan, defendant eventually admitted that he was using the money to purchase marijuana from Castronovo.
Following Brotan’s testimony and argument by the parties, the trial court gave the following ruling from the bench:
“We all know the fourth amendment says in essence that all searches must be premised by a search warrant based upon probable cause unless there’s some exception.
I understand by the testimony that on April 17th of ’07 the officers had with them a search warrant for the address of 4010 High-crest Road.
The Court understands the reason why officers didn’t go in, because they had information that there may be weapons involved and they’re concerned about their safety. Rather than entering the residence pursuant to that lawfully issued search warrant, they backed off and observed Mr. Castronovo leaving the scene in a Lincoln Town Car, they followed, and the Town Car pulled into another location.
There were other officers involved besides Officer Brotan, *** and it’s quite clear by the testimony that the vehicle that Mr. Castronovo had been driving was stopped.
One of the exceptions of the warrant requirement of the fourth amendment is search incident to the automobile search, which means, in essence, if the officers have probable cause to believe that evidence is located in a vehicle and that vehicle is moving or about to be moved, they have the authority to stop and search.
The question I have is was there any information in the officers’ minds when Castronovo left the home whether or not he had any evidence of crimes or contraband in the vehicle. The officers testified they had no information that there were any weapons present on Mr. Castronovo, nor did they have any other information that any other contraband or illegal substance may be located in that car.
The car was stopped, and the issue now is, one, did the officers have ‘the right to seize the occupants in the vehicle.’
There’s been testimony that there were no traffic violations, no parking violations, and the officers pulled up, two other officers in different squads in addition to officer or Agent Brotan. The question is did the other officers have the opportunity to seize. The issue is seizure.
I think it’s quite clear, and the Court is familiar with the cases, once the officer turns on lights, whether the vehicle is stopped by the officer or vehicle stopped, there must he some reason to seize that vehicle. And that’s the question before the Court. We know that two other agents approached the vehicle where Mr. Castronovo was the driver, and passenger now would be this [defendant. Was the initial seizure, the turning on the lights and tapping the siren, was that justified?
Based on case law submitted to the Court, the Court finds there was a seizure and that the officers — did the officers have any reasonable articulable suspicion at that time that criminal activity was afoot that would even justify a Terry stop? I find that’s not present in this case. There’s been no testimony regarding the justification regarding the seizure of the vehicle. If the officers had pulled behind and walked up, would he a different story but, as the case law appropriately points out, case of [People v. Laake,348 Ill. App. 3d 346 (2004)], just to read a portion, ‘Driver of vehicle that was stopped on shoulder of road was detained for purpose of fourth amendment when officer pulled behind the vehicle and activated emergency overhead lights.’
So at the time the officers activated emergency lights there was seizure. And was that seizure justified? And I find there is no evidence presented that the seizure was lawful.
I’m going to grant the Defendant’s Motion to Suppress the Evidence.”
About three weeks later, the State filed a motion to reconsider. Nearly three months after the motion was filed, the court heard arguments and made the following ruling:
“We have a unique set of facts in this case, and I point out that the cases that [the State] has cited are distinguishable regarding the facts of this case. And this is why I’m going to go over my notes again.
And my recollection of the facts[,] and the transcript bears [this out,] that on April 17 of ’07, the officer was involved with another officer in a search warrant for the address of 4010 High Crest Road. They were conducting surveillance, and there was no testimony presented that while the surveillance was going on, while the car left, that other officers arrived, and the search warrant was executed. I don’t know when the search warrant was executed if it was, if [sic] fact, executed.
And they indicated the address belonged to a Nick Castronovo. The car that left was a maroon Lincoln Town Car. They had no arrest warrant for Mr. Castronovo or the defendant, in this case Brandon Cash.
They followed the vehicle, and the officer testified there were no violations of traffic violations, no other violations, and he gave the address of the 2200 block of Edgebrook.
Then there was a silver Lincoln Town Car parked, and then the car they were following pulled behind the other one, and they were both parked legally.
And then the officer says Castronovo was the second person.
MR. VELLA [defense counsel]: Second car behind.
THE COURT: The second car behind the first car. They were in an unmarked squad car. He was with another agent.
There’s another agent who pulled behind his squad, meaning Agent Brotan, B-R-O-T-A-N. There were a total of three agents’ cars there. And then one of the agents activated the lights and the siren was also put on. At that time the court determined that there was a stop based on the case law I cited.
Now, the court is aware of Terry v. Ohio, [392 U.S. 1 ,20 L. Ed. 2d 889 ,88 S. Ct. 1868 (1968),] which states, basically, we know that if there is articulable suspicion that criminal activity is afoot, an officer may stop a person walking near the location or in a vehicle, but I find as the officer testified the search warrant had not been executed. I heard no facts involved in that, and the officer, once they activated the lights, that was the point in time when there was quote a detention. If they hadn’t executed — strike—if they hadn’t activated lights and put siren on, a different story, but they did. I can’t change the facts in this case.
There was a detention. Based on the illegal detention, they walked up to the car and saw what they saw. They exceeded the stop for which they — they hadn’t stopped the vehicle. There was no stop here, but when the lights were activated, that’s when the stop occurs.
And I see no reason under \Terry\ or the cases cited by the [S]tate that the court should change its decision, and again, under this unique set of facts involved, there is a detention and it’s unwarranted. Motion to reconsider is heard and denied.”
Within 30 days of the denial of the motion to reconsider, the State filed its notice of appeal. Thereafter, the State filed a motion to file a late notice of appeal and we granted that motion.
As an initial matter, defendant argues that, under People v. Marker,
On appeal, the State argues that, under the totality of the circumstances, the trial court erred in granting defendant’s motion to suppress evidence. The State contends that a police officer’s activation of lights and siren does not automatically result in a seizure as of the moment of activation. Turning to defendant’s arguments, the State contends that the trial court mechanically applied Laake’s result (activating lights or siren behind a parked car results in a seizure at the moment the lights or siren are activated) without adequately considering Laake’s admonition to fully consider the totality of the circumstances (Laake,
In reviewing a circuit court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, we are usually faced with questions of law and fact. People v. Gherna,
The State first contends that the trial court erred by mechanically applying the result in Laake. The State argues that, instead, the trial court should have looked to the totality of the circumstances, which would have led to the conclusion that no seizure occurred until after the agents had smelled the odor of marijuana in Castronovo’s vehicle, conferring upon them probable cause to seize defendant and Castronovo. We disagree.
To understand the errors in the State’s argument, we first look at Laake. In that case, the police received a tip at about 3 a.m. concerning a possible intoxicated driver. The officer sent to investigate did not see any vehicles or the reported intoxicated driver in the vicinity. The officer widened his search somewhat and discovered the defendant’s car stopped on the shoulder of the road, pointing in the direction the tip gave for the intoxicated driver’s heading, and with its brake lights on. Laake,
The court noted that the issue in the case was whether the officer approached the defendant under the community caretaking function or whether, upon activating his overhead lights, the officer had commanded the defendant to remain stopped. Laake,
This did not, however, end the court’s inquiry. The court further noted that, although the defendant was technically detained as a result of the activation of the officer’s emergency lights, the detention would not violate the fourth amendment (U.S. Const., amend. IV) unless it was unreasonable. Laake,
Our review of the evidence adduced at the hearing on the motion to suppress and the trial court’s rulings convinces us that the trial court, contrary to the State’s contention, did not mechanically apply Laake but, instead, considered the totality of the circumstances. The evidence demonstrated that Brotan and the others were keeping Castronovo’s house under surveillance prior to executing a search warrant for the house. The agents did not have a search warrant for Castronovo’s car, and they did not have an arrest warrant for either Castronovo or defendant. Because the agents had learned that Castronovo might have a significantly dangerous arsenal stored in the house, they did not want to enter the house while Castronovo was present. Instead, they wanted Castronovo to leave the house, at which time they would approach him.
Castronovo did leave his house and proceeded to drive away in his maroon Lincoln Town Car. The agents followed. Brotan testified that they did not observe Castronovo commit any traffic violations as Castronovo drove to his rendezvous with defendant. Brotan testified that, when Castronovo arrived, he parked on the street behind defendant’s car. Again, Castronovo did not commit any violations parking behind defendant’s car. Likewise, the testimony revealed that defendant’s car was also legally parked. Brotan further testified that neither defendant nor Castronovo appeared to be in distress at any time before they exited Castronovo’s vehicle.
Hilgers and Mott parked their vehicles behind Castronovo’s and defendant’s. As Hilgers was pulling in behind Castronovo, he activated his overhead emergency lights and siren. Hilgers and Mott then approached Castronovo’s car and asked Castronovo and defendant to get out of the car. As Castronovo and defendant complied, Hilgers observed a plastic bag on the seat and both agents smelled the odor of marijuana coming from the inside of the vehicle. These facts are undisputed.
Under Laake, the activation of a police car’s lights and siren directed at an individual is equivalent to a command to stop or to stay put. Laake,
Next, the State contends that there was no evidence advanced during the hearing on the motion to suppress that demonstrated that defendant and Castronovo had submitted to the agents’ show of authority when Hilgers activated his lights and siren. Additionally, the State contends that the trial court based its analysis on the wrong legal standard. We disagree with both contentions.
The State first contends that there was no evidence elicited from Brotan that defendant or Castronovo submitted to the show of the agents’ authority. In support, the State cites to People v. Brodack,
In Thompson, this court again dealt with the issue of the point at which a seizure occurs. In Thompson, the officer received a dispatch indicating a possible drunk driver. The tipster was driving behind the suspect vehicle. As the officer pulled behind the suspect vehicle, the tipster stated to the dispatcher that the police car was right behind the vehicle. The officer activated his lights and attempted to stop the vehicle. Thompson,
The parties and the trial court all believed that a seizure occurred when the officer attempted to halt the suspect vehicle by activating his emergency lights or siren or both. Thompson,
The rule we draw from Brodack and Thompson is that a person who is fleeing from a show of authority has not submitted to it and, therefore, has not been seized. It is only when the person begins to submit to the assertion of authority, by stopping or by beginning to stop, that we may deem a seizure of the person to have occurred. Thompson,
The State argues that “no evidence was adduced to demonstrate either” “a demonstration of an exercise of physical force on the part of the police against the subject, or, [a] demonstration that there was a submission on the part of the subject to the authority of the police.” To the contrary, upon Hilgers’ “tapping of the siren and flashing of overhead lights,” both defendant and Castronovo followed the implied command to stay put. See Laake,
The State’s contention also appears to cover a scenario in which neither defendant nor Castronovo submitted to the show of authority because they subjectively intended to remain at the spot regardless of any actions undertaken by the agents. In such a situation, they did not submit to the show of authority, because it had no impact upon their intentions and their actions. Under the State’s analysis, they were not seized, because they were not submitting to the show of authority. Further, when the agents requested that defendant and Castronovo exit the car, they still were not seized, because this was a noninvestigative encounter between the agents and defendant and Castronovo. When Castronovo and defendant opened the car doors and exited, the agents smelled a particularly strong odor of marijuana, giving them probable cause to seize defendant and Castronovo, and it was only after this point, according to the State’s argument, that the men were seized. The problem, however, with the State’s contention is that it sweeps too broadly. If the target of the investigative stop flees, then he or she is obviously not submitting to the show of authority. If, however, the target does not flee, then he or she is still not submitting to the show of authority, because it was his or her intent to stand his or her ground regardless of the police presence. The fly in the ointment, however, is the fact that submission appears to be exactly the same as refusing to submit. The target stays put. If such behavior denotes both submission and refusal to submit, then our inquiry is removed from the objective reasonable person and focuses on the target’s subjective intent, and this would both be contrary to the law as it has developed and disturb any predictability in search-and-seizure law. The State’s argument, then, cannot be accepted.
Even under the State’s subjective-intent-to-stand-his-ground argument, however, we still conclude that a seizure occurred and that it was unjustified by reasonable suspicion or probable cause. Accepting for the sake of argument that defendant subjectively did not intend to submit to a show of authority, the question that must be answered upon the show of authority is whether a reasonable innocent person would have felt free to leave or to terminate the encounter with the agents. Based on the totality of the evidence adduced at the suppression hearing, we conclude that a reasonable person would not have felt free to leave or to terminate the encounter. Upon the show of authority, then, defendant was seized because a reasonable innocent person in the same circumstances would not have felt free to leave or to terminate the encounter, notwithstanding his subjective intent to stay put even absent the show of authority. In other words, defendant’s subjective intent to remain at the spot does not trump the objective inquiry of whether a reasonable innocent person would have felt free to leave or to terminate the encounter.
Accordingly, we do not accept the State’s contention that there was no evidence that defendant submitted to the agents’ show of authority when Hilgers briefly activated his lights and siren, because the undisputed evidence showed that defendant did not flee or otherwise attempt to leave the location, and a reasonable innocent person in the same circumstances would not have felt free to leave or to terminate the encounter. Indeed, when the agents approached Castronovo’s vehicle and asked defendant to get out of it, he again complied, further indicating his submission to police authority through his cooperation, both with the earlier command to stay put and with the current request to exit.
We agree with defendant that Village of Mundelein v. Minx,
While Minx is not quite the static situation presented in this case, it is instructive. The defendant in Minx was in his driveway when he noticed the officer’s flashing emergency lights. The defendant in Minx stopped; he did not continue walking the few steps into his house. Likewise here. When Hilgers activated his lights and siren, defendant did not attempt to leave, but he stayed put. Obeying the implied command of the lights and siren to stay put qualifies as evidence of defendant’s submission to the show of authority.
In addition, we hold that, after Hilgers had briefly activated his lights and siren, a reasonable innocent person would not have felt free to decline the encounter. See Luedemann,
Next, the State contends that the trial court relied, improperly, on the “free-to-leave” test that was impliedly modified in Luedemann. The State argues that People v. Cosby,
Additionally, we note that the cases are legion in other jurisdictions in which the activation of lights or siren or both has been deemed a sufficient show of authority to result in the seizure of a parked car. See, e.g., Hammons v. State,
While the flashing lights of a police car are a sufficient show of authority to effect a seizure, the seizure must still be found to be reasonable, and there is nothing in the evidence here to suggest any justification, such as the agents were performing a community caretaking function or otherwise promoting public safety to justify the seizure in this case. There was no testimony that defendant or Castronovo was in distress or needed aid (indeed, Brotan positively testified that he observed nothing to make him think that defendant was in any sort of medical or other difficulty). The State suggests that the activation of the lights and siren was to avoid any armed confrontation with defendant or Castronovo. That justification, however, strongly supports the idea that the agents were indeed seizing defendant and Castronovo. It likewise improperly relies on the agents’ subjective intent in purporting to determine whether a seizure occurred. The State does not argue that there is anything in the record to support the seizure on the basis that defendant and Castronovo were armed or even that, if they were armed that fact would justify their seizure, which, according to the State, occurred later after probable cause had been developed. Even if we were to agree that flashing lights alone might not always result in a seizure, our review of the evidence and our consideration of the totality of the circumstances convince us that an unreasonable seizure did indeed occur when Hilgers activated his emergency lights and siren.
Additionally, while the “free-to-leave” test may not recite the proper terminology in a traffic-type stop, the appropriate test, whether a reasonable, innocent person would have felt free to decline the officer’s requests or to terminate the encounter (Luedemann,
Last, the State contends that the search warrant gave the agents an adequate basis to seize Castronovo and defendant. In support of this argument, the State cites to Rochon v. State,
On appeal, the defendant argued that his detention for the traffic stop was illegal because it lasted longer than necessary to accomplish the purpose of the stop. The court, however, held that the defendant was lawfully detained while his house was being searched pursuant to the lawful search warrant. Rochon,
“If the evidence that a citizen’s residence is harboring contraband is sufficient to persuade a judicial officer that an invasion of the citizen’s privacy is justified, it is constitutionally reasonable to require that citizen to remain while officers of the law execute a valid warrant to search his home. Thus, for Fourth Amendment purposes, we hold that a warrant to search for contraband founded on probable cause implicitly carries with it the limited authority to detain the occupants of the premises while a proper search is conducted.” Summers,452 U.S. at 704-05 ,69 L. Ed. 2d at 351 ,101 S. Ct. at 2595 .
The Supreme Court further held that the law enforcement interests served by the detention included the prevention of harm to officers and residents, the prevention of flight by the suspect, and the orderly completion of the search, which was facilitated by the presence of the occupants. Summers,
The Rochon court used these holdings, plus a Tenth Circuit case interpreting them, to determine that the defendant was simply being detained as the police executed a lawful warrant to search his home for contraband. Rochon,
While there are similarities to Rochon, this case is nevertheless distinguishable. Importantly, there was no evidence to demonstrate that defendant and Castronovo were being detained at the same time the police or the DEA were executing the search warrant on Castronovo’s residence. Because of this lack of evidence, we cannot conclude that Castronovo’s detention (and, by extension, defendant’s) played any part in facilitating an orderly search of Castronovo’s residence. Rather, Brotan testified only that he was “involved” in a search warrant and did not execute the search warrant at the residence before stopping Castronovo. Based on these distinctions, we find that Rochon does not apply. Rather, much like United States v. Edwards,
Last, we note that the State argues that the trial court erred in determining that the DEA agents “stopped” Castronovo’s car despite the testimony that Castronovo’s car was already legally parked and was not in motion at the time the agents pulled in behind it. According to the State, this mistaken premise on the trial court’s part “led to a flawed analysis” and reversible error. We disagree.
In the first instance, we note that we do not look to the propriety of the trial court’s reasoning, but rather, we review the trial court’s result. It does not matter if the trial court used “a flawed analysis” so long as the trial court reached the correct result. Here, we have held that the trial court properly granted the motion to suppress evidence. Second, and more importantly, the record clearly demonstrates that the trial court correctly apprehended the circumstances and did not use an “erroneous premise” in analyzing the issues in this case. The court explained to the parties:
“When I use that phrase, ‘pull the vehicle over,’ the vehicle had stopped. There were two vehicles involved. The vehicle stopped, and the officers pulled over.
When I make reference to stopping of the vehicle, when the officer places the Mars lights or red lights on and activates the siren, I use that phrase. At that point in time I believe there was a stop. That’s just so it’s clear on the record.”
The court’s explanation makes clear that it was attempting to conform its explanation to standard terminology used in traffic stops or Terry stops. The State’s contention is without merit.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Winnebago County is affirmed.
Affirmed.
McLAREN and JORGENSEN, JJ., concur.
Notes
Presiding Justice Lytton, in People v. Roa,
We note that the Laake court also relied on the officer’s subjective intent of rendering assistance to the driver. Our supreme court has recently reiterated that the police officer’s subjective intent is irrelevant, because the reasonableness of the seizure is considered only objectively. People v. Wear,
Likewise, in both People v. Luedemann,
Justice O’Malley, writing for the majority, criticized Minx in People v. DiPace,
