Lead Opinion
Antione Tuckson
I. The Motion to Suppress
Tuckson’s Arrest
The following facts were presented at the hearing on Tuckson’s motion to suppress. On March 18, 2009, Tuckson drove his 2001 Chevy Impala into a cul-de-sac on 37th Street, S.E. Tuckson’s car was outfitted with dark windows, long antennas, a “police-style dash light,” and other features that made it appear to be “an undercover or unmarked police vehicle.” Unluckily for Tuckson, members of the Metropolitan Police Department’s gun recovery unit happened to be leaving the
Before the officers could stop Tuckson, he parked in front of a fire hydrant and got out of the car. He was wearing “nice” clothes — “a pair of slacks” and “a button-down shirt” — and a pair of “thin gloves.” Delpo thought Tuckson’s gloves looked like “the style that police officers would wear.” Tuckson walked to a nearby doorway, where he gave someone a set of keys.
As Tuckson walked back to his car, he was stopped by Sergeant Sloan. Sloan asked Tuckson “if he was a police officer,” and Tuckson answered that he was not. Sloan then informed Tuckson that “he was parked illegally and the tint on his window appeared to be illegal.” Sloan requested Tuckson’s driver’s license, registration and insurance, which Tuckson produced.
In order to conduct the window tint check, Officer Malsona (another officer on the scene), opened Tuckson’s driver’s side door. After opening the door, Malsona noticed a collapsible baton, or “asp,”
The Trial Court’s Findings
The trial court found that the officers had reasonable suspicion to detain appellant and investigate the illegal tinting on his windows and his illegally parked car. Further, the trial court determined that reasonable suspicion existed to investigate whether appellant was impersonating a police officer. The court ruled that, when he was detained, appellant voluntarily handed-over his keys, and the police permissibly opened the driver’s side door, where the officer observed the baton.
At that point, the trial court held, “the police had probable cause to believe that [Tuckson] intended to use [the baton] unlawfully in that [Tuckson] intended to use it to in the future commit the crime of impersonating a police officer.” The court elaborated, noting that the police “had all this information that suggested that he was going to do so in the future.” Because the court “believe[d] that [impersonating a
The trial court found that the officers had probable cause to believe that Tuckson possessed the baton with the intent to use it unlawfully, i.e., to use it in the future to commit the crime of impersonating a police officer. The trial court also concluded that, although appellant had not yet committed the crime of “impersonating a police officer,” there was probable cause to believe that appellant “was about to commit” that crime. But the court believed that, unless the police could “show that a crime was committed,” they did not have probable cause to arrest for that offense. After analyzing the Supreme Court’s opinion in Arizona v. Gant,
II. Analysis
“When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, we defer to the trial court’s findings of fact, but we determine questions of law de novo.” Napper v. United States, 22 A.3d 758, 766 (D.C.2011) (citation omitted). Whether the facts found by the trial court — to which we defer — suffice to establish probable cause is a question of law. See Ornelas v. United States,
Possession of a Prohibited Weapon and Carrying a Dangerous Weapon
First we address whether, as the trial court concluded, the police had probable cause to arrest appellant for a violation of D.C.Code § 22-4514(b) (possession of a prohibited weapon) or, applying similar logic, the trial court could have permissibly concluded the arrest was valid under D.C.Code § 22-4504(a) (carrying a dangerous weapon). As we have stated before, “[t]he determination of probable cause is an inexact judgment.” Price v. United States,
Both § 22-4514(b) and § 22-4504(a) prohibit the possession of “dangerous weapons.”
Our case law explains that a “dangerous weapon is one which is likely to produce death or great bodily injury by the use made of it. Such instrument may be dangerous in its ordinary use as contemplated by its design and construction, or where the purpose of carrying the object, under the circumstances, is its use as a weapon.” Scott v. United States,
There is no dispute that the baton in this case is not listed as a per se prohibited weapon in either § 22-4514(b) or § 22-4504(a). Thus, we ask whether the baton is an “inherently dangerous” weapon. Our case law defines inherently dangerous weapons as those objects which are “dangerous in [their] ordinary use as contemplated by [their] design and construction.” Scott,
Which is not to say that possession of a baton cannot ever be grounds for an arrest under § 22-4504(a). As the Broadie court observed, “a 16-inch steel rod — like the more commonplace lead pipe — is capable of inflicting great bodily injury when used for that purpose.”
After evaluating these factors, we cannot conclude that a person “of reasonable caution,” Perkins,
The trial court essentially reached these same conclusions. The trial court was “a little loathe” to come to the conclusion that the baton was a “per se ... dangerous weapon,” and never made a finding that Tuckson intended to use the baton as a weapon. Instead, the trial court found probable cause to believe Tuckson possessed the baton in order to assist him in the future commission of the crime of “impersonating a police officer.” We cannot affirm the trial court’s ruling on this basis. Intending to use the baton as a prop to complete a fraudulent act is not the same as intending to use the baton as a weapon “unlawfully against another” — that is, as a weapon. Nor is it enough to make the baton a dangerous weapon. We have held, for example, that an intent to use an inoperable air pistol “to frighten others” was not sufficient to establish an intent to use the air pistol as a dangerous weapon within the meaning of D.C.Code § 22-4504(a). Strong,
Impersonating a Police Officer
Although the trial court specifically found that the police lacked probable cause to believe that Tuckson had already committed the offense of impersonating a police officer, it did find that probable cause existed to believe that Tuckson “was about to commit the crime of impersonating a police officer.” However, the trial court expressed some uncertainty about whether the police were permitted to make an arrest if they had probable cause to believe a crime was “going to be committed in the future.” Accordingly, we must also inquire whether probable cause to believe that appellant was about to commit the crime of impersonating a police officer could have justified his arrest. We conclude that it did not.
To be clear, we share the trial court’s doubt that the Fourth Amendment permits the police to arrest (as opposed to temporarily detain) a person to deter the future commission of a crime. The government quotes Michigan v. DeFillippo,
First, we note our agreement with the trial court’s conclusion that the police lacked probable cause to believe that appellant had already committed or was in the process of committing the crime of impersonating a police officer. Under D.C.Code § 22-1406 (2001), it is “a misdemeanor ... for any person, not a member of the police force, to falsely represent himself as being such [a] member, with a fraudulent design.” Accordingly, we must look for probable cause of both (1) false representation, and (2) fraudulent design. A false representation need not be an explicit statement, but can be any “intentionally conveyed ... impression.” Gary v. United States,
It is undisputed that Tuckson’s car looked and was lawfully equipped like an unmarked police vehicle.
Similarly, we do not think that, viewed in context, the evidence supports the government’s suggestion that “appellant’s portrayal of himself as a police officer and his Impala as an unmarked police vehicle also aided his attempt to avoid being ticketed for illegal tinting.” Throughout his interaction with the officers, Tuckson acted in a straightforward manner: He made no attempt to claim that the window tinting was lawful, allowed the officers to check his car windows, and quickly acknowledged he was not a police officer. Thus, we think that, like appellant’s conduct in parking in front of a fire hydrant, the mere fact that he had illegal window tinting is insufficiently assertive of intent to constitute an effort to deceive another person that he was a police officer and thereby gain an unfair advantage.
A close reading of the trial court’s decision demonstrates that it was the lack of evidence of a specific fraudulent design that led the trial court to conclude that although Tuckson might be “about” to commit the crime, he was not currently committing it. However, we think this deficiency also afflicts the trial court’s conclusion that the police had probable cause to believe Tuckson was “about” to commit the crime of impersonating a police officer. Probable cause may not rest on a “mere suspicion” of criminal activity. Rucker v. United States,
The Automobile Exception
Finally, we turn to an issue raised neither before the trial court nor in the parties’ initial briefs to this court. Following oral argument, we requested additional briefing on the “automobile exception,” a doctrine that allows police to search an automobile without a warrant if they have probable cause to believe the car contains “‘contraband or evidence of a crime.’” Holston v. United States,
“It is a basic principle of appellate jurisprudence that points not urged on appeal are deemed to be waived.” Rose v. United States,
In addition to considerations of good order, judicial efficiency, and respect for the proper role of institutional litigants that argue against our consideration of an argument that the government has not seen fit to present, we note that application of the automobile exception to this case is not one we could “easily resolve” or that is “beyond serious debate.” Id. (internal citation omitted). In order for the automobile exception to apply, the police must have probable cause to believe that a car will contain either contraband or evidence of a crime. See Holston v. United States,
To find probable cause on the facts the officers had in this case, we would have to endorse the generalization that any person whose car is lawfully equipped, like Tuck-son’s, with police-type equipment, is likely to also carry guns or evidence of fraudulent intent.
Thus, both for reasons of procedural good order and because the matter is debatable, we follow our earlier opinion in Rose and decline to consider the applicability of the “automobile exception” in this case.
Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress cannot be upheld, and that the gun and ammunition found in the car should have been suppressed. As that evidence was central to the government’s case, we reverse appellant’s convictions.
Notes
. At oral argument counsel for appellant explained that although appellant’s name is pronounced ''Antoine,” it is spelled “Antione.”
. Violations of, respectively, D.C.Code §§ 22-4504(a), 22-4503(a)(2), 7-2506.01(a)(3) (2001).
. Tuckson apparently only had a photocopy of his license, but other than being odd, no additional import appears to have been attached to Tuckson’s failure to produce his actual license.
. "Asp” appears to be an acronym for the name of a company that makes police batons (A.S.P. — Armament Systems & Procedures, Inc.), and seems to have become a generic term for any police baton. It appears both un-capitalized and capitalized in the record. For convenience, this opinion will use "baton” where possible.
. The court also cited precedent from the D.C. Circuit (the parties agree that the court was referring to United States v. Broadie,
. The trial court considered the motion to suppress under the principles enunciated in Gant because at the time Tuckson was placed under arrest, he was "standing over by the sidewalk on the passenger side of the vehicle,” would have needed to take "a couple of steps forward” in order to be able to touch the vehicle, and was "in the custody of a large contingent of police officers.” Thus, as the trial court found, Tuckson was not "within reaching distance” of the car’s passenger compartment. Gant,
. D.C.Code § 22-4514(b) states that "[n]o person shall within the District of Columbia possess, with intent to use unlawfully against another, an imitation pistol, or a dagger, dirk, razor, stiletto, or knife with a blade longer than 3 inches, or other dangerous weapon.” (emphasis added.) D.C.Code § 22-4504(a) states that "[n]o person shall carry within the District of Columbia either openly or concealed on or about their person, a pistol, or any deadly or dangerous weapon capable of being so concealed." (emphasis added.)
. Although these considerations are analytically similar to the considerations that would go into the element of "to use unlawfully against another” in § 22-4514(b), the circumstances surrounding the discovery of an instrument can establish it as a dangerous weapon without necessarily also establishing intent to use the weapon unlawfully against another. See Broadie,
. None of the cases cited in DeFillippo after the sentence quoted by the government in its brief contains the "about to commit” language, nor do their facts support it.
. In the DeFillippo case, for example, the arrest was upheld based on "abundant probable cause” that the conduct the officer observed — a suspect's evasive and inconsistent answers to a request that he identify himself— had actually violated an ordinance.
. With the exception of the unlawfully tinted windows.
. One officer testified that he thought that Tuckson was dressed in a manner similar to the garb often worn by plain clothes policemen. We give little weight to this particular fact. Tuckson’s clothes, though "nice," were not otherwise remarkable or distinctive.
. We are not persuaded by the summary conclusion that there was probable cause to apply the automobile exception in Reis,
. This generalization is distinguishable from the oft-cited proposition, supported by many cases over the years and expert testimony, that "drugs and weapons go together.” E.g., Peay v. United States,
. The fact that the search did actually reveal the presence of contraband cannot affect our analysis. It has been established beyond peradventure that "[a] search is not to be made legal by what it turns up; it is good or bad when it starts and does not change character from its success.” Brown v. United States,
.The government has not argued otherwise.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting;
For the reasons explained in the majority opinion, I agree that the police in this case lacked probable cause to arrest appellant for possession of a prohibited weapon.
“Probable cause does not require the same type of specific evidence of each element of the offense as would be needed to support a conviction.” Adams v. Williams,
I.
I briefly recap the pertinent facts. The officers involved in appellant’s arrest were patrolling in “an area of high violence” where they had made several arrests for firearms offenses. They observed appellant’s vehicle drive into a cul-de-sac. His vehicle had dark tinted windows (permitted for and, according to Detective Kirk Delpo, “often times ... see[n] [on] police vehicles”), a “police-style” dash light, two police-style long antennas on the back, a disk-like tracking device found on police vehicles, and a “Thin Blue Line sticker” that Detective Delpo testified is “often used by police officers” and is “supposed to be sold exclusively to police officers to show other police officers that ... it’s a police officer driving in that vehicle.” Detective Delpo explained that “a lot of police departments, including our police department,” use Chevy Impalas (which are “sold as fleet cars”) as police vehicles. He testified that “[a]ll of these things” made the car “look[] like an undercover or unmarked police vehicle” or “some sort of
Appellant parked his vehicle in front of a fire hydrant, exited the vehicle, and then walked up to a house. Detective Delpo observed that appellant was wearing dress slacks, a button-down shirt, and gloves that were the same “style that police officers would wear.” The detective’s check of the WALES (Washington Area Law Enforcement System) database revealed, however, that the car belonged to a private citizen “who’s just 25 years of age.” This information made the detective “more suspicious of ... why does this vehicle have all this police equipment on it and a police dash light.”
As appellant walked back to his car, a different officer approached appellant and asked him whether he was a police officer, and appellant replied that he was not. An officer advised appellant that he was illegally parked and that the tint on his vehicle windows appeared to be illegal. One of the officers asked appellant whether he had any guns in the car. He replied that he did not. When asked whether police could search his car, appellant responded that he would “rather [they] didn’t,” but he gave the officer his car keys to allow him to conduct a tint inspection. When the officer opened the car door, he saw in plain view, in the driver’s side door pocket, a so-called ASP baton (hereinafter, “asp baton”) — according to Detective Delpo, “something a police officer employs or uses.”
In ruling on appellant’s motion to suppress the gun and ammunition, the trial court credited Detective Delpo’s account of the officers’ encounter with appellant. The court found that appellant’s car “look[ed] exactly like” an off-duty or undercover police vehicle with a resembling antenna, strobe light, device for activating a police siren, and a “disk” that could have been used as a police GPS device.
II.
As we have frequently said, our role in reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress is to “ensure that the trial court ha[d] a substantial basis for concluding that no constitutional violation occurred.” Howard v. United States,
“[T]he Fourth Amendment inquiry is objective [and] an officer’s subjective reason for making the arrest need not be the criminal offense as to which the known facts provide probable cause.” United States v. Vinton,
III.
Although police generally are required by the Fourth Amendment to obtain a
“[P]robable cause is a fluid concept— turning on the assessment of probabilities in particular factual contexts — not readily, or even usefully, reduced to a neat set of legal rules.” Illinois v. Gates,
IV.
In my view, once officers observed that appellant had numerous items of police paraphernalia both on the outside and the inside of his car, including a typical police weapon (the asp baton) inside the passenger compartment, they had reason to believe that he also possessed and had in his vehicle a firearm and ammunition — i.e., other standard police items that are necessary to complete the outfit — that generally are contraband in the hands of a civilian. I agree with the trial court that it is “logical to conclude” “that somebody who goes out, even if it’s not criminal in any way, to buy a car, the antenna, the dashboard light, the strobe light, the ... siren control, and the asp ... would also purchase a weapon....”
In a supplemental brief, appellant argues that the government “did not present any expert police testimony suggesting that a person conducting himself as Mr. Tuckson did would likely possess illicit contraband.” Supplemental Reply Brief at 7. That is so, but I believe it is an “ ‘entirely reasonable’ ”
But it is not appropriate to minimize the fact of the illegally tinted windows, as the majority opinion does. The officers’ observation that appellant was driving a vehicle with unlawfully tinted windows and parked his vehicle in front of a fire hydrant gave them reason to believe that appellant did not always restrain his conduct so as to avoid breaking the law, and thus a reasonable basis for believing that the illegality of carrying a firearm would not deter him from completing his police outfit by possessing contraband. Moreover, the fair probability of appellant’s having a gun and ammunition in his vehicle was bolstered by the fact, testified to by Detective Delpo, that the encounter with appellant was in a high-violence area where police had made many arrests for firearm possession. That there might have been what appellant calls “plausible noncriminal explanations” for his possession of the asp baton and all of the other police paraphernalia on and in his vehicle — appellant suggests “a desire to project an image consistent with [his] aesthetic tastes or simply for recreational purposes” — did nothing to diminish the existence of probable cause, because, again, “the existence of probable cause does not depend on the elimination of all innocent explanations for a situation.”
The majority opinion denigrates my conclusion that the officers had probable cause to believe that appellant’s car contained an illegal firearm as a “generalization that any person whose car is lawfully equipped ... with police-type equipment, is likely to also carry gun [plural] or evidence of fraudulent intent.” Ante, 366. I make no such generalization. What I maintain is “beyond serious debate”
The facts surrounding the search in this case are not in dispute. Regardless of what subjective motivations the officers cited or might have had for the search for appellant’s vehicle,
V.
We may affirm the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress “on any valid ground supported by the record”
The government’s initial brief on appeal did not specifically mention the automobile exception, but it did argue that the officers “could reasonably check ... [appellant’s] vehicle for additional weapons, even if he lawfully possessed the asp,” and it cited the trial court’s reasoning that “it’s logical to assume that if one who has engaged in all of the conduct that [appellant] engaged in ... there might be other evidence ..., such as another weapon or handcuffs or police badges or other things like that that would be found in the car.” The government’s brief also summarized the prosecutor’s argument that “[o]nce the officers discovered the asp,” having already noted the “vehicle’s appearance” (i.e., its features making it resemble a police vehicle), “the officers had probable cause to search the vehicle for additional weapons.” Thus, “[d]espite [the government’s] failure to style [its] claim under ... the specific [automobile exception],” the reasoning it cited “aligns with ... jurisprudence concerning [that exception].” Euceda v. United States,
I don’t think one would necessarily conclude at that point that he is likely to have another asp in the car[,] but [it] might be a logical conclusion, given everything else that is known at that point, that there would be a gun or something else that police officers would keep.
This retort by the trial court clearly was a prompt to appellant to set forth and develop his arguments about why the discovery of the asp in the car did not establish a basis for a reasonable belief that appellant’s vehicle would also contain a gun. The court repeatedly pressed the point:
[W]e’re talking about a certain level of logic here that somebody who is driving a car that looks quite like a police vehicle, has antennas that are used in a police vehicle, has this other item on the back that at least according to Officer Delpo is [a] device[ ] ... used by police. Has a device under the dashboard of the car that operates a siren, has strobe lights, has an asp which police officers carry, and is at least dressed consistently with the garb of officers. Why isn’t it a logical conclusion from that that somebody doing all of those things would be far more inclined to be possessing a gun[?]
[T]hat would not lead you logically to conclude that somebody who would do everything short of [using his police officer-like appearance to take advantage of someone else] would be more likely to have a gun?
And you’re saying it would be illogical to conclude ... that he would be ... likely to carry a gun ... ? [Y]ou’re saying that it’s illogical for them to conclude that having somebody who’s done all these other things [“acquisition of the radio ... acquisition of the siren device ... acquisition of the strobe light ... acquisition of the car, the antennas”] is more likely to have ... possessed a gun ... ?
I also just think that as a matter of just logical relevance, that somebody who goes out, even if it’s not criminal in any way, to buy a car, the antenna, the dashboard light, the strobe light, ... the siren control, and the asp, ... it’s logical to conclude that somebody like that would also purchase a weapon and handcuffs.
Similarly, in explaining its decision to deny the motion to suppress, the trial court reasoned as follows:
I think it’s logical to assume that if one who has engaged in all of the conduct that Mr. Tuckson engaged in, by that I mean all of the acquisition of all these various items that duplicate police vehicles, and then finding an asp, I think it’s logical to assume that there might be other evidence of that illegal use, such as another weapon or handcuffs or other things like that that would be found in the car.
*375 [I]t was very logical to assume that somebody — that [had] all of these devices that are consistent with misrepresentation of a police officer and then had an asp, a weapon, used by police to subdue people on the streets, would also have other weapons and other matters, such as badges and so forth....
These various remarks by the trial court repeatedly apprised appellant of the court’s reasoning that it was logical for the officers to believe that because his vehicle displayed and contained police paraphernalia, including an asp baton, it was likely also to contain “another weapon,” such as a firearm. While none of court’s remarks was made in the context of a discussion of the automobile exception, the remarks squarely invited appellant to address the very issue presented here: whether the facts known to the officers gave them reason to believe that a gun would be found in appellant’s car.
In addition, this court gave the parties an opportunity to file supplemental briefs on the applicability of the automobile exception, and appellant submitted a supplemental brief and a supplemental reply brief. Thus, appellant was “afforded the opportunity to make an appropriate record in the trial court,” had reason to anticipate the argument as raised in the course of this appeal, and has had “a reasonable opportunity to be heard with respect to the reasoning on which the proposed affir-mance is to be based.” Randolph,
VI.
Finally, I explain why I do not agree with appellant that affirming the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress on the basis of the automobile exception would be inconsistent with judicial neutrality or with separation of powers, or that this court must hold “all litigants, including the government, ... to the arguments formulated by their counsel.”
I acknowledge that a “basic principle of [our] appellate jurisprudence” is that points not urged on appeal generally are deemed to be waived. Rose v. United States,
To do so is not inconsistent with neutrality or with separation of powers. “[T]he public is entitled to have valid judgments of conviction sustained,” and thus part of this court’s role is “to act as an institutional failsafe to make sure that the government has not compromised its prosecutorial responsibility.” Id. at 534, 537; see also Stewart v. United States,
As this court emphasized in Randolph v. United States,
The bottom line is that, to exercise our de novo standard of review, when we review denials of motions to suppress brought on the ground that the search or seizure was unreasonable, we must con
Finally, affirming the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress by relying on the automobile exception would be consistent with the principle that we “ ‘do not sit as self-directed boards of legal inquiry and research, but essentially as arbiters of legal questions presented and argued by the parties before them[.]’ ” Randolph,
To require more for probable cause than the undisputed facts of this case provide “would be to ... impose a drastically more rigorous definition of probable cause than the security of our citizens!] demands.” Gates,
. That is because they had no basis for believing that he intended to use the police baton they found in the door pocket of his vehicle "unlawfully against another.” D.C.Code § 22-4514(b) (2012 Repl.).
. “[A] required element of CDW,” see D.C.Code § 22-4504(a) (2012 Repl.), is that the defendant have "carried the [weapon] for the purpose of using it as a dangerous weapon[.]” In re M.L.,
. See D.C.Code § 22-1406 (2012 Repl.) (providing in pertinent part that "[i]t shall be a misdemeanor ... for any person, not a member of the police force, to falsely represent himself as being such member, with a fraudulent design”); Gary v. United States,
. The possibility that appellant’s parking of his vehicle in front of the hydrant may have been nothing "more sinister than ignorance of or indifference to the District’s parking laws,” ante 365, did not negate probable cause, because the parking infraction might also have been a deliberate act that appellant thought would not cause police to issue a citation, given that his vehicle looked like a police vehicle. "The test [for probable cause] is not whether the conduct under question is consistent with innocent behavior; law enforcement officers do not have to rule out the possibility of innocent behavior.” Sennett v. United States,
. The asp baton was stored in a belt holster.
. See also California v. Carney,
. Jefferson v. United States,
. Vinton,
. Cf. United States v. Christian,
. United States v. Jackson,
. Rose v. United States, 629 A.2d 526, 537 (D.C.1993).
. This was not, as posited by one of the questions at oral argument, Halloween in Georgetown.
. See Whren v. United States,
.At least one court has similarly held that where officers find police-related equipment in a private vehicle, they have probable cause to search for other police-related paraphernalia (that would be contraband when possessed by a civilian). See United States v. Reis,
The Reis court also found that police officers had probable cause to arrest Reis for impersonating a police officer. However, nothing in the Seventh Circuit's opinion suggests that an automobile-exception search would not have been justified absent probable cause to arrest Reis for that offense.
. Barnhardt v. United States,
. Randolph v. United States,
. See also, e.g., Watkins v. United States,
. In Randolph, the government was the beneficiary of our willingness to consider an issue not argued on appeal: we reached the issue of whether the trial court error was harmless notwithstanding the government’s failure to claim harmlessness. See Randolph,
. State v. Williams,
