Defendant, who entered a conditional plea of no contest, ORS 135.335(3),
We review the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion to suppress for errors of law. State v. Ehly,
On April 7, 2011, Aaron Davis, a City of Albany police officer with approximately seven and one-half years of “narcotics detective experience,” was working with Hutch, his “narcotics detection trained police canine.”
While Hutch was taking his break, Davis noticed another vehicle parked “at the edge of the park with a single male occupant.” Davis ran “a records check.” He recognized the name of the vehicle’s registered owner as that of a “reported * * * dealer of methamphetamine,” but Davis could not determine whether the male occupant was the registered owner. At that point, Davis, who was wearing a uniform, saw a female — later identified as “Shawna” — “clear [] the edge of the jersey wall.” Shawna looked in Davis’s direction.
Davis left the park, located the vehicle that defendant was driving, and followed it. Davis did not observe defendant commit any traffic infractions. He “ran” the vehicle’s license plate number and learned that its “female registered owner * * * had a court ordered driver’s suspension history for drugs.”
After taking a circuitous route, defendant stopped at a house, which Davis recognized because, several years before, he had “processed a methamphetamine lab” there and, on a separate occasion, had “seized * * * drug evidence” from the house. Shawna got out of the vehicle and entered the house. According to Davis, based on his training and experience, it is common for a house in which methamphetamine has been manufactured to continue to be associated with “drug activity.”
Defendant drove away. Davis followed but did not activate his lights or otherwise require defendant to stop the vehicle.
Eventually, defendant parked the vehicle at her apartment complex next to a dumpster. Davis parked his car “parallel” to and “approximately 30 feet” away from defendant’s vehicle.
When defendant got out of the car, Davis asked her about her route of travel and what she was up to. According to Davis, defendant explained that she had given her friend Shawna — whose last name defendant did not know — a ride after Shawna had called her from a pay phone. Davis thought that response was “odd” because the nearest pay phone was “about a quarter mile away and in the opposite direction” of where he had first seen Shawna. Davis also indicated to defendant that he “suspect [ed] drug activity” and asked defendant whether she used drugs and whether she owned the vehicle that she had been driving. According to Davis, defendant “admitted to the previous use of both methamphetamine and marijuana” but told him that it “had been months since her last use” and explained that the vehicle was her mother’s. By this point, another officer, Ronald Parker, had arrived.
Davis asked defendant for her identification, which she provided. He ran the identification, but there were no outstanding warrants. Davis returned the identification to defendant and continued speaking with her “mindful to keep it as a casual consensual encounter.” At some point, defendant told Davis that she felt harassed and asked whether she could leave. According to Davis, “I told her point blank, ‘This isn’t a stop and you’re free to go at any time. You’ve been free to go at any time.’ ” Defendant again indicated that she felt as though she was being harassed. Davis asked
At that point, Davis made a “mental tabulation” of the following circumstances: (1) Davis had observed what he believed was a “suspected drug deal in the park.” (2) Defendant gave a ride to Shawna “whose last name [defendant] didn’t know” and “who supposedly called from a pay phone when none was immediately present.” (3) Shawna got out of the vehicle “in a high drug use area” and entered “a former drug house.” (4) Defendant had “admitted” to a “previous history of two types of illegal drug use.” (5) Defendant was not the registered owner of the car she was driving. (6) The vehicle’s registered owner “had a documented drug history.” (7) Defendant had made statements distancing herself from “potential evidence in the vehicle that could be attributed to her.” And (8) defendant was in a “high drug trafficking and use area of the city.”
Davis then asked defendant to step away from the vehicle so that he could deploy Hutch to perform “an exterior sniff.” Defendant refused. Davis asked again, and again defendant refused.
Both Davis and Parker testified as to what occurred next. According to Davis,
“I reached out to escort [defendant] away from the vehicle and she told me not to touch her. She kind of jerked her arm away and said[,] ‘Don’t touch me,’ at which I complied, and then she went and sat on the hood of her car. I had to tell her twice rather directly to get off the car.”
Consistently with Davis’s testimony, Parker testified:
“When [Davis] first told [defendant] he wanted to do an air sniff then [defendant] was having difficulty, I would say, understanding that we needed her to step away from the vehicle while he did this. That took some convincing. Once she was convinced to step away from the vehicle as she was interfering with his investigation then she decided to sit on the hood of the car, and that was explained to her a couple of times that she needed to get off the hood of the car so we could conduct the investigation. Once threatened with arrestfj she finally stepped from the hood of the car and stood in front of the car, and then that’s when * * * Davis conducted a free air sniff with his canine.”
(Emphasis added.) Based on that testimony, the trial court found:
“Defendant was then ordered, by either Davis or Parker, to move away from the car to allow the search to occur under threat of being immediately arrested. She moved away.”
At that point, Davis deployed Hutch, who is trained to detect cocaine, methamphetamine, heroin, and marijuana. On his second pass around the vehicle, Hutch “alert[ed].” According to Davis, he then saw “Hutch trace to the door seam, and that would be the front left door seam, sniff intently and then sit, which is an indication for the presence of one of those four odors.” Parker testified that he “immediately placed [defendant] in handcuffs and advised her of her rights.”
Based on Hutch’s behavior and the eight circumstances described above, Davis believed that he had probable cause to search the vehicle. At this point, Davis searched the car, finding methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia in various places, and defendant made incriminating statements.
Defendant was charged with possession of methamphetamine and moved to suppress “all evidence derived from the stop of * * *
In resolving defendant’s motion, the trial court did not address defendant’s primary contention that she had been unlawfully stopped and that all derivative evidence obtained as a result of that stop must be suppressed. Instead, the court denied defendant’s motion, addressing only her alternative contention, reasoning that the warrant-less search of the vehicle was supported by probable cause and the automobile exception to the warrant requirement.
Thereafter, defendant pleaded no contest to possession of methamphetamine, reserving in writing the right to challenge the court’s suppression ruling. This appeal followed.
On appeal, defendant contends that the dispositive issues are those that the trial court did not address in resolving defendant’s motion to suppress — viz., (1) whether defendant was stopped, (2) if defendant was stopped, whether the stop was supported by reasonable suspicion, and (3) if defendant was unlawfully stopped, whether there was a causal “but for” connection between that illegality and the evidence that defendant seeks to suppress. Even though the court did not resolve those issues, we need not remand this case to the trial court to engage in the proper legal inquiry. That is so for two interrelated reasons.
First, as noted above,
Second, the court found that the stop occurred “to allow” the dog sniff. That finding demonstrates that the trial court identified a “but for” causal nexus between the stop and dog sniff. In other words, under the circumstances of this case, the court found that the stop was a necessary precondition to the performance of the dog sniff. Stated differently, had the officers not stopped defendant by ordering her away from the vehicle under the threat of arrest, the dog sniff and Hutch’s corresponding alert — at which point the trial court concluded Davis had probable cause to search the vehicle — would not have occurred in this case.
In State v. Martin,
“An officer has reasonable suspicion to stop a person when the officer has an objectively reasonable belief, based on specific and articulable facts, that the person has committed or is about to commit a crime. The officer’s suspicion must be particularized to the person and based on the person’s conduct.
“The fact that there might be innocent explanations for conduct does not mean that the conduct cannot, also give rise to reasonable suspicion of criminality. But, an officer may not stop a person simply because the person’s conduct is consistent with criminal conduct; the nature of the conduct matters. As we explained in [State v.] Alvarado, [257 Or App 612 , 629,307 P3d 540 (2013),] where the state argued that a drug-trafficking stop was supported, in part, by evidence that ‘(1) the car defendant was driving was owned by somebody else; (2) defendant was carrying a cell phone and a pager; and (3) the car contained multiple air fresheners and two bottles of cologne,’
‘“a set of facts will not always create a reasonable suspicion just because those facts are consistent with, but do not necessarily suggest, a crime being committed. Wearing clothing while driving, to use an extreme example, is also consistent with the transportation of narcotics. Less extremely, so too (for all we know) is wearing cologne. This consistency, however, would not be enough to support reasonable suspicion.’
* * * *
“When evaluating the objective reasonableness of an officer’s suspicion, a court considers the totality of the circumstances, viewed in light of the officer’s experience. The officer’s experience is relevant to what inferences the officer may draw from the circumstances. But, an officer’s experience cannot form the entire basis for reasonable suspicion. Intuition or instinct, even of an experienced officer, cannot amount to reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.”
(Some internal quotation marks and citations omitted; brackets in original.) Applying those principles to this case, we conclude that Davis did not have reasonable suspicion to stop defendant.
As noted above,
As an initial matter, two of those circumstances— viz., defendant’s presence in a “high drug trafficking and use area of the city” and her “admissions” to prior drug use months before the stop — carry minimal weight. With regard to the former, we have “repeatedly said that a person’s presence in a location associated with drug activity is insufficient to support an objectively reasonable belief that that person is himself or herself engaged in drug activity.”
The remaining circumstances, in combination with those two, are collectively insufficient to establish reasonable suspicion in this case. Two salient observations demonstrate why that is so.
First, as we explained in Martin, “[t]he officer’s suspicion must be particularized to the person and based on the person’s conduct.”
Second, Davis explained that, in his experience, “people will utilize vehicles not registered to them when they’re in the course of committing crimes, which would include buying and selling drugs, so as to thwart law enforcement’s attempts to identify them” and defendant’s statements “distancing herself from potential evidence in the vehicle that could be attributed to her” were a “red flag” or “excuse as to why there is something there but they don’t want it to be theirs.” Although “[t]he officer’s experience is relevant to what inferences the officer may draw from the circumstances,” Martin,
Ultimately, when considered in their totality in light of Davis’s experience, the circumstances in this case establish nothing more than that defendant, who had admitted to using drugs months before the stop, was present in high drug use areas and was associating with others who had been or may have been involved in drug-related activities.
In sum, here, defendant was stopped no later than when she was ordered to move away from the vehicle that she had been driving under the threat of immediate arrest. That stop was not supported by reasonable suspicion and was unlawful. Under the circumstances in this case, the evidence that defendant seeks to suppress was the unattenuated product of that illegality because, but for the illegal stop, the investigatory dog sniff would not have occurred, which, in turn, led to Hutch’s alert, defendant’s incriminatory statements, and the search of the
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
ORS 135.335(3) provides:
“With the consent of the court and the state, a defendant may enter a conditional plea of guilty or no contest reserving, in writing, the right, on appeal from the judgment, to a review of an adverse determination of any specified pretrial motion. A defendant who finally prevails on appeal may withdraw the plea.”
Article I, section 9, provides, in part, that “[n]o law shall violate the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable search, or seizure!.]”
Davis was the primary witness at the suppression hearing. Unless otherwise noted, our quotations are taken from his testimony.
According to Davis, the term “jersey wall” referred to concrete slabs or barriers that “were stacked on top of each other taller than” his vehicle.
The trial court found that Shawna’s “direction of travel was consistent with her approaching [the vehicle with the male occupant], hut it was also consistent with her continuing northward on NE Waverly pas[t] [that vehicle]” and that “Shawna never had any contact observed by Davis with [that vehicle] or its operator, nor is there any evidence he ever spoke with her.”
Davis also referred to a ninth circumstance — viz., defendant’s “evasive driving” when she left the park. Because the trial court expressly found that defendant was not driving evasively, we do not consider that circumstance.
Cf. State v. Anderson,
Bertsch,
As explained above,
