Lead Opinion
Opinion
The question presented here is whether a police request for identification during a street encounter amounts to a detention
I
Santa Ana Police Corporal Richard Reese, a 13-year veteran, and a recruit were patrolling for narcotics traffickers in a parking lot on October 22, 1986. The officers saw Servando Najera Lopez sitting on the hoоd of a car. Reese “thought [he] recognized [Lopez] from some prior encounter” but “just couldn’t remember where,” so he initiated the following conversation as they walked by: “And I haрpened to ask him as I was passing if that was his car. And he said, ‘No, it’s not my car.’ [fl] And then I asked him why he was sitting on that car, and he told me he was waiting for his friends to play pool. At this time I came to a stop . . . and looked back at him and asked him, if he was waiting for his friend to play pool, where his pool stick was. He didn’t reply at that time, [fl] And I asked him, did he have an I.D. card or did he have I.D.; and he rеached into his left front pocket and handed his wallet to [the recruit].”
The wallet was opened, a bindle “pop[ped] up,” and Lopez was arrested after the officers сonfirmed it appeared to contain cocaine. More narcotics were found during a postarrest search.
II
The district attorney concedes the officers had nо reasonable justification to detain Lopez before the contraband was discovered. But, contrary to the trial court’s conclusion, it is quite clear police do not need to have a reasonable suspicion in order to ask questions or request identification: “[0]ur recent decision in [Florida v. Royer (1983)
That court holds no detention or Fourth Amendment seizure occurs until an encounter reaches the point where a reasonable person would not feel free to leave. (INS v. Delgado, supra, 466 U.S. at pp. 216-217 [
We agree Royer and Delgado compel the conclusion that no seizure occurred here under the Supreme Court’s formulation. In Royer only one member of the court, Justice Brennan, аdopted the position that a request for identification would reasonably cause an individual to believe he was not free to leave. (Florida v. Royer, supra,
Nevertheless, questions of а sufficiently accusatory nature may by themselves be cause to view an encounter as a nonconsensual detention. (Wilson v. Superior Court, supra, 34 Cal.3d at pp. 790-791.) In Wilson the
The officers were concededly on the prowl for narcotics dealers; and Reese recognized Lopez from a previous, but then unremembered, encounter (a drunk driving arrest, as it turned out). Lopez was not engaged in any apparently unlawful conduct, yet the officers stood on either side of him and launched into a short, albeit somewhat accusatory, interrogation. But the questions were brief, flip, and, most importantly, did not concern criminal аctivity. The statements in Wilson, by contrast, were heavily accusatory and related to serious criminal conduct. The officers made no show of force or attempt to physically restrain Lopez, nor did they order him to remain. With all due deference to the trial court, we do not believe the undisputed evidence in this case meets the applicable legal standard, i.e., that “the circumstances [were] so intimidating as to demonstrate that a reasonable person would have believed he was not free to leave if he had not resрonded . . . .” (INS v. Delgado, supra,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
The officer described the neighborhood’s reputation and his experience in that locale. Reese had participated in “approximately [ ] 600 or 700” narcotics arrests in the area, which was “rampant [with] narcotiсs” and “occupied by about 100 percent undocumented aliens” who controlled a gang involved in car thefts.
The Court of Appeal has also focused on the form of the pоlice request, stating, '‘[i]t 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 . . . .” (People v. Franklin (1987)
Although the facts before us closely resemble those of Brown v. Texas, supra,
Concurrence Opinion
The instincts of the trial judge were absolutely correct. In the real world this defendant could not possibly have felt himself free to walk away when his identification was requested, and it is almost laughable to think the officers wоuld have let him do so. (See Florida v. Royer (1983)
Among the most fundamental of the liberties enjoyed by members of a free and open society is the right to be left alone. Allowing police to demand identification without reasonable suspicion in ordinary street encounters and requiring those who would assert their rights to resist the police as the price of their freedom is unsound as a matter of constitutional law and sends exactly the wrong message to the citizenry. That message is: You are protected by the Fourth Amendment only to the extent you are willing to risk the physical violation of your person by armed officers. In accord with Justice Brennan, I believe we can do much better than that.
A petition fоr a rehearing was denied August 8, 1989, and respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied October 12, 1989. Mosk, J., and Broussard, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
