Jeremy Dean Reynolds appeals from his judgment of conviction for possession of cocaine. Reynolds specifically challenges the district court’s order denying his motion to suppress evidence. Because we conclude that Reynolds’s motion to suppress should have been granted, we vacate Reynolds’s judgment of conviction.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
The following facts were revealed through testimony and were set forth by the district court in its findings in denying Reynolds’s motion to suppress. At 11:45 p.m. on April 7, 2004, probation officers and a police officer conducted a search of a business owned by a probationer because they suspected drug activity at the business. Reynolds’s residence
According to the police officer’s testimony, the building housing the probationer’s business had a back door that opened into the 15-foot open area. The officer testified that he went to the rear of the probationer’s business to monitor anybody coming or going from the back door during the search. As the officer walked down the alley toward the rear of the probationer’s business, he observed Reynolds walking through the 15-foot open area. The officer testified that Reynolds was initially 4 feet from the back door of the building housing the probationer’s business. However, the officer testified that he did not know the location of the property line in relation to Reynolds’s position in the 15-foot open area. The officer recognized Reynolds from prior police work and ordered Reynolds to stop. Reynolds looked back at the officer but proceeded on his way and entered his shop without stopping. The officer did not pursue Reynolds into his shop.
Minutes later, Reynolds emerged from his shop. The officer immediately ordered Reynolds to put his hands on a vehicle parked in the 15-foot open area and conducted a pat-down search of Reynolds. The officer saw a glass pipe sticking out of the back pocket of Reynolds’s pants and seized the pipe, which allegedly contained methamphetamine residue. The officer then handcuffed Reynolds and placed him in a patrol vehicle. The officer testified that Reynolds consented to a search of his shop after the probation search was complete. The officer found drug paraphernalia as well as substances that later tested positive as hashish, cocaine, and marijuana.
Reynolds was charged with three counts of possession of a controlled substance, I.C. § 37-2732(e), one count for the methamphetamine in the pipe and one count each for the cocaine and marijuana found in the shop. Reynolds filed a motion to suppress the pipe and the drugs found in his shop as the fruits of an unconstitutional detention and frisk. The district court denied Reynolds’s motion to suppress. Reynolds filed a motion to reconsider, challenging the police officer’s testimony at the suppression hearing. Reynolds then withdrew the motion to reconsider and pled guilty to possession of cocaine. The state dismissed the remaining two counts. Reynolds appeals, challenging the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress.
II.
ANALYSIS
The standard of review of a suppression motion is bifurcated. When a decision on a motion to suppress is challenged, we accept the trial court’s findings of fact which are supported by substantial evidence, but we freely review the application of constitutional principles to the facts as found.
State v. Atkinson,
A. Factual Dispute
Reynolds initially argues that there was no back door on the building housing the probationer’s business or any other way of exiting the building from the rear. The police officer testified repeatedly that the probationer’s business did have a back door that opened into the 15-foot open area. The district court relied on this testimony in its oral finding at the hearing on the motion to suppress that Reynolds was initially 4 feet from the back door of the probationer’s business. Subsequent to the order denying the motion to suppress, Reynolds submitted evidence with a motion to reconsider that indicates there was no back door or any other way of exiting the rear of the probationer’s business. However, Reynolds withdrew his motion to reconsider at a status conference where he pled guilty. Because Reynolds was reserv
ing
B. Fourth Amendment
Reynolds argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress because the officer conducted an unlawful stop and an unlawful frisk. The pipe and the drugs found in his shop, Reynolds argues, should therefore be suppressed as fruits of the unconstitutional stop and frisk. Although Reynolds contends that both constitutions were violated, he provides no cogent reason why Article I, Section 17 of the Idaho Constitution should be applied differently than the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution in this case. Therefore, the Court will rely on judicial interpretation of the Fourth Amendment in its analysis of Reynolds’s claims.
See State v. Schaffer,
1. The stop
A warrantless search is presumptively unreasonable unless it falls within certain special and well-delineated exceptions to the warrant requirement.
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
The state concedes that the officer did not have reasonable suspicion that Reynolds was involved in criminal activity at the time of the stop, but argues that the officer was entitled to conduct an investigatory stop to secure the premises of the probation search. Reynolds correctly argues that Idaho appellate courts have not recognized an exception to the warrant requirement for an investigatory detention of a person on the premises of a probation search without independent reasonable suspicion that the person is involved in criminal activity.
This Court has recognized that police are entitled to detain certain individuals in the execution of a search warrant, even without independent reasonable suspicion that those individuals are involved in criminal activity.
See State v. Kester,
When police detain individuals in the execution of a search warrant, the articulable and individualized suspicion to support the detention is found in the issuance of a search warrant by a judicial officer based upon probable cause.
Kester,
The state relies on a California appellate decision that extended the reasoning of
Summers
to hold that an officer acted reasonably in detaining individuals leaving the premises of a residence subject to a warrantless probation search.
See People v. Matelski,
The situation that existed when Reynolds was detained in the present case is clearly distinguishable from Matelski. The district court found that Reynolds was in the 15-foot open area, 4 feet from the building housing the probationer’s business, when the officer first observed him. Even if we assume there was a back door on the building housing the probationer’s business, the district court found that the officer did not observe Reynolds leaving the building. The testimony and the district court’s findings of fact do not specify who owned the 15-foot open area in which the officer first observed Reynolds or where the property line divided the area. However, the officer’s testimony indicates that the officer knew Reynolds owned the residence and shop next door to the probationer’s business. It is therefore clear that the officer knew Reynolds was on or very near his own property when the officer initially observed him and ordered him to stop. At oral argument, the state conceded that the officer had no justification to stop Reynolds when he initially ordered Reynolds to stop. Reynolds therefore exercised his right to ignore the officer and walk away.
Reynolds was not detained until minutes later when he emerged from a building on his own property — his shop. The officer testified that the detention occurred immediately after Reynolds emerged from his shop before Reynolds could move in any direction. Reynolds was therefore clearly on his own property when the officer detained him. In
The state argues that the officer acted reasonably because he suspected Reynolds was a threat to himself and the probation officers. In support of this argument, the state relies on testimony from the officer regarding Reynolds’s prior drug use and his possible involvement in a violent crime, but does not argue that Reynolds threatened the officer in any way on the night in question. This argument ignores the fact that there was no nexus between Reynolds and the criminal activity giving rise to the probation search when he was stopped. Police officers are not entitled to detain the neighbor of a site subject to a lawful search while that neighbor is on his or her own property simply because the officer recognizes the neighbor as a person who has been involved in crime in the past. Such generalized knowledge of Reynolds’s past would not provide the officer with the reasonable and particularized suspicion necessary to lawfully stop Reynolds on the night in question while Reynolds was on his own property.
We therefore need not decide whether the police can constitutionally detain individuals found on the premises of a lawful probation search. We hold that, even if this Court were to extend the holdings in Summers, Kester, and Pierce to permit officers to detain individuals on the premises of probation searches, the facts available to the officer in this case would still not justify Reynolds’s detention. Additionally, the officer did not have facts supporting a reasonable suspicion that Reynolds was involved in criminal activity independent from suspected drug activity giving rise to the probation search. The stop was unconstitutional because it did not fall within any well-delineated exception to the warrant requirement.
2. Fruit of the poisonous tree
If evidence is not seized pursuant to a recognized exception to the warrant requirement, the evidence discovered as a result of the warrantless search must be excluded as the fruit of the poisonous tree.
State v. Van Dorne,
Here, the methamphetamine pipe was seized from Reynolds’s back pocket during, and as a result of, the unlawful stop and should have been suppressed. The officer testified that Reynolds consented to the search of his shop which uncovered the cocaine and marijuana after Reynolds was placed in the patrol vehicle. The cocaine and marijuana should have been suppressed because the consent flowed directly from the unlawful stop and detention. The district court therefore erred in denying Reynolds’s motion to suppress the evidence.
III.
CONCLUSION
We need not resolve the factual dispute over whether the building housing the probationer’s business had a back door because the
