On September 19,1980, defendant was convicted in a bench trial of armed robbery, contrary to MCL 750.529; MSA 28.797. After pleading guilty to being a second-felony offender, he was sentenced to 12 to 20 years imprisonment. He appeals as of right.
Defendant first argues that his trial and conviction were barred by double jeopardy. See
People v Benton,
Defendant argues that the trial judge abused his discretion in declaring the mistrial because there was no manifest necessity and because defendant did not consent to the mistrial. We need not address defendant’s second argument because we find that manifest necessity did exist.
The evidence presented at the hearing established that the witness’s doctor could not deterine when, if ever, the witness could again testify. Defense counsel vehemently opposed the prosecutor’s motion for a further adjournment, arguing that such a postponement would deleteriously affect the trial court’s perception of the testimony so far presented. The trial court was thus left with two alternatives — eithеr to permit the trial to continue or to declare a mistrial.
Had the trial court adopted the first of these alternatives, defendant’s right to confrontation would have been seriously abridged. The witness was one of the few witnesses who saw the bank robber’s face and was actually one of the tellers from whom the money was taken. Identification testimony from such a witness must be considered "crucial and devastating”. See
Dutton v Evans,
Defendant next argues that evidence introduced against him at trial should have been suppressed because it was illegally seized and that his right to counsel was denied by an on-the-scene identification without counsel. On March 19, 1980, at 3:40 p.m., two men robbed the City Bank and Trust in Jackson. Witnesses at the scene saw the two men drive away from the bank in a brown car and noted the license plate number. Within five to ten minutes, the police radio broadcasted a report of the bank robbery, a description of the robbers as two armed black males, and the address to which the getaway car was registered.
Immediately after this broadcast, at least seven police officers drove tо the address. Three of the officers proceeded directly to the front door with guns drawn while at least three other officers went to the back door. Officer Conant, one of the three officers at the front door, knocked and rang the doorbell. Mrs. Deborah Johnson, the owner of the house, answered the door. Officer Conant later testified thаt the following exchange then occurred:
"I asked her if she owned a red Fairmont. She stated that she did. I told her that her license number had just been reported as being used in a bank robbery, and she gave me a look of surprise, and I asked her if I could come in. She stepped back and I followed her into the house. Detective Smith and Choate followеd me in the front door following her.”
*300 The officers followed Mrs. Johnson into her living room. Within 10 to 15 seconds, defendant and codefendant Briston entered the room. After some discussion with Mrs. Johnson, Officer Conant checked with the officers still outside and discovered that the getaway car was in the garage. Upon this discovery, the officers searched the two men fоr weapons, handcuffered them, placed them in the backseats of two police cars, and sent them back to the City Bank and Trust for the on-the-scene identification.
Immediately after sending defendant and codefendant away, the police searched the entire house to "see if any additional suspect or any other person” was in the house. In one of the bedrooms, the officers saw money wrappers, cash register tapes, and rubberbands lying on the bed. These items were later seized pursuant to a search warrant. Under the same search warrant, the police searched dresser drawers and closets and looked between the mattresses in the same room. They fоund money, including bait money from the bank robbery, a felt hat, a black coat, and a revolver.
A search without a warrant is unreasonable per se unless it can be justified under one of the exceptions to the search warrant requirement.
Stoner v California,
A plain view search and seizure is justified only when four requirements are met. First, the police must have a lawful right to be where they are when they see the item.
People v Dugan,
The crucial inquiry in this case focuses on the first requirement. The prosecution argues that the police were lawfully in the house through hot pursuit.
"Hot pursuit” is a form of "exigent circumstances”.
Warden v Hayden,
In this case, it cannot be said that the police had to enter Mrs. Johnson’s house to prevent the escape of the two suspects or destruction of evidence taken in the robbery, or to protect anyone from the suspects. At the time the police entered the hоuse, they knew of nothing that even suggested the suspects were in the house. The police did not follow the suspects to the robbery scene but instead went directly to the house. In addition, the police arrived at the house in pursuit of a lead (the getaway car was registered to that address) and not in pursuit of the suspects. This was amply demonstrated by the fact that the police never checked to see whether the getaway car was anywhere near the house until sometime after they had entered the house, although, given the short time since the robbery (5 to 10 minutes) and the distance from the robbery scene (1 mile), this *302 would have been the logical investigatory step if the police thought the suspects might be in the area.
Two recent cases support our conclusion that, because the police had no reason to believe the suspects were in Mrs. Johnson’s house, they lacked exigent circumstances to enter it. In
People v Anthony, supra,
the police were led by a witness to the house of the supposed armed robbers within 15 to 30 minutes of the robbery. The Court nоted that the police had no information that anyone had recently entered the house and distinguished the case from the situation in
Warden v Hayden, supra,
where the officers’ actions "were not directed to a house where the suspect was living but rather where he had entered moments before”.
People v Anthony, supra,
p 212. In
People v Jeffery Woodard,
Neither do we find that the officers had the right to be in the house through consent. In
People v Carpenter,
These facts are not present herе. The prosecution must show by clear and convincing evidence that, under the totality of the circumstances, the consent was freely and voluntarily given.
Schneckloth v Bustamonte,
We therefore must conclude that the police lacked the right to be at Mrs. Johnson’s house when they saw the items in plain view. Since the original search formed the basis for the warrant and subsequent search, all items seized pursuant to the warrant must be suppressed as fruit of the poisonous tree.
Wong Sun v United States,
Although we are reversing defendant’s conviction on this ground, we must determine whether defendаnt’s on-the-scene identifications, and possibly the later in-court identifications, should also have been suppressed because this issue may recur on retrial. Michigan allows a prompt, on-the-scene identification without counsel.
People v Anderson,
The police testimony in this case established that the police searched defendant and codefendant Briston for weapons, handcuffed them, and took them in the rear seats of separate рolice cruisers to the scene of the robbery for identification. Furthermore, the officers informed other officers back at the bank that defendant and his codefendant were "in custody”. On these facts, we can conclude only that defendant and his codefendant were under arrest: "the
sine qua non
for an arrest or 'seizure’ of the person of a defendant is a significant restraint of freedom, an intrusion more severe that a Terry-type 'stop and frisk’ ”.
People v Emanuel,
However, the police themselves fully admitted that they did not have probable cause to arrest the men:
”Q. And, what was your reason for having the officers take them back to the bank for field identification?
”A. Well I didn’t — I didn’t know, and there was no way to know at this point whethеr they were or were not the persons responsible for the bank robbery. It’s been my experience that the quickest way to solve that problem is to take them back immediately for field identification, as long as the time distance span is reasonable.
*305 ”Q. Mr. Conant, you didn’t have any descriptions of any additional suspects other than Mr. — the descriptiоn that’s fit Mr. Raybon and Mr. Briston at the time you entered the house, is that right?
"A The description I had even at that point was vague, and although they did match and meet the descriptions as I could visualize myself, Mr. Raybon, Mr. Briston, they would also match many people.”
Failure to conclude that the police lacked probable cause to arrest on these facts would allow the police to search, handcuff, and transport any black male in the vicinity. Had 20 other black males entered the Johnson house in defendant’s wake, nothing but a requirement of probable cause would have prevented the police from taking all 20 back to the bank in handcuffs. We must, therefore, conclude that defendant’s arrеst was without probable cause (see MCL 764.15[l][d]; MSA 28.874[l][d]), and that the subsequent on-the-scene identifications must be suppressed as fruit of the poisonous tree. Wong Sun v United States, supra. 1
This case may be distinguished from the type of situation that occurred in
People v Starks,
We realize that our resolution of this issue may place the police in an untenable situation, depending on the interpretation given other aspects of the on-the-scene identification procedure. In
People v Dixon,
In light of the policy reasons favoring the on-the-scene identifications, we believe this result would be too severe. Such identifications are conducted to avoid detention of an innocent suspect
2
and to permit an identification while the image of the criminal is still fresh in the victim’s mind.
Russell v United States,
133 US App DC 77, 80-81; 408 F2d 1280, 1283-1284 (1969),
cert den
This dilemma could be eliminated by following
People v Coward,
"Unquestionably, confrontations in which a single suspect is viewed in the custody of the police are highly suggestive. Whatever the police actually sаy to the viewer, it must be apparent to him that they think they have caught the villain. Doubtless a man seen in handcuffs or through the grill of a police wagon looks more like a crook than the same man standing at ease and at liberty. There may also be unconscious or overt pressures on the witness to cooperate with the police by confirming their suspicions. And the viewer may have been emotionally unsettled by the experience of the fresh offense.” Russell v United States, supra, p 1284.
Given these competing considerations, we believe that the better reasoned approach is that taken in
People v Dana Turner,
This approach also eliminates the possibility of a valid arrest automatically preventing a prompt, on-the-scene identification without counsel. As long as the probable cause nеcessary to arrest a suspect does not rise to the level of "strong evidence” cited in Turner, the police may arrest a suspect and still conduct the identification.
Because we have concluded that the on-the-scene identifications of defendant must be suppressed on retrial, we must also determine whether subsequent in-court identifications (by witnesses Kusiak, Wasilew, and Hock) must also be suppressed. The trial court found no illegality in the on-the-scene identifications and so had no reason to inquire after an independent basis for the in-court identifications. On retrial, we therefore direct the trial court to conduct an evidentiary hearing pursuant to
People v Kachar;
400 Mich
78;
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
We note that even if the police had probable cause to arrest, in the absence of exigent circumstances or consent, this arrest still would have been illegal.
Payton v New York,
Even where a suspect has been properly arrested on probable cause, this consideration is still relevant. Exoneration at the identification could well eliminate the need for the trip to the police station and all that this would entail.
A second consideration mentioned in People v Turner requiring counsel is irrelevant here.
