State of Delaware v. Chaon Calhoun ( 2015 )


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  • IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    IN AND FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY
    STATE OF DELAWARE )
    )
    )
    Vt )
    )
    ) Cr. A. No. 1404011003
    CHAON CALHOUN, )
    )
    )
    Defendant. )
    Marc C. Petrucci, Esquire Richard J. item-file, Esquire
    Deputy Attorney General 4 East 8th
    Eel-gimme Department of Justice Wilmington, DE 19801
    $2?th Fiench Street, 7th Floor Attorney for Defendant
    Wilmington, DE 19801
    Attorney for the State
    DECISION ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO SUPPRESS
    RENNIE, J.
    Defendant Chaon Calhoun (“Calhoun”) stands charged with Driving Under the Influence
    of Alcohol (“DUI”), in violation of 
    21 Del. C
    . § 4177(a) following a stop on April 14, 2014.
    Calhoun moved to suppress the results of Standard Field Sobriety Tests (“SFTs”) and a
    subsequent intoxilyzer test administered at the Wilmington Police Department (“WPD”).1
    Calhoun contends that the decision to administer the SFTs at the WPD precinct rather than at the
    scene was improper. He argues that it does not fall within the narrow circumstances in which
    Delaware courts justify the transfer of a suspect from the scene to another location to perform
    SFTs. Due to this failing, Calhoun contends that the results of the SFTs and intoxilyzer test must
    be suppressed. The Court heard Calhoun’s motion on July 21, 2015, took the matter under
    advisement, and ordered post-hearing briefing. This is the Court’s Opinion on Calhoun’s
    requested relief.
    FACTS
    Corporal Ralph Schifano (“Cpl. Schifano”) testified on behalf of the State.2 On the
    evening of April 14, 2014, Cpl. Schifano was working a patrol shift when another officer made a
    call for assistance with a motor vehicle accident.3 Although the accident had been assigned to
    another collision investigator, Cpl. Schifano responded and proceeded to the scene. When he
    arrived, Cpl. Schifano observed that other officers were on the scene and Calhoun was
    handcuffed and in the back of a police cruiser. Cpl. Schifano surveyed heavy damage to the front
    of the vehicle — a Ford Mustang convertible with Florida license plates. The front axle was
    ' Calhoun also sought suppression of the SFTs, alternatively arguing that the Wilmington Police should have given a
    Miranda warning before the SFTs were administered at the station. However, in his opening brief, Calhoun waived
    this argument based on the United States Supreme Court’s ruling in Pennsylvania v. Muniz, 496 US. 582 (1990).
    2 Cpl. Schifano has been a police officer since 1989. His current role is as a Collision Investigator with the Special
    Operations Division of the Wilmington Police Department. His duties include responding to and investigating traffic
    collisions including “hit-and-runs” and alcohol-related accidents. The Court finds Cpl. Schifano to be a credible
    w1tness.
    3 This accident was at the 300 block of East 23rd Street in Wilmington, Delaware.
    2
    almost completely separated from the mustang. Further, the mustang had scratches on the front
    and sides.
    After the investigating officer arrived, Cpl. Schifano left the scene to respond to a call
    relating to a second accident that had occurred earlier and was reported as a hit and run.4 The
    scene of the second accident was five to six blocks away from the first reported accident. When
    Cpl. Schifano arrived, he spoke with the victim of the second accident. Her vehicle was parked
    and unattended. A neighbor advised her that a Ford Mustang convertible operated by a black
    male struck her car and fled.5
    Next, Senior Corporal Joseph Dellose (“Sr. Cpl. Dellose”) testified.6 He stated that on
    April 14, 2014 at 9:48 pm, a call came in that a hit and run accident involving a Ford Mustang
    occurred at the 500 block of West 26th Street in Wilmington, Delaware. Sr. Cpl. Dellose was
    assigned to investigate the incident. He arrived on the scene and spoke to the arresting officers.7
    They reported that they were in the area on routine patrol when they heard what sounded like a
    motor vehicle collision. The officers then observed a gray Ford Mustang with heavy front-end
    damage travelling westbound on West 26th Street and stopped the vehicle.
    During Sr. Cpl. Dellose’s investigation of the accident, he observed heavy front-end
    damage to the passenger side of the Ford Mustang. The front axle of the vehicle appeared to be
    broken. Also, two other vehicles on the block had sustained damage. Sr. Cpl. Dellose testified
    that the police officers had placed the driver of the Ford Mustang — later identified as Calhoun —
    4 The second collision was at the 500 block of West 26Lh Street in Wilmington, Delaware.
    5 As Cpl. Schifano interviewed the victim, the neighbor approached and explained what he had witnessed. He added
    that after the incident, he got in his car and followed the mustang. The neighbor observed it collide with several
    other parked cars. Shortly afterward, the mustang had been stopped by the police at the scene Cpl. Schifano had just
    left.
    6 Sr. Cpl. Dellose is a collision investigator with the Wilmington Police Department’s patrol division. He has been
    an officer since July 6, 2004. Sr. Cpl. Dellose has been trained in collision investigations and DUI Investigation
    basics, including a twenty-four hour course with the Wilmington Police Academy. Further, Sr. Cpl. Dellose is
    certified to administer the intoxilyzer test. The Court finds Sr. Cpl. Dellose to be a credible witness.
    7 The arresting Officers were later identified as Officers Irwin and Verna of the Wilmington Police Department.
    3
    in the back of the police cruiser. Sr. Cpl. Dellose approached Calhoun to obtain his version of the
    accident. Sr. Cpl. Dellose testified that while standing three to four feet from Calhoun, he
    detected a strong odor of alcohol emanating from Calhoun’s breath. Further, Calhoun’s speech
    was slurred, his eyes were watery and glassy, and he appeared to be dazed. Calhoun stated to Sr.
    Cpl. Dellose that he was not involved in an accident.
    The arresting officers transported Calhoun to WPD headquarters. At the police station,
    Sr. Cpl. Dellose met Calhoun for the purpose of administering the SFTs. Prior to administering
    the SFTs, Sr. Cpl. Dellose asked Calhoun if he had any physical impairment which might result
    ”8 Calhoun indicated that he had no such impairment. Sr. Cpl.
    in the tests giving a “false-positive.
    Dellose administered the Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus (“HGN”), Walk-and-Turn (“WAT”), and
    One-Leg Stand (“OLS”) tests, which were performed in the turnkey room of the police
    department.9 Calhoun exhibited six out of six possible clues on the HGN and six out of six
    possible clues on the WAT. Sr. Cpl. Dellose testified that he attempted to administer the OLS,
    but Calhoun began to sway and lose his balance. After attempting the OLS three times, Sr. Cpl.
    Dellose discontinued the test because he was concerned that Calhoun might injure himself.
    As a result of the numerous clues Sr. Cpl. Dellose observed during the SFTs, the strong
    odor of alcohol on Calhoun’s breath, Calhoun’s slurred speech, glassy and watery eyes, and his
    dazed state, Sr. Cpl. Dellose administered the intoxilyzer test.
    8 This includes any medication, illness, or injury which may impede an individual’s ability to properly perform these
    tests when sober, thus diminishing such tests’ efficacy as an indicator of alcohol induced impairment.
    9 The turnkey room has fluorescent lighting and solid, level black concrete.
    4
    PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
    Calhoun contends that the SFTs and subsequent intoxilyzer result should be suppressed
    because there were not any conditions present at the scene to justify his detention and transport
    for later testing.10 Specifically, Calhoun argues that in the absence of (1) poor weather
    conditions; (2) heavy traffic; (3) officer safety concerns; or (4) a combative and uncooperative
    attitude of the suspect, the SFTs should have been performed at the scene. Based on the
    testimony offered by the State, none of the above circumstances were present, and Calhoun
    argues that the Wilmington Police did not have probable cause to transport him to WPD
    headquarters to administer the SFTs. Thus, Calhoun argues that the SFT results and intoxilyzer
    result should be suppressed.
    In response, the State counters that although there is not sufficient evidence of any of the
    above conditions present at the scene, the SFTs should not be suppressed because the State had
    probable cause to arrest Calhoun for DUI prior to transportng him to WPD headquarters.
    DISCUSSION
    On a motion to suppress, the State bears the burden of establishing that the challenged
    search or seizure comported with the rights guaranteed to Calhoun by the United States
    Constitution, the Delaware Constitution, and Delaware statutory law.11 The burden of proof on a
    motion to suppress is proof by a preponderance of the evidence. 12
    “When a person operates a motor vehicle in Delaware, he is deemed by statute to have
    given consent to chemical tests, including a test of the breath to determine the presence of
    alcohol or drugs.”13 “Chemical testing “may be required of a person when a police officer has
    10 Sr. Cpl. Dellose testified that at the scene of the accident, traffic was light and the weather was fair. Further, the
    arresting officers did not indicate any concerns for their safety. In fact, Calhoun was cooperative throughout the '
    entire encounter.
    ” See State v. Matos, 
    2001 WL 1398585
    , at *2 (Del.Super. Aug. 6, 2001).
    12
    
    Id. ‘3 See
    Bease v. State, 
    884 A.2d 495
    , 497-98 (Del. 2005) (quoting 
    21 Del. C
    . § 2740(a)).
    5
    probable cause to believe that the person was driving while under the influence of alcohol or
    drugs.”14
    In the DUI context, probable cause exists when an officer has trustworthy and factual
    information, which when viewed under the totality of the circumstances warrants “a reasonable
    [person] in believing that” the defendant drove a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol.15
    Further, probable cause to arrest for DUI “rests upon the observations of the arresting officer,
    which includes the driver’s performance on field sobriety tests.”16
    Standardized Field Sobriety Tests
    Calhoun seeks to suppress each of the SFT results on the basis that Sr. Cpl. Dellose’s
    administration of the SFTs at the police station rather than the scene of the crime went beyond
    those physical boundaries which were necessary and reasonable to investigate the alleged crime.
    The Court disagrees.
    Delaware precedent dictates that the physical boundaries of an investigative detention
    may be extended only as far as is “necessary and reasonable.”17 According to Williams v. Shahan
    and its progeny, in the DUI context, it is necessary and reasonable to remove a suspect from the
    scene of the crime without probable cause for later testing where there exists: (1) poor weather
    conditions; (2) heavy traffic; (3) officer safety concerns; or (4) a combative and uncooperative
    attitude of the suspect at the scene of the crime.18 In determining the propriety of removing a
    suspect from the scene for later testing where the above factors are not present, a court must first
    determine whether there was probable cause to arrest. If there is probable cause to arrest on
    '4 
    Id. at 498.
    15 State v. Maxwell, 
    624 A.2d 926
    , 930 (Del. 1993); Lefebvre at 292 (quoting Clendam'el v. Voshell, 
    562 A.2d 1167
    ,
    1170 (Del. 1989) (internal quotations omitted».
    ‘6 State v. Mulholland, 
    2013 WL 3131642
    , at *4 (Del. Com. Pl. Jun. 14, 2013).
    ‘7 See Williams v. Shahan, 
    1993 WL 81264
    (Del. Super. Mar. 10, 1993).
    [8 See Williams, 
    1993 WL 81264
    ; Perrera v. State, 
    852 A.2d 908
    (Del. 2004); Dunlap v. State, 
    812 A.2d 899
    (Del.
    2002).
    suspicion of DUI independent of the SFTs, then removing a suspect from scene to conduct
    further testing does not run afoul of Shahan and its progeny.
    Here, although there is testimony that on the night of April 14, 2014, the weather was
    fair; traffic was light; the road was well lit; and Calhoun was observed as cooperative with the
    Wilmington Police investigation, the evidence before the Court shows that Sr. Cpl. Dellose had
    probable cause to arrest Calhoun prior to his removal from the scene of the crime. Calhoun was
    initially stopped because the arresting officers heard what sounded like a motor vehicle accident,
    arid, thereafter saw a Ford Mustang with heavy front-end damage, including an axle nearly
    disconnected from the vehicle. After the police stopped Calhoun, they quickly confirmed that at
    least two vehicles on the block had been hit, and had received a call of another hit and run
    accident within a five to six block proximity to the current scene, describing a vehicle matching
    Calhoun’s.
    Next, Sr. Cpl. Dellose approached Calhoun, who had been detained in the back of the
    police cruiser, to determine the cause of the collisions. Not only was the initial stop of Calhoun’s
    motor vehicle “justified at its inception by reasonable suspicion of criminal activity,” but Sr. Cpl.
    Dellose’s approach to and inquiry of Calhoun was reasonably related to the purpose of the motor
    vehicle stop.19 Sr. Cpl. Dellose testified that when he spoke with Calhoun, from a distance of
    three to four feet, he detected a strong odor of alcohol on Calhoun’s breath, Calhoun’s slurred
    speech, glassy and watery eyes, and his dazed state. At this point in the investigation, there
    existed a “quantum of trustworthy factual information, ‘sufficient in themselves to warrant a man
    of reasonable caution’ to conclude that probable cause existed” to believe that Calhoun was
    driving under the influence of alcohol at the time Sr. Cpl. Dellose questioned him.20
    19 See Caldwell v. State, 
    780 A.2d 1037
    , 1046 (Del. 2001).
    2° Maxwell, 
    624 A.2d 926
    , 931 (Del. 1993).
    Accordingly, the totality of the circumstances was sufficient to establish probable cause to arrest
    Calhoun for suspicion of DUI.21 Thus, his removal to the WPD headquarters to conduct the SFTs
    was proper. Calhoun’s motion to suppress the SFTs is therefore DENIED.
    Intoxilyzer Test
    Calhoun also seeks to suppress the result of the intoxilyzer test. He contends that without
    the SFT results, Sr. Cpl. Dellose did not have probable cause to arrest him for DUI or to
    administer the intoxilyzer test. Calhoun’s motion to suppress the intoxilyzer test is dependent
    upon the suppression of the SFTs and a finding of a lack of probable cause to arrest for DUI.
    Therefore, the Court’s denial of Calhoun’s motion to suppress the SFTs and a finding of
    probable cause independent of the SFTs necessarily nullifies his arguments on the suppression of
    the intoxilyzer test. Consequently, Calhoun’s motion to suppress the intoxilyzer test result is
    DENIED.
    ORDER
    After consideration of the testimony, evidence and arguments presented, Defendant
    Chaon Calhoun’s Motion to Suppress the results of the standardized field sobriety tests and
    intoxilyzer test is DENIED.
    IT IS so ORDERED this 31st day orig;
    21 See Bease v. State, 
    884 A.2d 495
    (Del. 2005) (finding that the arresting officer had probable cause to arrest the
    defendant for DUI based on his commission of a traffic violation and the investigating officer’s observations at the
    scene of the crime). See also State v. Maxwell, 
    624 A.2d 926
    , 930-31 (Del. 1993); Higgins v. Shahan, 
    1995 WL 108699
    (Del. Super. Jan. 18, 1995); Silverman v. Shahan, 
    2002 WL 31999363
    (Del.Com.Pl. Jan. 2, 2002).
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1404011003

Judges: Rennie J.

Filed Date: 8/31/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/10/2015