Ways v. State , 199 A.3d 101 ( 2018 )


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  •         IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    BRANDON WAYS,                          §
    §     No. 547, 2017
    Defendant Below,                 §
    Appellant,                       §     Court Below: Superior Court
    §     of the State of Delaware
    v.                               §
    §     
    ID. No. 1611002979
    (S)
    STATE OF DELAWARE,                     §
    §
    Plaintiff Below,                 §
    Appellee.                        §
    Submitted: October 10, 2018
    Decided: December 10, 2018
    Before VALIHURA, VAUGHN, and SEITZ, Justices.
    Upon appeal from the Superior Court. AFFIRMED.
    Jerome M. Capone, Esquire, Assistant Public Defender, Georgetown, Delaware, for
    Appellant, Brandon Ways.
    Abby Adams, Esquire, Deputy Attorney General, Georgetown, Delaware, for
    Appellee, State of Delaware.
    VAUGHN, Justice:
    I. INTRODUCTION
    Appellant, Brandon Ways, appeals from a Superior Court jury verdict finding
    him guilty of Aggravated Possession of Heroin in a Tier 5 Quantity, Drug Dealing
    in a Tier 4 Quantity, and Conspiracy in the Second Degree. These charges were the
    result of a year-long investigation by the Delaware State Police and the Seaford
    Police Department into a large-scale drug trafficking operation of Ways and his
    associate, Torontay Mann.     Ways’s co-defendant, Angeline Metelus, was also
    charged with these same crimes as a result of the investigation. She was driving
    Ways’s blue Jeep Cherokee (the “jeep”) when the police followed it to an area in
    New Jersey. Through their investigation, the police had been informed that Ways
    bought a large amount of cocaine and heroin every two weeks from sources in New
    Jersey. They also knew from experience that New Jersey was a source for drugs
    transported into Delaware.    Upon the jeep’s return to Delaware, Metelus was
    stopped and the jeep was searched pursuant to a search warrant. Approximately
    1,300 grams of heroin were found in a hidden compartment.
    Ways makes two claims on appeal. First, he contends that the Superior Court
    abused its discretion by denying his motion to suppress all evidence derived from
    the State’s use of a mobile tracking device (“MTD”) to track the jeep in the State of
    New Jersey. Ways argues that the out-of-state tracking violated his rights under the
    Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, Article I, § 6 of the Delaware
    1
    Constitution, and 
    11 Del. C
    . § 2304 because (1) those provisions do not permit a
    Delaware judge to issue a warrant to track a vehicle after it leaves the state and (2)
    no New Jersey judge authorized the use of the MTD in New Jersey. Second, Ways
    contends that the Superior Court erred by denying his motion for judgment of
    acquittal, arguing that the State failed to prove the predicate element of venue for
    any charge in the indictment.1
    We find that the Superior Court should be affirmed on both claims. First, we
    conclude that even if the out-of-state tracking did violate either of the constitutional
    provisions or the statute, the heroin the police found when they searched the jeep
    inevitably would have been discovered, and therefore suppression was not required,
    because the search was conducted pursuant to a valid search warrant that did not
    depend upon any evidence derived from the out-of-state tracking. Second, we
    conclude that the State presented sufficient evidence for a rational fact finder to
    conclude that at least one count in the indictment, the conspiracy charge, occurred
    in Sussex County, and therefore, venue was properly proved as to all counts under
    Superior Court Rule of Criminal Procedure 18.
    1
    In presenting this issue Ways said the trial judge “abused her discretion” by denying the motion
    for judgment of acquittal, Appellant’s Opening Br. at 2, but Ways rightly noted that the standard
    of review for a motion for judgment of acquittal is actually de novo, 
    id. at 28;
    see also Cline v.
    State, 
    720 A.2d 891
    , 892 (Del. 1998).
    2
    II. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Ways was arrested on November 5, 2016, and was charged with the three
    crimes underlying this appeal. In the months prior to his arrest (since October
    2015), the police were investigating Ways and Mann’s large-scale drug trafficking
    operation. As part of the investigation, on or about September 23, 2016, they
    requested and obtained a Superior Court warrant authorizing the police to install and
    use an MTD on the jeep. The police were told by a confidential informant that
    Ways and Mann had obtained the jeep to transport large amounts of heroin and that
    the jeep had a large aftermarket hidden compartment for that purpose.
    Although the search warrant authorizing the police to install and use the MTD
    on the jeep (the “MTD warrant”) did not contain an express geographic limitation
    for tracking, it provided that the MTD “is to be installed within the State of
    Delaware.”2 It also noted, “Information likely to be obtained by the [MTD] will
    relate to violations of the Delaware Criminal Code, including but not limited to
    [drug] offenses . . . transpiring within Sussex, Delaware.”3 The police installed the
    MTD on the jeep in Delaware on October 14, 2016.
    On November 4, 2016, the police were alerted by the MTD that the jeep had
    moved to the Walmart parking lot in Seaford, Delaware (in Sussex County). They
    2
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A3, D.I. 19.
    3
    
    Id. 3 responded
    by sending officers to conduct physical surveillance of the jeep at that
    location. The officers arrived at approximately 11:00 a.m. While surveilling the
    jeep, the police observed Ways arrive in a green Dodge Ram, which was associated
    with Mann. Ways exited the passenger side of the Dodge Ram and entered and
    exited the jeep multiple times, moving from the rear seat to the driver’s seat and
    reaching deep into the cargo area. At one point, they observed Ways transfer a large
    item (possibly a duffel bag) from the Dodge Ram to deep inside the cargo area of
    the jeep.   This behavior, the police believed, based upon their training and
    experience, was consistent with storing drugs and currency inside a hidden
    compartment. The police then observed Ways drive the jeep a short distance to the
    Seaford Food Lion parking lot. The Dodge Ram followed. The police then saw
    Ways toss an unknown object into the back of the Dodge Ram and walk away. The
    Dodge Ram then departed.
    At approximately 4:20 p.m. on that same day, while visually surveilling the
    jeep in the Food Lion parking lot, the police observed an unknown female,
    subsequently identified as co-defendant Metelus, get into the jeep and drive away.
    They followed Metelus north through Delaware, over the Delaware Memorial
    Bridge into New Jersey, and up the New Jersey Turnpike to northern New Jersey,
    while the chief investigating officer tracked the MTD from Troop 4 in Georgetown,
    Delaware.
    4
    At approximately 7:40 p.m., Metelus took an exit off the New Jersey
    Turnpike. Sometime before then, the police lost MTD functionality but continued
    to maintain physical surveillance as they followed behind her. After she turned off
    the exit, however, they also lost physical surveillance in the high-density area off the
    Turnpike. About 20 minutes later, MTD functionality was restored, which enabled
    the police to reestablish physical surveillance. The police continued to follow her
    through the streets of the high-density area.
    Eventually, at about 8:26 p.m., she stopped at a residence at 71 Mitchell Street.
    The police conducted drive-by surveillance and observed an unknown man speaking
    with Metelus as she was seated in the jeep. After about nine minutes, Metelus drove
    off. After the jeep left the residence, it was driven around “aimlessly without a
    destination,” repeating the same pattern three times.4 After stopping briefly at a
    location known as Pilot Place, where the police observed nothing unusual, the jeep
    returned to 71 Mitchell Street at approximately 9:01 p.m. The jeep was there for
    about 51 minutes. The police again conducted “drive by” surveillance rather than
    stationary surveillance and observed nothing of significance.             The jeep then
    departed and was later seen to stop in a parking lot on Central Street, where it
    remained for several minutes. Nothing of significance was seen while the jeep was
    stopped there.
    4
    App. to Appellant’s Reply Br. at B132.
    5
    The jeep then left that location and began its return to Delaware. The police
    continued to follow the jeep. In argument before the trial court, the State also
    indicated that the police had approximately three units stationed near the Delaware
    Memorial Bridge awaiting the jeep’s return to Delaware and that they could have set
    up a “geo fence” to alert them when the MTD (and thus the jeep) crossed the
    Delaware Memorial Bridge and returned to Delaware.5
    While this was happening, the police requested and were granted a warrant to
    search the jeep (the “jeep search warrant”) upon its expected return to Delaware.
    The application and affidavit in support of the jeep search warrant recited many of
    the same facts as the application for the MTD warrant, including information from
    four cooperating individuals, two of whom made controlled purchases of heroin
    from Ways and his girlfriend and one of whom told the police that Ways would be
    using the jeep because it had a larger hidden compartment than his other trafficking
    vehicle. The affidavit also detailed Ways’s encounter with the jeep that the police
    had observed earlier that day.
    Importantly, the application and affidavit did not rely on any information
    obtained solely from tracking the jeep with the MTD while it was outside of
    Delaware. The affidavit explained that the police had been conducting “physical
    5
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A228 (“The [MTD] had already been set up with a ‘geo
    fence’ alerting officers when the vehicle crossed the Kent and Sussex county border.”).
    6
    surveillance” of the jeep (which was parked) on November 4, 2016,6 when Metelus
    got in and drove off and that the police followed as she traveled through Delaware
    and into New Jersey.           It provided, “On November 4, 2016, surveillance was
    maintained [on] Angeline Metelus who was still operating the Jeep . . . . Angeline
    Metelus was followed to a location known for high drug trafficking.”7 It concluded,
    “From training and experience it appeared Angeline Metelus made this trip
    specifically to New Jersey to obtained [sic] an amount of illegal narcotic and will be
    back en-route to be distributed in Sussex County, Delaware.”8 The affidavit did not
    recite any of the police’s observations that were made after the police lost (and
    subsequently regained) visual surveillance of the jeep in New Jersey.
    Pursuant to the jeep search warrant, the police stopped and searched the jeep
    in Dover, Delaware.           In the jeep, the police found a concealed aftermarket
    compartment that contained approximately 1,300 grams of heroin. Thereafter, the
    police stopped Ways, who was driving a different car in Seaford, Delaware, and took
    him into custody.
    Prior to trial, Ways filed an Omnibus Motion to Suppress that included the
    suppression argument he now raises on appeal as well as several others not pertinent
    here. Ways argued that the police exceeded their authority under the MTD warrant
    6
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A147, ¶ 35.
    7
    
    Id. at A151,
    ¶ 38.
    8
    
    Id. 7 when
    they tracked the jeep outside of Delaware because the MTD warrant did not,
    and could not, authorize out-of-state tracking. According to Ways, “Without a valid
    New Jersey [MTD] order, the Delaware police engaged in a warrantless search by
    monitoring [the MTD] in the State of New Jersey.”9
    The Superior Court denied Ways’s motion to suppress. The court found that
    the issuing court had the authority to order the attachment of the MTD within
    Delaware and that such authority was sufficient to authorize the police to track the
    jeep, whether or not it remained within the boundaries of Delaware.
    The indictment charged Ways and co-defendant Metelus with Aggravated
    Possession of Heroin in a Tier 5 Quantity, Drug Dealing in a Tier 4 Quantity, and
    Conspiracy in the Second Degree. The indictment identified Sussex County as the
    venue in which all alleged offenses took place. At the conclusion of the State’s case
    at trial, Ways (joined by Metelus) moved for judgment of acquittal on all counts,
    contending that the State failed to prove venue for each count beyond a reasonable
    doubt. The Superior Court denied the motion, finding that any challenge to venue
    had been waived under Rule 12 and, in addition, venue was proper under Rule 18 of
    the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure, which provides that venue is proper
    in the county in which any one of the charged offenses occurred. The court
    determined that the jury could conclude, from the evidence presented, that the
    9
    
    Id. at A221,
    ¶ 41.
    8
    conspiracy (Count 3) began in Sussex County, making Sussex County a proper
    venue under Rule 18. The court then permitted the State to amend the indictment
    to specify that Counts 1 and 2 took place in Kent County.
    III. DISCUSSION
    A. Motion to Suppress
    “We review the grant or denial of a motion to suppress for an abuse of
    discretion.”10    “[T]his Court will defer to the factual findings of a Superior Court
    judge unless those findings are clearly erroneous.”11          We review the trial judge’s
    application of the law to his or her factual findings de novo.12
    Because we conclude that the heroin found in the jeep inevitably would have
    been discovered, we do not address the difficult constitutional and statutory issues
    raised in this appeal, and we express no opinion thereon.                   “The ‘inevitable
    discovery’ exception to the exclusionary rule ‘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 means in the absence of official misconduct.”’”13 Here, even absent the
    10
    Lopez-Vazquez v. State, 
    956 A.2d 1280
    , 1285 (Del. 2008).
    11
    State v. Rollins, 
    922 A.2d 379
    , 382 (Del. 2007).
    12
    Burrell v. State, 
    953 A.2d 957
    , 960 (Del. 2008).
    
    13 Hard. v
    . State, 
    844 A.2d 982
    , 987 (Del. 2004) (emphasis added) (quoting Cook v. State, 
    374 A.2d 264
    , 267-68 (Del. 1977)); see also Reed v. State, 
    89 A.3d 477
    , 
    2014 WL 1494098
    , at *2 (Del.
    Apr. 14, 2014) (Table) (finding no inevitable discovery where the police could have arrested the
    driver and then searched him incident to arrest for driving without a license but would not have
    because “the standard practice is not to arrest [an unlicensed] driver”).
    9
    out-of-state tracking, the police inevitably would have relocated and searched the
    jeep and thus found the heroin.
    First and most importantly, as previously mentioned, the jeep search warrant
    application and affidavit, contrary to Ways’s argument in his brief, did not rely on
    any information obtained solely as a result of the out-of-state tracking, and Ways
    does not otherwise challenge the sufficiency of the probable cause for the jeep search
    warrant.      The affidavit detailed how the police had been conducting “physical
    surveillance” of the jeep on November 4, 2016, 14 and explained that the police
    observed Metelus get into the Jeep and drive north through Delaware and into New
    Jersey. It continued, “On November 4, 2016, surveillance was maintained [on]
    Angeline Metelus who was still operating the jeep . . . . Angeline Metelus was
    followed to a location known for high drug trafficking.”15 This information was
    obtained through visual surveillance. The affidavit did not recite any of the police
    observations that were made after the police lost (and subsequently regained) visual
    surveillance of the jeep.
    Second, even without the aid of the MTD to relocate the jeep in New Jersey,
    the police would have regained visual surveillance of the jeep once it returned to
    Delaware for two reasons. For one, the police had three units stationed at the
    14
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A147, ¶ 35.
    15
    
    Id. at A147,
    ¶ 35.
    10
    Delaware Memorial Bridge awaiting its return and the jeep returned to Delaware via
    that route, meaning the police likely would have resumed visual surveillance at that
    point. Additionally, the police could have—and it is reasonable to conclude they
    would have—used the MTD both (1) to alert them when the jeep crossed back into
    Delaware and (2) to track and thereby relocate the jeep in Delaware.
    For these reasons, we find under these circumstances that the police inevitably
    would have relocated the jeep in Delaware, executed the search warrant, and
    discovered the heroin. Denial of Ways’s motion to suppress was not error.
    B. Motion for Judgment of Acquittal
    We review an appeal from the denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal de
    novo.16 Specifically, we examine “whether any rational trier of fact, viewing the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the State, could find a defendant guilty
    beyond a reasonable doubt of all the elements of the crime. For the purposes of this
    inquiry, this Court does not distinguish between direct and circumstantial
    evidence.”17
    In addition to proving each element of an offense, “[f]acts establishing
    jurisdiction and venue . . . must also be proved as elements of the offense.”18 Venue
    16
    
    Cline, 720 A.2d at 892
    .
    17
    Id.
    18
    
    11 Del. C
    . § 232; see also 
    id. § 301(b)
    (requiring each element of an offense to be proved beyond
    a reasonable doubt).
    11
    “shall be had in the county in which the offense is alleged to have been committed.”19
    But when two or more offenses are charged in the same indictment, “the prosecution
    may be had in any county in which one or more of the offenses is alleged to have
    been committed.”20 The situs of the crime “may be established by inference.”21
    Ways contends that 
    11 Del. C
    . § 232 requires venue to be proved for each
    crime as a separate element of each crime and that Superior Court Rule of Criminal
    Procedure 18 cannot expand the statutory requirement because “[i]n cases of conflict
    between rules of court and state statutes, the statutes prevail.”22 However, when §
    232 is read together with Rule 18, it is apparent that venue for the trial as a whole
    (not each offense individually) must be proved as an element. That is, so long as
    the State proves beyond a reasonable doubt that at least one of the indicted crimes
    occurred in the county in which the trial court sits, venue is established as to all
    offenses properly joined in the indictment under Rule 18.
    Here, venue was proved as to Counts 1 and 2 of the indictment under Rule 18
    because Count 3, the conspiracy charge, made Sussex County a proper venue for the
    trial. The State presented evidence showing that Count 3 occurred (at least in part)
    19
    Super. Ct. Crim. R. 18.
    20
    
    Id. 21 Thornton
    v. State, 
    405 A.2d 126
    , 127 (Del. 1979) (per curiam).
    22
    Appellant’s Opening Br. at 30 (quoting 2 Norman J. Singer & J.D. Shambie Singer, Sutherland
    Statutes and Statutory Construction § 36.6 (7th ed.)).
    12
    in Sussex County. Therefore, the Superior Court did not err in denying Ways’s
    motion for judgment of acquittal.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the Superior Court did not err when it denied both
    Ways’s motion to suppress and his motion for judgment of acquittal. Accordingly,
    the judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed.
    13