James E. Haldiman (“Mr. Haldiman”) was convicted of possession of a controlled substance, methamphetamine, section 195.202, RSMo 2000, and sentenced to seven years imprisonment. He does not dispute the sufficiency of the evidence. He makes two claims on appeal, however. Mr. Haldiman asserts that the trial court erred in (1) denying his motion to suppress and admitting at trial the methamphetamine seized from his person during a pat-down search conducted when he was stopped for a traffic violation that had concluded before the search, and (2) admitting the laboratory report under the business records exception to the hearsay rule identifying the substance seized from Mr. Haldiman as methamphetamine because the State failed to establish sufficient trustworthiness of the test results. The judgment of the trial court is reversed.
Factual and Procedural History
While Highway Patrol Trooper Lance MacLaughlin (“Trooper MacLaughlin”) was on duty on February 6, 1998, he received a radio communication from troop headquarters that a gray Camaro traveling eastbound on 1-70 from Higginsville in Lafayette County was transporting contraband drugs. Nothing in the record indicates that the information came from any source other than an anonymous tip. Trooper MacLaughlin was provided the license plate number of the vehicle. He parked in the median strip of 1-70 and watched the eastbound traffic until he observed the vehicle pass him. Trooper MacLaughlin then followed the vehicle for about four miles. While following the vehicle, the trooper observed it veer off the highway onto the shoulder twice. Activating part of the emergency warning devices on the patrol car, he caused the driver of the vehicle to drive to the side of the highway and stop. Trooper MacLaughlin asked the driver, later identified as Mr. Haldiman, to accompany him to the patrol car while he checked the appropriate database regarding his license plate and issued the traffic citation. Mr. Haldiman sat in the patrol car passenger seat as Trooper MacLauglin sat in the driver’s seat.
Toward the end of drafting the traffic citation, Trooper MacLaughlin asked Mr. Haldiman if any weapons, illegal narcotics, or stolen property were in the vehicle he had driven. Mr. Haldiman answered in the negative. Trooper MacLaughlin asked
Trooper MacLaughlin seized the plastic bag, which contained another bag of pinkish-brown material. The substances seized were eventually analyzed by laboratory personnel. Both bags contained methamphetamine, with the larger plastic bag containing 14.26 grams, and the smaller bag containing 0.72 grams.
Mr. Haldiman did not take the stand at trial. He was found guilty of the charge, and the court entered its judgment of conviction, sentencing him to seven years as recommended by the jury. This appeal followed.
Issues on Appeal
Mr. Haldiman raises two issues on appeal. He claims that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress and admitting at trial the methamphetamine seized from inside his boot because the seizure of the contraband occurred during a pat-down search following a traffic stop and prior to a consensual search of his vehicle. He argues the search of his person was unlawful in that the traffic stop had concluded and Trooper MacLaughlin did not have specific and articulable facts to reasonably warrant a belief that Mr. Haldiman presented a risk to his safety, and, at the time of the search, the encounter had become consensual and was not the result of an investigative stop. He further contends that the seizure of the alleged methamphetamine was unlawful in that Trooper MacLaughlin exceeded the scope of the pat-down search by pulling up his pants leg and inspecting inside his boot when no object that could be a weapon was felt through the pat-down of his outer clothing. In his second point on appeal, Mr. Haldiman claims that the trial court erred in admitting the laboratory report under the business records exception of the hearsay rule identifying the substances seized from him as methamphetamine because the testimony of the supervisor of the chemist who actually performed the analysis did not and could not establish the trustworthiness of the test results because the underlying data and conclusions were not known to him and were based upon his subjective interpretation of the underlying test data and, finally, that the evidence did not establish the equipment utilized to test the substance was in proper working order when two tests of the content of one of the substances seized yielded different results.
Standard of Review
The State bears the burden of showing by a preponderance of the evidence that a motion to suppress should be denied.
State v. Heyer,
Point I
Mr. Haldiman argues in his first point on appeal that the trial court erred in overruling his motion to suppress evidence because reasonable, articulable suspicion sufficient to justify the pat-down search did not exist. When a valid stop has been made, officers may pat a suspect’s outer clothing if they have a reasonable, particularized suspicion that the suspect is armed.
State v. Rushing,
The sole justification of the search in the present situation is the protection of the police officer and others nearby, and it must therefore be confined in scope to an intrusion reasonably designed to discover guns, knives, clubs, or other hidden instruments for the assault of the police officer.
Analysis of a search pursuant to
Terry
requires an inquiry .into whether an officer could reasonably believe an object discovered during the pat-down was a weapon.
State v. Harrison,
At the time of the search in this case, Trooper MacLaughlin knew he could only ticket Mr. Haldiman for swerving onto the shoulder of the road on the two occasions that he observed him. Additionally, Trooper MacLaughlin testified that he would not have stopped Mr. Haldiman if he had not observed a traffic violation because he would not have been legally justified to do so. He testified that after he stopped the vehicle, Mr. Haldiman was not antagonistic, made no hostile moves,
Under these circumstances, Trooper MacLaughlin lacked a reasonable, articula-ble suspicion that Mr. Haldiman was armed and dangerous at the time of the pat-down search.
See United States v. Glenn,
The State claims that it was reasonable for Trooper MacLaughlin to conduct a pat-down search of Mr. Haldiman because he had received a radio message that Mr. Haldiman’s vehicle might contain drugs. It cites
State v. Pfleiderer, 8
S.W.3d 249, 255 (Mo.App. W.D.1999), for the proposition that “the nature of the crime [the officer] suspected, drug trafficking, created a wholly credible concern that at least some of the suspects might be armed.” (quoting
United States v. Miller,
The State claims that Mr. Haldiman’s consent to search a vehicle automatically constituted consent to search his person. Mr. Haldiman argues that he consented to a search of the vehicle only and that consent to conduct a vehicle search does not automatically equate to consent to conduct a pat-down search of the consenting person.
“A search conducted without a warrant but with proper consent, voluntarily given, is valid under the Fourth Amendment.”
State v. Smith,
Mr. Haldiman also claims that his consent to search the vehicle was insufficient, by itself, to supply the reasonable, articu-lable suspicion required to justify a pat-down search. He cites
United States v. Gray,
In viewing the totality of the circumstances in this case, Trooper MacLaughlin did not have a reasonable suspicion that Mr. Haldiman was armed and presented a danger to his safety when he frisked him. Although Trooper MacLaughlin received information claiming that Mr. Haldiman’s vehicle contained drugs, no corroboration of this fact before conducting the pat-down search was presented. In the absence of Mr. Haldiman’s consent to search the vehicle, Trooper MacLaughlin’s legal justification to detain Mr. Haldiman and to determine whether he had any weapons posing a danger to him ended after he issued the traffic citation.
Because the pat-down search of Mr. Haldiman was constitutionally unreasonable, point one of Mr. Haldiman’s appeal is granted. The portion of Mr. Haldiman’s first point on appeal arguing that the scope of the search exceeded the permissible scope of that permitted by
Terry
is not
For the foregoing reasons, the pat-down search of Mr. Haldiman violated his Fourth Amendment rights. The evidence should not have been admitted. The judgment of the trial court is reversed.
All concur.
Notes
.
Cf. United States v. Menard,
. The State cites
State v. Fernandez,
