*1103 Opinion
Defendant McKinley William Garry seeks reversal of a judgment and probation modification order because both resulted from the trial court’s improper denial of his motion to suppress certain evidence obtained when a police officer detained him as he stood in front of his home late one evening in May 2005. We reverse the judgment and order and remand for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
Case No. VCR162584
In December 2002, defendant, after pleading no contest to possession of cocaine base in Solano County Superior Court, received probation and was placed in a rehabilitation program. In 2006, as a result of the matters discussed further in this appeal, defendant’s Proposition 36 program was terminated unsuccessfully, and the court required that he be placed in a Delancey Street residential treatment program or, if not accepted into that program, a category I treatment program to be determined by the probation department.
Case No. VCR178540
In May 2005, the Solano County District Attorney filed an information in Solano County Superior Court. The information charged defendant with one count of possession for sale of cocaine base in violation of Health and Safety Code section 11351.5, and alleged defendant had committed two prior felonies for which he had been convicted and served prison terms within the meaning of Penal Code section 667.5, subdivision (b).
The Suppression Motion Hearing
Prior to his jury trial, defendant moved to suppress certain evidence found as a result of a purportedly illegal detention. At the suppression motion hearing, Officer Brian Crutcher testified that he was armed with a baton and gun and in full uniform as he patrolled in a marked police vehicle about 11:23 p;m. on the evening of May 3, 2005, in an area in Vallejo known as “The Crest,” which he stated was a high-crime, high-drug area where illegal street drugs were often sold and where police officers had been assaulted. 1 Crutcher observed defendant standing next to a parked car on the comer of *1104 Janice and McGrue Streets for five to eight seconds. Prior to this time, Crutcher had not made any arrests on this particular comer, but stated that “Might in that area, I’ve probably made 40-plus drug-related arrests within the last seven years. I know other officers have been assaulted in that area. I’ve had people try to assault me. And oftentimes it revolves around the sale of illegal street drags.” He had made “several” arrests on Janice Street, 100 to 150 yards from McGrue Street, including one six months before.
Crutcher turned on the patrol car’s spotlight, which emitted a white light, and illuminated defendant. He exited his car, which was “probably” about 35 feet away from defendant, and noticed that defendant looked nervous. Crutcher started walking “briskly” toward him, and defendant “[w]ith a look of kind of nervousness and shock, he started, like, walking backwards . . . and he spontaneously stated, T live right there,’ and he pointed to a house on his right.” Crutcher continued to walk toward defendant, said, “Okay, I just want to confirm that,” and asked defendant if he was on probation or parole. Defendant said he was on parole. After hearing this information, Crutcher decided to detain defendant to find out why he was there. He asked defendant if he had any weapons, guns, or knives on him, and defendant indicated he did not.
Crutcher testified that he reached defendant “two and a half, three seconds” after leaving his patrol car, during which time defendant referred to living “right there” and took three or four steps back, Crutcher asked defendant if he was on probation or parole, and defendant answered affirmatively. Shortly thereafter, after defendant “kind of paused,” Crutcher reached out and grabbed him, but defendant started to pull away “violently.” As defendant continued to actively resist, Crutcher put defendant in an arm-shoulder lock and put him on the ground and handcuffed him. Crutcher arrested defendant and searched him incident to arrest. In defendant’s front right jacket pocket, Crutcher found a small brown paper bag that contained two sandwich bags, in which were 13 individually wrapped pieces of suspected rock cocaine, which Crutcher seized.
The only other witness who testified at the suppression motion hearing was Diane Scott, a self-described “ride-along” with Crutcher, who observed events from inside the police car. Scott testified in relevant part that “Crutcher pulled up in the car, walked over to [defendant]. They talked. They had a confrontation.” She testified that during the “confrontation” she saw defendant back up, but only “like, a step. Nothing like trying to back up and run away or anything like that.” She recalled the two were a certain distance away from her by referring to certain spots in the courtroom, a distance which the court estimated to be 35 to 40 feet. She was not asked how quickly Crutcher approached defendant, and she could not remember whether there were any lights on the patrol car.
*1105 The trial court denied defendant’s suppression motion. It found that, based on Crutcher’s “credible testimony,” the encounter occurred in a high-crime area, that there was no evidence that Crutcher had a reasonable suspicion that defendant was committing an offense prior to detaining him, that Crutcher used his spotlight for officer safety because he was going to get out of the vehicle and speak to defendant to determine what he was doing in the area and why he was standing on the comer, and that a consensual contact occurred when Cmtcher got out of his patrol car, “simply approached” defendant, and starting to speak to him. The trial court stated: “[Cmtcher] didn’t yell anything at Mr. Garry. He didn’t yell ‘Stay where you are. You’re under arrest,’ or anything like that. He simply approached him, and as he was approaching him, started to speak to Mr. Garry. And one of the things he asked was, ‘Are you on probation or parole?’ And Mr. Garry was responding to that question and told him that he was on parole. Once Mr. Garry told him he was on parole, I find that the officer had a legal basis to detain Mr. Garry for the purpose of conducting a parole search, which is exactly what he did.”
Further Proceedings
After a jury trial, the jury found defendant was guilty of possessing cocaine base for sale. 2 Defendant waived jury trial of the prior conviction allegations, and the trial court found them to be tme. In May 2006, the court suspended imposition of sentence and placed defendant on three years’ probation on the same terms as in case No. VCR162584, ordering that he be placed in a Delancey Street residential treatment program or, if not accepted into that program, a category I treatment program to be determined by the probation department.
Defendant subsequently filed a timely appeal, which referred to both cases and the trial court’s motion to suppress mling.
DISCUSSION
The Fourth Amendment of the federal Constitution requires state and federal courts to exclude evidence obtained from unreasonable government searches and seizures.
(People
v.
Williams
(1999)
In
In re Manuel G.
(1997)
The test for the existence of a show of authority is an objective one and does not take into account the perceptions of the particular person involved.
(In re Manuel G., supra,
Defendant argues Crutcher detained him prior to his admission that he was on parole because “[w]hen a uniformed officer parks his patrol car next to you, shines his spotlight on you, and then proceeds to rapidly walk toward you while asking a series of questions, it is by its very nature an act of *1107 government intimidation. . . . Any reasonable person in [defendant’s] position would not have felt free to disregard Crutcher and leave the scene.” Defendant’s argument concedes that Crutcher did not command defendant to do anything. Instead, defendant relies heavily on Crutcher’s nonverbal actions— particularly Crutcher’s use of the spotlight and rapid approach—to argue Crutcher employed a level of intimidation that amounted to an unlawful detention.
The People do not contend that Cmtcher had a reasonable suspicion to detain defendant before finding out he was on parole. 3 Instead, the People maintain that the evidence provides sufficient support for the trial court’s finding that Crutcher used his spotlight to illuminate the high-crime area for his own safety, and then merely approached defendant and asked him if he was on parole. The People point out that Crutcher did not order defendant to stop or to approach him.
We are not aware of a single search and seizure case which discusses all of the relevant circumstances involved in this matter. Therefore, we review California cases, most of them found in the course of our independent research, which discuss police use of spotlights in the course of approaching people in public areas, as well as pertinent cases cited by the parties analyzing police approaches and questioning of people on the street, in order to determine the merit of the parties’ arguments.
In
People
v.
Roth
(1990)
In
People v. McKelvy
(1972)
On the other hand, in
People v. Rico
(1979)
In
People v. Franklin
(1987)
In
People
v.
Perez
(1989)
The parties to this appeal also cite certain search and seizure cases involving police approaching people on the street that are particularly instructive. In
People
v.
Terrell
(1999)
In
People v. Bennett
(1998)
On the other hand, in
People
v.
Jones
(1991)
As
In re Manuel G., supra,
16 Cal.4th at pages 820-821, makes clear, we “ ‘must consider all the circumstances surrounding the encounter to determine whether the police conduct would have communicated to a reasonable person that the person was not free to decline the officers’ requests or otherwise terminate the encounter.’ ”
(Id.
at p. 821.) This includes an examination of both an officer’s verbal
and
nonverbal actions in order to “assess [] the coercive effect of police conduct as a whole, rather than emphasizing particular details of that conduct in isolation.”
(Ibid.)
In cases such as those we discuss above, an officer’s words and verbal tones are always considered. (See
Franklin, supra,
In the present case, the argument can be made that no detention occurred prior to Crutcher learning about defendant’s parole status. Crutcher’s testimony indicates that he parked his car 35 feet away from defendant, a considerable distance, had no other officers with him, did not use emergency lights, did not draw a weapon, made no verbal commands, went to defendant rather than asking defendant to come to him, did nothing to prevent defendant from leaving, and did not touch defendant prior to learning that he was on parole. 6
However, Crutcher’s testimony makes clear that his actions, taken as a whole, would be very intimidating to any reasonable person. Crutcher testified that after only five to eight seconds of observing defendant from his marked police vehicle, Crutcher bathed defendant in light, exited his police vehicle, and, armed and in uniform, “briskly” walked 35 feet in “two and a half, three seconds” directly to him while questioning him about his legal status. Furthermore, Crutcher immediately questioned defendant about his probation and parole status, disregarding defendant’s indication that he was merely standing outside his home. In other words, rather than engage in a conversation, Crutcher immediately and pointedly inquired about defendant’s
*1112
legal status as he quickly approached.
7
We think only one conclusion is possible from this undisputed evidence: that Crutcher’s actions constituted a show of authority so intimidating as to communicate to any reasonable person that he or she was “ ‘not free to decline [his] requests or otherwise terminate the encounter.’ ”
(In re Manuel G., supra,
We find a detention occurred despite the fact that Crutcher did not make any verbal commands. “It is not the nature of the question or request made by the authorities, but rather the manner or mode in which it is put to the citizen that guides us in deciding whether compliance was voluntary or not.”
(Franklin, supra,
The trial court’s statement at the conclusion of the suppression motion hearing indicates that it did not give proper weight to all of the circumstances in denying defendant’s suppression motion. Instead, the court placed undue emphasis on the one fact that Crutcher did not issue any verbal commands to defendant. In doing so, the court did not sufficiently consider the combined, intimidating effect of Crutcher’s actions. Furthermore, the court’s finding that Crutcher “simply approached” defendant and “started to speak” to him was not supported by substantial evidence. Rather, Crutcher’s testimony indicates that Crutcher, immediately after spotlighting defendant, all but ran directly at him, covering 35 feet in just two and one-half to three seconds, asking defendant about his legal status as he did so. These were significantly different, more aggressive, and intimidating actions than indicated by the trial court’s characterizations.
Accordingly, we find the trial court erred when it found no detention occurred prior to Crutcher learning defendant was on parole. Defendant’s motion should have been granted and the drug evidence found on him suppressed.
*1113 DISPOSITION
The trial court’s judgment in case No. VCR178540 and its probation modification order in case No. VCR162584 are reversed, and the matters remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion
Kline, P. J., and Richman, J., concurred.
On November 29, 2007, the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied March 12, 2008, S159619. Moreno, J., did not participate therein. Baxter, J., and Corrigan, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Crutcher could not define the parameters of “The Crest,” but described it as a “neighborhood” with “[bjasically the same housing or similar housing that was built at the same time.”
In their appellate papers, the parties also discuss the evidence presented at the subsequent trial, including Crutcher’s trial testimony about his initial encounter with defendant. We do not discuss this evidence because the only appellate issues defendant raises relate to the trial court’s ruling on his pretrial motion to suppress evidence. Our review is limited to the evidence which was before the trial court when it was called upon to rule on that motion.
(People
v.
Gibbs
(1971)
For this reason, we do not discuss further defendant’s arguments why there was no reasonable suspicion of criminal activity here.
Finding that “[t]he circumstances were devoid of indicia of [the defendant’s] involvement in criminal activity,” the appellate court reversed the trial court’s motion denial.
(People
v.
Roth, supra,
The People also discuss
In re Frank V.
(1991)
We also have no reason to disagree with the trial court’s determination that Crutcher used his spotlight for officer safety, but “[t]he officer’s uncommunicated state of mind . . . [is] irrelevant in assessing whether a seizure triggering Fourth Amendment scrutiny has occurred.”
(In re Manuel G., supra,
Defendant’s ready response to Crutcher’s question demonstrates that he had submitted to Crutcher’s show of authority by this point.
