State Of Washington v. P. E. P ( 2013 )


Menu:
  •     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,
    No. 68694-1-1
    Respondent,
    DIVISION ONE           ^       'I
    v.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINICj^ ^
    P.E.P.,
    p.1      t> —
    Appellant.                       FILED: September 23, 2Q13 Sr£
    .•i
    O   rn1-
    Appelwick, J. — This appeal arises from P.E.P.'s conviction for ^lawful
    possession of a firearm in the first degree. P.E.P. argues that the trial court should
    have suppressed the gun as the fruit of an unlawful seizure. We affirm.
    FACTS
    The relevant facts are undisputed. Before he started his shift on September 28,
    2011, Seattle Police Officer Christopher Gregorio was briefed on a drive-by shooting
    that happened around 6:00 p.m. on the 9100 block of Rainier Avenue South.              The
    shooter was still at large.
    Around 8:40 p.m. that night, Gregorio responded to a domestic violence (DV) call
    at the Lake Washington Apartments, just a block from the scene of the drive-by
    shooting. Gregorio was familiar with the DV suspect, Reginald Barron, having arrested
    him several times before, and could recognize him on sight. Gregorio drove around the
    back of the apartment building because Barron usually left that way to evade
    responding police officers.
    No. 68694-1-1/2
    Gregorio found two people behind the apartment building. One was sitting on the
    apartment steps, and the other was hunched over along the back fence, partially hidden
    in some sticker bushes. Gregorio could not tell if the two people were there together or
    not. At first, Gregorio thought the man in the bushes was Barron, so he spotlighted him.
    The man looked back, not fully turning, and Gregorio immediately realized the man was
    not Barron. Gregorio would later identify the man as P.E.P.
    Gregorio thought it was "suspicious and odd" that P.E.P. was hidden in the
    bushes, so he asked him, "Hey, what are you doing?" P.E.P. did not say anything, but
    quickly turned to face Gregorio with a "deer-in-the-headlights look," and "flicked" a dark
    object behind him into the bushes. The object made a "big clink" when it hit the metal
    fence behind the bushes.      Gregorio immediately suspected the object was a gun
    because of P.E.P.'s actions, and because he recognized the sound as a gun hitting a
    fence, having heard the sound before.
    Remembering the recent nearby shooting and not knowing whether the second
    man might be armed, too, Gregorio pointed his gun at P.E.P., and ordered both men to
    get down on the ground. Gregorio then called for backup, which arrived in less than a
    minute. Once backup arrived, Gregorio handcuffed P.E.P. and searched the area by
    the fence where P.E.P. had thrown something, quickly finding a small handgun. With
    the confirmation that P.E.P. had been in possession of a handgun and Gregorio's
    estimation that P.E.P. was underage, Gregorio arrested P.E.P. for unlawful possession
    No. 68694-1-1/3
    of a weapon.1 After running a background check, Gregorio also learned that P.E.P. had
    a prior felony conviction.
    The State charged P.E.P. with unlawful possession of a firearm in the first degree
    based on his prior conviction.2 P.E.P. moved to suppress the gun, arguing that it was
    the product of an illegal seizure. The trial court denied the motion. It concluded that
    Based on Officer Gregorio's training and experience, his knowledge of the
    earlier shooting, his initial observations of [P.E.P.] crouched near the
    bushes, [P.E.P.'s] throwing of an object and the sound of the object hitting
    the fence being consistent with that of a gun hitting a metal fence, Officer
    Gregorio had reasonable and articulable suspicion to believe that [P.E.P.]
    was armed with a firearm.
    The court found P.E.P. guilty on stipulated facts. P.E.P. timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    P.E.P. argues that the trial court violated his rights under the Fourth Amendment
    and article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution by admitting evidence obtained
    as a result of an unconstitutional seizure. The constitutionality of a warrantless seizure
    is a question of law we review de novo. State v. Gatewood, 
    163 Wn.2d 534
    , 539, 
    182 P.3d 426
     (2008).
    1 Gregorio testified that it was apparent to him that P.E.P. was under 21. RCW
    9.41.240 provides that a person between 18 and 21 may only possess a pistol in certain
    circumstances, none of which apply here. A person under 18 may also lawfully possess
    a firearm in certain circumstances pursuant to RCW 9.41.042, but those circumstances
    are not present here, either.
    2 RCW 9.41.040(1)(a) provides that "[a] person, whether an adult or juvenile, is
    guilty of the crime of unlawful possession of a firearm in the first degree, if the person
    owns, has in his or her possession, or has in his or her control any firearm after having
    previously been convicted . . . in this state or elsewhere of any serious offense as
    defined in this chapter."
    No. 68694-1-1/4
    Generally, warrantless searches and seizures are unconstitutional, id A Terry
    stop is a well-established exception to the warrant requirement that allows police to
    briefly detain a person to investigate whether a crime has been committed. Terry v.
    Ohio. 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 30-31, 
    88 S. Ct. 1868
    , 
    20 L. Ed. 2d 889
     (1968); Gatewood. 
    163 Wn.2d at 539
    . A Terry stop is lawful if the State can point to specific and articulable
    facts giving rise to a reasonable suspicion that the person stopped is, or is about to be,
    engaged in criminal activity.    State v. Kinzv, 
    141 Wn.2d 373
    , 384-85, 
    5 P.3d 668
    (2000). Whether the officer's suspicion is reasonable is determined by the totality of the
    circumstances known to the officer at the inception of the stop. State v. Glover, 
    116 Wn.2d 509
    , 514, 
    806 P.2d 760
     (1991); Gatewood. 
    163 Wn.2d at 539
    .                       The
    circumstances known to the officer are viewed objectively, and the reasonableness of
    his suspicion is not dependent on his subjective belief or on his ability to correctly
    articulate his suspicion in reference to a particular crime. State v. Mitchell, 
    80 Wn. App. 143
    , 147, 906P.2d 1013(1995).
    P.E.P. argues that Officer Gregorio could not have formed a reasonable
    suspicion that he was engaged in criminal activity, because carrying a firearm is not a
    crime. He contends that Gregorio's knowledge after the stop of his status as a minor
    and of his felony conviction cannot validate the seizure post hoc. We agree. The trial
    court finding was erroneous unless P.E.P. was unlawfully armed with a firearm at the
    time he was seized. What Officer Gregorio learned after the seizure cannot provide a
    basis to validate the seizure.     However, this is not dispositive of whether Officer
    Gregorio had a reasonable suspicion to believe P.E.P. unlawfully possessed a firearm.
    No. 68694-1-1/5
    P.E.P.'s reliance on State v. Almanza-Guzman, 
    94 Wn. App. 563
    , 565, 
    972 P.2d 468
    (1999), and Gatewood is misplaced.
    In Almanza-Guzman. border patrol agents stopped the defendant because (1)
    they suspected he was a Mexican national; and (2) they doubted that he had a license
    for his gun. jd at 564. The court held mere gun possession—particularly at a gun
    show—and suspicion of alien status insufficient to provide a basis for a reasonable
    suspicion of criminal activity. |d at 567-68.
    The circumstances similarly failed to support a reasonable suspicion of criminal
    activity in Gatewood. There, the only facts known to the officers when they stopped the
    defendant were that (1) his eyes widened on seeing their passing patrol car; (2) he
    twisted his body to the side as if to hide something; (3) he walked away from the bus
    shelter after the officers passed; and (4) he jaywalked. ]d at 540. This was insufficient
    for a Terry stop. ]d While the defendant, like P.E.P., also threw a gun into some
    bushes, he did so after the officers told him to stop, so it did not contribute to the basis
    for his initial seizure. See jd at 538, 540.
    P.E.P. does not challenge the trial court's conclusion of law that Gregorio's
    testimony was credible.     Here, based on that testimony, the totality of circumstances
    known to Gregorio at the time he initially seized P.E.P. included the following: (1) there
    had recently been a shooting nearby, and the shooter was still at large; (2) he found
    P.E.P. behind an apartment complex hunched over, hiding in the sticker bushes; (3)
    there was a second individual nearby, potentially armed; (4) when Gregorio spotlighted
    P.E.P. and asked him a simple question, P.E.P. spun around with a startled expression
    and threw something away into the bushes; and (5) Gregorio recognized the resulting
    No. 68694-1-1/6
    sound as a gun hitting a metal fence.      Unlike the defendant in Gatewood, P.E.P.'s
    suspicious disposal of a gun into the bushes was not subsequent to his seizure; it
    triggered it.
    We hold that Officer Gregorio had a reasonable suspicion to believe that P.E.P.
    was unlawfully armed with a firearm and conducted a lawful Terry stop of P.E.P.
    Accordingly, the trial court properly denied P.E.P.'s motion to suppress.
    We affirm.
    WE CONCUR:
    V
    b£3L                        ^'J-