Opinion
Thеre is little room for error when a police officer responds to a disturbance call involving a firearm in a documented criminal street gang area. (See
People ex rel. Totten
v.
Colonia Chiques
(2007)
Richard G. appeals from the order of the juvenile court denying his motion to suppress and accepting appellant’s admission that he disturbed the peace by using offensive language. (Pen. Code, § 415, subd. (3).) Appellant contends the juvenile court erred when it denied his motion to suppress because (1) the evidencе was insufficient to support the detention and cursory search for weapons, and (2) the prosecution did not establish the source of the information on which the arresting officer relied to detain appellant. These contentions are without merit and, in any event, the granting of a suppression motion would not preclude the People from proving their case. We affirm.
*1256 Facts and Procedural History
Oxnard Police Officers Mora and Alva were on routine patrol in the Colonia area of Oxnard at approximately midnight on June 21, 2007. They received a radio dispatch that two males were causing a disturbance outside a residence at 133 North Juanita Street and that one of them was possibly in possession of a handgun. The police dispatcher further stated that one male was wearing a black T-shirt while the other was wearing a blue Pendletontype jacket. They were walking toward Colonia Park, which is located across the street from the North Juanita Street residence. Earlier that week, Officer Mora had responded to another call of a daytime shooting at the same residence. The police seized two guns on that occasion.
The officers drove around the park. Within a few minutes, they saw two males and two females walking near the park. The males were wearing clothing that identiсally matched the description given in the radio dispatch. They radioed for “backup” and Officer Valesquez responded to their call.
Officers Mora and Alva got out of their patrol car and made contact with the group. They ordered the males to stop but they refused to do so. Because they believed one of the males might be in possession of a gun, the officers repeated their commands and told the malеs to sit on the ground. Appellant repeatedly refused to obey any police command. He told Officer Mora, “I’m going to fuck you up . . . .” He made repeated statements to the same effect. When Mora grabbed appellant to place him in a control hold, appellant resisted and punched Mora. Appellant was eventually handcuffed with help from other officers, but not before he caused visible injuries tо Officer Mora.
Appellant filed a written motion to suppress evidence of his statements and conduct during the detention on the theory that Officer Mora lacked reasonable suspicion to detain him. He also lodged a
“Harvey-Madden”
objection, contending the prosecution could not establish that his detention was lawful unless it identified the source of the original report or called the police dispatcher to testify that it had been received.
(People v. Harvey
(1958)
After the trial court denied the motion to suppress, appellаnt admitted the misdemeanor allegation that he disturbed the peace by using offensive language toward Officer Mora. Allegations that he resisted, obstructed or *1257 delayed a peace officer in violation of Penal Code section 148, subdivision (a)(1), and that he resisted an executive officer in violation of Penal Code section 69 were dismissed.
Anonymous Tip Supports the Detention and Cursory Search for Weapons
A poliсe officer may stop and detain a person if the officer knows of “specific and articulable facts causing him to suspect that (1) some activity relating to crime has taken place or is occurring or about to occur, and (2) the person he intends to stop or detain is involved in that activity.”
(In re Tony C.
(1978)
Here, informаtion from an anonymous telephone call supplied the basis for appellant’s detention. Relying on
Florida
v.
J. L.
(2000)
More recently, in
People v. Dolly,
our California Supreme Court distinguished
Florida v. J. L.
In
Dolly,
an anonymous caller, who reported that hе had just been assaulted with a firearm, provided a detailed description of the assailant, his car and his location. Within five minutes, a police officer located the car and driver described in the telephone call. A handgun was concealed under the front passenger seat.
(People v. Dolly, supra,
In the presenting case, an anonymous caller gave a contemporaneous report of a late night disturbance involving a firearm that occurred in front of *1258 a specific residence located in known gang territory. The caller described the individuals involved and their clothing, and reported that they were walking toward Colonia Park. The officers knew this park was frequented by members of the Colonia Chiques street gang. Only days before, officers investigated a shooting at the same residence and seized two firearms. In our view, the anonymous telephone report at issue here is every bit as reliable as the report described in Dolly, if not more so. This dictates affirmance of the trial court’s finding that the officer did not violate appellant’s Fourth Amendment rights. 1
In these types of cases, the courts are called upon to strike a balance between a citizen’s Fourth Amendment rights and the rights of society in general to be free from people who create disturbances with firearms. We conclude the trial court struck the correct balance when it expressly found that there was no Fourth Amendment violation. We also point out what seems to be obvious: in all likelihood, appellant would have been detained for a few minutes and then sent on his way had he not displayed such a “bad attitude.” If appellant had cooperated with a brief detention and patdown, the officer would have found that he was unarmed—the crucial factor driving the detention—and allowed him to leave. Instead, appellant belligerently refused to comply with any police request or command, escalating an otherwise benign encounter into a physical fight. He is lucky that neither he nor Officer Mora was seriously injured.
Harvey-Madden
Appellant contends the trial court erred when it denied the motion to suppress because the prosecution did not comply with the “Harvey-Madden” rule. As a result, he contends, the prosecution did not carry its burden to prove his detention was supported by a reasonable suspicion of his involvement in a crime. We are not persuaded. Our Supreme Court has said: “We held in
People
v.
Lara
[(1967)]
Here there was no “manufacture” of information. The information received by the police dispatcher was radioed to multiple officers in multiple patrol cars and it provided detailed descriptions of the two suspects. Absent (1) the officer himself calling in the report to the dispatcher or, (2) clairvoyance on the part of the dispatcher, there is no way that the dispatcher could have manufactured these detailed descriptions at or near the place and time the officers saw appellant and his companion matching the detailed descriptions.
Where, as here, the evidence and the reasonable inferences flowing from it show that the police dispatcher actually received a telephone report creating a reasonable suspicion of criminal wrongdoing, it is not necessary to require strict compliance with the
“Harvey-Madden”
rule.
(People v. Orozco
(1981)
“When the reason of a rule ceases, so should the rule itself.” (Civ. Code, § 3510.) When the judiciary can reasonably determine that no evidence has been manufactured, there is no reason for strict compliance with the letter of the “Harvey-Mаdden” rule. We point out, of course, that there is a good reason for the “Harvey-Madden” rule and that its requirements can plainly and easily be met by simply calling the police dispatcher as a witness at the suppression hearing.
(People v. Orozco, supra,
To the extent that
In re Eskiel S.
(1993)
Limitations on What Can Be Suppressed
Finally, even if we were to assume that there was insufficient evidence to support the detention and that the trial court should have required strict compliance with “Harvey-Madden,” we still would not order that testimony describing appellant’s violent behavior and threatening statements be supressed. There are limitations to the exclusionary rule which are largely
*1261
based on common sense. One such limitation is that the rule does not immunize crimes of violence committed on a peace officer, even if they are preceded by a Fourth Amendment violation. For example, would the exclusionary rule operate to exclude testimony that an unlawfully arrested person shot the arresting police officer? The answer is, plainly, no.
(People v. Mathews
(1994)
Many other state and federal appellate courts have reached the same conclusion, declining to suppress physical evidence or testimony describing a new crime committed by a defendant in response to an illegal detention or search. As one Georgia court explained, “Whilе we vigorously condemn any illegal detention of our citizens, we will not find that an improper
Terry
investigative stop justifies the commission of a battery against the officers conducting the stop. ‘Challenges to even unconstitutional police [actions] must be made in the courts, not on the street.’ ”
(Strickland
v.
State
(2004)
The very facts of the instant case illustrate the principle. All of the police officers at the scene experienced or saw the entire encounter between
*1262
appellant and Officer Mora. They were eyewitnesses to appellant’s assaultive conduct and heard his threatening statements. Their testimony did not “result from” nor was it “caused by” a Fourth Amendment violation. Their testimony arose from a contemporaneous “independent source,” their own perceptions.
(United States
v.
Ceccolini, supra,
Broadly speaking, evidence may be excluded as “fruit of the poisonous tree” where its discovery “results from” or is “caused” by a Fourth Amendment violation.
(United States
v.
Ceccolini, supra,
An individual’s decision to commit a new and distinct crime, even if made during or immediately after an unlawful detention, is an intervening act sufficient to purge the “taint” of a theoretically illegal detention. For example, had Officer Mora unlawfully arrested appellant based solely on an uncorroborated police radio broadcast and had appellant then told or showed Mora where he disposed of a firearm, this information, the officer’s observations, and the gun itself could be excluded from evidence at trial because they “resulted from” or were “caused by” the unlawful arrest. This is plainly not the case, however,_ whеre a police officer or third party sees a defendant commit a new crime at the same time as the defendant is subjected to an unlawful detention or search. Under those circumstances, the defendant’s new criminal behavior breaks the causal link between any constitutional violation and evidence of the new crime.
As the Supreme Court stated in
Ceccolini,
“[r]ules which disqualify knowledgeable witnesses from testifying at trial are, in the words of Professor McCormick, ‘sеrious obstructions to the ascertainment of truth’; accordingly, ‘[f]or a century the course of legal evolution has been in the direction of sweeping away these obstructions.’ ”
(United States v. Ceccolini, supra,
The judgment (order denying motion to suppress) is affirmed.
Coffee, J., and Perren, J., concurred.
On May 20, 2009, the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied August 26, 2009, S174032.
Notes
We reach the issue of “cursory search or patdown for weapons” because Officer Mora ordered appellant to sit on the ground as a protеctive measure, presumably as a prelude to a patdown. This implicates appellant’s rights to a greater extent than just detaining him for questioning. But, Officer Mora never got that far because of appellant’s vulgar refusal to follow any of the officer’s directions. Appellant was arrested for resisting and interfering with a peace officer before any patdown search could take place. In our view, Officer Mora had sufficient information to believe that appellant was armed and dangerous and a patdown for weapons would have been appropriate.
Among the many cases that have declined to suppress evidence of a new crime committed after an illegal detention or warrantless entry, we note:
U.S. v. Sledge
(8th Cir. 2006)
