397 N.E.2d 422 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1978
This cause came on to be heard upon the appeal, the transcript of the docket, journal entries and original papers from the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, and the briefs and the arguments of counsel.
Shortly after midnight on February 10, 1977, as two plainclothed Cincinnati police officers were searching for stolen cars in an unmarked vehicle through a known "dumping area" for stolen automobiles, they observed appellant seated behind the steering wheel of an auto stopped in a parking lot. Outside the car several individuals were talking to each other and to appellant, and, as they drove slowly by, one of the officers heard one of the group exclaim, "[t]hat is the cops." About twenty seconds later appellant pulled out of the lot at a normal rate of speed and turned in a direction opposite to that in which the officers were traveling. Although appellant had not been observed to violate any traffic laws, and although the officers were not specifically looking for the car driven by appellant, the policemen changed their course in pursuit of him. Appellant was driving a late-model Oldsmobile bearing Indiana license plates, and the officers radioed their request for a license check to see if the car was *336 stolen. Upon being told that this information was unavailable at the time, the officers asked that a uniformed policeman in a marked car stop appellant's vehicle so that they could further investigate it. This stop was subsequently accomplished with appellant offering no resistance. Appellant was ordered to alight from his car, and only as he did so did officers beside him note a revolver lying on the seat in a spot which previously had been covered by appellant's right leg.
Appellant was indicted for carrying a concealed weapon, a violation of R. C.
Appellant first argues that the trial court erred to his prejudice in overruling his motion to suppress evidence of the revolver, asserting that the weapon was seized in violation of the
The state concedes that the police officers did not have probable cause either to arrest appellant or to search his automobile when they initially approached it. It contends, nevertheless, that the officers were reasonably suspicious that criminal activity was afoot, and, therefore, under Terry v.Ohio (1967),
In the instant case, the facts as related above were adduced at the hearing to suppress as the requisite "specific and articulable facts." However, it must be noted that appellant was not observed violating any traffic or other laws and that the officers were not specifically looking for either the appellant or the auto he was driving. On balance, we find the above-listed events, circumstantially innocuous in *337
themselves, to be too skeletal and ambiguous to create any reasonable suspicion that appellant was engaged in or about to engage in criminal activity. Cf. United States v. Cupps (C.A. 6, 1974),
The state would furthir justify the instant stop as being authorized by R. C.
In his second assignment of error, appellant asserts that the judgment of the trial court was manifestly against the weight of the evidence and contrary to law, in that the state failed to prove that the weapon was concealed and, if it did prove concealment, that appellant established an affirmative defense under R. C.
In light of our disposition of the first assignment of error, the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed.
PALMER, P. J., KEEFE and CASTLE, J J., concur.