David Moultrie appeals his conviction for possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. He claims the trial court should have excluded evidence that he alleges the arresting officer improperly seized during a search of his person and testimony concerning his prior drug-related activities. We affirm.
On June 15,1991, Ricky Dean Fabre gave Deputies Joseph Boykin and Ronald Maugans a detailed account of drug trans actions involving cocaine, crack cocaine, and marijuana that Moultrie regularly conducted in front of his house since 1989. Fabre acquired the information that he gave to the officers from personal experience. Fabre told the deputies Moultrie kept drugs in a brown paper bag either under his car in front of his house or in the woods adjacent to his house near where he parked his car.
On June 17, 1991, at the dark hour of 10:00 p.m., the two deputies pulled up on the road in front of Moultrie’s house. Deputy Boykin observed a crowd of approximately eight people around a car parked in front of the house. He recognized Moultrie, who was standing in front of the car, from prior encounters. As Deputy Boykin approached the crowd, lighting his way with a small flashlight, he saw on the ground, approximately one to two feet from Moultrie, a plastic-wrapped package of green plant material that appeared to be, and later proved to be, marijuana.
The deputies, suspecting criminal activity, conducted a “pat-down” weapons search of each individual. Deputy Boykin’s search of Moultrie produced a pocket knife and a bulging wallet that contained a large sum of cash.
Deputy Boykin also discovered cocaine, crack cocaine, and more marijuana in a brown paper bag at the edge of the woods, approximately ten to fifteen feet from Moultrie’s car.
Deputy Boykin then formally arrested Moultrie.
The grand jury later indicted Moultrie for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, possession of crack cocaine with intent to distribute, and possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. The petit jury acquitted Moultrie on the cocaine and crack cocaine charges, but convicted him on the marijuana charge.
I.
Moultrie argues the trial court should have excluded the evidence of the cash found in
We need not decide this question.
The fact that an arresting officer improperly based a search of an individual on a
Terry-stop
rationale does not prevent the State from otherwise justifying the search by proving probable cause to make a warrantless arrest of the individual existed prior to the search.
Florida v. Royer,
But, before determining whether Deputy Boykin had probable cause to arrest Moultrie, we ought to decide whether the challenged search, which occurred before Moultrie’s arrest, qualifies as a search incident to that arrest.
A warrantless search
2
that precedes a formal arrest is nonetheless valid if the arrest quickly follows.
Rawlings v. Kentucky,
Turning to the question of probable cause, probable cause for a warrantless arrest generally exists “where the facts and circumstances within the arresting officer’s knowledge are sufficient for a reasonable person to believe that a crime has been or is being committed by the person to be arrested.”
Miller,
925 F. (2d) at 698;
Brinegar v. United States,
The Supreme Court has upheld a warrantless arrest based on an informant’s tip where
Here, Fabre’s detailed firsthand information about Moultrie’s mode of operation during his drug transactions was corroborated when Deputy Boykin arrived on the scene to find a crowd of people surrounding Moultrie, a package of marijuana at Moultrie’s feet, and a paper bag filled wdth cocaine, crack cocaine, and marijuana at the edge of the woods, exactly where Fabre had told the deputies Moultrie stored his inventory of drugs. 4 These facts, when viewed under the totality of the circumstances, were sufficient for a reasonable person to believe that Moultrie had been, or was currently, conducting drug transactions in front of his house.
Without considering the evidence of the cash found in Moultrie’s wallet, we hold Deputy Boykin had probable cause to arrest Moultrie and perform a search incident to that arrest. The cash found in Moultrie’s wallet was therefore admissible as the fruit of a valid search incident to arrest.
Accord United States v. Morgan,
799 F. (2d) 467 (9th Cir. 1986) (a warrantless search of the suspect’s person that revealed a large sum of money was held lawful as a search incident to an arrest, even though the officer told the suspect he was not under arrest at the time of the search, because the officer had probable cause before he removed the money from the suspect’s pocket);
United States v. Trusheim,
II.
Moultrie also argues the trial court committed reversible error in denying his pretrial motion in limine to exclude evidence of prior bad acts and in denying his motions for a mistrial based on the introduction of evidence of prior bad acts. We disagree.
A.
Moultrie first challenged, in a pretrial motion in limine made before Judge Hayes, the admission of “any evidence of prior crimes which did not result in any con viction.” In arguing the motion, Moultrie focused entirely on Fabre’s testimony concerning Moultrie’s involvement since 1987 in the drug trade. Judge Hayes ruled the testimony would be admissible at trial to prove a common scheme.
To preserve this issue for appeal, Moultrie was not only required to raise it once again before the trial judge, Judge Howell, but also to obtain a ruling on the issue from the trial judge.
E.g., State v. Schumpert,
— S.C. —,
Before the State presented its case, Moultrie renewed his motion in limine, before Judge Howell, to exclude evidence of prior bad acts. Moultrie did not, however, obtain a ruling on this issue; therefore, we need not address this issue.
Even assuming Moultrie preserved this issue for appeal, the trial court did not
Generally, evidence that a defendant has committed other unrelated crimes or bad acts is inadmissible to prove the defendant’s propensity to commit the crime with which he is charged.
Mitchell v. State,
First, we dispose of the relevancy issue, holding the challenged testimony was clearly relevant to the question of whether Moultrie possessed drugs with the intent to distribute them on the night of his arrest.
See State v. Alexander,
Next, in determining the admissibility of evidence of prior crimes or bad acts to prove a common scheme or plan, “[t]he question is whether the particular item of evidence tends to show the existence, the nature or content of the plan. Much of
the showing is evidence of the conduct of the defendant and the specific question becomes whether the particular conduct circumstantially tends to prove the design or plan.”
Bell,
Fabre’s testimony relating the specifics of Moultrie’s mode of operation when conducting prior drug deals bore an extraordinary similarity to the evidence Deputy Boykin discovered on the night of Moultrie’s arrest and tended to show the nature and content of Moultrie’s previous drug dealing. This testimony was, therefore, admissible to prove the existence and nature of Moultrie’s drug trafficking scheme and was probative 5 of Moultrie’s conduct with respect to the crime for which he was on trial.
Further, we hold the challenged testimony could have been admitted as evidence of Moultrie’s intent.
See State v. Gore,
B.
Moultrie moved for a mistrial twice during Fabre’s testimony, testimony he now says prejudiced him. He based his first mistrial motion on Fabre’s testimony that he knew Moultrie had “been busted two or three times” before; and he based his second mistrial motion on Fabre’s testimony that he had seen police searching around Moultrie’s property before, that Moultrie was a “bootlegger,” and that he knew Moultrie had been arrested and released three times.
Moultrie, however, made no contemporaneous objection to any of these statements.
Our courts have held a “failure to contemporaneously ob
ject” to the introduction of evidence claimed to be prejudicial “cannot be later bootstrapped by a motion for a ipistrial.”
State v. Lynn,
C.
Moultrie moved a third time for a mistrial after Deputy Boykin’s testimony that he knew Moultrie “by sight and name.” Moultrie argues the testimony portrays Moultrie as a person who had been the subject of police investigation in the past.
This time, Moultrie made a contemporaneous objection to the offending testimony; however, he did not state any ground for this objection. He is, therefore, now precluded from challenging the trial judge’s admission of this testimony.
State v. Meyers,
Even assuming Moultrie’s contemporaneous objection provided a proper basis for a mistrial motion, the challenged testimony was still admissible because it did not prejudice Moultrie. A trial court error must sufficiently prejudice the defendant in order to require reversal.
State v. Bernotas,
As we mentioned, Fabre testified he knew Moultrie had been arrested three times before. Moultrie directed no objection to this testimony, testimony that also portrays Moultrie as a person who had been the subject of police investigation in the past.
Other evidence far more damaging to Moultrie than Deputy Boykin’s casual statement that he knew Moultrie “by sight and name” haunts the record.
In addition to Fabre’s other uncontested testimony that Moultrie was a drug dealer, another witness, Marcus Grant, testified, without objection, he and Moultrie sold drugs on a regular basis.
Further, the jury had before it the cocaine, crack cocaine, and marijuana Deputy Boykin found near Moultrie, precisely where the informant had predicted the illegal drugs would be found.
We therefore find Deputy Boykin’s comments were not prejudicial because there was much other evidence of guilt.
See State v. Rochester,
Affirmed.
Notes
See Terry v. Ohio,
See Chimel v. California,
Probable cause analysis “includes a realistic assessment of the situation from a law enforcement officer’s perspective.”
United States v. Pasquarille,
20 F. (3d) 682, 686 (6th Cir. 1994);
see id.
(an informant’s tip provided probable cause where the informant identified herself and had personally observed the attempted sale of drugs) (citations omitted);
see also United States v. Cortez,
Although Moultrie argues Fabre’s information is less reliable because he gave it in an effort to secure a more lenient sentence on pending federal drug-charges and to avoid state drug charges, our Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals has held “[t]he informant’s interest in obtaining leniency created a strong motive to supply accurate information. The informant hoped that by giving reliable information she would receive a lenient sentence. If she provided false information she had nothing to gain and could have risked an additional charge for falsification.” Miller, 925 F. (2d) at 699.
The challenged testimony was probative of a common scheme and this probative value outweighed any prejudicial effect the testimony might have had on the jury’s decision; further, the record is laden with other evidence of Moultrie’s guilt. See infra pt. (II)(C).
Moultrie’s only objection to
any
of Fabre’s testimony was based on the ground of surprise. Because he does not argue this ground in his brief, it is deemed abandoned.
State v. Givens,
