delivered the opinion of the court:
Following his arrest for home invasion, defendant Earl Ross filed a motion to quash his arrest and suppress evidence, alleging that the police subjected him to an arrest before establishing probable cause in violation of the fourth amendment of the United States Constitution (U.S. Const., amend. IV). Following a hearing, the trial court granted defendant’s motion. The State filed a certificate of substantial impairment and contends on appeal that the trial court erred because the police properly stopped defendant pursuant to Terry v. Ohio,
At the hearing on defendant’s motion, defendant testified that shortly after 11 p.m. on May 26, 1998, he was walking north near 16638 South Marshfield when a police officer ran up behind him and yelled “Stop.” Defendant was dressed in a light blue shirt and dark trousers. The officer handcuffed him, placed him in a squad car, and took him “over to Hazel Crest” (1709 West 168th Street), where defendant stood on the street 60 to 75 feet from a house. The officer shined a flashlight in defendant’s face and then he was told that the victim had identified him. The officer subsequently recovered one $10 bill, one $5 bill, and fifteen $1 bills from defendant’s pocket. Defendant said he saw a man and two women walking ahead of him on Marsh-field when the police stopped him. Defendant acknowledged that the victim’s house was just south and across an open field from where he was stopped and that part of the field included a well-lighted towing shop surrounded by a cyclone fence.
Brian Tegtmeyer, administrative supervisor for the Hazel Crest police department, testified that at 11:11 p.m. on the night of this incident, the elderly victim, Fred Douglas, telephoned and stated that a black man wearing a blue shirt and pants had just entered his home, choked and robbed him, and left on foot. Other than that description, the victim said he did not know what the assailant looked like. Tegtmeyer radioed the information to patrol officers in the area. Officer Don Preston arrived at the victim’s house one minute later and radioed to responding officers that he had seen a suspect matching the initial description. At 11:17 p.m., Sergeant Patrick Murray radioed Tegtmeyer that a subject (defendant) had been stopped. Defendant was taken to the victim’s house, positively identified and then arrested at 11:25 p.m.
Officers Preston and Murray testified as follows. As Officer Preston approached the victim’s home, he saw defendant, a black man wearing a blue shirt, about one-half block away. Defendant was walking away from Preston on the gravel road bordering the towing shop, an area well-lighted with overhead lights. Preston radioed other patrol officers and relayed the information. There were no other pedestrians in the area. Preston watched as the man walked toward the end of the road where the area darkened. When Preston saw Murray’s squad car driving with its headlights off past the spot where defendant had walked, he radioed Murray, directing him back to the correct location. Preston then spoke to the victim, who told him the assailant was 6 feet 2 inches tall and weighed 220 pounds and that he had robbed him of one $5 bill, two $10 bills and fifteen $1 bills.
Meanwhile, Sergeant Murray parked his squad car and proceeded on foot to 167th Street and Marshfield where he saw defendant, who matched the description Officer Preston had radioed. Murray drew his weapon because, although he did not know if defendant was armed, he knew that a home invasion had occurred. He handcuffed defendant, placed him in the squad car, and then radioed Preston and asked him to bring the victim to the scene of the stop for a showup. Preston asked that Murray bring defendant to the home of the 80-year-old victim. The distance between the scene of the stop and the victim’s house was one block plus about 100 feet.
When Murray arrived with defendant, he stopped directly in front of the victim’s house and defendant stood on the street under a streetlight in the headlights of the squad car. After the victim walked to within two feet of defendant and positively identified him, stating “That’s him” or “That’s the guy,” Murray placed defendant under arrest. Before putting defendant in the squad car, Murray checked defendant’s pockets and found bills totaling $30. Only two to three minutes had passed from the time Murray heard the radio dispatch until he stopped defendant. Murray also saw no other pedestrians in the area during the search, but after he stopped defendant several people came out of “shadows,” presumably out of a house. After he stopped defendant, Murray patted him down to check for weapons but did not search his pockets until he was identified as the offender.
The trial court stated that it was “troubled by” the testimony of Officer Preston, “who testified that a half block away he saw the blue shirt.” The trial court thought “that’s impossible to see at night.” After being asked by the prosecutor for a finding that defendant was not arrested until after the showup, the court stated, “I’m saying he was arrested at the time they stopped him. He was certainly not free to go. He was not free to go.” The trial court granted defendant’s motion to quash his arrest and suppress evidence.
We review undisputed facts in a motion to suppress de novo (People v. Wallace,
We must first consider whether the initial Terry stop was lawful. We apply a de novo standard of review to determine the existence of “reasonable suspicion” supporting a Terry stop. People v. Young,
To justify a brief investigatory stop of a person in a public place, a police officer must be able to articulate specific facts which, considered with rational inferences from those facts, would lead a reasonable person to believe the action taken was proper. 725 ILCS 5/107 — 14 (West 1998); People v. Rivera,
The undisputed evidence established that the victim telephoned the police at 11:11 p.m. and said that a black man wearing a blue shirt had just invaded his home, choked and robbed him, and fled on foot. While responding to this call and approaching the victim’s home, Officer Preston saw defendant, who matched the description and was about one-half block from the victim’s home in a well-lighted area. Preston immediately notified the other responding police officers of defendant’s presence and location. Sergeant Murray then observed defendant within minutes of the crime walking a short distance from the victim’s home. Defendant fit the victim’s description of the offender, and there were no other pedestrians in sight. These facts provided at least the minimal articulable suspicion required to stop defendant. Rivera,
Next, we must consider whether the investigatory stop of defendant constituted or was converted into an arrest before the victim identified defendant. The State contends that defendant was not placed under arrest until the victim positively identified him. Defendant asserts that the police effected an arrest by handcuffing him at gunpoint, placing him in a squad car, and transporting him to a showup. There is no dispute that probable cause to arrest existed when the victim positively identified defendant as the assailant.
An investigatory stop is distinguished from an arrest based on the length of detention and the scope of investigation following the initial stop, not the initial restraint of movement. Young,
In the present case, neither the length of detention nor the scope of the investigation transformed the lawful investigatory stop into an arrest. Only eight minutes elapsed between the time the police effectuated defendant’s stop and the time of arrest after the victim positively identified defendant according to the undisputed evidence. At 11:17 p.m., Sergeant Murray radioed that a subject had been stopped. At 11:25 p.m., after obtaining the victim’s positive identification of defendant, the arrest was made. Thus, the length of defendant’s detention was very brief. See Young,
The scope of the investigation following the Terry stop conformed to appropriate procedures because it was brief and determinative in nature. The purpose of a Terry stop is to allow a police officer to investigate the circumstances that provoke suspicion and either confirm or dispel his suspicions. People v. Fasse,
Furthermore, the transportation of a suspect for the purpose of an identification is not necessarily an unreasonable seizure under the fourth amendment. People v. Lippert,
The restraint of defendant in this case also did not transform the investigatory stop into an arrest. The trial court mistakenly found that defendant was under arrest at the time of the stop because “[h]e was not free to go.” Contrary to this finding, the law provides that, during the course of a legitimate investigative stop, a person “ ‘is no more free to leave than if he were placed under a full arrest.’ ” People v. Paskins,
In fact, the instant defendant, in his appellate brief, correctly acknowledges “that in isolation or even in combination, for the police to draw a gun at a citizen, handcuff him, place him in a squad car and drive him to a confrontational encounter with a witness in a different location might not per se cause a stop to become an arrest under the particular facts of an individual case.” See Tilmon,
Under the facts and circumstances of the present case, we find that the investigatory stop was properly based upon reasonable suspicion and the defendant was properly arrested only after the victim’s positive identification, which gave rise to probable cause. See Young,
Accordingly, the order of the trial court is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
McNULTY, EJ., and GORDON, J., concur.
