Case Information
*1 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE
AT JACKSON
April 4, 2012 Session STATE OF TENNESSEE v. GUY ALVIN WILLIAMSON Appeal by Permission from the Court of Criminal Appeals Circuit Court for Tipton County No. 6572 Joseph H. Walker, Judge No. W2011-00049-SC-R11-CD - Filed May 31, 2012 After an investigatory stop and frisk, the defendant was charged with the unlawful possession of a handgun after a felony conviction and the unlawful possession of a handgun while under the influence of alcohol and was convicted on both counts. The trial court imposed probationary sentences of three years and eleven months, twenty-nine days, respectively. The defendant appealed, arguing that his motion to suppress evidence should have been granted. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed. This Court granted the defendant’s application for permission to appeal. Because the investigatory stop and frisk of the defendant was not supported by specific and articulable facts establishing reasonable suspicion that a criminal act was being or about to be committed, the trial court erred by failing to suppress the handgun found by the police and presented as evidence at trial. The judgments of conviction are, therefore, reversed and the cause dismissed.
Tenn. R. App. P. 11; Judgment of the Trial Court is Reversed and Remanded G ARY R. W ADE , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which C ORNELIA A. C LARK , C.J., J ANICE M. H OLDER , W ILLIAM C. K OCH , J R ., and S HARON G. L EE , JJ., joined.
Gary Antrican, District Public Defender; and Parker O. Dixon, Assistant Public Defender, for the appellant, Guy Alvin Williamson.
Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; William E. Young, Solicitor General; David H. Findley, Senior Counsel; D. Michael Dunavant, District Attorney General; and James Walter Freeland, Jr., Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, the State of Tennessee.
OPINION
At 1:25 a.m. on May 31, 2009, officers with the Covington Police Department were dispatched to the Baxter Motel in response to an anonymous 911 telephone call. Six different police officers responded to the dispatch from the department, some going to the second floor, while others remained at the first floor level. Guy Alvin Williamson (the “Defendant”) and other individuals were on the second floor balcony near the door to room 21. One officer, who saw a white male leaving room 21, stopped and frisked the individual but found no weapon. Meanwhile, another officer, prompted by an unnamed person at the scene, frisked the Defendant, who was standing three doors away from room 21, and found a .22 caliber Rossi revolver. After observing that the Defendant had slurred speech and smelled of alcohol, the officer placed the Defendant under arrest. Later, a grand jury indicted the Defendant on two counts: (1) the unlawful possession of a handgun after being convicted of a felony, Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-1307(c)(1) (Supp. 2008); and (2) the unlawful possession of a handgun while under the influence of alcohol, Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17- 1321(a) (2006).
Suppression Hearing
Officer William Nelson, who had driven to the scene in a marked police vehicle and arrived “in a minute or less” after the dispatch, was the only witness at the hearing on the Defendant’s motion to suppress the revolver as evidence. On direct examination by the State, he testified that the dispatcher reported “[a]n armed party and possible robbery in progress” at the motel, which, he claimed, was “a place where local prostitutes, addicts, and sellers hang out.” Officer Nelson stated that the dispatch included “a possible description of two subjects” and asserted that the Defendant, an African-American, met one of the descriptions provided by the dispatcher. When asked specifically whether the Defendant’s clothes matched the description in the dispatch, the officer answered, “Yes, sir.” He testified that Michael Short, one of the other five officers at the scene, patted down an individual whose surname was Yarbrough, but found nothing. Yarbrough was later determined to be a guest at the motel. Officer Nelson recalled that Officer Short, one of several officers responding to the anonymous tip, then frisked the Defendant and found a “small revolver” in his right front pocket. He stated that when the weapon was discovered, the Defendant exclaimed, “I don’t know whose it is and I don’t know how it got there.”
On cross-examination, Officer Nelson acknowledged that the arrest warrant he had prepared did not contain any reference to “an armed robbery in progress” and did not include any reference to the description of any suspect from the police dispatch. He explained that he did not include the information regarding a possible robbery in the warrant because he and *3 the other officers had been unable to “validate it” at the scene. While conceding that he had not heard the original 911 call to the department and had no knowledge of its content, Officer Nelson nevertheless insisted that the dispatch, his only source of information, was for “an armed robbery in progress.” When confronted during his cross-examination with a recording of the dispatch, however, he admitted that the dispatcher did not mention a possible robbery and speculated that he must have received that information from someone after he arrived at the scene. The officer also admitted that the recording of the dispatch did not include a description of the weapon, any information about the ethnicity, gender, or physical appearance of the suspect or suspects, or any reference to the clothing worn. Officer Nelson, who denied drawing his weapon when he arrived at the scene, could not recall whether any of the other officers had done so. There was no testimony at the hearing regarding the Defendant’s use of alcohol, although the arrest warrant, which was made an exhibit, included allegations that the Defendant smelled of alcohol and had slurred speech.
Based upon this testimony, the trial court denied the motion to suppress the revolver as evidence. While mistakenly concluding that Officer Nelson had frisked the Defendant when the only testimony was that Officer Short had done so, the trial court ruled that the circumstances warranted an investigatory stop and frisk of the Defendant for possible weapons.
Trial
Officer Short testified that he arrived less than a minute after receiving the dispatch. The five others responding to the scene were Officers Garrian, Baskin, Parker, Nelson, and McCurrie. Officer Short recalled that he first patted down a white male walking out of room 21, but found no weapons or contraband. He then checked the inside of the room, which was empty. When he returned to the balcony, he observed Officer McCurrie frisk the Defendant, who was standing three doors away, and saw him remove a .22 caliber Rossi revolver from the Defendant’s pocket. Officer Short had no recollection of the Defendant’s demeanor or his condition. On cross-examination, he acknowledged that the revolver taken from the Defendant was not capable of firing a bullet, as the trigger was inoperable, the hammer would not fully recoil, and the cylinder did not rotate.
Officer McCurrie, who was employed by the 25th Judicial District Drug Task Force, also responded to the Baxter Motel dispatch. He confirmed that there was no reference in *4 the dispatch to a “robbery in progress”—only a report of “an armed party.” When he arrived at the scene and observed that Officer Garrian was pointing his service weapon toward “a subject on the balcony” of the second floor, Officer McCurrie exclaimed, “Aw, man!” He then saw a white male, who was being questioned by Officer Short, and two black males “standing up there.” After being “nudg[ed]” by an unidentified black male who indicated that the Defendant had a gun, Officer McCurrie walked up the stairs, patted down the Defendant, and found the revolver. During the search, the officer noticed that the Defendant had “slurred speech,” was “loud,” and “smelled of alcohol.” On cross-examination, Officer McCurrie acknowledged that the dispatch did not include the race or the gender of the “armed party,” although there were no women at the motel when he arrived.
The State also introduced as evidence a certified copy of a judgment dated October 1, 1993, which established that the Defendant had previously been convicted of possession of contraband in a penal institution, Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-201(a)(2) (1991), a Class C felony. The Defendant offered no proof. After deliberations, the jury returned guilty verdicts for each of the two counts as charged in the indictment. The trial court imposed probationary sentences of three years for felony possession of a handgun, a Class E felony, and eleven months, twenty-nine days for possession of a handgun while under the influence, a misdemeanor.
Appeal
On appeal, the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed, holding that the investigatory stop
and frisk of the Defendant was based upon reasonable suspicion. State v. Williamson, No.
W2011-00049-CCA-R3-CD,
The defendant was in the close vicinity of the motel room given in the dispatch, and he was pointed out to Officer McCurrie by an African-American male at the scene as the armed individual. Even though it was an anonymous tip which directed the police officers to the area, the detention of the defendant was fully justified by what the officers learned and observed once they arrived at the scene.
Id.
In the application for permission to appeal to this Court, the Defendant asserted that *5 because Officer Nelson, upon being confronted with the contents of the recorded dispatch at the suppression hearing, recanted his testimony about having information regarding a “robbery in progress” and conceded that the dispatcher made no mention of the physical description, race, and gender of the suspect or suspects, the trial court had no basis to either accredit his testimony or uphold the validity of the frisk. This Court granted the application to consider the propriety of the investigatory stop based upon the content of the anonymous tip and the circumstances observed at the scene.
Standard of Review
The standard of review applicable to suppression issues is well established. When the
trial court makes findings of fact at the conclusion of a suppression hearing, they are binding
upon this Court unless the evidence in the record preponderates against them. State v. Odom,
Questions of credibility of the witnesses, the weight and value of the evidence, and resolution of conflicts in the evidence are matters entrusted to the trial judge as the trier of fact. The party prevailing in the trial court is entitled to the strongest legitimate view of the evidence adduced at the suppression hearing as well as all reasonable and legitimate inferences that may be drawn from that evidence.
Id. Our review of a trial court’s application of law to the facts is de novo, however, with no
presumption of correctness. State v. Walton,
Further, appellate courts, when evaluating the correctness of the ruling by the trial
court on a motion to suppress, may consider the entire record, including not only the proof
offered at the hearing, but also the evidence adduced at trial. State v. Henning, 975 S.W.2d
290, 297-99 (Tenn. 1998); see also State v. Chopin, 372 So. 2d 1222, 1223-24 n.2 (La.
1979); State v. Bruno,
Applicable Law
*6
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article 1, section 7 of
the Tennessee Constitution provide protections against unreasonable searches and seizures.
See U.S. Const. amend. IV (stating that “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their
persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
violated”); Tenn. Const. art. 1, § 7 (providing “[t]hat the people shall be secure in their
persons, houses, papers and possessions, from unreasonable searches and seizures”). “[T]he
[3]
most basic constitutional rule in this area is that ‘searches conducted outside the judicial
process, without prior approval by judge or magistrate, are per se unreasonable under the
Fourth Amendment—subject only to a few specifically established and well delineated
exceptions.’” Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
Evidence obtained by a warrantless search or seizure “is subject to suppression unless
the State demonstrates that the search or seizure was conducted pursuant to one of the
narrowly defined exceptions to the warrant requirement.” State v. Yeargan,
suspicion, supported by specific and articulable facts, to believe that a criminal offense has
been or is about to be committed, a detention is warranted. Id. at 21; see also Hughes v.
State,
Special considerations arise, however, when the State seeks to justify an investigatory
stop based upon information provided by an unidentified informant because “‘an anonymous
tip alone seldom demonstrates the informant’s basis of knowledge or veracity.’” Florida v.
J.L.,
is dependent upon both the content of information possessed by police and its degree of reliability. Both factors—quantity and quality—are considered in the totality of the circumstances—the whole picture, that must be taken into account when evaluating whether there is reasonable suspicion. Thus, if a tip has a relatively low degree of reliability, more information will be required to establish the requisite quantum of suspicion than would be required if the tip were more reliable.
White, 496 U.S. at 330 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Under the
Tennessee Constitution, “the basis of the informant’s knowledge of the conveyed
information” and his or her credibility must both be established. State v. Hanning, 296
S.W.3d 44, 49 (Tenn. 2009); see also State v. Day,
Analysis
A. Seizure The Defendant asserts that he was seized when one of the police officers drew his weapon at the motel. He argues that because the officers did not have the requisite level of information to warrant a detention at that time, the trial court should have granted the motion to suppress the revolver as evidence. He contends that “there is nothing inherently criminal about being an armed party unless the armed party does not have a permit,” and that “[t]here is . . . nothing in the record to suggest the existence of a situation involving either an active or preparatory offense involving the use of a weapon.”
A seizure takes place “‘when an officer, by means of physical force or show of
authority, has in some way restrained the liberty of [the] citizen.’” State v. Williams, 185
S.W.3d 311, 316 (Tenn. 2006) (quoting Terry,
In this instance, several officers in a variety of police vehicles converged upon the Baxter Motel in response to a complaint of an “armed party.” At least one officer drew his service weapon, pointing it in the direction of the Defendant and two other individuals on the second floor balcony. When Yarbrough, a guest at the motel, was frisked by Officer Short, a bystander suggested to Officer McCurrie that the Defendant had a gun. In our view, the time of the encounter; the show of force by the officers present; the drawing of a weapon; and the pat-down of Yarbrough at the scene are all factors establishing that a reasonable person in the position of the Defendant had reason to believe he had been seized by the police prior to being frisked by Officer McCurrie. At the latest, the seizure occurred at the time of the frisk. In either event, our conclusions regarding the admission of the revolver as evidence would be the same.
B. Reasonable Suspicion
Because there was a seizure, the question becomes whether the anonymous tip, either standing alone or as corroborated by other circumstances, provided the officers with the reasonable suspicion required to justify the seizure of the Defendant and the subsequent frisk for weapons. The State first contends that the high crime area, the early morning hour, and the interest of the public in preventing illegal activity established a satisfactory basis for the police to make an investigatory stop and frisk at the time of their arrival. In the alternative, the State argues that if the seizure took place at the time of the frisk, the bystander who reported that the Defendant had the gun provided sufficient corroboration. As its final argument, the State asserts that if there was no reasonable basis for the detention either upon the arrival of the police or after the report by the bystander, Officer McCurrie’s detection of the smell of alcohol and the Defendant’s slurred speech justified the frisk.
J.L. is the United States Supreme Court’s most recent decision considering the
propriety of an investigatory stop involving an anonymous tip. In that case, an unidentified
caller reported to the police that a young black male wearing a plaid shirt was in possession
of a gun at a particular bus stop.
Unlike a tip from a known informant whose reputation can be assessed and who can be held responsible if her allegations turn out to be fabricated, an anonymous tip alone seldom demonstrates the informant’s basis of knowledge or veracity. As we have recognized, however, there are situations in which an anonymous tip, suitably corroborated, exhibits sufficient indicia of reliability to provide reasonable suspicion to make the investigatory stop.
Id. at 270 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). After concluding that the call concerning J.L., a juvenile, “provided no predictive information and therefore left the police without means to test the informant’s knowledge or credibility,” id. at 271, the Court held *10 that, even though the officers actually found a weapon, this did not provide justification for the frisk:
The reasonableness of official suspicion must be measured by what the officers knew before they conducted their search. All the police had to go on in this case was the bare report of an unknown, unaccountable informant who neither explained how he knew about the gun nor supplied any basis for believing he had inside information about [the defendant].
Id. (emphasis added). The Supreme Court rejected the argument that the accuracy of the description of J.L.’s shirt was corroborative, observing that reasonable suspicion “requires that a tip be reliable in its assertion of illegality, not just in its tendency to identify a determinate person.” Id. at 272 (emphasis added).
Second, the Court declined to adopt a “firearm exception” to the Terry standard, an argument advanced by the prosecution, which would have justified a stop and frisk based on “a tip alleging an illegal gun . . . even if the accusation would fail standard pre-search reliability testing.” Id. (emphasis added). The Court held that “[s]uch an exception would enable any person seeking to harass another to set in motion an intrusive, embarrassing police search of the targeted person simply by placing an anonymous call falsely reporting the target’s unlawful carriage of a gun.” Id.
Finally, the Court clarified its ruling as follows:
[T]he requirement that an anonymous tip bear standard indicia of reliability in order to justify a stop in no way diminishes a police officer’s prerogative, in accord with Terry, to conduct a protective search of a person who has already been legitimately stopped. We speak in today’s decision only of cases in which the officer’s authority to make the initial stop is at issue. In that context, we hold that an anonymous tip lacking indicia of reliability of the kind contemplated in Adams[ v. Williams,407 U.S. 143 (1972)] and [Alabama v.] White[,496 U.S. 325 (1990)] does not justify a stop and frisk whenever and however it alleges the illegal possession of a firearm.
Id. at 274 (emphasis added).
*11 Since the Court’s decision in J.L., its principles have been applied in a variety of cases on both the federal and state levels. Recently, the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit [8]
addressed the denial of a motion to suppress under facts similar to those before this Court
today. In United States v. Massenburg,
would be to authorize general searches of persons on the street not unlike those conducted of old by the crown against the colonists. Allowing officers to stop and frisk any individuals in the neighborhood after even the most generic of anonymous tips would be tantamount to permitting a regime of general searches of virtually any individual residing in or found in high-crime neighborhoods, where complaints of random gunfire in the night are all too usual[].
Id. (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).
The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has come to a similar conclusion under
facts comparable to those before us today. In Commonwealth v. Gomes,
A number of other courts, addressing similar factual circumstances, have also
suppressed evidence based upon the holding in J.L. See, e.g., United States v. Colon, 250
F.3d 130, 138 (2d Cir. 2001) (holding that “an anonymous tip containing descriptive but no
predictive detail, [was an] insufficient . . . basis . . . to support the stop and frisk”); Berry v.
State,
Based upon our review of J.L., and the numerous cases with comparable facts, we
conclude that the anonymous tip to the Covington police was insufficient to support the stop
and frisk of the Defendant. The unidentified 911 caller, whose complaint was relayed to the
various officers by dispatch, contained only an allegation that an armed individual was
outside a particular room at the Baxter Motel. The content of the tip provided even less
support for a stop and frisk than that in J.L., as there was no description of the suspect, much
less “predictive information,” which would allow police “to test the informant’s knowledge
or credibility.”
In addition, one’s status as an “armed party” is not per se illegal. See generally Tenn.
Code Ann. § 39-17-1351(b) (2006) (providing that “any resident of Tennessee who is a
United States citizen or permanent lawful resident . . . who has reached twenty-one (21) years
of age, may apply to the department of safety for a handgun carry permit,” and that “[i]f the
applicant is not prohibited from purchasing or possessing a firearm in this state pursuant to”
a provision of state or federal law and “otherwise meets all of the requirements of this
section, the department shall issue a permit to the applicant”). While the carrying of a
firearm under certain circumstances may constitute a crime,
[10]
the caller did not offer any
articulable facts indicating that the Defendant unlawfully possessed a gun, and the
information at the scene did not demonstrate the unlawfulness of its possession until after the
frisk. See United States v. Ubiles, 224 F.3d 213, 218 (3d Cir. 2000) (holding that an
anonymous tip alleging that the defendant was in possession of a firearm did not give the
authorities evidence “suggesting that the gun [the defendant] possessed was defaced or
unlicensed,” or such other circumstances which would have rendered his carrying of a
weapon a crime). Because there was no “assertion of illegality” in the tip, J.L.,
While the Baxter Motel’s location in a high-crime area and the time of the complaint to the police may be relevant factors in the consideration of the propriety of a stop and frisk, [11] those cases in which the Supreme Court upheld stops and frisks occurring in high-crime areas have included significant other factors, such as the reliability of the informant or the police officer’s own observations. [12] To accept the State’s argument that the location of this *15 encounter, the time at which it occurred, and the generalized “public[] interest in abating criminal activity” somehow tipped the scales in favor of reasonable suspicion would, in effect, establish an exception for those persons in “high-crime” areas at certain hours of the day or night. Such generalized authority to conduct random searches is precisely the type of evil against which the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 7 of the Tennessee Constitution were meant to protect. Cf. Thomas Y. Davies, Recovering the Original Fourth Amendment, 98 Mich. L. Rev. 547, 724 (1999) (“The Framers aimed the Fourth Amendment precisely at banning Congress from authorizing use of general warrants.”). Because the anonymous tip failed to provide the responding officers with the requisite reasonable suspicion to seize and subsequently frisk the Defendant, the revolver should have been suppressed as evidence.
The State further contends, however, that even if the initial seizure was illegal, the
unidentified bystander at the motel who informed Officer McCurrie that the Defendant was
carrying a gun supplied sufficient corroboration to warrant the stop and frisk. Indeed, a face-
to-face encounter with an informant generally lends more credibility to the tip, and, in
consequence, may often serve to increase its reliability. See United States v. Valentine, 232
F.3d 350, 354 (3d Cir. 2000) (noting that “a tip given face to face is more reliable than an
anonymous telephone call”); cf. J.L.,
The holding in Ubiles is instructive. As in that jurisdiction, possession of a firearm in this state is not necessarily a crime. Furthermore, while there might be some instances in which carrying a gun would be unlawful, the bystander at the scene did not provide Officer McCurrie with any such information. Even though a face-to-face encounter with an informant is generally more reliable than an anonymous phone call, and could, in some instances, corroborate a previously-received tip, the information provided by the bystander at the Baxter Motel did not indicate that the Defendant’s possession of the handgun was unlawful. See id.
The State’s final contention is that even if none of the officers had reasonable
suspicion either at the outset of their encounter with the Defendant or after the comment by
the bystander at the scene, the fact that Officer McCurrie detected signs of intoxication
served to establish the requisite reasonable suspicion necessary for the frisk, meaning that
the revolver “would have inevitably [been] discovered.” The State seeks to rely on the
“inevitable discovery” doctrine or exception, which “rests upon the principle that the
remedial purposes of the exclusionary rule are not served by suppressing evidence discovered
through a later, lawful seizure that is genuinely independent of an earlier, tainted one.”
Hudson v. Michigan, 547 U.S. 586, 616 (2006) (internal quotation marks omitted). The
sequence of events as related by Officer McCurrie, however, does not support the State’s
*17
reliance upon this exception. His testimony clearly establishes that he had conducted the pat-
down of the Defendant before he noticed any signs of intoxication. Because we have
determined that Officer McCurrie had no reason to frisk the Defendant initially, the only way
he discovered that the Defendant was allegedly intoxicated was as a result of the illegal
seizure and frisk. This did not constitute a lawful seizure that was “genuinely independent”
from the earlier ones. An observation occurring after a frisk “cannot retroactively make th[e
officer’s] actions objectively reasonable.” Colon,
Conclusion
Because the anonymous report of an armed party, absent corroboration and other indicia of reliability as to criminal activity, did not establish reasonable suspicion based upon specific, articuable facts, there was an insufficient basis for the investigatory stop and frisk of the Defendant. The evidence seized, therefore, should be suppressed. The convictions are reversed and the cause dismissed. Costs are adjudged against the State.
_________________________________ GARY R. WADE, JUSTICE
Notes
[1] At trial, Officer Rodney McCurrie testified that he had actually conducted the frisk of the Defendant.
[2] The complete recording of the dispatch is as follows: Dispatcher: 3-23-32. Subject with a gun, the Baxter Motel, room number – room 21. Room 21 at Baxter Motel, 112 Highway 51 North. Unable to get further at this time.
[3] Our state constitution has been interpreted to offer more protection than the corresponding
provisions of the Fourth Amendment in some contexts. See, e.g., State v. Jacumin,
[4] There are three categories of police intervention with private citizens: (1) a full scale arrest, which
requires probable cause; (2) a brief investigatory detention, requiring reasonable suspicion of wrong-doing;
and (3) a brief police-citizen encounter, requiring no objective justification. State v. Daniel,
[5] We address infra the State’s argument that the bystander, who pointed out the Defendant to Officer McCurrie at the scene, established an independent source of reasonable suspicion upon which to justify the seizure and frisk.
[6] Justice Kennedy, who wrote a separate concurrence, in which Chief Justice Rehnquist joined, pointed out that, in future cases, “a tip might be anonymous in some sense yet have certain other features, either supporting reliability or narrowing the likely class of informants, so that the tip does provide the lawful basis for some police action.” Id. at 275 (Kennedy, J., concurring). He “join[ed the Court’s] opinion in all respects,” however, and agreed that the anonymous telephone tip at issue “did not justify the arresting officer’s immediate stop and frisk of [the defendant].” Id. at 274-75.
[7] In Hanning,
[7] (...continued)
any allegations about a weapon. The investigating officer found corroborating circumstances at the scene.
Id. at 50. This Court did not adopt a “firearms exception.”
Other courts have similarly distinguished J.L., holding that an anonymous tip alleging reckless
driving may justify a stop. See, e.g., United States v. Wheat,
[8] See, e.g., United States v. Copening, 506 F.3d 1241, 1247-48 (10th Cir. 2007) (holding that
anonymous calls provided authorities with sufficient indicia of reliability to justify the stop of the car in
which the defendant was a passenger); Joseph v. United States,
[9] Although the Defendant here was closer to the location identified by the anonymous tipster than the defendant in Massenburg, we do not find this fact to be persuasively probative based upon the other factors discussed in this opinion.
[10] See generally Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-1307 (2006) (prohibiting a person from “carr[ying a firearm] with the intent to go armed” and prohibiting persons convicted of certain offenses from possessing firearms).
[11] See State v. Nicholson, 188 S.W.3d 649, 661 (Tenn. 2006) (agreeing that “a location’s characteristics may be relevant to amassing reasonable suspicion”).
[12] For instance, in Adams, the Court held the frisk of the defendant to be supported by reasonable
suspicion because the informant approached the officer face-to-face in order to inform him that the defendant
had narcotics and a gun on his person; the officer knew the informant personally and had received accurate
tips from him in the past; and the tip was “immediately verifiable.”
[12] (...continued)
safety, namely because the encounter occurred early in the morning in a high-crime area. Id. at 147-48.
Similarly, in Illinois v. Wardlow,
[13] The St. Thomas celebration, known as the “J’ouvert Carnival,” “celebrates the sunrise, and . . . [is] typically crowded and boisterous,” with “[h]undreds if not thousands of revelers . . . [who] often consume a great deal of alcohol.” Id. at 214-15.
[14] Although, at trial, the informant testified that he observed “something that looked like a gun pass from another man to [the defendant],” he did not relate this information to the officers. Id. at 216.
[15] Although Ubiles is factually distinguishable, in that there was only one informant, whereas here, there were two—the anonymous phone call and the bystander at the Baxter Motel—we nonetheless find the opinion’s rationale persuasive because the two tips at issue did not serve to increase the officer’s information regarding potentially illegal activity.
