641 N.E.2d 216 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1994
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *503
About 2:15 a.m., on March 27, 1992, Richardson was driving south on North Wayne Avenue in Lockland, Ohio. Officer Mark Reiber was three to four hundred yards away approaching from the opposite direction in a police cruiser. Because Richardson did not make a left-turn signal, the officer activated the *504 cruiser's flashing lights and followed Richardson's automobile for three blocks. He testified that, in that distance, he saw Richardson make another left turn without signalling and run a stop sign. Richardson eventually stopped his automobile in the adjacent city of Lincoln Heights. When Richardson presented his license, Officer Reiber said that he recognized Richardson's name as having been given to him a week earlier by an informant in connection with the use and sale of crack cocaine. He further testified that he knew Richardson's brother carried a firearm and had been arrested for drug trafficking. In addition, he recalled that, a year earlier, a man was shot and killed in the Lockland apartment of Richardson's father. Accordingly, the officer ordered Richardson to exit the automobile. He told the trial judge that, as he patted Richardson down, he saw a roll of bills and a plastic baggie protruding from the pocket of Richardson's jacket. Believing that the plastic baggie contained crack cocaine, he confiscated it and placed Richardson under arrest.
Richardson first argues that Officer Reiber lacked a sufficient articulable ground to provide even reasonable suspicion for a traffic stop, because the conduct observed by the officer on the night in question did not amount to a left-turn-signal violation under R.C.
R.C.
According to the record in this case, Officer Reiber personally observed Richardson as he made the initial left turn without using the signal required by R.C.
Pretextual stops are a significant intrusion into one's liberty and have been held to be unconstitutional. United Statesv. Lefkowitz (1932),
If an objective test for pretext is restricted to precisely the same test held to govern investigatory stops or arrests in general, pretext is deprived of any constitutional significance whenever a stop or an arrest meets the ordinarily accepted standard, no matter how egregious or illegal an officer's actions may be when viewed from the perspective of the actual goal of the investigation. See Katz, supra, at 176. In UnitedStates v. Ferguson (C.A.6, 1993),
We believe that true pretextual arrests or stops arise from extraordinary circumstances and are therefore better evaluated under a more exacting standard of objectivity, such as the test adopted by the Eleventh District Court of Appeals in State v.Whitsell (1990),
Admittedly, a heightened objective test for pretextual stops may have limited practical significance by serving to invalidate police action under only the most extraordinary circumstances. For example, it is unlikely that an officer will ever admit taking action beyond the terms of accepted routine or departmental policy in stopping an automobile for a traffic violation. As unlikely as it may be that pretextual conduct may be found, however, in those extraordinary instances where it can be shown to exist, we believe a more exacting Fourth Amendment avenue of review should be available for searches stemming materially from improper hunches grounded in such things as race, dress, appearance, or personal bias.
We are not persuaded, however, from our review of the record, that there is in the present case a sufficient factual basis for the application of a heightened objective test for pretext. Although Richardson asserts that the initial stop was made only so that Officer Reiber could undertake a search for drugs, the record is bare of any evidence that could reasonably substantiate this position. There is no evidence, for example, that the officer was conducting a drug investigation, *508 that he was looking for drug offenders, or that he was concerned specifically in any way about drugs when he decided to stop Richardson's vehicle upon observing the first traffic offense. What the evidence does show is that the officer personally observed one criminal violation, and that, prior to the actual stop, he observed the commission of two more, by someone whose identity, history, and personal characteristics were entirely unknown to him. On the state of this record, the only conceivable link between the stop and drugs is the fact that drugs were ultimately discovered in the course of the investigative activity that followed the stop. In our judgment, such a discovery made during an ensuing search, standing alone, is insufficient to demonstrate that the stop itself was pretextual. There being no factual basis to support the claim of pretext, the appropriate standard for measuring the validity of the stop is clearly one of unadorned reasonable suspicion; and, as we have already determined, the evidence here is more than ample to satisfy that test.
Consistent with Jennings, Richardson relied below on statistics, which he compiled for a six-month period, purporting to show that Officer Reiber singled out minorities for different treatment than non-minorities. Based upon the six-month period, Officer Reiber issued sixty-six percent of his citations to African Americans, although Lockland's overall population is only twenty-five-percent African American. The prosecutor argues that, standing alone, these statistics are not evidence of disparate treatment and are meaningless because the population of the area where the officer was patrolling and where Richardson was stopped is eighty percent or more African American.
The merits of Richardson's factual argument are immaterial to the constitutional issue he raises. Although the Equal Protection Clause expresses a guarantee of equal treatment, we are not aware of any constitutional requirement which *509
allows police to stop suspects only in proportion to the racial make-up of the surrounding community. The exclusionary rule is a judicially created remedy to protect Fourth Amendment rights.United States v. Calandra (1974),
When an appellate court reviews a ruling on a motion to suppress, the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses are for the trier of fact. State v. DePew (1988),
Officer Reiber's testimony about his belief that Richardson might be armed and dangerous was sufficient for the trial court to find that the officer independently articulated particularized facts and circumstances which would have warranted an officer of reasonable caution to pat down Richardson's outer clothing to determine if he was armed.Terry, supra,
Evidence is admissible under Evid.R. 406, as Richardson argues, to prove that a person's conduct on a particular occasion was in conformity with his habit or routine practice. 1 Weissenberger's Ohio Evidence (1988), Sections 406.1-406.4. The trial court may also exclude relevant evidence if it determines that the evidence is needlessly cumulative. Evid.R. 403(B). Weissenberger, supra, at Section 403(7). Because the trial court has broad discretion in admitting or excluding evidence, the Ohio Supreme Court has admonished appellate courts not to interfere unless the trial court clearly abused its discretion.State v. Apanovitch (1987),
The anecdotal evidence proffered into the record by Richardson appears to serve as nothing more than piling on. Richardson has failed to demonstrate how he was prejudiced because the probative value of this evidence, if any, duplicates Richardson's statistical evidence offered in support of his nonexistent equal protection theory. The trial court's exclusion of this evidence as cumulative was not unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable, and, therefore, was not an *511
abuse of discretion. State v. Lundy (1987),
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
SHANNON, P.J., and DOAN, J., concur.