State of Delaware v. Holmes. ( 2015 )


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  •       IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    IN AND FOR KENT COUNTY
    STATE OF DELAWARE                     )
    )
    v.                              )
    )
    )
    MARLOW E. HOLMES,                     )
    1501015446                            )
    )
    Defendant.                )
    Submitted: August 3, 2015
    Decided: September 3, 2015
    OPINION
    UPON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO SUPPRESS
    GRANTED
    Zachary A. George, Esquire, Department of Justice, for the State.
    J’Aime L. Walker, Public Defender’s Office, for the Defendant
    CLARK, J.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    Before the Court is Marlow Holmes’ (“Defendant’s”) Motion to Suppress all
    evidence seized as a result of what the Defendant alleges was an unlawful search and
    seizure of his person and property following a traffic stop that coincided with an
    independent undercover drug investigation. The Defendant argues that the evidence
    was obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution
    and Article I, §6 of the Delaware Constitution. A suppression hearing was held on
    August 3, 2015. At the hearing, the State called one witness to testify– the officer in
    charge of the undercover drug investigation. The State did not present as witnesses
    the officers involved in the traffic stop or subsequent search and arrest at issue. The
    primary issues in this case involve whether the State’s burden in a motion to suppress
    can be met solely by hearsay and whether the circumstances of this case require
    application of the collective knowledge doctrine. The presentation of evidence at this
    suppression hearing provided the inverse of the typical situation involving an
    undercover officer. Here, the undercover officer provided all of the testimony and
    the arresting and searching officers did not appear or testify at the hearing. In light
    of the law, the facts of this case, and the parties’ submissions, the Defendant's motion
    is GRANTED.
    II. FINDINGS OF FACT
    All testimony and evidence in the suppression motion came from the testimony
    of Detective Scott Hurd (“Detective Hurd”). In early January 2015, Detective Hurd
    was working undercover as a part of the Dover Police Department’s Drug Vice and
    Organized Crime Unit. At that time, Detective Hurd was contacted by a confidential
    2
    informant1 (“CI”) who told him that a black male known as Carolina was selling
    cocaine in the downtown Dover area. According to the CI, the man in question had
    a prosthetic leg which he used to store and transport cocaine. The CI also informed
    Detective Hurd that Carolina drove a blue Ford Crown Victoria with Delaware
    registration HP31970. With that information, Detective Hurd conducted a Delaware
    Criminal Justice inquiry check that confirmed Defendant Holmes as the registered
    owner of the Crown Victoria. Pursuant to that inquiry, Detective Hurd obtained a
    picture of Defendant Holmes. Detective Hurd showed the picture to the CI who
    positively identified Defendant Holmes as Carolina. A month long investigation of
    Carolina followed which culminated on the date in question.
    On January 26, 2015, the CI contacted Detective Hurd and informed him that
    the Defendant was in possession of cocaine on Division Street in Dover. Detective
    Hurd used the CI’s cell phone to contact the Defendant. According to Detective
    Hurd, the Defendant confirmed that he was in possession of cocaine and asked how
    much Detective Hurd needed. Detective Hurd asked for a “ball game” which is slang
    for 3.5 grams of cocaine. The Defendant said he did not have the requested quantity
    1
    According to Detective Hurd’s testimony, the CI, known as No. 496, was past-proven and
    reliable.
    3
    at that time, but would go to Smyrna to meet with his “people”2 and return in
    approximately an hour with the requested drugs.
    Meanwhile, Detective Hurd and his partner established surveillance in the 300
    block of Division Street and identified the Defendant. They observed the Defendant
    get into the front passenger seat of a white Chevrolet Tahoe with Delaware
    registration. The Tahoe headed West on Division Street and Detective Hurd and his
    partner followed. The Tahoe then stopped at the Dover Express Gas Station and the
    Hamlet Shopping Center before entering northbound Route One toward Smyrna.
    From there, Detective Hurd followed the Tahoe onto Northbound Route One
    and then onto Southbound Route 13 via the North Smyrna exit. From Route 13, the
    Tahoe pulled into the Shore Stop Gas station. All the occupants remained in the
    vehicle and after a few minutes, the Tahoe left the Shore Stop gas station and
    continued Southbound on Route 13 before entering the Valero gas station in Smyrna.
    Detective Hurd observed the Defendant exit the vehicle and enter the business
    through a side door. After a few minutes, the Defendant returned to the vehicle which
    then proceeded North again on Route 13 to the Shore Stop gas station for a second
    time.
    2
    According to Detective Hurd’s testimony, “people” is a common term in the drug world
    for a dealer’s source of supply.
    4
    Detective Hurd watched as the vehicle parked at the gas pumps. The driver
    exited the Tahoe and entered the business. Meanwhile, the Defendant exited the
    vehicle and walked to a white Chevrolet Silverado parked at the adjacent fuel pump
    and entered the front passenger seat. The Defendant remained in the Silverado for
    a few minutes before exiting and returning to the Tahoe. The Tahoe exited the gas
    station and Detective Hurd followed it. As the Tahoe entered Southbound Route
    One, Detective Hurd continued to follow it toward Dover.
    According to Detective Hurd, based on his training and six years of undercover
    experience, he believed he had just witnessed the Defendant meet his cocaine
    supplier. His belief was grounded in the information described above.
    Detective Hurd testified adamantly that he did not relay the above-mentioned
    information to other officers, however. There was no testimony at the hearing
    involving contact between Detective Hurd and any other officer. In the police report,
    attached as an exhibit to Defendant’s Motion to Suppress, there was a single reference
    addressing contact among officers. That lone reference stated that Detective Hurd
    radioed other officers when he entered Southbound Route 1 to return to Dover to
    make them, including Officer Martinek, “aware of our location.” No other testimony,
    evidence, or reference in the police report evidences the sharing of any of the above-
    mentioned information. In fact, the testimony at the hearing conclusively established
    5
    this information was not relayed to other officers outside the undercover vehicle.
    Detective Hurd next testified that Officer Martinek, from the Dover Police
    Department, independently observed a seatbelt violation in the Tahoe and stopped
    the Tahoe. Due to his undercover capacity, Detective Hurd did not participate in the
    stop but watched from a distance of approximately fifty yards. Detective Hurd did
    not witness any facts relevant to a seatbelt violation in the Tahoe at issue.
    At some point after the stop of the vehicle by Officer Martinek, Detective
    Hurd, still from approximately fifty yards away, observed as Officer Hannon and his
    K-9 partner arrived on scene and conducted a sniff of the vehicle. At that time, all
    of the occupants were removed from the vehicle. Detective Hurd testified that he was
    later informed that the dog alerted the presence of drugs on the front passenger side
    door of the Tahoe. Detective Hurd also testified that the officers later informed him
    that at the scene they performed background checks on the occupants. Detective
    Hurd did not recall the results of the checks. The officers on the scene, not Detective
    Hurd, made the decision to take the occupants and the vehicle into custody. Detective
    Hurd was unable to testify as to who made the decision for the arrest or the precise
    reason for it. He did testify, however, that Officer Stagg later told him that officer
    safety was an issue and that the Defendant appeared to be extremely nervous while
    still in the vehicle and repeatedly asked to use the bathroom.
    6
    The occupants and the vehicle were transported to the Dover Police
    Department so a thorough search could be conducted. Once there, Detective Hurd
    searched the vehicle but no contraband was located. According to Detective Hurd,
    he was told that at some point, his supervisor, Detective Dickinson authorized strip
    searches of all the vehicle’s occupants. Detective Hurd indicated he was not present
    when the decision was made and did not recall the reasons that were given for
    performing the strip searches. He was told by fellow officers that a search of the
    Defendant uncovered a clear knotted plastic bag hidden in his left prosthetic leg, and
    that a field test returned positive for cocaine at which point the Defendant was read
    his Miranda rights. The Defendant was then charged with Aggravated Possession,
    Drug Dealing, and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    In evaluating a motion to suppress evidence seized during a warrantless search
    or seizure, the State bears the burden of establishing that the challenged search or
    seizure was performed in a manner so as to protect the individual rights guaranteed
    by the United States Constitution, the Delaware Constitution and state statutes.3 The
    State must persuade the Court that an initial stop, arrest and search were lawful by a
    3
    State v. Chandler, 
    2015 WL 1731508
    , at *3 (Del.Super. April 2, 2015)(citing Hunter v.
    State, 
    783 A.2d 558
    , 560(Del. 2001)).
    7
    preponderance of the evidence.4
    IV. DISCUSSION
    A.       Legal standard for a traffic stop
    The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Section
    6 of the Delaware Constitution, protect individuals from unreasonable searches and
    seizures.5 When it comes to a traffic stop, “the State must demonstrate that the stop
    and any subsequent police investigation were reasonable under the circumstances.
    First, the stop must be justified at its inception by reasonable suspicion of criminal
    activity as defined in Terry v. Ohio.”6 Delaware courts consistently define reasonable
    suspicion as an “officer's ability to point to specific and articulable facts which, taken
    together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant the intrusion.”7
    Courts must evaluate the intrusion “through the eyes of a reasonable, trained police
    officer in the same or similar circumstances, combining objective facts with such an
    4
    
    Id. (Citing State
    v. Abel, 
    2011 WL 5221276
    , at *2 (Del. Super. Oct.31, 2011) aff’d, 
    68 A.3d 1228
    (Del. 2012), as Amended (Jan.22, 2013)).
    5
    U.S. Const. amend. IV; Del. Const. art. I, § 6.
    6
    Caldwell v. State, 
    780 A.2d 1037
    , 1045-46 (Del. 2001) (citing Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    ,
    16–19 (1968) ( “[T]he 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.”)).
    7
    Chandler, 
    2015 WL 1731508
    , at *4 (quoting Holden v. State, 
    23 A.3d 843
    , 847 (Del.
    2011)).
    8
    officer's subjective interpretation of those facts.”8
    B.        Legal standard for a warrantless arrest where arresting officers had
    personal knowledge
    In Delaware, a police officer is authorized to make a warrantless arrest for a
    felony when there is “reasonable ground to believe that the person to be arrested has
    committed a felony ...” “[R]easonable ground to believe,” as used in that statute, has
    been construed to mean probable cause.9
    Probable cause “is an elusive concept which avoids precise definition.... It lies
    somewhere between suspicion and sufficient evidence to convict."10 Furthermore,
    “[a]rresting officers have ‘probable cause’ to make an arrest ... whenever the facts
    and circumstances within the officers' knowledge and of which they had reasonably
    trustworthy information were sufficient to warrant a prudent person in believing that
    the arrestees had committed or were committing an offense." 11 The test involves a
    8
    Holden v. State, 
    23 A.3d 843
    , 847 (Del. 2011) (citing Jones v. State, 
    745 A.2d 856
    , 861
    (Del. 1999) (emphasis added).
    9
    Thompson v. State, 
    539 A.2d 1055
    , 1056 (Del. 1988) (citing 
    11 Del. C
    . §1904(b)(1).
    10
    State v. Maxwell, 
    624 A.2d 926
    , 929 (Del. 1993) (internal quotations omitted).
    11
    State v. Manley, 
    706 A.2d 535
    , 538-39 (Del. Super. 1996) (internal citations
    omitted)(emphasis added); see also, Carter v. State, 
    814 A.2d 443
    , 445 (Del. 2002) ("For an
    arresting officer to have probable cause, the officer's knowledge must be sufficient for a prudent
    person to believe that an individual had committed or was committing an offense.") (emphasis
    added).
    9
    case-by-case analysis of the “totality of the circumstances.”12 As such, “police are
    only required to present facts which suggest, when those facts are viewed under the
    totality of the circumstances, that there is a fair probability that the defendant has
    committed a crime.”13
    C.         Legal standard for a warrantless arrest where arresting officer’s
    justification in based on knowledge communicated by fellow
    officers.
    Arresting officers are “entitled to rely on information relayed to [them] through
    official channels when arresting [a suspect].”14 In other words, “[t]he arresting officer
    himself need not be apprised of the underlying circumstances which gave rise to a
    conclusion of probable cause.”15 An arresting officer is free to “act in the belief that
    his fellow officer's judgment is correct.”16 However, if “no officer connected to the
    arrest knows the facts which might justify it, [i.e., probable cause] no officer
    12
    
    Maxwell, 624 A.2d at 928
    ; see also Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 479 (1963)
    (“The quantum of information which constitutes probable cause—evidence which ‘would warrant
    a man of reasonable caution in the belief' that a felony has been committed—must be measured by
    the facts of the particular case.").
    13
    
    Maxwell, 624 A.2d at 930
    .
    14
    State v. Cooley, 
    457 A.2d 352
    , 355 (Del. 1983).
    15
    
    Id. 16 Id.
    10
    exercises the judgment required as a substitute for judicial approval.”17 In the
    absence of communication amongst a team of officers, the stop or arrest of an
    individual by an officer not possessing any such knowledge is improper.18
    D.         Detective Hurd had the personal knowledge sufficient to establish
    probable cause, but it was not relayed to the arresting officers.
    In the present case, the State’s only witness was Detective Hurd. At the
    suppression hearing, the thrust of the State’s case centered on the information
    obtained by Detective Hurd during his undercover investigation and surveillance of
    the Defendant. In light of the aforementioned legal principles, the Court is persuaded
    that Detective Hurd had personal knowledge sufficient to support a finding of
    probable cause which would have allowed him, or someone at his direction, to arrest
    the Defendant without a warrant.19 However, Detective Hurd did not participate in
    17
    
    Id. (Emphasis added).
           18
    
    Id. 19 As
    indicated above, Detective Hurd had six years experience as an undercover drug
    investigator. On the day in question, Detective Hurd was informed that the Defendant was dealing
    cocaine in the Dover area from a past-proven, reliable source. The Defendant was personally
    contacted by Detective Hurd and corroborated the fact that he was selling cocaine. The Defendant
    himself provided Detective Hurd with his plan to travel to Smyrna and back to acquire the requested
    amount of cocaine. Meanwhile, Detective Hurd established surveillance of the Defendant and
    followed him on the trip to Smyrna as described. Along the way, the Tahoe carrying the Defendant
    stopped for gas in Dover. By the time the Tahoe reached Smyrna, it stopped at two more gas
    stations– one of them twice–without getting gas. On the last stop, the Defendant was observed
    entering a vehicle parked at an adjacent pump for a brief period of time. After the meeting, the
    Defendant got back in the Tahoe and headed directly back to Dover.
    11
    the stop or subsequent arrest of the Defendant.                       Because the legality of any
    warrantless arrest hinges on what was known by the arresting officer at the time of
    the arrest, Detective Hurd’s testimony can only be considered if that information was
    known by the arresting officers. In other words, if the information uncovered during
    Detective Hurd’s investigation was never relayed to his fellow officers, it logically
    could not have formed a basis for the arresting officers’ probable cause determination.
    This aspect of the suppression motion is controlled by State v. Cooley.20 In that
    case, the Delaware Supreme Court determined whether probable cause existed to
    arrest a Defendant and to administer an intoxilyzer test in a driving under the
    influence case. On the night in question, in Cooley, State Trooper Shamany arrived
    on scene and identified the Defendant as a driver of one of the vehicles involved in
    an accident.21 At the scene, Trooper Shamany detected a strong smell of alcohol on
    the Defendant’s breath and noted that he appeared to be incoherent.22 Trooper
    Shamany helped him into a police car but did not place him under arrest or mention
    that he was being detained pending investigation into the accident.23 Other officers
    20
    
    Cooley, 457 A.2d at 353
    .
    21
    
    Id. 22 Id.
              23
    
    Id. (The Court
    determined that the Defendant was not taken into custody or arrested at that
    time.).
    12
    arrived on site to aid in the investigation.
    Witnesses on the scene were identified and directed to the nearby State Police
    Troop for statements. Two of the witnesses offered to take the Defendant with them
    to the Troop, and Trooper Shamany accepted their offer.24 Sometime thereafter, one
    of the other officers who later arrived at the scene, Corporal McDerby, established
    radio contact with the Troop and directed the desk sergeant, Sergeant Thompson, to
    arrest the Defendant when he arrived for driving under the influence of alcohol.
    Sergeant Thompson, at the Troop desk, had no firsthand knowledge to justify
    the Defendant’s arrest. The focus of the Court’s inquiry shifted to whether the
    directing officer, Corporal McDerby, had probable cause to order the arrest of the
    Defendant.25 In carefully reviewing the facts, the Supreme Court held in that case that
    since Trooper Shamany (1) was the only officer possessing sufficient facts to reach
    a conclusion regarding probable cause and (2) she did not communicate them to either
    Thompson or McDerby, and furthermore (3) Trooper Shamany did not direct the
    Defendant’s arrest, that there was not probable cause for such an arrest.26 Because
    of the absence of communication between officers, it followed that the defendant was
    24
    
    Id. 25 Id.
    at 355.
    26
    
    Id. 13 arrested
    without probable cause. Defendant’s arrest at the Troop by an officer
    possessing neither facts shared with him by an officer regarding probable cause nor
    an order by a fellow officer possessing such information violated both the United
    States and Delaware Constitutions.27
    The Delaware Supreme Court, in Cooley, also rejected the State's alternative
    argument that even if the arresting officer, Thompson, did not have knowledge of
    sufficient facts amounting to probable cause, Shamany's knowledge could
    nevertheless be imputed to Thompson since "the collective knowledge of an entire
    organization may be imputed to an individual officer....”28 In rejecting that argument,
    while recognizing the viability of the collective knowledge doctrine, the Court
    explained that the
    State misunderstands that principle here. To say in the abstract that
    probable cause is to be evaluated on the basis of the collective
    information of the police ignores the underlying assumption—and
    factual reality—that there is some communication between those
    officers, who do know facts amounting to probable cause, and those who
    do not....[I]nformation scattered among various officers in a police
    department cannot substitute for possession of the necessary facts by a
    single officer related to the arrest. 29
    27
    
    Id. at 356
    (internal citations omitted).
    28
    
    Id. at 355
    (quoting State v. Schoenbneelt, 
    368 A.2d 117
    , 119 (Conn. 1976)).
    29
    
    Id. at 355
    -56 (quoting Com. v. Gambit, 
    418 A.2d 554
    , 557 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1980) aff'd, 
    462 A.2d 211
    (Pa. 1983)).
    14
    The Court reasoned that the collective knowledge doctrine appropriately applied in
    situations where information held by several officers is actually (not constructively)
    pooled to make a probable cause determination.30
    In summary, on a motion to suppress challenging the sufficiency of a stop or
    warrantless arrest for lack of probable cause, the State can satisfy its burden in one
    of two ways. The State can present evidence that the arresting officers themselves
    possessed the requisite knowledge to establish probable cause, or by introducing
    evidence that a fellow police officer with the requisite knowledge communicated that
    information to, and/or directed the officers on scene to make the arrest. Under the
    latter, the State must persuade the Court that the requisite knowledge was in fact
    communicated in order to rely upon the collective knowledge doctrine. Otherwise,
    it follows that the arresting officer acted without reasonable suspicion or probable
    cause.
    Turning to the record in the case at hand, there is no evidence that the arresting
    officers had the benefit of Detective Hurd’s information or that they arrested the
    Defendant at his direction. In fact, Detective Hurd adamantly maintained that he did
    not relay this information. The sole reference to any communication between the
    officers is found in Detective Hurd’s police report, attached to Defendant’s Motion
    30
    
    Id. 15 as
    “Exhibit A.” According to the report, while following the Defendant back to
    Dover, Detective Hurd “contacted Officer Anthony Digirolomo, Aaron Dickinson,
    Chris Bumgarner, Peter Martinek, Josh Boesenberg, Daniel Stagg, Thomas Hannon
    and K-9 partner Mina to making [sic] them aware of our location.” Any potential
    inference suggesting that the aforementioned notation is evidence that Detective Hurd
    relayed the results of his undercover investigation to his fellow officers, or that it
    played a roll in the initial stop and events that followed, is contradicted by his
    testimony.
    During the suppression hearing, the following exchange took place on direct-
    examination:
    Q.     All right. On the traffic stop topic, what was the reason for the stop?
    A.     I believe Officer Martinek observed a seatbelt violation.
    Q.     Okay.
    .     .     .
    Q.     Did Martinek tell you about the seatbelt violation?
    A.     Yes, he did.
    Q.     Was he the one that conducted the actual stop?
    A.     There were several officers there that conducted the traffic stop.
    Q.     Who lead them, though?
    A.     I believe it was Officer Martinek.
    Q.     Did you arrive immediately or shortly after the stop?
    A.     I did not go to the actual traffic stop location. I observed it from an
    undisclosed location due to my undercover capacity.
    On cross-examination, Detective Hurd further testified as follows:
    16
    Q.     And was that your decision, to take him into custody at that time, or was
    that Officer Martinek?
    A.     There was never really a conversation that was taking place between he
    and I. You'd have to ask Officer Martinek on that scene because he
    might -- I do know that Officer Stagg observed him becoming extremely
    nervous, Mr. Holmes, and he was trying to use the bathroom at that time.
    So for safety concerns for the officers, I know he was taken into
    custody. I never said, take him into custody.
    Q.     Okay.
    A.     If that’s what you’re looking for.
    Q.     Okay. And you never had a conversation with any of the officers
    conducting the traffic stop regarding taking any of the parties present in
    the vehicle into custody at that time?
    A.     That's correct. I did not have any conversation.
    .     .     .
    Q.     Okay. Who authorized the strip search of everyone in the vehicle?
    A.     Our supervisor at the time, Detective Aaron Dickinson.
    Q.     And do you recall the reasons that were requested to conduct that strip
    search?
    A.     I don't recall the reasonings of the –
    Q.     I'm sorry?
    A.     No, I don't recall the reasonings. Of the strip search?
    Q.     Yes.
    A.     I do not recall that. I don't know who -- I don't know who even to ask,
    to be honest with you, because I wasn't back to the police department yet
    when they brought everyone back.
    As indicated above, while arresting officers “need not be apprised of the
    underlying circumstances which gave rise to a conclusion of probable cause” and are
    "entitled to rely on information relayed to [them] through official channels when
    arresting [a suspect]", a condition precedent requires that the arresting officers receive
    17
    the information in the first place.31 The Court is constrained by the record before it.
    In the present case, there is no evidence that the arresting officers were privy to the
    information discovered by Detective Hurd’s undercover investigation, As such,
    Detective Hurd’s information could not have played a role in the arresting officer’s
    reasonable suspicion or probable cause determinations.
    E.       The traffic stop
    Apart from the significant incriminating observations of Detective Hurd, the
    analyses independently may hinge on the legality of the specific traffic stop and the
    drug detection dog’s reported alert and other observations of the Defendant at the
    scene of the stop. In order to initiate a traffic stop, the stop must be justified at its
    inception by a reasonable articulable suspicion of criminal activity. A police officer
    who observes a traffic violation–like the seat belt violation in this case–has probable
    cause to stop the vehicle and its occupants.32
    The Defendant argues that the stop was pretextual, and therefore unlawful.
    State v. Heath held that when a stop is motivated by an unrelated purpose, and absent
    that purpose the stop would not have been made, that stop is pretextual and
    31
    
    Cooley, 457 A.2d at 355
    .
    32
    
    Holden, 23 A.3d at 847
    .
    18
    unlawful.33 However, despite opportunities to do so, the Delaware Supreme Court
    has declined to adopt the holding in Heath. For instance, in Turner v. State, the
    Defendant also argued that the traffic stop was pretextual, and pursuant to the holding
    in Heath, that such a stop violates Article 1, Section 6 of the Delaware Constitution.34
    The Supreme Court in Turner, declined to follow Heath, noting “[t]hat decision was
    not appealed, and Heath has not been followed in any other Superior Court decisions.
    [The Defendant] cannot rely on Heath as a basis for his constitutional claim.”35
    Instead, the Court focused on the reality of a violation, finding that,
    [the arresting officer] witnessed [the Defendant] in the front passenger
    seat of the Grand Marquis with an unfastened seatbelt, in violation of 
    21 Del. C
    . § 4802(a)(2). These facts constitute a reasonable articulable
    suspicion that Tann, the driver, committed a traffic violation. Therefore,
    the officers had probable cause to conduct a traffic stop.36
    Without expressly rejecting Heath, the Court emphasized, “the Delaware Supreme
    Court recognizes an officer's discretion in conducting a traffic stop and does not rely
    on an officer's actual, subjective motives to determine the reasonableness of an
    officer's conduct.”37
    33
    State v. Heath, 
    929 A.2d 390
    , 402-03 (Del. Super. 2006).
    34
    Turner v. State, 
    25 A.3d 774
    , 777 (Del. 2011).
    35
    
    Id. 36 Id.
          37
    
    Id. 19 In
    light of Turner v. State, the Defendant’s pretextual claim is rejected.
    Moreover, the facts of record in this case establish that any information possessed by
    Detective Hurd was not relayed to Officer Martinek. Accordingly, the stop could not
    be pretextual since there was no other alleged motive for the stop other than what was
    later relayed to the testifying officer to be a seatbelt violation.
    Here, because the Court did not hear testimony or receive reports from the
    arresting officers, the record is devoid of any first hand account of the incident in
    question. The officer who made the stop did not testify. Likewise, the officers who
    arrested and searched the Defendant did not testify. Therefore, the Court must
    determine if the State is capable of meeting its burden strictly on the basis of the
    police officers’ hearsay statements, as relayed by Detective Hurd, who was neither
    included in the stop or in contact with the stopping/arresting officers at the time of
    the stop.
    F.     Justification for the stop, arrest, and search based solely upon
    uncorroborated hearsay
    Before discussing whether the State can meet its burden for the initial traffic
    stop and subsequent arrest and search based entirely on the uncorroborated hearsay
    statements between officers, the Court finds it helpful to identify the relevant
    testimony. As is often the case with secondhand information, the breadth and
    20
    specificity of Detective Hurd’s knowledge with regards to the circumstances
    surrounding the traffic stop is limited. On cross-examination, Detective Hurd
    testified as follows:
    Q.     Okay. Do you have a copy of the traffic citation issued to Mr. Irvin?
    A.     No, I do not. I did not issue the traffic citation, so I don't have a copy of
    it.
    Q.     Would you be able to pull that up?
    A.     I believe Officer Martinek could do that.
    Q.     Okay. You do not have the capability to do that?
    A.     I just got back on the road after six years. I don't know if I can do that
    or not.
    Q.     Okay. How soon after this traffic stop did you and your partner, I guess,
    arrive at the traffic stop?
    A.     We never arrived at the traffic stop location.
    Q.     Okay.
    A.     We observed the traffic stop location from an undisclosed location. If
    you want to get in specifics, it was approximately 50 yards from where
    it took place.
    Q.     Okay. So you don't have any personal knowledge on the IDs that were
    taken from everyone in the vehicle and any warrant checks?
    A.     That's correct. I don't have any knowledge of that.
    Q.     Okay. Do you know if anyone had any outstanding warrants?
    A.     I do not know that.
    Q.     Okay. And then you testified that you don't feel comfortable testifying
    regarding the K-9 sniff or search of the vehicle?
    A.     That's correct.
    .    .     .
    Q.     Okay. So you would not be able to testify personally as to any
    behavior observed of anybody in the vehicle?
    A.     No.
    .    .     .
    21
    Q.     Okay. Have you had opportunity to review the K-9 activity use of force
    report?
    A.     No, I have not.
    Q.     Okay. Are you familiar with these?
    A.     No, I'm not.
    Q.     Okay. Do you know if they notate the weather conditions in that report?
    A.     I’m not familiar.
    Q.     Okay. Who authorized the strip search of everyone in the vehicle?
    A.     Our supervisor at the time, Detective Aaron Dickinson.
    Q.     And do you recall the reasons that were requested to conduct that strip
    search?
    A.     I don't recall the reasonings of the –
    Q.     I'm sorry?
    A.     No, I don't recall the reasonings. Of the strip search?
    Q.     Yes.
    A.     I do not recall that. I don't know who -- I don't know who even to ask,
    to be honest with you, because I wasn't back to the police department yet
    when they brought everyone back.
    The only other reference to the circumstances surrounding the stop and later arrest
    was contained in Detective Hurd’s police report. With the exception of a notation to
    “See Hannon’s supplement for further”– which was not submitted into the record–
    Detective Hurd’s report provides no additional evidence.
    A suppression hearing is not a trial where strict rules of evidence must apply
    and where the concern is guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The rules of evidence are
    relaxed, because “[t]rials are necessarily surrounded with evidentiary rules developed
    to safeguard men from dubious and unjust convictions. But before the trial we deal
    22
    only with probabilities that are not technical; they are the factual and practical
    considerations of everyday life on which reasonable and prudent men, not legal
    technicians, act.”38 As such, during a suppression hearing,"[h]earsay information may
    form the basis of probable cause if sufficiently corroborated by other facts within
    the officer's direct knowledge.”39
    Generally, when it comes to a probable cause determination at a suppression
    hearing, hearsay statements typically come from incriminating reports given to the
    police by informants or witnesses. In such scenarios, “[p]robable cause is not
    established solely by allegations of past reliability; something more is needed.”40 The
    same holds true when the hearsay statement is between two police officers. Put
    simply, the Court “may not accept a police officer's conclusion that probable cause
    for arrest exists without opportunity to examine in detail the grounds upon the basis
    of which he reached that conclusion.”41
    In the present case, all relevant evidence stemming from the stop is based on
    38
    Schramm v. State, 
    366 A.2d 1185
    , 1192 (Del. 1976) (internal quotations omitted).
    39
    State v. Demby, 
    1995 WL 717619
    , at *5 (Del. Super. Nov. 28, 1995) (emphasis added);
    see also Brown v. State, 
    249 A.2d 269
    , 272 (Del. 1968) (holding similarly, in the context of a
    violation of probation hearing, that pure hearsay, without some additional competent evidence, is
    not alone sufficient to support the finding of a violation).
    40
    Garner v. State, 
    314 A.2d 908
    , 913 (Del. 1973).
    41
    
    Id. 23 hearsay
    which is uncorroborated and lacking in detail. Following the initial stop for
    a seatbelt violation, Detective Hurd was told that ID checks were performed on the
    occupants of the vehicle. He did not know the results of those inquiries, or if any of
    the occupants had outstanding warrants. He was not familiar with any of the arresting
    officers’ reports and did not feel comfortable testifying about K-9 procedures because
    he was not familiar with them. Additionally, as the stop unfolded, the Court could
    not ascertain what the arresting officers said, how the occupants responded, or what
    those officers were thinking. Without at least some corroborating details other than
    hearsay as to exactly what transpired, the Court is left solely with Detective Hurd’s
    assumptions and conclusions. While the State is permitted to rely on hearsay in even
    large part to show that police action met the appropriate legal standard(s), under the
    circumstances of this case, its burden cannot be predicated entirely on hearsay.
    G.     The Inevitable discovery doctrine does not apply in this case
    In response to questions posed by the Court at the motion hearing, the State
    made the alternative argument that even if the Court found that the stop and
    subsequent investigation did comport with the Defendant’s Constitutional rights, the
    inevitable discovery doctrine should apply to prevent exclusion. Based upon the
    record of this case, the Court disagrees.
    The exclusionary rule acts “as a remedy for a violation of a defendant's right
    24
    to be free of illegal searches and seizures. It provides for the exclusion from trial of
    any evidence recovered or derived from an illegal search and seizure.”42 However,
    the Delaware Supreme Court has recognized occasions where “official misconduct
    should not fatally taint evidence that would have been discovered absent that official
    misconduct.” 43 Rather, “taint may be purged and the evidence may be admissible
    through one of the doctrinal exceptions to the exclusionary rule, such as the
    independent source doctrine, the inevitable discovery doctrine, the exigent
    circumstances doctrine, and the attenuation doctrine.” 44
    Delaware accepts and consistently applies the inevitable discovery exception
    to the exclusionary rule.45 This exception provides that “evidence, obtained in the
    course of illegal police conduct, will not be suppressed if the prosecution can prove
    that the incriminating evidence would have been discovered through legitimate
    
    42 Jones v
    . State, 
    745 A.2d 856
    , 872-73 (Del. 1999) (citing Mapp v. Ohio, 
    367 U.S. 643
    (1961); Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    (1963)).
    43
    
    Id. at 873.
           44
    Lopez-Vazquez v. State, 
    956 A.2d 1280
    , 1292 (Del. 2008) (internal citations omitted).
    45
    State v. Lambert, 
    2015 WL 3897810
    at *6-7 (Del. Super. June 22, 2015); State v. Parks,
    
    95 A.3d 42
    , 51 (Del. Super. 2014) (citing Cook v. State, 
    374 A.2d 264
    , 267–68 (Del. 1977); Martin
    v. State, 
    433 A.2d 1025
    (Del. 1981); Rew v. State, 
    1993 WL 61705
    (Del. Feb. 25, 1993); Hardin v.
    State, 
    844 A.2d 982
    (Del. 2004); Thomas v. State, 
    8 A.3d 1195
    (Del. 2010); Roy v. State, 
    62 A.3d 1183
    (Del.2012)).
    25
    means in the absence of official misconduct.”46
    In the present case, the Court is not persuaded that the incriminating evidence
    would have been discovered through legitimate means in the absence of official
    misconduct. There is a significant difference between what could have happened and
    what would have happened. According to Detective Hurd, the investigation into the
    Defendant was a month-long investigation. On cross-examination, Detective Hurd
    testified as follows:
    Q.       Okay. If Officer Martinek had not observed an alleged traffic violation,
    was your plan just to conduct surveillance all day on Mr. Holmes?
    A.       I probably would have watched him a little bit longer just to see if he
    would have went back to that location.
    Q.       What location?
    A.       To the West Division Street area.
    Q.       Okay.
    A.       And depending on what I saw, I might have had someone stop him
    based upon what I saw. I mean, I can't speculate after the traffic stop,
    but the seatbelt violation was observed, so that's what we went with.
    If a plan certain was set in motion to apprehend the Defendant had the traffic
    stop not occurred, it cannot be found in the record. Detective Hurd’s testimony
    establishes that it was uncertain as to whether an arrest that day would have occurred,
    or whether his month-long undercover investigation would have continued. Perhaps
    Detective Hurd would have arrested Defendant upon his return to Dover, or on the
    46
    
    Id. (quoting Cook,
    374 A.2d at 267–68) (emphasis added).
    26
    other hand, the undercover officer may have set up additional buys in an attempt to
    apprehend Defendant’s supplier. Speculation does not establish inevitability. There
    was no evidence in the hearing permitting even an inference that an arrest was
    imminent. Accordingly, the inevitable discovery doctrine is not applicable as a means
    to validate the stop of the Defendant or his subsequent arrest and search. Based upon
    the aforementioned, it follows that all evidence obtained as a result of that illegal
    search and seizure is hereby suppressed.
    V. CONCLUSION
    For all of the reasons listed above, the Defendant’s Motion to Suppress is
    GRANTED.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    /s/Jeffrey J Clark
    Judge
    27