STATE of Louisiana
v.
Samuel T. HILLS.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
*1028 Richard P. Ieyoub, Attorney General, Harry F. connick, District Attorney, Scott D. Peebles, for Applicant.
William R. Campbell, Jr., New Orleans, Yvonne Chalker, for Respondent.
PER CURIAM.
In Williamson v. United States,
Nevertheless, particularized circumstances may render the statement reliable. We found those circumstances present in State v. Mosley,
On June 8, 1996, Sergeant Steven Gaudet, acting on a tip from a confidential informant that "James" was dealing cocaine in front of an abandoned house in the 2100 block of LaSalle Street in New Orleans, established a surveillance of that location with Officers Lampard and Schnapp. The officers observed a hand-to-hand *1029 transaction between two men standing not in front of the abandoned home but across the street on the sidewalk in front of the gate to a chain link fence marking the perimeter of a two-story, wood-framed building on the corner of LaSalle Street and Jackson Avenue. The officers immediately placed the two men, James Scott and Howard Bryant, under arrest. Bryant had a single bag of cocaine in his possession; Scott had a total of 19 bags of cocaine on his person. According to the police testimony at the hearing conducted on respondent's motion to suppress the evidence, while Officer Lampard was in the process of handcuffing Scott and advising him of his rights, Scott informed the officers that he did not want to go to jail and that the cocaine he had in his possession had been given to him by a Samuel Hills to sell. Scott told the officers that Hills was wearing a white baseball cap, a blue and white striped shirt and blue shorts. Scott also began motioning behind him with his head to the apartment above him, indicating that Hills resided there, and advised the officers that his supplier had more cocaine stashed on the premises. Sergeant Gaudet looked up and observed respondent, who fit Scott's description, duck his head out of the doorway to the second story apartment on at least three occasions, "as if he were monitoring our activities." Gaudet testified that he did not know either Scott or Bryant but it appeared to the officer that, "given [his] position," Scott was telling him the truth.
Shortly thereafter, the officers saw two young males exit the apartment and enter a black Nissan Sentra parked on the street. A woman also left the apartment, sat briefly in the Nissan occupied by her two sons, and then returned upstairs. Moments later, the officers observed respondent, in the company of the woman, at the head of the winding iron stair case which connected the second-story apartment to the ground. It appeared to the officers that respondent was attempting to leave, and Gaudet and Lampard stopped him and his female companion on the stairs, advised respondent that he was under investigation for a possible narcotics violation, and read him his rights pursuant to Miranda v. Arizona,
The state charged respondent by bill of information with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in violation of La.R.S. 40:967(A)(1). After the trial court denied respondent's motion to suppress the evidence, a jury found him guilty of simple possession of cocaine. La.R.S. 40:967(C)(2). The court sentenced him as an habitual offender to 20 years imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of probation or suspension of sentence. On appeal, the Fourth Circuit reversed respondent's conviction and sentence. State v. Hills, 00-0124 (La.App. 4th Cir.2/14/01),
We agree with the premise of the majority on the court of appeal panel that even spontaneous statements not made as the result of police interrogation may be suppressed as the fruit of an illegal arrest or seizure if they are not sufficiently attenuated from the primary illegality to represent the exercise of free will. State v. Fisher, 97-1133, pp. 11-12 (La.9/9/98),
Nevertheless, we also agree with the dissent that probable cause existed for the de facto arrest of respondent. That a statement made by an individual in James Scott's position, naming others involved in an offense, is not truly self-inculpatory and therefore not intrinsically reliable, does not mean "that one who knows the police are already in a position to charge him with a serious crime will not lightly undertake to divert the police down blind alleyways." 2 Warren R. LaFave, Search and Seizure, § 3.3(c), p. 129 (3rd ed.1996). Accordingly, "where the circumstances fairly suggest that the informant well knew that any discrepancies in his story might go hard with him, that is reason for finding the information reliable." Id. (internal quotation marks and footnote omitted) We acknowledged that factor in Mosley but were inclined to discount it, in favor of other more persuasive circumstances, because the informant may have calculated that the "risk incurred in fabricating the basis of his information may have seemed small, difficult to distinguish from a genuine effort to cooperate and worth the chance of having the charges against him dropped." Mosley,
However, in the present case, the circumstances of his arrest gave Scott absolutely no incentive to lie about the source of his cocaine to feign cooperation with the police in an attempt to improve his position. He had just been arrested for possession of 19 bags of cocaine, knew that he faced serious felony charges, and named and described a source who was not only literally feet away from him but who was also monitoring the course of the investigation from the doorway of the upstairs *1031 apartment. Scott was presumably as aware of respondent's presence as the officers and could reasonably assume that the police would react to his information in exactly the manner that they did, by attempting to verify or discount it immediately on the scene. Scott had little or no time to fabricate a story falsely implicating someone else and he spoke spontaneously in the hope, however misguided, that he could help out his own case by trading off information expanding the scope of the police investigation "up the chain" of street-level drug trafficking. Sergeant Gaudet therefore had a substantial basis for taking Scott at his word when he gestured with his head and named his supplier. See United States v. Moore,
Sergeant Gaudet also had a reasonable basis for assuming that he faced a now-or-never situation precipitated by respondent's apparent attempt to leave the apartment with his family. See Roaden v. Kentucky,
The trial court therefore reached the correct result when it denied respondent's motion to suppress the evidence. To this extent, we reverse the decision in the court of appeal. However, in all other respects, the court of appeal adequately treated respondent's remaining assignments of error. We therefore affirm those portions of the court of appeal's opinion, reinstate respondent's conviction and sentence, and remand this case to the district court for execution of sentence.
DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEAL AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART; CASE REMANDED.
JOHNSON, J., dissents.
CALOGERO, C.J., dissents and assigns reasons.
*1032 CALOGERO, Chief Justice, dissents and assigns the following reasons:
As the majority panel of the court of appeal noted, the crux of this case is whether James Scott's statement, coupled with respondent's observing the street activities from his door step, provided the officers probable cause to believe that respondent had indeed committed the crime of possession of drugs with intent to distribute. I conclude that the officers did not have probable cause, and, consequently, the de facto arrest of respondent was unlawful.
A confidential informant may provide adequate information to establish probable cause for a warrantless arrest if the state proves that the informant was credible and the information reliable. Illinois v. Gates,
In Mosley, the tipster was known to the arresting officers. The officers in the instant case, however, admitted they knew nothing about Scott or his reliability. The fact that Scott was being arrested for a crime and may have been attempting to "curry favor" with the police tends to negate his reliability. United States v. Jackson,
The officers testified that they did not observe behavior on the part of respondent consistent with drug trafficking: they did not see anyone approach respondent, nor did they see any hand-to-hand transactions. The officers merely noticed respondent looking outside of his door several times. Equivocal conduct does not furnish probable cause to arrest if the possibility of criminal conduct is no greater than the possibility of innocent behavior. State v. Talbert,
Because the officers relied on information given them by an unverified informant and also derived from a short-lived surveillance that failed to reveal any unambiguous facts and circumstances indicating that respondent was engaging in criminal activity, the officers lacked probable cause to make a warrantless arrest. Accordingly, the court of appeal correctly held that the trial court erred by failing to suppress the cocaine seized from underneath *1033 respondent's stairway and inside his apartment.
