Lead Opinion
Williе Winfield Scott was convicted of possession of a firearm while possessing cocaine, possession of cocaine and obstruction of a police officer. On appeal he contends that the charges of possessing cocaine and possessing a firearm while possessing cocaine should be dismissed because the police officer violated his constitutional rights when the officer seized and frisked him on the basis of a general description provided by an anonymous phone caller. Scott further contends that because the officer’s seizure of him was unreasonable, his conviction of obstructing the officer shоuld also be reversed. We affirm the trial court’s decision because the police officer had a reasonable suspicion based on articulable facts that Scott was, or had been, engaged in criminal аctivity. We need not address the issue of obstruction because Scott failed to raise the issue at trial as it is now presented on appeal. See Rule 5A:18. Even if we were to address the issue as presented, because we hold the officer had probable cause to conduct the pat down search of Scott we would not reverse the conviction of obstruction.
The officer commanded Scott to “freeze” and to put his hands on the wall. Scott compHed and the officer patted him down, felt a hard object in Scott’s waistband, and removed a .38 cahber revolver. The officer then told Scott that he was under arrest for carrying a concealed weapon. The officer asked Scott to put his hands behind him to be cuffed, but Scott started to resist and to struggle. The officer put Scott’s gun a few feet away and the two struggled. During the struggle, Scott was trying to get away from the officer and at one time lunged in the direction of the gun. Scott was finally subdued when a second officer came on the scene. When that officer searched Scott, he found cocaine.
To justify a pat down under Terry v. Ohio,
The Commonwealth maintains that becаuse the dispatch mentioned a gun, pubhc safety warranted an immediate investigation. Scott argues that the anonymous tip in this case,
In the past, we have recognized a line of cases where courts have found reasonable suspicion for an investigatory stop when the public is in imminent danger, despite the fact thаt the stop is based on information provided by an anonymous informant who has not provided any basis of knowledge. See Beckner v. Commonwealth,
In answering this question, the case of State v. Franklin,
The anonymity of an informant does not necessarily make an investigatory stop improper, especially when the informant’s information indicates that a violent crime may occur ....
[T]he unidentified citizen informant in the present case observed a person in public with a firearm and reported his*729 observations almost contemporaneously with their occurrence. The informant specified the public location of the suspect and gave a description of the suspect’s attire. In these unique and potentially dangerous circumstances, such a tip is sufficiently reliable to support an investigatory detention if the police immediately verify the accuracy of the description and location of the suspect. Immediate police verification of the tip’s innocuous details supports reasonable inferences that the anonymous informant’s information is based on eyewitness observation, and that the unverified portion of the tip [рossession of a firearm] may also be accurate.
Id. at 412-13,
Other courts have also recognized the need for an immediate investigatory stop when an anonymous informant of undetermined reliability states that he or she observed a suspect carrying or displaying a gun in a public place. See State v. Kuahuia,
We hold that, under the circumstances of this case, the officer’s pat down search of Scott for a firearm was warranted for the officer’s protection and the protection of the public. See State ex rel. H.B.,
For all of the above-stated reasons, we affirm Scott’s convictions.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
In a case in which an anоnymous tip conveyed detailed information to the police that a person was engaged in criminal activity, the Supreme Court of the United States declared it “a close case” and ruled as follows:
[T]he independent corroboration by the police of significant aspects of the informer’s predictions imparted some degree of reliability to the other allegations made by the caller.
[It is] also important that, as in [Illinois v. Gates,462 U.S. 213 ,103 S.Ct. 2317 ,76 L.Ed.2d 527 (1983)], “the anonymous [tip] contained a range of details relating not just to easily obtained facts and conditions existing at the time of the tip, but to future actions of third parties ordinarily not easily predicted.”
Alabama v. White,
In Adams v. Williams,
Furthermore, this Court’s decision in Beckner v. Commonwealth,
The record in this case contains no basis upon which anyone could have determined that the invisible, unknоwn informant was reliable or had a basis to know anything other than the presence of the defendant, or someone similarly dressed, in the laundromat. See White,
“[T]he test of constitutional validity [of a warrantless search] is whether at the moment of arrest the arresting officer had knowledge of sufficient facts and circumstances to wаrrant a reasonable man in believing that an offense has been committed.” An important element in establishing the reliability of an anonymous tip is the predictive nature of the information. The information provided by the informаnt must describe not just easily obtained facts, but future third party actions not easily predicted. Probable cause to arrest must exist exclusive of the incident search.
Hardy v. Commonwealth,
For these reasons, I would hold that the officer lacked a lawful basis to conduct a Terry stop. Accordingly, I would reverse the convictions.
