Sims v. the State ( 2016 )


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  •                                SECOND DIVISION
    ANDREWS, P. J.,
    MILLER, P. J., and BRANCH, J.
    NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
    physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
    days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
    http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
    February 9, 2016
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A15A1836. SIMS v. THE STATE.
    ANDREWS, Presiding Judge.
    Benjamin Sims appeals from the trial court’s denial of his pre-trial motion to
    suppress evidence supporting the State’s accusation charging him with misdemeanor
    possession of marijuana and misdemeanor obstruction of law enforcement officers.1
    For the following reasons, we affirm the denial of the motion.
    Sims claims that, in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution, police officers: (a) illegally stopped and detained him for questioning
    without reasonable suspicion of criminal activity; (b) illegally arrested him for
    obstruction when he walked away from and resisted the unlawful detention; and (c)
    found marijuana on his person during an illegal search incident to the unlawful arrest.
    1
    We granted Sims’s application for an interlocutory appeal.
    In its order denying the motion to suppress, the trial court found that the officers
    lawfully attempted to detain Sims for questioning based on reasonable suspicion, and
    lawfully arrested him for obstruction when he resisted the detention. The sworn
    evidence at the motion hearing supports the trial court’s order.
    The State introduced the following testimony at the hearing on the motion:
    Officer Cook, who was employed as a police officer with the Athens-Clarke County
    Police Department, testified that he also worked off-duty providing security for the
    University Oaks Apartments. The Apartments were located in a high crime area
    plagued by burglaries, robberies, and illegal drug sales, and the Apartments hired
    Cook and other police officers to provide off-duty security against these criminal
    activities. The off-duty officers worked for the Apartments in full police uniform and
    used their police patrol vehicles. The Apartments specifically asked the off-duty
    officers to look for non-residents on the Apartments property engaging in criminal
    activity. Officer Cook first encountered Sims on the Apartments property a few days
    prior to the present incident. While providing off-duty security, Cook investigated the
    smell of burning marijuana coming from one of the apartments. After the apartment
    resident admitted that marijuana was being smoked inside the apartment, Cook
    elected not to make arrests, but warned the resident and the other individuals in the
    2
    apartment (including Sims who did not live there) that smoking marijuana was an
    illegal activity not allowed on the property. A few days later, while Cook was again
    providing off-duty security for the Apartments property, he repeatedly saw Sims and
    another person he did not recognize coming out from behind different buildings on
    the Apartments property over a period of time. At that point Officer Cook knew that
    Sims was not a resident of the Apartments; could not confirm that the other person
    was a resident; knew that Sims had recently been using marijuana on the property;
    knew of the problem with non-residents coming on the property to engage in criminal
    activity; and knew of recent burglaries and recent narcotics sales on the property.
    Given these facts, along with the unusual movement by Sims and the other person
    from behind building to building on the property, Cook suspected that Sims and the
    other person may be non-residents engaged in criminal activity on the property. To
    investigate this suspicion, Cook drove up to Sims and the other person in his patrol
    vehicle. Without exiting the vehicle, Cook rolled down the window, said to Sims, “I
    know you’re not a resident,” and asked the other person, “[D]o you live here, sir?” In
    response to this question, Sims told the other person not to answer, cursed at the
    officer, and both men walked away. Cook parked his patrol car, got out, followed
    behind the two men as they walked away, identified himself as a police officer hired
    3
    by the Apartments, and attempted to stop the men . But the men refused to stop,
    continued to curse at the officer, and continued to walk away. At that point, Officer
    Cook called for backup, and a second police officer arrived, Officer Herring, who was
    patrolling on-duty in the area. When Herring arrived, he saw the two men walking
    away from Cook. Cook explained his suspicion to Herring and asked Herring to “see
    if you can talk some sense into them.” Herring walked ahead of the two men and tried
    to get them to stop and answer questions about what they were doing at the
    Apartments property, but neither man would stop or answer questions. The men
    continued to walk away and act in a belligerent fashion toward the officers. Officer
    Herring eventually said he “pretty much had enough,” reached for his handcuffs, and
    moved toward Sims. Sims said “You’re not going to put those on me,” and either ran
    or walked away at a fast pace to avoid the officer. At that point, Officer Herring
    caught and handcuffed Sims, who continued to physically resist the officers.
    Sims claims that he lawfully exercised his right as a citizen to simply walk
    away from the officers because they had no basis under the Fourth Amendment to
    4
    stop and question him to investigate any suspicion of criminal activity, and no basis
    to arrest him when he refused to stop and answer their questions.2
    [E]ncounters between police officers and citizens come in three
    varieties, at least as far as the Fourth Amendment is concerned: [tier
    one] encounters involving no coercion or detention, which are outside
    the purview of the Fourth Amendment altogether; [tier two] brief
    seizures, which require an officer to have a reasonable suspicion of
    criminal wrongdoing; and [tier three] custodial arrests, which require
    probable cause.
    Culpepper v. State, 
    312 Ga. App. 115
    , 118 (717 SE2d 698) (2011) (Citation and
    punctuation omitted). In a tier one encounter involving no coercion or detention,
    “police officers may approach citizens, ask for identification, and freely question the
    citizen without any basis or belief that the citizen is involved in criminal activity, as
    long as the officers do not detain the citizen or create the impression that the citizen
    may not leave.” 
    Id.
     (Citation and punctuation omitted). The touchstone of this kind
    of encounter is the right of the citizen not to answer the officer’s questions and to
    walk or even run away. Ewumi v. State, 
    315 Ga. App. 656
    , 658 (727 SE2d 257)
    2
    Even though Officer Cook was providing off-duty security for the Apartments
    during the events at issue, he was still at all times acting in the discharge of his
    official duties as a police officer. “[A]ll law enforcement officers have the general
    duty to enforce the law and maintain the peace. They carry this duty twenty-four
    hours a day, on and off duty.” Stryker v. State, 
    297 Ga. App. 493
    , 494 (677 SE2d 680)
    (2009) (Citation and punctuation omitted).
    5
    (2012). We agree with the trial court that the facts show this was not a tier one
    police–citizen encounter, and that Sims was not entitled to resist and walk away.
    Rather, this was an attempted tier two encounter in which the police officers tried to
    stop and detain Sims based on reasonable suspicion of criminal wrongdoing.
    The Fourth Amendment allows a police officer to stop persons . . . to
    investigate the officer’s reasonable suspicion “that the person stopped
    is, or is about to be, engaged in criminal activity.” United States v.
    Cortez, 
    449 U. S. 411
    , 417 (101 SC[ t] 90, 66 LE2d 621) (1981); Terry
    v. Ohio, 
    392 U. S. 1
    , 9 (88 SC[t] 1868, 20 LE2d 889) (1968); Vansant
    v. State, 
    264 Ga. 319
    , 320 (443 SE2d 474) (1994). To establish the
    necessary reasonable suspicion to make an investigative stop, the totality
    of the circumstances must show that the officer had “specific and
    articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from
    those facts, . . . [provided] a particularized and objective basis for
    suspecting the particular person stopped of criminal activity.”
    (Punctuation omitted.) Vansant, 
    supra at 320
    . Although an investigative
    stop cannot be based on an officer’s mere hunch that criminal activity
    is afoot, “[t]his process allows officers to draw on their own experience
    and specialized training to make inferences from and deductions about
    the cumulative information available to them that might well elude an
    untrained person.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.) United States v.
    Arvizu, 
    534 U. S. 266
    , 273 (122 SC[t] 744, 151 LE2d 740) (2002). In
    considering the totality of the circumstances in each case, a court must
    avoid evaluating the facts in isolation. Even where each in a series of
    acts may be susceptible to an innocent explanation, taken together they
    may collectively amount to reasonable suspicion justifying an officer’s
    investigative stop. 
    Id. at 274-275
    . Moreover, “[a] determination that
    reasonable suspicion exists . . . need not rule out the possibility of
    innocent conduct.” 
    Id. at 277
    .
    Rolfe v. State, 
    278 Ga. App. 605
    , 606-607 (630 SE2d 438) (2006).
    6
    Applying these standards, we find under the totality of the circumstances that
    Officers Cook and Herring had a reasonable suspicion that Sims was, or was about
    to be, engaged in criminal activity on the Apartments property. Officer Cook saw
    Sims, who he knew was not a resident, and another person he could not identify as
    a resident, moving about in unusual ways behind various buildings on the Apartments
    property. Although it was certainly possible that the two men were engaged in
    innocent conduct, the officer also knew of Sims’s recent involvement with marijuana
    on the Apartments property, knew of continuing problems with non-residents
    engaged in criminal activity on the property, and knew of recent burglaries and illegal
    drug sales on the property. All of this knowledge, along with the officer’s
    observations, supported reasonable inferences that led him to suspect that Sims and
    the person with him were engaged in criminal activity on the property. Moreover,
    when Cook approached Sims and the other person and attempted to determine if the
    other person was a resident of the Apartments property, Sims told the other person not
    to answer the officer. This conduct was additional suspicious behavior. Taken
    together, the circumstances were sufficient to give the officers a particularized and
    objective basis for reasonable suspicion to stop Sims and the other person to
    investigate.
    7
    Accordingly, the facts show that Officers Cook and Herring had lawful
    authority under the Fourth Amendment to detain and question Sims in a tier two
    encounter, and that the officers attempted repeatedly to exercise that authority.
    Because the facts show that Sims refused to submit to the assertion of that authority,
    Sims was not seized in a tier two encounter. State v. Walker, 
    295 Ga. 888
    , 890-895
    (764 SE2d 804) (2014). Rather, Sims’s continued resistance to the officers’ lawful
    authority to conduct a tier two encounter provided the officers with probable cause
    to arrest Sims for obstruction. McClary v. State, 
    292 Ga. App. 184
    , 187 (663 SE2d
    809) (2008); Spence v. State, 
    295 Ga. App. 583
    , 586 (672 SE2d 538) (2009); State
    v. Quarterman, 
    333 Ga. App. 803
     (777 SE2d 489) (2015). It follows that the trial
    court did not err in denying Sims’s motion to suppress.
    Judgment affirmed. Miller, P. J., and Branch, J., concur.
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A15A1836

Judges: Andrews, Miller, Branch

Filed Date: 2/18/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/8/2024