{¶ 1} Antonio Jones pleaded no contest to possession of crack cocaine and tampering with evidence after the trial court overruled his motion to suppress evidence. He was sentenced accordingly. Jones appeals, challenging the denial of his motion to suppress.
{¶ 2} We conclude that the trial court erred in overruling Jones’s motion to suppress evidence. Although the trial court correctly determined that there was probable cause to arrest Jones based on his alleged prior participation in controlled drug buys, the trial court committed plain error when it failed to recognize that the officers were required to obtain an arrest warrant when the significant passage of time made it practicable to do so. The judgment of the trial court will be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
I
{¶ 3} At some point prior to January 2008, Jones was involved in controlled drug purchases facilitated by a confidential informant and monitored and observed by Troy police officers. The officers did not immediately arrest Jones, but they bеlieved that they had probable cause to do so. They did not seek or obtain an arrest warrant. Sometime later, officers located Jones through a tip from their confidential informant, which resulted in a traffic stop of a vehicle in which Jones was traveling. Jones was immediately arrested. While Jones was standing, handcuffed, behind the car in which he had been stopрed, the arresting officer conducted a pat-down search and discovered crack cocaine and marijuana in baggies in Jones’s pockets. The officer placed the items on the trunk of the car in front of Jones. When the arresting officer briefly looked away, Jones bent over, took the baggie of crack cocaine in his mouth, and unsuccеssfully attempted to swallow it.
{¶ 4} Jones was subsequently charged with possession of crack cocaine and with tampering with evidence. He filed a motion to suppress the evidence obtained as a result of his stop and arrest, but the motion was overruled after a hearing. Thereafter, Jones pleaded no contest to both offenses and was convicted аnd sentenced to imprisonment on each offense, to be served concurrently.
{¶ 5} Jones raises two assignments of error on appeal.
{¶ 6} Jones’s first assignment of error states:
{¶ 7} “The trial court erred when it allowed into evidence material that should have been suppressed.”
{¶ 8} Jones contends that his constitutional rights were violated because the police officers lacked probable cause to stop or to arrest him and that therefore, the evidence seized as a result of his stop and arrest should have been suppressed.
{¶ 9} The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution states that “the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated.” “Since the Fourth Amendment speaks equally to both searches and seizures, and since an arrest, the taking hold of one’s person, is quintessentially a seizure, it would seem that the constitutional provision should impose the same limitations upon arrests that it does upon searches. Indeed, as an abstract matter an argument can be made that the restrictions upon arrest perhaps should be greater. A searсh may cause only annoyance and temporary inconvenience to the law-abiding citizen, assuming more serious dimension only when it turns up evidence of criminality. An arrest, however, is a serious personal intrusion regardless of whether the person seized is guilty or innocent. * * * Logic therefore would seem to dictate that arrests be subject to the warrant requirement at least to the same extent as searches.” United States v. Watson (1976),
{¶ 10} “The historic purpose of the arrest warrant in the criminal context was to interpose between the government and the citizen a neutral official charged with protecting basic rights.” Hyser v. Reed (D.C.Cir.1963),
{¶ 11} The Fourth Amendment prohibits warrantless searches and seizures, rendering them per se unreasonable unless an exception applies. Id.; Katz v. United States (1967),
{¶ 12} A warrantless arrest is permitted when two requirements have been met: first, the officer must have probable cause for the arrest; second, obtaining an arrest warrant beforehand must be shown to have been impracticable under the circumstances. State v. Heston (1972),
{¶ 13} Jones’s argument in his motion to suppress and in his brief on appeal addresses only whether the police officers had probable cause to stop and arrest him. The trial court’s decision overruling the motion to suppress was also confined to the probable-cause determination. However, we must address both requirements for a warrantless arrest.
{¶ 14} An appellate court reviews a trial court’s decision on a motion to suppress de novo. State v. Bing (1999),
{¶ 15} We begin with the issue of probable cause. The state bears the burden of proof on the issue of whether probable cause existed for a warrantless search and seizure. Xenia v. Wallace (1988),
{¶ 16} At the suppression hearing, two Troy police officers testified about the basis for the officеrs’ decision to stop and arrest Jones. Detective Christopher Tilley testified that officers had been working on a case involving the use of a confidential informant to purchase drugs from Jones. Tilley stated that Detective Short had been using a confidential informant to purchase drugs from Jones “for quite some time,” that officers had arranged to buy drugs from Jones at least three times through the informant, and that he (Tilley) had been personally involved with at least two prior controlled drug buys involving Jones and the confidential informant. As a result, there were “three felony five trafficking charges on file” against Jones at the police department, but they had not been filed in court. Tilley acknowledged that there had been no search warrant or arrest warrant from any court, only the “charges” written up at the police department. It is unclear from the record what controlled substance Jones had allegedly sold to the informant on previous occasions, or in what amount, except that the officers classified the offenses as “F5s,” or felonies of the fifth degree. Further, there is nothing in the record аs to when these purchases allegedly occurred.
{¶ 17} Three weeks before Jones’s arrest, Troy police officers did a “drug roundup,” which meant that they made a concerted effort to “round up the individuals” implicated in some of the cases on which they had been working. Jones was included in this group. Tilley described the intent of the “roundup” as follows: “We arrest them, we bring them in, we talk to ’em, and at that point they either go to jail or we work out some other sort of arrangement.”
{¶ 18} At a minimum, the officers had been looking for Jones from the date of the roundup until the date of his arrest, although Tilley testified that the investigation, including the drug purchases, had been going on for “quite some time.” Despite the fact that, as a result of the drug roundup, the cоnfidential informant was told that the police were looking for Jones, no complaint was filed and no warrant was obtained for Jones. On February 15, 2008, the confidential informant called Tilley at the police department to report that Jones would be coming to Troy that evening, “holding drugs.” The informant stated that Jones would be in an older maroon two-door Oldsmobile driven by Matt Furrow. According to Tilley, the confidential informant had a successful record; the informant had provided information leading to several arrests, and the information provided by the informant had “always turned out to be exactly” as reported.
{¶20} Police Officer Joe Stutz stopped the car in which Jones was riding. Stutz testified that he stopped the car because it matched the description with which he had been provided, including the presence of a black man and a white man in the car. Once the car had stopped, Stutz recognized the passenger as Jones and arrested him immediately. Stutz searched Jonеs incident to the arrest and found baggies of crack cocaine and marijuana in Jones’s pocket.
{¶ 21} In this case, the facts providing probable cause for Jones’s stop, seizure, and arrest had allegedly been observed, at least indirectly, by the police officers themselves. Detective Tilley stated that he had been present at two prior cоntrolled drug buys from Jones, but that the police had been unable to locate him in recent weeks. On the date of Jones’s arrest, the informant provided the information about Jones’s whereabouts. The police verified this information to the extent that they were able to do so, namely, by ascertaining that the man with whom Jones was alleged to be driving owned the type of сar in which they were alleged to be traveling.
{¶22} Under the totality of the circumstances, the trial court reasonably concluded that the police officers had had probable cause for stopping the Oldsmobile based on the informant’s description of the vehicle, the informant’s reliability, Detective Tilley’s verification that the man with whom Jones was traveling ownеd the type of car described by the informant, and an officer’s observation that the races of the Oldsmobile’s occupants were consistent with the information known to the officers and verified through vehicle registration and driver’s license records. The judge’s decision found that “the officers had sufficient cause to stop the car and probable cause to arrest the defendant for the prior drug trafficking offenses.” We find no error in the trial court’s determination that the officers had probable cause to stop and arrest Jones for those prior alleged offenses.
{¶ 23} Jones’s argument does not specify how, under the facts of this case, the officers lacked probable cause to arrest him. He simply cites twо other cases involving informants where appellate courts held that probable cause was lacking. In State v. Young, Erie App. No. E-04-013,
{¶ 24} We now turn to the question that the trial court and Jones did not address: whether the state showed that it was impractiсable under the circumstances for the police officers to obtain an arrest warrant before Jones’s arrest. Because Jones did not raise this issue in the trial court, he has waived all but plain error. Plain error has been defined as “obvious error prejudicial to a defendant * * * which involves a matter of great public interest having substantial adverse impaсt on the integrity of and the public’s confidence in judicial proceedings.” State v. Goldick, Montgomery App. No. 22611,
{¶ 25} As we discussed above, a warrantless arrest is the exception, not the rule. State v. Smith, Montgomery App. No. 6139,
{¶ 27} Based on the evidence presented, the police officers clearly had ample opportunity and time to obtain an arrest warrant, but failed to do so. There were no circumstances that made it impracticable to obtain an arrest warrant between the time of the controlled drug buys with police officers and the time Jones was spotted on the interstate at least several weeks lаter. Indeed, the passage of several weeks made it virtually impossible to establish the impracticability of obtaining a warrant. See State v. English (Nov. 12, 1974), Warren App. No. 2,
{¶ 28} Jones’s first assignment of error is sustained.
Ill
{¶ 29} Jones’s second assignment of error states:
{¶ 30} “The trial court erred when it failed to allow the dеfendant replacement legal counsel.”
{¶ 31} In his second assignment, Jones argues that the trial court erred in refusing to allow him to change appointed counsel because of Jones’s “severe
IV
{¶ 32} The judgment of the trial court will be reversed, and the matter will be remanded for further proceedings.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
