The issue in this appeal is whether a warning from a dispatcher to a police officer making a traffic stop that the driver is “a 2CX,” which the officer testified means a “convicted felon that should be considered extremely dangerous,” justifies a pat-down search of the suspect. See
Terry
v.
Ohio,
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
After the traffic stop and pat-down search, Robert E. Coleman, Jr., was arrested for biting Officer David G. Rieck and possessing narcotics. Coleman was charged with third degree assault on an officer and possession of a controlled substance. Coleman moved to suppress the evidence obtained after the pat-down search. At the hearing on Coleman’s motion to suppress, the State’s evidence consisted exclusively of Rieck’s testimony and a videotape of the entire stop. The district court for Douglas County overruled Coleman’s motion to suppress, and the case went to trial. During trial, Coleman renewed his motion to suppress and objected to all evidence adduced from the allegedly unconstitutional search and seizure. The court overruled the renewed motion and granted Coleman a continuing objection to evidence obtained as a result of the pat-down search. A jury convicted Coleman of assaulting an officer and possessing a controlled substance. After an enhancement
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
At 11:37 p.m. on March 30,1999, Rieck stopped Coleman for failing to signal a turn. Upon request, Coleman gave his driver’s license and registration to Rieck, who was in uniform and driving a marked police car at the time. Rieck testified that he did not see any weapons in Coleman’s car, that Coleman complied with Rieck’s initial requests, and that Coleman was not belligerent or out of control.
As he stood at Coleman’s car door, Rieck performed a data check on Coleman’s license. According to Rieck, a data check involves an officer’s request via the police department’s radio system to the dispatcher to find out whether a person has outstanding warrants, a criminal history, or a suspended license. Rieck testified that the data check revealed that Coleman’s driver’s license had not been suspended and that there were no outstanding warrants for his arrest. Rieck stated that dispatch informed him that Coleman “was a 2CX,” meaning a “convicted felon that should be considered extremely dangerous.” Rieck testified that the Omaha Police Department was the source of the 2CX rating and that 2CX has a standard meaning to all police officers who hear it. Rieck testified that he customarily conducts pat-down searches on those with 2CX status, because “knowing that he’s an extremely dangerous person and I have to turn my back on him to get back to my cruiser, I want to make sure he doesn’t have any weapons on him.” Rieck admitted that other than the 2CX rating, he had no other evidence that Coleman was dangerous before conducting the pat down, that the 2CX rating did not indicate which felonies are involved in the conviction, and that some felony convictions can be classified as nondangerous. The videotape of the stop from Rieck’s cruiser confirms that Rieck informed Coleman that his status was 2CX and that therefore Rieck was going to pat him down. The videotape shows that Rieck opened Coleman’s car door after this brief discussion and directed Coleman to place his hands on the roof of the car. After some verbal disagreement, Coleman got out of the car and placed his hands on the roof as Rieck patted him down.
During the pat down, the extent or technique of which Coleman does not contest, Rieck felt what he thought was a small piece of a television antenna in Coleman’s front left pocket. Rieck testified that based on his experience, he thought the small tube was used as a crack cocaine pipe. Rieck stated (and the videotape shows) that he asked Coleman to remove the object from his pocket, whereupon Coleman took out a lighter and at some point furtively put something into his mouth. Rieck repeatedly shouted at Coleman to spit out the object, and a struggle ensued between the two, during which Coleman bit Rieck several times. With the help of six other officers, Rieck was eventually able to handcuff Coleman and retrieve a crack cocaine pipe. At some point during the struggle, Coleman spit out the object, which was seized and later identified as crack cocaine.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
Coleman’s two assignments of error are (1) that the district court erred in overruling his motion to suppress because his stop, search, and arrest were not based on reasonable suspicion and (2) that Coleman was denied effective representation due to his lawyer’s performance at trial.
A trial court’s ultimate determinations of reasonable suspicion to conduct an investigatory stop and probable cause to perform a warrantless search are reviewed de novo.
State
v.
Scovill,
In reviewing rulings on a motion to suppress evidence, an appellate court considers all the evidence at trial, as well as at the hearing on the motion.
State v. Tierney,
ANALYSIS
Both the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and article I, § 7, of the Nebraska Constitution protect against unreasonable searches and seizures by the government.
State
v.
Kinney,
In determining whether an officer acted reasonably, it is not the officer’s inchoate or unparticularized suspicion or hunch that is given due weight, but the specific reasonable inferences which the officer is entitled to draw from the facts in light of his or her experience.
State
v.
Ellington,
Coleman does not contest the lawfulness of the traffic stop for failing to signal a turn, nor does he contend that the license check was illegal. His argument is that Rieck did not have reasonable suspicion to pat him down after learning the results of the license check. There is no question that Coleman was searched. See
State
v.
Caples,
Without authority from factually similar cases, the State asserts simply that the pat down “was authorized by Terry” once Rieck learned that Coleman was a convicted felon who was extremely dangerous. Brief for appellee at 12. Coleman’s position is that “a felony conviction as well as an officer’s knowledge of a person’s criminal history is not enough to justify a pat down frisk.” Reply brief for appellant at 6.
In
State v. Stubblefield, 2
Neb. App. 307,
In
State
v.
Kinney,
We are unaware of any Nebraska cases which directly address the instant fact pattern which we foresaw in
Kinney
— a pat down based solely on a warning from a dispatcher. Nevertheless, several general rules from factually similar cases help guide our analysis. The Nebraska Supreme Court has held that reasonable suspicion need not be based only on an officer’s personal observations, see
State
v.
Hicks,
An officer must have reasonable suspicion before making an investigative traffic stop and before conducting a pat-down
search.
Terry
v.
Ohio,
The court in
Soukharith, supra,
concluded that the stop was lawful on the basis of a warning from a dispatcher if the officers who generated the information upon which the dispatcher relied had articulable facts supporting the cautionary message. The vehicle in
Soukharith
was a “ ‘fancy sports car’ ” driven by a young man, which a Wyoming state trooper thought seemed “out of place.”
The problem here is that the record lacks such evidence. Proof of a factual foundation for the warning ensures that
Terry
stops are based on articulable facts instead of a fellow officer’s baseless warning. See
Whiteley v. Warden,
Pat downs based solely on a defendant’s criminal history have been found unconstitutional. See, e.g.,
United States
v.
Hairston,
The court in
Valentine
acknowledged that knowledge of a suspect’s criminal history is a relevant factor in weighing whether there was reasonable suspicion, and stated: “In many instances, a reasonable inference may be drawn that a suspect is armed and dangerous from the fact that he or she is known to have been armed and dangerous on previous occasions.”
Dumas
and
Valentine
also indicate that while knowledge of a prior felony record does not alone provide reasonable grounds for a pat-down search, such knowledge in combination with other factors may provide reasonable suspicion that a suspect is armed and dangerous. See
State
v.
Love,
The Terry holding requires a balancing of the need to protect officers and the public through pat-down searches against the Fourth Amendment prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures. A pat down for weapons, which is a search, even when a lawfully stopped traffic violator is involved, is unreasonable unless the State proves that the officer had reasonable suspicion, based upon articulable facts, that the violator was armed and dangerous. The record here lacks such proof, and thus we must find that the pat down was an unreasonable and unlawful search. The district court should have suppressed the physical evidence from the pat down, including the drugs which were seized. Our holding moots Coleman’s argument that the seizure of the crack cocaine pipe was unjustified because “Officer Rieck was not afraid of this antenna-like object, he just suspected it was a crack pipe.” Brief for appellant at 15.
Effect of Illegal Pat Down on Coleman’s Assault Conviction.
Coleman does not separately attack his assault conviction except by indirect inclusion of that conviction in his claim that the Fourth Amendment was violated by the pat down. Citing
State v. Tierney,
Coleman correctly points out that the fruits of illegal searches may not be used as evidence against a defendant. See
State
v.
Runge,
Moreover, in Nebraska, it is well established that one may not forcibly resist an arrest, regardless of whether the arrest is legal. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-1409(2) (Reissue 1995);
State
v.
Clark,
Ineffective Assistance of Counsel.
Coleman argues that his trial lawyer’s performance did not equal that of a lawyer with ordinary training and skill in criminal law in the area because his lawyer was ill prepared and unmotivated for trial. The Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees every criminal defendant the right to effective assistance of counsel.
State
v.
Toof
Coleman makes this ineffectiveness claim on direct appeal, and there has been no evidentiary hearing on his allegations. Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel raised for the first time on direct appeal do not require dismissal ipso facto; the determining factor is whether the record is sufficient to adequately review the question.
State
v.
Becerra,
Coleman cites
State v. McGurk,
CONCLUSION
Rieck did not have reasonable suspicion based on articulable facts to justify a pat down of Coleman when all the information he received from his dispatcher was that Coleman was labeled a “2CX” and there was no proof of the facts behind that warning. Thus, the fruits of the search should have been suppressed, and we reverse the drug possession conviction. However, because Coleman could not lawfully resist the pat down, albeit unlawful, the evidence of his assault on Reick was properly admitted, and we sustain that conviction. Coleman’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel has no merit on this record.
Affirmed in part, and in part reversed.
