STATE of Florida, Appellant,
v.
Margretta DANIELS, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*820 Rоbert A. Butterworth, Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, and Carol Cobourn Asbury, Asst. Atty. Gen., West Palm Beach, for appellant.
Richard L. Jorandby, Public Defender, and Marcy K. Allen, Asst. Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
PER CURIAM.
The state appeals the trial court's order that granted appellee's motion tо suppress physical evidence and statements.
Appellee Margretta Daniels [Daniels], a black woman, was seated on a bench at a train station in Fort Lauderdale waiting to board a northbound train. There were two pieces of luggage on the ground in front of her, a tote bag and a suitcase that her coat was draped over. A man and a woman *821 dressed in street clothes approached Daniels and identified themselves as Broward County Deputy Sheriffs. They asked Daniels if she had time to speak to them and asked to see her train ticket and some identification, which were promptly returned to her. The deputies then explained that the transportation of illegal drugs and firearms is a problem in South Florida and that they were seeking the public's cooperation by asking to search the luggage of train passengers. They told Daniels that she could refusе to allow them to search her luggage and asked if she had any luggage. Daniels indicated that the tote bag belonged to her and the gentleman sitting next to her, but she denied owning the suitcase. The gentleman consented to the search of the tote bag, but also denied owning the suitcase. Becаuse no one claimed the suitcase, the deputies opened it and found papers in Daniels' name and cocaine. Daniels then claimed the suitcase belonged to her.
THE SEIZURE
Daniels relies on Bostick v. State,
The Bostick court considered the following circumstances: the officers were wearing raid jackets clearly identifying them as officers; Bostick was approached during a five minute layover; he was asked to produce his identification and indicate his destination; during questioning one of the officers stood in such a way as to block the only possible exit from the bus; Bostick testified that while the officers spoke with him, one of them had his hand on a pouch that appeared to contain a gun; because he was on his way to Atlanta, he could not leave the bus; he had only the confines of the bus itself in which to move about and he felt that the officers would not allow him to move about the bus. Under those circumstances, the supreme court concluded, a reasonable traveler would not hаve felt free to leave or to disregard the questions and walk away. In fact, the court noted, there was no place he might have gone to or walked away to, especially given the fact that his path was blocked by one officer and another had his hand on what Bostick assumed was a gun.
The state distinguishes the facts here from those in Bostick by pointing out that this encounter took place at the terminal with Daniels sitting on a bench and not on a bus or a train and that the encounter was not coercive because the officers made only a brief inquiry of Daniels, did not retain her identification, and did not block her path.
The state relies on Palmer v. State,
The state also relies on United States v. Fields,
*822 These circumstances include the blocking of an individual's path or the impeding of his progress, the retention of a ticket or piece of identification; an officer's statement that the individual is the subject of an investigation, or that a truly innocent person would cooperate with the law enforcement officer, the display of weapons, the number of officers present and their demeanor, the length of the detention, and the extent to which the officer physically restrained the individual.
Id. at 474 (quoting United States v. Hammock,
Sub judice, the trial court did not find that the officers blocked Daniels' path or impeded her progress, retained her ticket or her identification, advised her she was under investigation or that a truly innocent person would cooperate, displayed their weapons, or physically restrained Daniels. The trial court did consider the following factors before determining that Daniels had been illegally stopped by police: the stop occurred within fivе or ten minutes prior to the time her train was scheduled to leave the station; the officers involved were "positive, assertive individuals" whose demeanor reflected their well being; Daniels' shy nature and inbred, ingrained habits of acquiescence to apparent authority she had acquired аs a result of having been raised in Ahoskie, North Carolina, an area of the country where blacks typically submit to the law enforcement authority of white individuals, and concluded that although she had lived in New York the past twelve to fifteen years, those years had not dispelled these inbred, ingrained habits. The court found Daniels' freedom of movement to have been restricted from the time when the officers sought to explain to her that she had a right to refuse to speak with them. The trial court then noted that the Amtrak Station in Fort Lauderdale is located in a high crime area, that it was not unreasonable for Daniels to conclude that she could not safely walk away from the station, and that she did not have the funds to call a taxicab.
Daniels' reliance on Bostick is misplaced. Bostick stands for the proposition that impermissible seizures occur when police board busses and question passengers aboard the busses without having an articulable reason for questioning them. Daniels was not on a bus where there are inherent limitations on a passenger's movements; she was not on a train, where there are also inherent limitations on a passenger's movements; she was at a train station. Based on Palmer, we hold that the encountеr between Daniels and the deputies did not qualify as a seizure of Daniels within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. The test is whether a reasonable person would have believed he was not free to leave, not whether the particular defendant would not have felt free to leave because she was raised in a part of the country where black citizens submit to the authority of white law enforcement individuals. The trial court's finding that Daniels could not leave the train station is irrelevant. It is not a question of having the resources to call a cab to leave the station, it is a question of feeling free to walk away from the officers and having the space in which to do so. Here Daniels could have walked away from the officers to another bench or to another part of the station. The trial court incorrectly applied a subjective test rather than the objеctive test set *823 forth in Mendenhall. We conclude that the trial court erred by ruling that Daniels was illegally seized.
ABANDONMENT
The state contends that voluntary abandonment of property cannot be tainted or made involuntary by a prior illegal stop. It reasons that Daniels lost her reasonable expectation оf privacy in the suitcase and its contents when she disclaimed ownership. Daniels responds that because she was illegally stopped, anything found pursuant to that illegal stop is tainted and should have been suppressed.
The state relies on State v. Oliver,
Once a defendant abandons his suitcases, he lacks standing to challenge either the search of the suitcase or the seizure of its contents. United States v. Roman,
In Tolbert, the defendant was approached by agents as she was about to enter a taxi to leave the airport. She did nоt have her luggage with her. When asked about her luggage, Tolbert insisted that she was traveling without luggage and specifically disclaimed ownership of the bag in question in that case. Id. at 1044. The Tolbert court reversed the trial court's rejection of the government's argument that Tolbert had abandoned her to the abandonment to determine whether she had been seized at the time she abandoned the luggage. They concluded that she had but that the seizure was legal. In Roman, agents had observed Roman entering the airport carrying a suitcase. He checked two pieces of luggage. The agents became susрicious, felt the bags, and decided to x-ray them. They observed a solid grey mass but no indication of clothing. They approached Roman inside the airplane and identified themselves. Without hesitation, Roman handed the agents his permanent resident alien card. He was asked if he had checked any luggage. He replied that he had not. He stated that he did not have any luggage other than his carry-on bag. He was asked to accompany the agents *824 into the terminal, shown his luggage and asked if it was his. He replied that the suitcases were not his. Roman,
We disagree with the state that even if Daniels was illegally stopped, she lost her reasonable expectation of рrivacy in her luggage by denying that she owned it. The case law holds that courts must consider the sequence of events leading up to the abandonment in order to determine whether the abandonment was voluntary. If officers have illegally seized a defendant or have begun to conduct an illegal search of property before a defendant has abandoned it, the abandonment may be involuntary, depending on the facts of the case. Tolbert and Oliver. The test is whether there is a causal connection between the illegal conduct and the abandonment.
The trial court sub judice found that there was no abandonment because Daniels did not willingly and voluntarily relinquish a known right to possess. This finding is irrelevant. The test is not whether Daniels willingly and voluntarily relinquished a known right to possess. The test is whether the luggage was abandoned as a direct result of police misconduct, whether that misconduct was illegally seizing Daniels or searching the suitcase before she either gave consent or abandoned it. As we indicated above, the encounter between the officers and Daniels was not an illegal seizure of her person. Palmer, Tolbert, and Roman. Daniels abandoned the suitcase in an area where she had no Fourth Amendment protectiоn, the train station. She made a decision to abandon it, as did her male companion. Thus, Daniels' abandonment of the suitcase was voluntary. The trial court erred by granting the motion to suppress.
Accordingly, we reverse the trial court's suppression order and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
STONE, POLEN and GARRETT, JJ., concur.
