STATE of Vermont
v.
Stephen W. FORD II.
Supreme Court of Vermont.
*688 Thomas Donovan, Jr., Chittenden County State's Attorney, and Pamela Hall Johnson, Deputy State's Attorney, Burlington, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Charles S. Martin of Martin & Associates, Barre, for Defendant-Appellee.
Present: REIBER, C.J., DOOLEY, JOHNSON, SKOGLUND and BURGESS, JJ.
DOOLEY, J.
¶ 1. In this interlocutory appeal, the State of Vermont challenges an order of the Chittenden District Court granting defendant's motion to suppress evidence obtained during a Terry frisk. Terry v. Ohio,
¶ 2. A police officer arrived at an apartment that defendаnt was visiting after receiving an anonymous tip that a woman and a bald man had been using illegal drugs while driving on an interstate highway. *689 The informant also provided a description of the car, a license plate number, and an аddress where the car was parked. After arriving at the named address, the officer found a car matching the one described by the informant and recognized the smell of marijuana emanating from the vehicle. Tracks in the snow led from the vehicle to apartment 6 of the named address. Upon inquiring with the tenant of apartment 6, the officer discovered that four people were inside, the resident at the apartment and a womаn and two men, including defendant, who had been in the car. The officer then asked defendant and the others who had been in the car to go outside to the parking lot in front of the building. Defendant and the other occupаnts of the vehicle did so, after which a second officer arrived on the scene in his cruiser. The second officer questioned defendant and the other occupants about their knowledge of the suspicious smеll coming from the vehicle. When defendant asked permission to go inside to plug in his cell phone, one of the officers refused permission.
¶ 3. As the conversation continued, one of the officers noted that the wоman identified as the driver of the car had a small folding knife clipped to a pocket at her waist. The officer then asked defendant if he had a knife in his pocket, and defendant admitted that he did. The officer then frisked defendant for weapons and felt the knife, which he removed. Because he also realized that several other, unidentified items were present in the pockets, the officer asked defendant if he had anything else in his pockets. Defendant offered to show the officer what he had in, his pockets, but the officer told defendant that the officer would prefer to remove it himself. The officer then searched defendаnt's pockets, discovering a pill bottle and a baggy full of what the officer identified as marijuana. Defendant was placed under arrest and subsequently moved to suppress evidence gathered from the search оf his pockets.
¶ 4. In reviewing a motion to: suppress, we review the trial court's legal conclusions de novo and its findings of fact under a clearly erroneous standard. State v. Simoneau,
*690 ¶ 5. Citing our holding in State v. Chapman, the trial court stated that it was "not reasonable" to interrogate the defendant outdoors, especially given that the wеather was cold and that the offense of marijuana possession was neither violent nor likely to pose a threat to the safety of the public. We disagree. Chapman, which addressed when an officer's display of a wеapon automatically converts a Terry frisk into a full arrest, set forth factors that may be considered in determining whether a Terry stop or frisk has become a de facto arrest. Chapman,
¶ 6. Contrary to the understanding of the trial court, the rule set forth by this Court in Chapman has nothing whatever to do with whether a suspect is questioned outdoors in cold weather or the nature of the suspected crime. In Chapman, we explained that, in order not to become a full arrеst, a frisk must be "brief," "its scope reasonably related to the justification for the stop and inquiry." Id. at 402,
¶ 7. Moreover, we do not agree that the officer's request that defendant accompany him outside was constitutionally impermissible. Even if a reasonable person in defendant's position would not have felt free to refuse the officer's "request," we conclude that the officer had at least a reasonable suspicion that "a crime had been committed" that was sufficient to justify the brief stop of the defendant. State v. Sprague,
¶ 8. We have thus held that an exit request is constitutionally permissible when it is supported by objective facts that support a reasonable suspicion that the safety of investigating officers or members of the public is at risk or that a crime has been committed. Id. Several states have held that the smell of burning marijuana gives investigating officers at least such a reasonable suspicion. Adams v. State,
¶ 9. However, in his brief, defendant raises an issue that was raised before but not considered by the trial court, namely, whether the officer exceeded the scope of the. "strictly circumscribed" search for weapons that Terry authorizes. Terry,
¶ 10. This Court has not yet considered the scope or application of the so-called plain-feel doctrine announced in Dickerson. In Dickerson, the Supreme Court held that if an officer realizes that an object is not a weapon; he may continue his search for it only if he can immediately identify the object as contraband during the frisk. Dickerson,
¶ 11. Had the trial court made adequate findings of fact with respect to the Dickerson issue, we could decide the legal issue defendant raises. State v. Pratt,
[Based on] a concern of the officers that other weapons might exist [, t]he officers patted down Mr. Ford, who volunteered that he had a knife in his pocket. Officer Rothenberg had him turn around so he could retrieve the knife. While doing so he felt what might be a soft bag of marijuana, and Mr. Ford then voluntarily reached into his own pocket and pulled it out. Further pat down disclosed several pill bottles containing medications.
¶ 12. The trial court made no findings of fact with respect to Dickerson's plain-feel doctrine, mentioning only that the officer felt "what might be a soft bag of marijuana." The court's finding concerning dеfendant's alleged consent was also inadequate. The trial court's statement that Ford "voluntarily reached into his own pocket" is conclusory. Adequate Fact-finding is especially important on this issue because consent is analyzed under a totality-of-the-circumstances test and depends heavily on the facts of each individual case. See Schneckloth. Bustamonte,
¶ 13. On remand, the trial court should make specific findings of fact regarding (1) whether the "incriminating character" of the marijuana was "immediately аpparent" to the officer; and (2) the circumstances under which defendant agreed to a search of his pockets and whether any of the factors emphasized in United States v. Mendenhall were present, see United States v. Mendenhall,
Reversed and remanded.
