The trial court granted the motion to suppress evidence in favor of Armstrong and dismissed all charges, and the State appeals.
Officer Fouchia was working an off-duty job in uniform and in a marked police car in the parking lot of a shopping center on Christmas Eve. He heard tires squealing and saw white smoke coming from the rear tires of a pickup truck which bounced as it made a turn in the parking lot. Pedestrian and vehicular traffic were both heavy. The officer observed people walking near the truck and recognized the driver’s manner of driving as dangerous to the pedestrian traffic.
He followed and then stopped the truck, and as he approached it, driver Armstrong rolled the window down. The officer smelled marijuana and observed Armstrong concealing a pipe in his hand. After arresting him, the officer advised Armstrong of his implied consent and Miranda rights, and Armstrong consented to blood and urine testing. Additional marijuana was found in his pocket after his arrest.
Armstrong was accused of driving under the influence of drugs to the extent that he was a less safe driver, OCGA § 40-6,-391 (a) (2), driving with unlawful drugs present in blood or urine, OCGA § 40-6-391 (a) (6), possession of marijuana, OCGA § 16-13-30 (a), and “laying drag,” OCGA § 40-6-251.
At the motion to suppress hearing, Officer Fouchia testified that he stopped Armstrong for “laying drag” and that if there had been anyone directly in front of the truck at the time the incident occurred, he would have also charged Armstrong with reckless driving. Armstrong’s counsel went through each act in the statute which constitutes “laying drag” and elicited testimony from the. officer that Armstrong was not “causing the vehicle to move in a zigzag or circular course or to gyrate or spin around.” OCGA § 40-6-251. Fouchia’s testimony fell short of showing that Armstrong had violated this provision of the traffic code.
The trial court observed that “[tjhere is a popular misconception among the public and law enforcement of what laying drags is. What you witnessed, Officer Fouchia, is not what the legislature says is laying drags. It’s not a violation of the law — not a violation of any law for the defendant to do what you witnessed him do.” The court
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then found, “There can’t be articulable suspicion on conduct that’s not a crime,” and excluded the evidence on the basis that the stop had accordingly been unreasonable under
Terry v. Ohio,
1. The evidence at the suppression hearing was uncontroverted, and no question of credibility of witnesses was presented. We thus review the trial court’s ruling on the motion to suppress to ensure that there was a substantial basis for it.
State v. McFarland,
2. When a police officer makes a stop and restrains an individual’s freedom to depart, that person is “seized.” The Fourth Amendment requires that the seizure be “reasonable” to assure the individual is not “ ‘subject to the discretion of the official in the field.’ [Cits.]”
Delaware v. Prouse,
A brief investigative stop of a vehicle by a law enforcement officer is considered reasonable if it is “justified by some objective manifestation that the person stopped is, or is about to be, engaged in criminal activity.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.)
Tarwid v. State,
Even if Armstrong’s behavior did not technically violate the “laying drags” statute, the officer nonetheless had reasonable articulable suspicion to stop him. The totality of circumstances in this case consisted of Armstrong driving his truck in a crowded parking lot on Christmas Eve in such a manner as to endanger others’ safety. Stopping his conduct was reasonable, whether or not Armstrong was technically “laying drags.”
The trial court’s declaration that “[t]here can’t be articulable suspicion on conduct that’s not a crime” is an incomplete statement of the law. While it is true that the officer must reasonably suspect
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wrongdoing, and that this suspicion cannot be based on a mere hunch that the individual is “up to something,” we have rejected the notion that the police officer must know with certainty that each element of a particular crime could be established: “If the officer acting in good faith believes that an unlawful act has been committed, his actions are not rendered improper by a later legal determination that the defendant’s actions were not a crime according to a technical legal definition or distinction determined to exist in the penal statute. It is not the officer’s function to determine on the spot such matters as, e.g., jurisdiction or the legal niceties in definition of a certain crime, for these are matters for the courts. The question to be decided is whether the officer’s motives and actions at the time and under all the circumstances, including the nature of the officer’s mistake, if any, were reasonable and not arbitrary or harassing.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.)
State v. Webb,
The situation here is distinguishable from cases in which we have found reasonable articulable suspicion lacking. See, e.g.,
State v. Canidate,
This episode approximates cases where we have found the officer had an articulable suspicion to make the stop, where the defendant was acquitted of the crime for which the officer stopped him initially,
Jones v. State,
The primary purpose for the exclusionary rule is to deter police
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misconduct.
Michigan v. DeFillippo,
3. After suppressing all physical evidence, the trial court dismissed the charges. The dismissal is also reversed.
Judgment reversed.
