¶ 1 Defendant Marcus Watkins appeals from the superior court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence seized after a stop and pat-down for weapons. The court denied the motion and admitted evidence obtained in the stop and frisk. Defendant contends that the stop and frisk were unlawful and therefore that the court should not have admitted the contraband as evidence.
¶ 2 This appeal requires us to decide first whether stopping Defendant violated the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution. To answer that question, we consider whether stopping a person who appears to have firsthand, material information about a recently committed felony is constitutional. If we decide that the initial stop was lawful, we must then determine whether the subsequent frisk and seizure of evidence violated the Fourth Amendment. We hold that the Constitution permits the stop, the frisk and the seizure.
¶3 The events that led to Defendant’s arrest are as follows. Late at night, the victim entered her apartment and saw two men leaving through the back door with her property. She observed them enter a vehicle and drive away. The victim recognized the men as acquaintances of Defendant. The victim went to Defendant’s apartment 1 to inquire about the suspects and call police. When she arrived, the suspects were in the apartment along with Defendant. She confronted the suspects and one of them choked her after she had told them to either return the property or she would call police. After the altercation, Defendant suggested that they proceed to another apartment to call police. The victim and Defendant did so, and then the victim returned home to wait for the police.
¶4 Shortly thereafter, at around 11:00 p.m., Officers Neese and Boulter arrived and spoke to the victim. She described the burglary suspects as two Hispanic males. She also told the officers that she had confronted the suspects in Defendant’s apartment. After she and the officers began walking to
¶ 5 Officer Boulter asked Defendant to stop. Defendant stopped, but then immediately started to make furtive movements with his hands toward his waist. It appeared to the officers that he was arranging his clothes as if to hide or retrieve something. The officers were concerned that Defendant might have a weapon.
¶ 6 The officers approached Defendant and asked for his consent to conduct a pat-down search for weapons. Defendant said nothing, but opened up his jacket. Officer Boulter patted Defendant’s waist and felt stems of marijuana protruding above his waistline. Officer Boulter then asked Defendant to hand the drugs to the officer.
¶ 7 Defendant refused, moved the officer’s hand away, and attempted to flee. Both officers pursued Defendant and overtook him. Defendant was within Officer Boulter’s view during the brief chase. Officer Boulter removed the marijuana from Defendant’s waistband. Officer Neese then conducted a search incident to an arrest and discovered cocaine. The officers placed Defendant in the patrol vehicle before completing their search. The transporting officer later found a loaded gun wedged under the seat of the vehicle.
¶ 8 The State charged Defendant with one count of possession of narcotic drugs, a class 4 felony, and one count of possession of marijuana, a class 6 felony.
¶ 9 Defendant moved to suppress the State’s evidence, arguing that the marijuana was inadmissible as the product of the officer’s illegal frisk. Defendant contended that the officer lacked reasonable suspicion both to detain him and to conduct a pat-down. Following a suppression hearing at which the officers testified, the court denied Defendant’s motion to suppress.
¶ 10 Defendant testified at trial. He admitted carrying the loaded gun but denied that he had possessed cocaine or marijuana. The jury convicted him of possession of marijuana and acquitted him of possession of cocaine. The court sentenced Defendant to probation under Proposition 200 under Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) section 13-901.01 (Supp.2003). Defendant timely appealed. 2
¶ 11 We have jurisdiction pursuant to the Arizona Constitution, Article 6, Section 9, and A.R.S. § 13-4032(6) (2001). We review the grant or denial of a motion to suppress for abuse of discretion.
State v. Sanchez,
¶ 12 Defendant challenges the admission of evidence as the forbidden fruit of an unlawful, warrantless search. Evidence found during an unlawful search is generally excluded.
State v. Cañez,
¶ 13 If a police officer conducts a warrantless stop of a citizen, the Fourth Amendment requires that the stop be reasonable.
United States v. Brignoni-Ponce,
¶ 14 The investigative stop
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of Defendant as a material witness passes the
Brown
test of reasonableness. The first factor, the public’s concern for the apprehension of known violent criminals, is present here. “Important in the balancing of interests is society’s compelling interest
to
keep a community safe from those who would act against it.”
Tykwinski,
¶ 15 The second factor of the
Brown
test is also satisfied. Stopping Defendant to ask him about the suspects and assault greatly furthers the public interest implicated here. The victim found the suspects at Defendant’s apartment immediately after the burglary and Defendant witnessed one of the suspects choke the victim. The offenses had been committed so recently that the suspects might still be in the vicinity. The information available to the officers was that Defendant was likely able to assist them in identifying, locating and safely apprehending violent criminals. To permit Defendant to leave without attempting to obtain this information, when he could in all likelihood identify the suspects and was an eyewitness to the assault, would frustrate the officers’
¶ 16 These were exigent circumstances justifying the stop.
See Pierce,
¶ 17 The third factor of
Brown
is fulfilled because the interference with Defendant’s liberty was only minimally intrusive. Defendant was walking toward the parking lot when Officer Boulter said, “Hey, hold on a minute. Let me talk to you.” The momentary stop
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of a person to ask questions about a crime the person just witnessed is not unconstitutionally intrusive. This type of stop is no more inconvenient than a highway checkpoint conducted by police to ask drivers and passengers for information about a fatal hit and run accident that had occurred a week before.
Lidster,
— U.S. at-,
¶ 18 Other jurisdictions also allow officers to stop potential witnesses.
E.g., State v. Pierce,
¶ 19 Having determined that the
Brown
balancing test favors the officers’ stop of Defendant, we caution that an officer’s ability to detain such a witness is not without limitation. As discussed above, officers may stop witnesses only in limited and exigent circumstances.
Pierce,
¶ 20 Without deciding whether we should adopt these standards, the circumstances of this investigative stop satisfied them. The victim called 911 after having been burglarized as soon as she could find a telephone. The officers arrived at the scene shortly thereafter. The officers were walking with the victim when she saw Defendant and identified him. The victim had told the officers she found the suspects in Defendant’s apartment along with Defendant, and that Defendant had been present when one of the suspects choked her. The officers reasonably believed that Defendant had material knowledge of crime that the officers needed to investigate and apprehend the suspects. Defendant was walking toward the parking lot, apparently trying to leave the apartment complex. Because the officers were responding to a burglary that had just been committed, the violent crime of assault had occurred, the suspects may have been nearby, Defendant was an eyewitness to at least the assault and Defendant was about to leave, the circumstances warranted the officers’ detention of Defendant. Accordingly, the stop of Defendant was constitutionally permissible. 6
¶ 21 Defendant next contends the pat-down was unlawful. After an officer has lawfully stopped an individual, he can briefly frisk that person only if a reasonably prudent officer under the circumstances would fear for his safety or the safety of those nearby.
See Terry,
¶ 22 The officers were legitimately concerned for their safety. They had sufficient reason to suspect Defendant had a weapon. After the officers commanded him to stop and while they were approaching him, Defendant lifted his jacket, and moved his hands to his waistband and under his shirt. Defendant aroused the officers’ suspicion by moving his hands toward an area of the body where weapons are often concealed or worn. Furtive movements near the waist support the inference that a person may be armed.
See, e.g., United States v. Brown,
¶23 The circumstances surrounding the officers’ encounter with Defendant further evidence the reasonableness of the officers’ fear of danger. It was 11:00 p.m. The officers were responding to a report of burglary and assault, a crime of violence. Defendant had been with the suspects and indeed was present when a suspect choked the victim. The officers also testified that, in their experience, burglary calls commonly involve suspects carrying weapons. Defendant argues that the victim told the officers that Defendant was not involved in the burglary and thus the officers had no reasonable suspicion to pat-down Defendant, but it was Defendant’s furtive movements and not the victim’s statements that support the frisk.
¶24 Defendant cites two cases to demonstrate that the search was unreasonable, both of which are distinguishable. The court in
In re Steven O.,
¶ 25 Also distinguishable is
State v. Rogers,
¶ 26 We must next decide whether the seizure of the marijuana was valid. It was. The marijuana was detected during the lawful pat-down for weapons. Contraband may be seized if, during a lawful frisk, the officer feels an object he knows is contraband without the need to manipulate it.
State v. Valle,
¶ 27 For these reasons, the officers’ conduct did not violate the Fourth Amendment and the superior court correctly denied the motion to suppress the evidence found incident to the search. Accordingly, we affirm.
Notes
. The testimony conflicts on whether Defendant lived in the apartment or merely frequented it.
. The State argues that Defendant waived any argument challenging the initial stop. However, he preserved the contention by questioning the propriety of the stop at the suppression hearing, an issue the court addressed.
See State v. Briggs,
. In its brevity and limited intrusiveness, the stop of Defendant is similar to that in
Terry v. Ohio,
. Related to the concept of apprehension of violent criminals is the identification of witnesses for subpoena purposes. The discovery of truth is the lifeblood of our justice system. And conviction often requires identification of suspects by witnesses and eyewitness testimony.
It is very difficult to investigate or prosecute a crime without witnesses. Missing witnesses have been the bane of more than one prosecution. Identifying the witnesses and obtaining their stories is thus an essential part of police work, and is best done as quickly as possible. A Terry stop of a ... witness is therefore the essence of good police work.
Charles L. Hobson, Flight and Terry: Providing the Necessary Bright Line, 3 Md. J. Contemp. Legal Issues 119, 139 (1992).
Because the victim informed the officers that Defendant lived in the apartment complex, this concern is not as strong here. In other circumstances, identifying a witness for subpoena purposes might be a sufficiently powerful justification when a police officer does not know where to locate the witness after a witness leaves the scene.
. One of the factors in measuring the level of intrusion is the length of detention.
See United States v. Martinez-Fuerte,
Of course, police can always request to speak to a citizen. It is the command to stop that renders this situation a detention subject to constitutional scrutiny.
See Cañez,
. The superior court ruled on this basis. It found that the officers "were certainly justified out of precaution to contact [Defendant] to find out if he knew anything about the burglary since they were made aware that he knew the suspects.” This case is clearly distinguishable from
Richcreek,
. Carrying a concealed weapon without a permit is a crime. A.R.S. § 13-3102(A)(1) (Supp.2003).
