Appellant was found guilty of one count of unlawful possession of a controlled substance (cocaine) in violation of D.C.Code § 48-904.01(d) (2001). He challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress the cocaine evidence on the ground that his Fourth Amendment rights were violated. We hold that, on the facts and circumstances of record, the motion to suppress should have been granted and we reverse appellant’s conviction for unlawful possession of a controlled substance.
I.
At the hearing on appellant’s suppression motion, the following facts were developed. Officer Steven Prade has been with the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) for approximately twelve years, most recently assigned to a Focus Mission Team that “normally target[s] high drug areas within the District.” Over the course of his career, Officer Prade has observed an estimated 3,000 drug transactions.
On the evening of November 5, 2004, Officer Prade and his partner were detailed to the 1900 block of Benning Road, N.E., to conduct a plainclothes “buy-bust” drug sting operation supported by an arrest team in separate MPD vehicles. At approximately 7:35 p.m., as Officer Prade drove towards the targeted location, he turned his unmarked police vehicle into a convenience store parking lot at 1830 Ben-ning Road, on the northwest corner of Benning Road and 19th Street, N.E. Officer Prade stopped directly behind a car with two occupants, including a person in the driver’s seat later identified as appellant, and immediately observed a man approach appellant’s window with United States currency visible in his hand. During a thirty to ninety-second conversation, the man handed the money to appellant and, in a gesture that Officer Prade viewed as “no handshake,” appellant appeared to place an unidentified “small object” in the man’s hand. The man then walked away and appellant drove his car out of the parking lot. Officer Prade, believing he had witnessed a drug transaction, followed appellant’s car and radioed its description to the arrest team with instructions for appellant’s arrest. 1 Appellant was stopped and, in a search incident to arrest, officers recovered from appellant’s left sock a white piece of paper containing two rocks that later tested positive for cocaine.
Before trial, appellant filed a motion to suppress tangible evidence, i.e., the cocaine, contending that the officers acted without probable cause when they arrested him and thus that the subsequent search, not being incident to a lawful arrest, violated his Fourth Amendment rights. The government conceded that probable cause was required because this was not a mere investigatory stop, but maintained that based on Officer Prade’s observations and experience, he had probable cause to order appellant’s arrest. The trial court agreed with the government and denied appellant’s motion to suppress. Appellant then stipulated that he possessed cocaine and was found guilty by the trial court of unlawful possession of a controlled substance. He was sentenced to twenty days of incarceration.
II.
The central question in this appeal, the parties agree, is whether Officer Prade had probable cause to believe that an offense had been or was being committed when he ordered the arrest team to intercept and arrest appellant. If we were
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to find that Officer Prade had probable cause, then the cocaine found on appellant’s person was lawfully recovered pursuant to the “search incident to an arrest” rule.
Davis v. United States,
“In reviewing a trial court order denying a motion to suppress, the facts and all reasonable inferences therefrom must be viewed in favor of sustaining the trial court ruling.”
Peay v. United States,
“Under the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution, an officer cannot conduct a warrantless search of a person, absent certain exceptions, without probable cause.”
Davis, supra,
Furthermore, we have acknowledged that “[t]he exchange of small objects for currency is an important and sometimes decisive factor in determining the existence of probable cause.”
Thompson v. United States,
Nonetheless, in the present case, even viewing the evidence of record in the light most favorable to the government, we are not satisfied that an adequate foundation was developed to show that Officer Prade could reasonably believe that there was a sufficient probability that criminal activity had occurred based on the activities he observed. Before ordering appellant’s arrest, Officer Prade saw: (1) appellant sitting in a car in a convenience store parking lot, (2) a pedestrian holding currency approach appellant’s driver’s side window and give that money to appellant, (3) the pedestrian receive back from appellant some kind of “small object,” and (4) both parties depart the scene. Although Officer Prade’s suspicions may indeed have been reasonably raised by the conduct he observed to justify a Terry stop, 3 we cannot conclude that probable cause existed on the record before us.
At oral argument, counsel for the government identified three analogous two-way-transaction cases that are said to best support a finding of probable cause in the present case:
Peterkin, supra,
In
Peterkin,
police officers on patrol in a known “high narcotic area” observed one appellant give currency to the other appellant in exchange for “something” out of a plastic medicine vial.
In
Tobias,
police officers stationed in a neighborhood known for “its high level of narcotics traffic” observed the appellant on two occasions approach people, remove a small object from his shoulder bag, and
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exchange the object for an undetermined amount of currency.
In
Coles,
a police officer observed appellant give another person currency in exchange for a zipper-seal plastic bag “which the latter retrieved from an apparent stash in a nearby tree-box space.”
Beyond the cases principally relied upon by the government, we have had many other two-way transaction eases in which we also relied on additional contextual factors to support a finding of probable cause.
See, e.g., Prince, supra
note 2,
In contrast to all the aforementioned cases, the instant case involves a two-way transaction on a record otherwise devoid of suspicious circumstances and where the observed transaction is capable of numerous innocent explanations. Officer Prade observed the transaction immediately upon entering the parking lot and received no insight from events occurring before the transaction. Officer Prade did not know or recognize either of the subjects as participants in past criminal activity. Officer Prade did not see appellant retrieve the *426 “small object” from a suspicious container or location. And immediately after the transaction, appellant and the pedestrian left the scene and Officer Prade ordered appellant’s arrest; no conduct subsequent to the transaction — such as any attempt to flee or conceal contraband — entered into the probable cause analysis.
On appeal, the government urges us to consider one additional factor by drawing an inference that Officer Prade’s judgment was informed by the fact that this incident occurred in a “high drug area.” Indeed, at oral argument, counsel for the government deemed this a “critical determination” and “a critical factor for a finding on behalf of the government,” conceding: “If you factor out the high drug area, I do not think it would be probable cause.” In addition, the government conceded that no evidence directly established that the incident occurred in a high drug area, acknowledging that “the record is imperfect and that’s frankly the government’s fault,” that “more questions should’ve been asked here,” and that “[tjhere are some inferences that have to be made,” but that these inferences “are rightly made in the government’s favor in this case based on the record as it stands.”
Generally, whether an area is known for high narcotics activity is a factor relevant to the assessment of probable cause and the reasonableness of the police officer’s response.
See Price v. United States,
In this case, we need not decide precisely what value to ascribe to the fact that the incident occurred in a high drug area because we conclude that the record does not sufficiently support the drawing of such an inference. No witness explicitly testified that the convenience store parking lot, nor for that matter the area surrounding the parking lot, was a “high drug area.”
Cf. Funchess, supra,
The closest that any testimony came to labeling the convenience store parking lot as a “high drug area” was the testimony of Office Prade, in response to a question about when the pedestrian approached appellant’s vehicle, that “I don’t know how long the white vehicle had been there because [we] were sent into that location to *427 do a buy-bust operation. So once we pulled into that location, then the unknown black male walked up.” To read “location” as the parking lot somewhat contradicts the indication that he pulled into the parking lot “on [his] way” to the targeted location, which had been identified as the “1900 block of Benning Road, N.E.” Moreover, even if the inference could be made that the convenience store was within the targeted location, the further inference would have to be made that since “normally” the Focus Mission Team targets high drug areas, this particular parking lot was a high drug area. We think this is requiring too much of inferences to support probable cause in this case.
Furthermore, any inference that can be drawn from the scanty evidence presented is at best vague and imprecise. As indicated, the extent of the “high drug area” is unclear. No evidence was presented to indicate why this convenience store parking lot might be suspected as a site of drug dealing. Moreover, the basis for the Focus Mission Team to suspect drug dealing in the “1900 block of Benning Road” is unknown, as is whether that suspicion was focused on a particular area of that block or more generally suspected. Where the government is placing such heavy reliance on the fact that the place where the suspected transaction took place was a “high drug area,” that fact must be shown with sufficient particularity to justify such reliance. As the government acknowledges, the need for any inferences could have been obviated by more precise questioning of the witnesses in this case. 5
In sum, we conclude that the evidence that the parking lot was a “high drug area” is too thin to support the finding of probable cause. In light of the centrality of the cocaine evidence to the question of appellant’s guilt in this case, we are unable to conclude that the erroneous admission of the evidence was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Morten v. United States,
So ordered.
Notes
. The police never stopped or identified the second man.
. "There is no requirement that the arresting officer have sufficient firsthand knowledge to constitute probable cause. It is enough that the police officer initiating the chain of communication ... had firsthand knowledge.
Prince v. United States,
. A police officer who has a "reasonable suspicion based on specific articulable facts that [a] person is involved in criminal activity” may briefly detain that person on less than probable cause and "may conduct a protective search if they have reasonable grounds to believe that the suspect is armed and poses a danger to himself or others.”
Reyes v. United States,
. "CUhis court has expressly rejected the idea that any one case sets forth in a precedential fashion the necessary prerequisites for a finding of the existence of probable cause.”
Tobias, supra,
. The government stresses the fact that Officer Trade was experienced in observing drug transactions. Such experience is certainly to be respected; however, the officer here said nothing about what feature(s) of this transaction distinguished it in his mind from one that is entirely innocent. Although Officer Prade testified that the duration of the encounter between appellant and the unidentified pedestrian was more consistent with what he would expect of a drag transaction between strangers (typically lasting ten to thirty seconds) than a drug transaction between friends or acquaintances (typically lasting three to five minutes), his testimony that this transaction took thirty to ninety seconds did not clearly place the event into either category. Moreover, this testimony served only to distinguish two kinds of drug transactions and not a drug transaction from entirely innocent conduct.
