Jesse Gregory Edmond v. Commonwealth of Virginia , 66 Va. App. 490 ( 2016 )


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  •                                          COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Humphreys, O’Brien and Malveaux
    PUBLISHED
    Argued at Richmond, Virginia
    JESSE GREGORY EDMOND
    OPINION BY
    v.     Record No. 0557-15-2                             JUDGE MARY BENNETT MALVEAUX
    AUGUST 2, 2016
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND
    Beverly W. Snukals, Judge
    Jennifer M. Newman (Jennifer M. Newman, P.C., on brief), for
    appellant.
    Benjamin H. Katz, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,
    Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Jesse Gregory Edmond (appellant) appeals his conviction for murder, in violation of Code
    § 18.2-32, robbery, in violation of Code § 18.2-58, conspiracy to commit robbery, in violation of
    Code §§ 18.2-58, -22, use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, in violation of Code
    § 18.2-53.1, and use of a firearm in commission of a felony, subsequent offense, in violation of
    Code § 18.2-53.1. He argues that the trial court erred when it denied his motion to suppress and
    subsequent motion to reconsider because the officer stopping the vehicle did not have reasonable
    suspicion for the stop. We disagree, and, for the following reasons, affirm the convictions.
    I. BACKGROUND
    On May 5, 2014, at 3:58 p.m., the City of Richmond Police Department received
    information that a crime was committed at Victoria Jewelers, located at 309 East Broad Street.
    Responding officers found the victim, Muhammad Haroon Baig, deceased with a gunshot wound
    to his head. Detective Michael Gouldman arrived to assist in the investigation. He noted that
    roughly half of the merchandise was missing from the display cases, the office in the back of the
    store had been “ransacked,” and the DVR recording system had been pulled out and smashed.
    The store’s owner confirmed that much of his merchandise was missing, as well as some cash
    that had been located below the register. The owner told police that he last spoke with Baig by
    phone at 2:44 p.m. that afternoon.
    Earlier that day, at approximately 12:30 p.m., Detective Christopher Henry of the
    Henrico Police Department received a report of a suspicious situation at a Citizen and Farmers
    Bank located in Henrico County. Once Henry arrived at the bank, a teller told him that she had
    observed a suspicious situation with a man and woman. The couple entered the bank together.
    The woman initially went to a teller’s station near the witness while the man stayed at a table in
    the center of the bank lobby. This station was experiencing computer issues. The woman was
    redirected to the witness’ teller station, and the man joined her there. The two spoke quietly with
    each other while at the teller station. The woman appeared to be wearing a wig and was holding
    a piece of paper that the teller believed was “some sort of a note.” When the bank teller asked
    the two individuals how she could help them, the man asked for change for a dollar. The teller
    told him that if he needed change, he could go to the convenience store across the street. The
    man and woman then left the bank. Surveillance footage from the bank captured the incident
    and the individuals involved.
    When the individuals left the bank, another teller went outside and saw them enter a blue
    Dodge Durango SUV with the Virginia license plate “VAR-5735.” The Durango’s hazard lights
    were on, and it was parked on the grass shoulder of the street where the bank was located.
    Detective Henry learned that the Durango was registered to Auto Plus Used Car Sales.
    After speaking with an Auto Plus manager, he learned that the Durango had been leased on May
    1, 2014. The manager told Henry that the vehicle was equipped with a GPS tracking device, and
    -2-
    he obtained the Durango’s GPS location for the detective. At approximately 2:30 p.m. on May
    5, the Durango was on North Third Street, just north of Broad Street, in the City of Richmond.
    Later that day, Henry saw a news story about the incident at Victoria Jewelers. Due to
    the proximity of the Durango to the jewelry store shortly before the robbery occurred, he
    contacted Detective Gouldman and gave him the information he had about the incident at the
    Citizen and Farmers Bank.
    The next day, May 6, 2014, Henry contacted the manager of Auto Plus and received an
    updated GPS location for the Durango, which placed it in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina.
    Henry provided this information to Gouldman. He also provided Gouldman with surveillance
    footage of the man and woman from the bank incident. Gouldman noted the distinctive
    appearance of the individuals in the video: the woman was wearing a sweater that had “bold
    up-and-down” stripes, boots, and a wig, while the man was wearing a green and white striped
    shirt. He also noticed that the woman appeared to be wearing glasses when she entered the bank,
    but that at some point she took them off and the man put them on.
    That same day, May 6, the Richmond Police Department contacted the U.S. Marshal’s
    fugitive unit for assistance in locating the Durango. Deputy Marshal Bryan Konig, supervisor of
    the U.S. Marshal’s Violent Fugitive Task Force in North Carolina, was contacted just prior to
    lunchtime and asked to locate a 2002 blue Dodge Durango “that was involved in a series of
    criminal activities that occurred on May the 5th in various areas of Eastern Virginia.” While on
    the way to Roanoke Rapids, he spoke with an officer from that jurisdiction who told him that he
    had successfully located the vehicle in response to a request by the Henrico County Police
    Department.1 Detective Gouldman personally contacted Konig during this period. In their initial
    1
    Detective Henry had also contacted the U.S. Marshal Service on May 6 and requested
    assistance in locating the vehicle. He relayed the information regarding the Citizen and Farmers
    -3-
    conversation, Gouldman told Konig that he did not have anything to directly connect the vehicle
    to the jewelry store incident. Gouldman did tell Konig that the criminal activity in Virginia
    involved an attempted bank robbery, a convenience store robbery,2 and a robbery and homicide
    at a jewelry store.
    Shortly after arriving in Roanoke Rapids, Konig located the vehicle and began
    surveillance. The Durango made several stops at local restaurants and stores. Throughout these
    stops, Konig frequently updated Detective Gouldman on the movements of the vehicle and its
    occupants.
    Later on May 6, Gouldman obtained surveillance footage from the Richmond
    Times-Dispatch building from May 5, the date of the robbery/homicide. The building had a
    movable security camera on the corner of Grace Street, which had a view of Broad Street and
    North Third Street, and also showed the entrance to an alleyway located between Grace Street
    and Broad Street. The back door of Victoria Jewelers opened into this alley. The only way to
    exit the alley was through North Third Street. The surveillance video, which had a time stamp of
    2:52 p.m., showed four individuals, three men and one woman, coming out of the alley carrying
    several large items, bags, and boxes. The individuals then loaded the items into a dark-colored
    Dodge Durango and proceeded south on Third Street towards Franklin Street. Of the four
    individuals, Gouldman could describe two men only as “wearing dark clothing.” However, the
    woman and other man “match[ed] the clothing descriptions to a tee exactly as the two
    individuals that were seen in the . . . [b]ank video.” He noted that the man was wearing “the
    Bank and Victoria Jewelers incidents and asked them to visually verify that the vehicle was in
    Roanoke Rapids. He requested the same verification from the Roanoke Rapids Police
    Department. Detective Henry did not have any direct contact with Deputy Marshal Konig during
    these communications.
    2
    The convenience store robbery occurred in Chesterfield County. Detective Gouldman
    was later unable to connect it to the other incidents that occurred on May 5, 2014.
    -4-
    green-and-white plaid shirt” and that the woman was wearing the “boldly striped sweater and
    boots.”
    After reviewing this video, Gouldman called Deputy Marshal Konig at around 5:00 p.m.
    and told him about the additional surveillance footage. He told Konig that he wanted to have the
    vehicle stopped in order to identify the occupants, but he did not want anyone arrested at that
    time. Konig told Gouldman that one of the vehicle’s tail lights was out.3 Gouldman decided to
    ask local law enforcement to stop the vehicle. Gouldman directed Konig to have the local
    agency conduct the stop so as not to alert the occupants that the U.S. Marshal Service was
    involved. At the time, Konig believed that a broken tail light was a traffic infraction under North
    Carolina law. Konig asked Officer Kristopher Jordan of the Roanoke Rapids Police Department
    to stop the vehicle without alerting the occupants of the Marshal Service’s involvement. Konig
    advised Jordan that two brake lights were not functioning and that the vehicle was “involved in
    criminal activity in Eastern Virginia.” At the time of the stop, Officer Jordan knew that a broken
    tail light was not an infraction under North Carolina law, and made the stop solely to identify the
    occupants for Konig.4
    Once the Durango was stopped, Officer Jordan relayed the occupants’ information to
    Konig, who then provided the same information to Detective Gouldman. From Konig,
    Gouldman learned the identities of the occupants of the Durango: appellant, Anthony Lenard,
    Jermeaka Gorham, and Tiandra Gregory.
    3
    In Gouldman’s report of the incident, he wrote that the vehicle was stopped because it
    had “a tail light out for defective equipment.” The report also stated that “Gouldman advised
    Konig there was no probable cause to arrest at that time” for the Virginia crimes.
    4
    At the suppression hearing, the prosecution conceded that at the time of the traffic stop,
    there was no broken tail light infraction under North Carolina law.
    -5-
    After obtaining DMV photos of all four individuals, Gouldman identified Lenard and
    Gorham as the two persons involved in the Henrico County bank incident. Gouldman obtained
    warrants to arrest Lenard and Gorham for conspiracy to commit murder. Lenard was already
    under arrest from the traffic stop for an outstanding grand larceny warrant. Once Gorham was
    arrested, she made a statement to a Roanoke Rapids officer: “Why are you only arresting me?
    You just looked the killer in the eyes and let him walk away.” Based on that statement,
    Gouldman obtained a warrant for appellant for conspiracy to commit murder.
    On October 31, 2014, appellant filed a motion to suppress the evidence, alleging it was
    obtained during the course of an illegal seizure under the Fourth Amendment. At the hearing on
    the motion to suppress, held December 2, 2014, the Commonwealth argued that the seizure was
    valid, relying on the collective knowledge doctrine. The trial court found that the collective
    knowledge doctrine applied and denied the motion to suppress.
    On February 4, 2015, appellant was found guilty by a jury of murder, robbery, conspiracy
    to commit robbery, use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, and use of a firearm in the
    commission of a felony, subsequent offense. On March 17, 2015, appellant filed a motion to
    reconsider denial of the motion to suppress. The trial court denied appellant’s motion to
    reconsider.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    When challenging the denial of a motion to suppress evidence on appeal, the defendant
    bears the burden of establishing that reversible error occurred. Glenn v. Commonwealth, 
    275 Va. 123
    , 130, 
    654 S.E.2d 910
    , 913 (2008). The determination of whether reasonable suspicion
    exists “involve[s] questions of both law and fact” and consequently is reviewed de novo on
    appeal. McGee v. Commonwealth, 
    25 Va. App. 193
    , 197, 
    487 S.E.2d 259
    , 261 (1997) (en banc).
    In conducting this review, the Court is “bound by the trial court’s findings of historical fact
    -6-
    unless ‘plainly wrong’ or without evidence to support them[,] and we give due weight to the
    inferences drawn from those facts by resident judges and local law enforcement officers.” 
    Id. at 198,
    487 S.E.2d at 261.
    The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that “[t]he right of the
    people to be secure in their persons . . . against unreasonable searches and seizures[] shall not be
    violated.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. “[W]hen the police stop a motor vehicle and detain an
    occupant, this constitutes a seizure of the person for Fourth Amendment purposes.” Logan v.
    Commonwealth, 
    19 Va. App. 437
    , 441, 
    452 S.E.2d 364
    , 367 (1994) (en banc) (quoting
    Zimmerman v. Commonwealth, 
    234 Va. 609
    , 611, 
    363 S.E.2d 708
    , 709 (1988)). “In order to
    justify an investigatory stop of a vehicle, the officer must have some reasonable, articulable
    suspicion that the vehicle or its occupants are involved in, or have recently been involved in,
    some form of criminal activity.” 
    Id. “A reasonable
    suspicion is more than an ‘unparticularized
    suspicion or “hunch.”’” Bass v. Commonwealth, 
    259 Va. 470
    , 475, 
    525 S.E.2d 921
    , 923 (2000)
    (quoting Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 27 (1968)). “However, it is something less than probable
    cause.” Jackson v. Commonwealth, 
    267 Va. 666
    , 673, 
    594 S.E.2d 595
    , 598 (2004). We “must
    consider the totality of the circumstances in determining whether a police officer had a
    particularized and objective basis for suspecting that a person stopped may be involved in
    criminal activity.” 
    Bass, 259 Va. at 475
    , 525 S.E.2d at 924.
    III. ANALYSIS
    On appeal, appellant claims Deputy Marshal Konig did not have a reasonable, articulable
    suspicion that criminal activity was afoot inside the Durango at the time of the stop. He further
    asserts that any knowledge Konig possessed of any criminal activity was speculative and not
    communicated to Officer Jordan, who stopped the Durango. Further, appellant argues that law
    enforcement only learned the identity of the occupants as a result of the illegal stop, and
    -7-
    therefore, under Zimmerman, 
    234 Va. 609
    , 
    363 S.E.2d 708
    , appellant’s identity should be
    suppressed. Contrary to appellant’s assertions, we find that Officer Jordan, under the collective
    knowledge doctrine, lawfully stopped the vehicle in which appellant was riding.
    A. Collective Knowledge Doctrine: Origins and Adoption
    The collective knowledge doctrine was discussed in dicta in the United States Supreme
    Court’s decision in Whiteley v. Warden, 
    401 U.S. 560
    , 568 (1971). In Whiteley, a county
    sheriff, acting on an informer’s tip, issued an arrest warrant for two suspects based on “nothing
    more than the [sheriff’s] conclusion that the individuals named therein perpetrated the offense
    described in the complaint.” 
    Id. at 565.
    A radio bulletin was issued on a state-wide police
    network with a description of the suspects and the crime allegedly committed. The bulletin
    further indicated that arrest warrants for both individuals had been issued. An officer in another
    county, relying on this bulletin, arrested the two men.
    The Court first reviewed the warrant for probable cause and found it lacking. However,
    in support of upholding the arrests, the state argued that the police relied on the radio bulletin for
    the arrest, not the issuing officer’s unnamed informant, and thus the arrest was proper. While the
    Court did not find this argument persuasive, it did note that,
    [w]e do not, of course, question that the Laramie police were
    entitled to act on the strength of the radio bulletin. Certainly police
    officers called upon to aid other officers in executing arrest
    warrants are entitled to assume that the officers requesting aid
    offered the magistrate the information requisite to support an
    independent judicial assessment of probable cause. Where,
    however, the contrary turns out to be true, an otherwise illegal
    arrest cannot be insulated from challenge by the decision of the
    instigating officer to rely on fellow officers to make the arrest.
    
    Id. at 568.
    Thus, the court indicated that an officer could stop an individual based upon probable
    cause determinations made by other law enforcement agencies.
    -8-
    The Supreme Court further developed this principle in the context of reasonable
    suspicion in United States v. Hensley, 
    469 U.S. 221
    (1985). In Hensley, the police interviewed
    an informant who told them that the defendant had driven the getaway car during an armed
    robbery. A “wanted flyer” was then issued, and an officer from another jurisdiction stopped the
    defendant based upon this flyer. The Supreme Court first determined that the officer who issued
    the “wanted flyer” possessed a reasonable suspicion that defendant was involved in an armed
    robbery. It then upheld the evidence seized during the Terry stop5 even though the arresting
    officer relying on the flyer did not know the factual basis of suspicion, because the “police who
    issued the flyer or bulletin possessed a reasonable suspicion justifying a stop.” 
    Id. at 233.
    The
    Court in Hensley reasoned that “if a flyer or bulletin has been issued on the basis of articulable
    facts supporting a reasonable suspicion that the wanted person has committed an offense, then
    reliance on that flyer or bulletin justifies a stop.” 
    Id. at 232.
    The Court further noted that
    Whiteley supports the proposition that, when evidence is
    uncovered during a search incident to an arrest in reliance merely
    on a flyer or bulletin, its admissibility turns on whether the officers
    who issued the flyer possessed probable cause to make the arrest.
    It does not turn on whether those relying on the flyer were
    themselves aware of the specific facts which led their colleagues to
    seek their assistance.
    
    Id. at 231.
    The Court acknowledged that in the modern era, with increased mobility of criminal
    suspects and their ability to flee across jurisdictional boarders, law enforcement’s reliance on
    these bulletins allows them to act promptly. 
    Id. For these
    reasons, the Court found that the “rule
    is a matter of common sense.” 
    Id. Thus, the
    Whiteley and Hensley decisions support the
    premise that where an officer’s action is directed by another officer, that action is proper as long
    5
    See Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    (1968).
    -9-
    as the directing officer has the requisite knowledge to justify the action under the appropriate
    legal standard.
    Many federal circuit courts have addressed the collective knowledge doctrine and its
    rationale, including the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in United States v.
    Massenburg, 
    654 F.3d 480
    (4th Cir. 2011).6 In Massenburg, two officers responded to an
    anonymous tip about shots having been fired in a high crime area. They encountered four men,
    including the defendant. The officers asked the individuals if they would consent to be searched.
    Two of the men complied voluntarily, but Massenburg did not. Instead of agreeing to be
    searched, he stated that he did not need to be searched, then “air-patted himself down . . . trying
    to show he didn’t have anything.” 
    Id. at 483.
    One officer nevertheless frisked him involuntarily,
    and recovered a gun and a small amount of marijuana. The second officer testified that prior to
    the frisk he observed what he believed to be a small bulge in Massenburg’s jacket, but he did not
    communicate this to the officer who conducted the frisk.
    In Massenburg, the government argued that, under the collective knowledge doctrine, the
    non-frisking officer’s uncommunicated observation of a bulge in defendant’s jacket could be
    imputed to the frisking officer and thus serve as a basis for reasonable suspicion to conduct the
    pat down. The Fourth Circuit rejected this expansive interpretation of the doctrine. It explained
    the doctrine, “as enunciated by the Supreme Court, holds that when an officer acts on an
    instruction from another officer, the act is justified if the instructing officer had sufficient
    information to justify taking such action herself; in this very limited sense, the instructing
    officer’s knowledge is imputed to the acting officer.” 
    Id. at 492.
    The court in Massenburg
    rejected the government’s argument that the uncommunicated knowledge of the two officers
    6
    See also United States v. Patiutka, 
    804 F.3d 684
    (4th Cir. 2015). We recognize that
    cases decided by the Fourth Circuit are persuasive and not binding upon this Court.
    - 10 -
    could be aggregated, stating that, “the collective-knowledge doctrine simply directs us to
    substitute the knowledge of the instructing officer or officers for the knowledge of the acting
    officer; it does not permit us to aggregate bits and pieces of information from among myriad
    officers, nor does it apply outside the context of communicated alerts or instructions.” 
    Id. at 493.
    Although this Court has not previously adopted the collective knowledge doctrine,7 we
    find that the principle derived from Whiteley, Hensley, and Massenburg—that an officer is
    justified in acting upon an instruction from another officer if the instructing officer had sufficient
    information to justify taking such action himself—is applicable in this case.8 We find that this
    principle both protects the Fourth Amendment privacy interest and recognizes important
    modern-day law enforcement realities. “The Fourth Amendment rights of the defendant are
    adequately protected by the requirement that the officers issuing the order or request have an
    adequate basis for doing so, such that if they were present at the scene, they could justifiably stop
    or arrest the suspect.” United States v. Nafzger, 
    974 F.2d 906
    , 911 (7th Cir. 1992). Thus, “[b]y
    imputing the investigating officer’s suspicions onto the responding officer, without requiring the
    responding officer to independently weigh the reasonable suspicion analysis, the collective
    knowledge doctrine ‘preserves the propriety of the stop’ and avoids crippling restrictions on our
    law enforcement.” United States v. Lyons, 
    687 F.3d 754
    , 766 (6th Cir. 2012) (quoting United
    States v. Ibarra-Sanchez, 
    199 F.3d 753
    , 760 (5th Cir. 1999)).
    7
    This Court first addressed the collective knowledge doctrine in White v.
    Commonwealth, 
    24 Va. App. 234
    , 
    481 S.E.2d 486
    , aff’d en banc on other grounds, 
    25 Va. App. 662
    , 
    492 S.E.2d 451
    (1997).
    8
    Our Supreme Court has recognized the principle from Henlsey and applied it in the
    context of imputed knowledge in Commonwealth v. Smith, 
    281 Va. 582
    , 
    709 S.E.2d 139
    (2011).
    In Smith, the Court held that Hensley permitted the imputation to frisking officers of the
    knowledge of officers who entered information into a police database, where the information
    indicated the suspect was “probably armed and a narcotics seller/user.” 
    Id. at 591-92,
    709 S.E.2d
    at 143.
    - 11 -
    B. Collective Knowledge Doctrine: Application
    Applying the collective knowledge doctrine to the instant matter, there are two crucial
    questions we must address. First, did the officer directing the stop have the requisite legal
    knowledge to stop the Durango? And, second, who was the instructing officer? Here, we find
    that Detective Gouldman possessed the reasonable articulable suspicion to effect the stop.
    Further, contrary to appellant’s assertion, we find that Detective Gouldman was the instructing
    officer.
    We first address the facts supporting reasonable suspicion for the stop. Detective
    Gouldman, through his investigation, developed information placing the Durango in the area of
    Victoria Jewelers at the time of the robbery and homicide. Detective Henry of the Henrico
    Police Department informed Gouldman that the Durango was in the vicinity of the crime scene at
    2:30 p.m. See Wells v. Commonwealth, 
    6 Va. App. 541
    , 552, 
    371 S.E.2d 19
    , 25 (1988)
    (“Proximity to the scene of a recently committed crime is another factor which police may
    consider in determining whether to engage in a Terry stop.”). From the Richmond
    Times-Dispatch surveillance video, Detective Gouldman was able to match by their clothing two
    individuals from both the incident at Citizen and Farmers Bank and the alley between Grace and
    Broad Streets, behind Victoria Jewelers. The surveillance footage, with a time stamp of
    2:52 p.m., showed these individuals and two men in dark clothing loading large items, bags, and
    boxes into a Dodge Durango. The store’s owner stated he last spoke with the decedent employee
    at 2:44 p.m. It was not until all of these facts were known to Gouldman that he requested the
    stop of the Dodge Durango.9 Here, Gouldman possessed more than an “unparticularized
    9
    At trial, Gouldman noted that in a previous conversation with Konig on the day of the
    stop, he told Konig that he did not have information linking the vehicle to the robbery and
    homicide. This conversation occurred before the discovery of the Richmond Times-Dispatch
    - 12 -
    suspicion or hunch” of possible criminal activity. Based on the totality of the circumstances, we
    hold that Gouldman possessed a reasonable, articulable suspicion that the vehicle and/or its
    occupants were involved in, or had recently been involved in, criminal activity.
    We now address the second question, the identity of the instructing officer. While
    appellant does not contest that Gouldman had reasonable suspicion for the stop, he argues that
    the stop was invalid because Konig was the instructing officer and did not have the information
    necessary for a finding of reasonable suspicion.10 However, we find that Konig was little more
    than a conduit or “go between” transmitting information to the Roanoke Rapids police to effect
    the stop. Detective Gouldman was the instructing officer in this case. Gouldman requested that
    Konig ask local law enforcement to stop the Durango and identify the occupants. Like the
    officer who issued the flyer in Hensley, Gouldman was the officer who initially developed the
    reasonable suspicion for the stop. Therefore, it is Gouldman’s knowledge that the Court must
    examine to determine whether the requisite knowledge for reasonable suspicion existed at the
    time of the stop.11 As discussed above, we find that Gouldman possessed the required
    knowledge.
    surveillance video. Until that time, Konig had been watching the occupants and the SUV, but
    had not engaged any of them or impeded the travel of the Durango.
    10
    On appeal, the Commonwealth argued that all the relevant information regarding
    reasonable suspicion that Gouldman had was communicated to Konig, who was the instructing
    officer. Therefore, Konig possessed reasonable articulable suspicion sufficient to stop the
    vehicle. While the Commonwealth’s argument is persuasive, because we find that Gouldman
    was the instructing officer, we need not address whether Konig had the necessary information to
    provide him with reasonable suspicion for the stop.
    11
    Appellant argues that Officer Jordan’s knowledge of some criminal activity alone was
    insufficient to effect the stop. We agree. However, Officer Jordan only stopped the Durango
    upon the request of Konig, who was following Gouldman’s request. Jordan was nothing more
    than the officer relying on the instructing officer’s request to stop the vehicle.
    - 13 -
    Appellant also argues that the facts in this case constitute an improper aggregation of
    knowledge as disavowed by the Fourth Circuit in Massenburg. This argument is unpersuasive.
    Massenburg specifically held that uncommunicated aggregation of knowledge between officers
    in an effort to create reasonable articulable suspicion violates the Fourth Amendment. Here,
    there was simply no aggregation of information at all. Gouldman possessed all of the
    information necessary to create reasonable suspicion. There was no additional information from
    Konig or Jordan that added more facts to the reasonable suspicion analysis. As there was no
    aggregation of information, either communicated or not, the stop of the vehicle clearly did not
    violate Massenburg.
    The facts of this case fall squarely in line with the Supreme Court’s collective knowledge
    reasoning in Whiteley and its progeny. We hold that the collective knowledge doctrine is
    applicable in this matter and therefore the stop did not violate the Fourth Amendment.12
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons above, we hold that the trial court did not err in denying appellant’s
    motion to suppress. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    Affirmed.
    12
    In light of this ruling, we do not address appellant’s argument that his identity should
    have been suppressed due to the illegal stop of the vehicle.
    - 14 -