Calm v. State ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •              IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    ANTHONY CALM,                                      §
    §    No. 577, 2018
    Defendants Below,                        §
    Appellant,                               §    Court Below: Superior Court
    §    of the State of Delaware
    v.                                §
    §    C.A. No. N1712007183
    STATE OF DELAWARE                                  §
    §
    Plaintiff Below,                         §
    Appellee.                                §
    Submitted: December 11, 2019
    Decided:   February 26, 2020
    Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, VAUGHN, TRAYNOR, Justices; and
    MCCORMICK, Vice Chancellor,* constituting the Court en Banc.
    Upon appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Delaware. AFFIRMED IN
    PART, REVERSED IN PART.
    Santino Ceccotti, Esquire, Office of the Public Defender, Wilmington, Delaware,
    Counsel for Appellant.
    Andrew J. Vella, Esquire, Department of Justice, Wilmington, Delaware (argued)
    and Abby L. Adams, Esquire Department of Justice, Georgetown, Delaware,
    Counsel for Appellee.
    *
    Sitting by designation under Del. Const. art. IV, § 12.
    TRAYNOR, Justice, for the Majority:
    Anthony Calm was convicted in the Superior Court of several weapons
    charges and resisting arrest.1 His sole argument on appeal is that the Superior Court
    erred in denying his motion to suppress the evidence—a firearm and ammunition—
    that the arresting officer found on Calm during a stop of a motor vehicle in which
    Calm was the passenger. Pat-down searches must be justified by a “reasonable
    articulable suspicion that the detainee is armed and presently dangerous.”2 The
    Superior Court did not apply this standard. Instead, it concluded that the mere
    removal of Calm from the vehicle for the purpose of conducting a consent search of
    the vehicle justified the pat-down of his person. What is more, the court’s other
    findings indicate that, had it applied the correct standard, the court would have found
    the State’s proof lacking and granted the motion to suppress. We therefore reverse
    Calm’s convictions for possession of a firearm by a person prohibited, possession of
    ammunition by a person prohibited, and carrying a concealed deadly weapon.
    Because the evidence seized from Calm was not relevant to the resisting-arrest
    charge, we affirm that conviction.
    1
    App. to Answering Br. at B22. The State dismissed the additional charge of possession of a
    weapon with a removed, obliterated or altered serial number. Id. at B9.
    2
    Cropper v. State, 
    123 A.3d 940
    , 945 (quoting State v. Henderson, 
    892 A.2d 1061
    , 1065 (Del.
    2006), which, in turn, cites Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 27 (1968)).
    2
    I. FACTS
    In December 2017, Corporals Timothy O’Connor and Aaron Metzner
    observed a vehicle with illegally tinted windows going 35 miles per hour in a 25
    mile-per-hour zone.3 At the time, the officers were working in the “disrupt” unit of
    the Wilmington Police Department, the purpose of which was to “seek out high-risk
    offenders and . . . reduce guns on the street.”4 The officers followed the vehicle for
    several blocks before conducting a traffic stop.5 While Corporal Metzner spoke with
    the driver, Corporal O’Connor addressed Calm, who was in the front passenger seat.6
    When Corporal O’Connor asked Calm for his identification, Calm asked why that
    was necessary.7      Although Calm provided his identification after asking this
    question, Corporal O’Connor interpreted the question to be a “small red flag.”8
    During their conversation, Calm also did not make eye contact with Corporal
    O’Connor and instead looked “straight ahead,”9 an action that Corporal O’Connor
    took to be a “second minor red flag.”10
    3
    App. to Opening Br. at A20.
    4
    
    Id.
     at A17.
    5
    
    Id.
     at A20.
    6
    
    Id.
    7
    
    Id.
     at A21.
    8
    
    Id.
     at A22.
    9
    
    Id.
    10
    
    Id.
     at A23.
    3
    After the initial conversation, the officers returned to their patrol car and found
    that the driver was on Level III probation. Calm, however, was neither on probation
    nor did he have any active capiases or warrants.11 The officers returned to the
    detained vehicle, and Corporal Metzner asked the driver if there were any weapons
    in the car.12 The driver said that there were none and consented to a search of the
    vehicle.13
    After the driver consented to the search, Calm immediately opened the
    passenger door and stuck one leg out of the car.14 Although Corporal O’Connor did
    not describe Calm’s movements with particularity, he believed that Calm was
    attempting to flee, so he promptly blocked the door, and Calm remained in the car.15
    After that, according to Corporal O’Connor, Calm moved excessively in his seat,
    fidgeted around, checked his pockets, and appeared “extremely nervous.”16
    O’Connor testified that those behaviors, combined with his belief that Calm’s
    opening of the door was the beginning of an attempt to flee, caused him to believe
    that Calm possessed some sort of contraband or possibly a firearm.17 At that point,
    11
    
    Id.
    12
    
    Id.
     at A24.
    13
    
    Id.
    14
    
    Id.
    15
    
    Id.
    16
    
    Id.
     at A27.
    17
    
    Id.
     at A25.
    4
    Corporal O’Connor decided that he was going to remove Calm from the vehicle and
    pat him down.18
    The officers removed the driver from the car first. Corporal Metzner patted
    the driver down and found nothing.19 The officers then removed Calm from the car,
    with Corporal O’Connor immediately instructing him to place his hands on the top
    of the car while holding on to Calm “at his waistband area.”20 Corporal O’Connor
    then asked Calm “if he had any weapons on him,” to which Calm “hesitated for like
    a brief second” before saying no.21 Corporal O’Connor explained how this “brief
    second” hesitation—a “final red flag,” in his words—aroused his suspicion that Calm
    was armed:
    So that to me was like a final red flag because someone that’s not in
    possession of a weapon is pretty confident if their answer, no, I don’t
    have any weapons on me. It’s a pretty easy answer. So the fact that he
    hesitated just a second or so when I asked that question, again, really at
    that point made me feel as though he could be in possession of a
    firearm.22
    Then Calm took his hand off the top of the vehicle and moved it toward the
    left side of his body.23 Corporal O’Connor immediately grabbed Calm’s hand and
    18
    
    Id.
     at A27.
    19
    
    Id.
     at A26.
    20
    
    Id.
     at A28–29.
    21
    
    Id.
    22
    
    Id.
     at A29 (emphasis added).
    23
    
    Id.
    5
    placed it back on top of the car, but as soon as Corporal O’Connor let go of Calm’s
    hand, Calm shoved away from the car, spun, and attempted to run away.24 Calm
    managed three to four steps before Corporal O’Connor, who still had a hand on
    Calm’s belt area, regained his footing and brought Calm “to the ground.”25 Corporal
    O’Connor then immediately asked Calm what he had on him, to which Calm
    responded that he had a gun.26 Corporal O’Connor retrieved the gun, which was
    located on the left side of Calm’s waistband.27
    A grand jury indicted Calm on charges of possession of a firearm by a person
    prohibited, possession of ammunition by a person prohibited, carrying a concealed
    deadly weapon, resisting arrest, and possession of a weapon with an obliterated or
    altered serial number.28 The State dismissed the last charge at trial.29 Calm moved
    to suppress the evidence of the firearm and ammunition found on his person during
    the pat-down, claiming that, at the time Corporal O’Connor initiated that pat-down
    search, he did not have the required suspicion that Calm was armed and dangerous
    that would justify the search.30 After hearing Corporal O’Connor’s testimony and
    24
    
    Id.
    25
    
    Id.
     at A30.
    26
    
    Id.
     at A31.
    27
    
    Id.
    28
    
    Id.
     at A6–8.
    29
    App. to Answering Br. at B9.
    30
    App. to Opening Br. at A42. The Superior Court denied Calm’s motion to suppress after an
    evidentiary hearing at which O’Connor testified.
    6
    the argument of counsel, the court denied the motion, and the jury found Calm guilty
    of the remaining charges.31 The Superior Court sentenced Calm to a total of 5 years
    of unsuspended Level V imprisonment followed by various levels of probation. 32
    Calm appeals his conviction, arguing that the Superior Court erred in denying his
    motion to suppress the evidence of the firearm and ammunition.
    III. ANALYSIS
    “We review the trial court’s refusal to grant the motion to suppress evidence
    under an abuse of discretion standard.”33 In determining whether the trial court
    abused its discretion in making factual findings, we ask whether there was sufficient
    evidence to support the findings, and whether those findings were clearly
    erroneous.34 Legal conclusions are reviewed de novo.35
    Here, there is no dispute that O’Connor and his partner made a legal traffic
    stop, given that the vehicle in question was speeding and had tinted windows without
    the required waiver.36 “A police officer who observes a traffic violation has probable
    cause to stop the vehicle and its driver.”37 Nor is there any dispute that O’Connor
    31
    App. to Answering Br. at B22.
    32
    
    Id.
     at B28–29.
    33
    West v. State, 
    143 A.3d 712
    , 715 (Del. 2016).
    34
    
    Id.
    35
    Lopez-Vazquez v. State, 
    956 A.2d 1280
    , 1284–85 (Del. 2008).
    36
    Howard v. State, 
    931 A.2d 437
     (TABLE), 
    2007 WL 2310001
    , at *2 (Del. 2007) (“Traffic stops
    must be supported by reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. Violation of traffic laws
    constitutes reasonable suspicion.”).
    37
    Holden v. State, 
    23 A.3d 843
    , 847 (Del. 2011).
    7
    and his partner could remove Calm and the driver from the vehicle after the driver
    consented to a search of the vehicle.38 “During a lawful traffic stop, a police officer
    may order both the driver and passengers out of the vehicle pending completion of
    the traffic stop.”39 The only dispute is whether, after the driver’s consent was given,
    Corporal O’Connor was justified in initiating a search of Calm’s person immediately
    upon Calm’s exit of the vehicle.40
    An “officer’s purpose in an ordinary traffic stop is to enforce the laws of the
    roadway, and ordinarily to investigate the manner of driving with the intent to issue
    a citation or warning.”41 Thus, “[a] police officer may not conduct a pat down search
    of a person during a traffic stop unless the officer [also] has reasonable suspicion
    that the person subject to the frisk is armed and dangerous.”42 In this area, our law
    strives to balance two vitally important interests—officer safety and the right of the
    38
    See Caldwell v. State, 
    780 A.2d 1037
    , 1047 (Del. 2001) (“Once the officer has issued a citation
    or warning and has run routine computer checks, the vehicle must be released unless the driver
    voluntarily consents to further questioning or the officer uncovers facts that independently warrant
    additional investigation.” (emphasis added) (citing Ferris v. State, 
    735 A.2d 491
    , 498–99 (Md.
    1999))).
    39
    
    Id.
    40
    Terry, 392
     U.S. at 21 (“[I]n justifying the particular intrusion[,] the police officer must be able
    to point to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those
    facts, reasonably warrant that intrusion. The scheme of the Fourth Amendment becomes
    meaningful only when it is assured that at some point the conduct of those charged with enforcing
    the laws can be subjected to the more detached, neutral scrutiny of a judge who must evaluate the
    reasonableness of a particular search or seizure in light of the particular circumstances.”).
    41
    Ferris, 735 A.2d at 499.
    42
    Holden, 
    23 A.3d at 847
    .
    8
    people to “be secure in their persons . . . from unreasonable searches and seizures.”43
    To that end, Terry v. Ohio and its progeny recognize that when the police officer can
    articulate facts that cause her reasonably to suspect that a citizen is armed, a pat-
    down search is reasonable and therefore permitted in the interest of protecting the
    officer’s safety.44 “In determining whether reasonable articulable suspicion exists,
    we must examine the totality of the circumstances surrounding the situation as
    viewed through the eyes of a reasonable, trained police officer in the same or similar
    circumstances, combining objective facts with such an officer's subjective
    interpretation of those facts.”45
    During the suppression hearing, Corporal O’Connor testified to four “red
    flags” that gave rise to his suspicion that Calm was armed and dangerous: (1) Calm’s
    inquiry into why O’Connor needed his identification,46 (2) Calm’s failure to make
    eye contact while O’Connor questioned him,47 (3) Calm’s attempt to leave the car
    after the driver gave his consent for the car to be searched,48 and (4) Calm’s excessive
    movements, fidgeting, checking of his pockets, and overall “extremely nervous”
    43
    U.S. CONST. amend. IV; DEL. CONST. art I, §6.
    
    44 Terry, 392
     U.S. at 21 (In order to have “reasonable suspicion,” “the police officer must be able
    to point to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those
    facts, reasonably warrant” the frisking.”).
    45
    Holden, 
    23 A.3d at 847
    .
    46
    App. to Opening Br. at A21–22.
    47
    
    Id.
     at A22–23.
    48
    
    Id.
     at A24–25.
    9
    demeanor.49 He also testified to a “final red flag”—Calm’s “brief second” hesitation
    before denying that he was armed—but that occurred after O’Connor had initiated
    the pat-down.50
    The Superior Court “[did not] believe [that those initial four factors], in and
    of [themselves,] . . . would have justified the moving of the defendant and patting
    him down.”51 That conclusion should have caused the Superior Court to grant the
    motion to suppress. The court, however, then concluded that “[o]nce [the police
    officers] remove [the driver and passenger] from the vehicle, they have the right to
    pat down those individuals for their own protection.”52 That legal conclusion caused
    the court to find sufficient reasonable and articulable suspicion for the pat-down.
    But that legal conclusion is incorrect; consent to search the vehicle does not provide
    consent to search the individual passengers’ persons.53 To conduct such a search
    requires consent or reasonable and articulable suspicion sufficient to justify the
    search.54 The Superior Court’s conclusion that “[t]he consent is the key that allowed
    49
    
    Id.
     at A27.
    50
    
    Id.
    51
    
    Id.
     at A42.
    52
    
    Id.
     at A41.
    53
    Holden, 
    23 A.3d at 847
     (“During a lawful traffic stop, a police officer may order both the driver
    and passengers out of the vehicle pending completion of the traffic stop. . . . A police officer may
    not conduct a pat down search of a person during a traffic stop unless the officer has reasonable
    suspicion that the person subject to the frisk is armed and dangerous.” (emphasis added)).
    54
    Id.; Terry, 
    392 U.S. at 21
    .
    10
    [the police officers] to remove the defendants” and “[o]nce that happened, . . . to
    conduct the pat down for their own safety”55 is thus legal error and requires reversal.
    As to the factual findings, however, the Superior Court did not abuse its
    discretion in finding that Corporal O’Connor lacked a reasonable and articulable
    suspicion that Calm was armed and dangerous when Corporal O’Connor decided
    that he would subject Calm to a pat-down. Corporal O’Connor testified that he
    decided to pat-down Calm after blocking Calm’s attempt to exit the car but before
    removing him from the car—i.e., before the final red flag occurred.56 And, in any
    event, the final red flag occurred after the frisk had begun. A police officer may not
    rely on a suspect’s reaction to a search to justify the search itself. As we held in
    Jones v. State, when “an officer attempts to seize someone before possessing
    reasonable and articulable suspicion, that person’s actions stemming from the
    attempted seizure may not be used to manufacture the suspicion the police lacked
    initially.”57 The “final red flag,” therefore, can have no bearing on the analysis of
    whether, at the time Corporal O’Connor decided to conduct a pat-down, he had a
    reasonable and articulable suspicion that Calm was armed and dangerous.
    Although an officer need not presume innocent explanations of otherwise
    suspicious conduct, Corporal O’Connor himself testified that what really caused him
    55
    App. to Opening Br. at A42.
    56
    
    Id.
     at A27.
    57
    Jones v. State, 
    745 A.2d 856
    , 874 (Del. 1999).
    11
    to suspect that Calm was armed was this “final red flag,” which occurred after
    Corporal O’Connor commenced the pat-down. In particular, Corporal O’Connor
    acknowledged that it was only after Calm had placed his hands on the top of the
    vehicle at O’Connor’s direction while he held on to Calm’s waistband that he “really
    . . . [felt] as though [Calm] could be in possession of a firearm.”58 It was within the
    trial court’s discretion to credit this testimony and find that Corporal O’Connor did
    not have a reasonable and articulable suspicion that Calm was armed until that final
    red flag occurred.
    Further, the “reasonable suspicion” test is an objective standard, and the trial
    judge was free to consider whether a reasonable officer would have believed Calm
    was armed.59 Here, there is sufficient evidence to find that a reasonable officer
    would not have had a reasonable and articulable belief that Calm was armed before
    getting Calm out of the vehicle. For example, a passenger may very well inquire
    why police officers need his identification for a routine speeding traffic stop given
    that he was not the one speeding; it is normal to be nervous when stopped by police
    officers; and it is not unreasonable for a passenger to believe he must exit the car
    when the driver gives consent to a search of the car.60 Hence, the trial judge’s
    58
    App. to Opening Br. at A29.
    
    59 Terry, 392
     U.S. at 21–22.
    60
    This is not to say that Corporal O’Connor was required to credit these innocent explanations,
    only that we may consider them as we assess the reasonableness of the trial court’s factual findings.
    12
    determination that Corporal O’Connor’s four “red flags” alone did not “reasonably
    warrant” a pat-down is supported by sufficient evidence and is entitled to deference
    on appeal.61
    IV. CONCLUSION
    The Superior Court’s legal conclusion that the officers could pat-down Calm
    merely by virtue of getting him out of the car is incorrect. And the Superior Court
    found that Corporal O’Connor did not have a reasonable articulable suspicion that
    Calm was armed based only on the four “red flags” that occurred before Calm was
    removed from the vehicle. That finding is entitled to deference and is sufficiently
    supported by the evidence. It follows that the evidence seized as a result of the pat-
    down—the firearm and ammunition—must be suppressed, because the pat-down
    was not justified at the time Corporal O’Connor initiated it. In the absence of that
    evidence, Calm’s convictions for possession of a firearm by a person prohibited,
    possession of ammunition by a person prohibited, and carrying a concealed deadly
    weapon cannot stand. Calm’s conviction for resisting arrest, however, is unaffected.
    We therefore reverse the Superior Court’s judgments of conviction under Counts I
    (possession of a firearm by a person prohibited), II (possession of ammunition by a
    person prohibited), and III (carrying a concealed deadly weapon) of the indictment,
    
    61 Terry, 392
     U.S. at 21; App. to Opening Br. at A42.
    13
    and affirm the judgment of conviction under Count V (resisting arrest) of the
    indictment.
    14
    VAUGHN, Justice, concurring in part and dissenting in part;
    The Superior Court denied the motion to suppress on the theory that the
    driver’s consent to a search of the vehicle allowed the officers to remove the driver
    and Calm from the vehicle and pat them both down for officer safety. The following
    excerpt from the transcript is the judge’s ruling:
    If the driver had said no, this would have been a much
    more difficult case because I’m not sure they had
    justification to pursue anything further at that time. But
    he did say yes. They searched and they had the right at
    that point in time to remove both the driver and the
    passenger from the vehicle. Once they remove them from
    the vehicle, they have the right to pat down those
    individuals for their own protection. And the pat down
    resulted in firearm being found in the defendant’s
    waistband. And there is no basis to suppress that evidence
    since it was done in a legal pat down for officer safety, as
    a result of a valid motor vehicle stop and a consent to
    search a vehicle.62
    I agree that a driver’s consent to a search of a vehicle does not, in and of itself, provide
    legal justification for a pat-down of a passenger. “A pat-down requires reasonable
    articulable facts for concern about officer safety that are specific to the person
    frisked.”63 Accordingly, I agree that Calm’s convictions of possession of a firearm
    62
    App. to Opening Br. at A41:10—A42:1.
    63
    Cropper v. State, 
    123 A.3d 940
    , 946 (Del. 2015) (citing Ybarra v. Illinois, 
    444 U.S. 85
    , 94
    (1979)).
    15
    by a person prohibited, possession of ammunition by a person prohibited, and
    carrying a concealed deadly weapon must be reversed.
    However, I would not take the additional step of continuing to review the case
    to decide whether Calm’s specific personal conduct justified a pat-down. While this
    Court reviews a trial court’s determination that the totality-of-the-circumstance did
    (or did not) give rise to reasonable, articulable suspicion to frisk a person de novo,64
    it appears to me that the Superior Court did not base its ruling on Calm’s specific
    personal conduct and the attendant circumstances. It left the issue of whether the
    totality-of-the-circumstances justified a pat-down unresolved. In other words, the
    court did not expressly determine whether Calm’s specific conduct and the attendant
    circumstances created a reasonable and articulable suspicion for concern about
    officer safety. As a general rule, I would not decide an issue upon which the trial
    court did not expressly rule unless the interests of justice required otherwise.
    What the judge did say about the circumstances giving rise to the pat-down
    was that:
    the other factors testified by the officers as to the suspicion
    certainly provided some further justification for the
    conducting of the pat down, but I don’t believe, in and of
    itself it would have justified the moving of the defendant
    and patting him down. The consent is the key that allowed
    64
    E.g., State v. Henderson, 
    892 A.2d 1061
    , 1064 (Del. 2006) (en banc) (“The trial judge’s
    determination of whether the police possessed reasonable articulable suspicion to stop and frisk
    [the defendant] and then seize [contraband] found is a mixed question of law and fact that this
    Court reviews de novo.”) (citing Jones v. State, 
    745 A.2d 856
    , 860 (Del. 1999) (en banc)).
    16
    them to remove the defendants. And once that happened,
    the defendant’s conduct not only – not only were they
    allowed to conduct the pat down for their own safety, but
    the defendant’s reaction to being removed from the
    vehicle and being patted down provided the officers with
    further justification.65
    The foregoing comments about Calm’s conduct are not part of the judge’s
    ruling that the driver’s consent to a search of the vehicle gave the officers grounds
    for the pat-down. In my view they are dicta in a bench ruling and stop short of an
    express determination by the trial court that the totality of Calm’s specific conduct,
    including his conduct outside as well as inside the vehicle, and the attendant
    circumstances, did or did not create a reasonable and articulable concern for officer
    safety. I would remand this case to the Superior Court for further proceedings there,
    to include findings of fact and a ruling on Calm’s motion to suppress applying the
    correct legal standard.
    65
    App. to Opening Br. at A42:2-13.
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 577, 2018

Judges: Traynor J.

Filed Date: 2/26/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/26/2020