11 Granted. The decision in
State v. Alvarez,
08-0558 (La.App. 5th Cir.1/13/09),
Evidence presented at both the suppression hearing and at trial established that during the course of a traffic stop conducted at night in the Woodmere Subdivision in Jefferson Parish, described as a “high crime area,” police officers found them attention drawn to defendant as he observed the scene while standing between two apartment buildings and behaved in what appeared to the officers a nervous and erratic manner. When two officers approached defendant to ask him some questions |2after he balked at their initial requests that he come over to them, defendant turned and ran through the alleyway between the two apartment buildings. The officers gave chase. During the pursuit, defendant removed a gun from his waistband and discarded in the weapon in some bushes. He then ran into an apartment building and slammed the door shut. The pursuing officers kicked in the door, placed defendant under arrest, and in a search incident to that arrest removed a small bag containing rock cocaine from his pants pocket. Thereafter, defendant consented to a search of the apartment leading to the recovery of additional amounts of crack cocaine and gun magazines filled with nine millimeter bullets.
The court of appeal freely conceded the officers did not need probable cause for an arrest or reasonable suspicion for an investigatory stop when they first approached defendant to ask him some questions.
Alvarez,
08-0558 at 7-8,
The court of appeal erred. Even assuming, arguendo, that an “imminent stop” took place in the present case before defendant discarded the firearm concealed in his waistband, defendant did not simply assert his right to walk away from the police officers when he turned and ran for sanctuary in the apartment building. Headlong, “unprovoked flight is simply not a mere refusal to cooperate.”
Illinois v. Wardlow,
|4The officers therefore lawfully recovered the gun abandoned by defendant 'during the chase and had probable cause to arrest him for at least the offense of carrying a concealed weapon in violation of La. R.S. 14:95.
See State v. Johnson,
94-1170, p. 4 (La.App. 4th Cir.8/23/95),
Accordingly, the trial court properly denied defendant’s motion to suppress and the court of appeal erred in setting aside that ruling. The judgment of the trial court on the motion to suppress is therefore reinstated and this case is remanded to the court of appeal for further consideration.
Notes
. Kimball, C.J., did not participate in the deliberation of this opinion. Retired Judge Phillip Ciaccio sitting ad hoc for Guidry, J., re-cused.
