State v. Annika S. Christensen ( 2022 )


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  •        COURT OF APPEALS
    DECISION                                               NOTICE
    DATED AND FILED                           This opinion is subject to further editing. If
    published, the official version will appear in
    the bound volume of the Official Reports.
    September 9, 2022
    A party may file with the Supreme Court a
    Sheila T. Reiff                petition to review an adverse decision by the
    Clerk of Court of Appeals           Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10
    and RULE 809.62.
    Appeal No.           2022AP500-CR                                             Cir. Ct. No. 2020CM223
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                            IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT IV
    STATE OF WISCONSIN,
    PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,
    V.
    ANNIKA S. CHRISTENSEN,
    DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT.
    APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Jefferson County:
    WILLIAM V. GRUBER, Judge.                 Affirmed and cause remanded for further
    proceedings.
    ¶1         BLANCHARD, P.J.1 The State appeals the circuit court’s order
    granting Annika Christensen’s motion to suppress evidence that she possessed the
    1
    This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 752.31(2)(f) (2019-20).
    All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2019-20 version unless otherwise noted.
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    active ingredient in marijuana, other controlled substances, and drug
    paraphernalia. The issue is whether Christensen was seized by police for purposes
    of the Fourth Amendment when the following occurred: while Christensen sat in
    the driver’s seat of a car parked in a lot after dark one night, two uniformed
    officers parked a fully marked police truck closely behind the car, shined a
    spotlight on the car (although without activating the truck’s emergency lights), and
    at least one of the officers approached the car on foot, with that officer identifying
    himself as law enforcement and knocking on the passenger-side window. The
    State does not challenge the circuit court’s conclusion that, leading up to the
    moment when the officer knocked on the window, the officers lacked reasonable
    suspicion that she had been or was committing a crime, or was about to commit
    one.   Instead, the State argues that the court erred in concluding that this
    constituted a seizure of Christensen, given the totality of the circumstances. I
    reject that argument. The State does not show that the court clearly erred in
    finding that a reasonable person in Christensen’s position would have had, in the
    words of the court, an “actual or perceived inability to” drive away from the
    police. Bearing that finding in mind as a key fact, I conclude that she was seized
    under the totality of the circumstances. Accordingly, I affirm the decision to grant
    the suppression motion.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2     As explained further below, the circuit court held two different
    evidentiary hearings on a motion to suppress filed by Christensen. The following
    is a summary of evidence presented at the initial hearing, which included the
    testimony of two Town of Lake Mills police officers.
    2
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    ¶3      On a Tuesday in November 2019, Officer Pagliaro and Sergeant
    Walters were on routine patrol together in marked police truck. At approximately
    6:49 p.m., after it was dark out, the officers noticed two cars parked next to each
    other near one corner of a parking lot.2 In one of the two cars, Christensen was
    seated in the driver’s seat and another person was in the front passenger seat.
    ¶4      The lot was on land owned by the state Department of Natural
    Resources. It was a square lot, with a gravel and dirt surface. It provided access
    to trails leading to the Glacial Drumlin Bike Trail. A single entrance-exit allowed
    vehicle access to and from the adjoining roadway. The lot was large enough to
    accommodate multiple rows of vehicles, as opposed to a single row (but no
    witness testified regarding the dimensions of the lot). There were trees on land
    adjoining half the lot; the land adjoining the other half consisted of fields.
    ¶5      The corner of the lot where the two cars were parked was next to the
    tree area. This prevented the car Christensen was in from being able to pull
    forward or to the right. There was no testimony regarding whether the edge of the
    lot had any barriers or obstacles such as curbs or parking blocks.
    ¶6      I pause this summary to discuss video evidence. The record reflects
    that the State presented two pieces of video evidence to the circuit court at the
    hearing. One video was taken from Sgt. Walters’ body camera. The other video
    purportedly showed the distance between the police truck, once it was brought to a
    2
    This summary of the evidence focuses on details pertinent to determining whether
    Christensen was seized for Fourth Amendment purposes under the totality of the circumstances as
    of the moment when the officer knocked on the car window. Accordingly, it omits details that
    are pertinent only to the circuit court’s unchallenged determination that the officers lacked
    reasonable suspicion before then.
    3
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    halt, and the already parked car that Christensen was in. The record is unclear
    whether the second video was taken from an earlier portion of that same body-
    camera footage, or instead from a different camera (perhaps a dashboard-mounted
    squad video). However, no video evidence was included in the record. Therefore,
    the circuit court had the benefit of evidence that I have no access to. When the
    appellate record is incomplete, I assume that the missing material supports the
    circuit court’s ruling. See State ex rel. Locklear v. Schwarz, 
    2001 WI App 74
    ,
    ¶30 n.2, 
    242 Wis. 2d 327
    , 
    629 N.W.2d 30
    .
    ¶7      I resume the background while bearing in mind this hole in the
    record on appeal. Sergeant Walters drove the police truck onto the lot and parked
    it. He parked approximately 10 feet behind the two already parked cars.3 Walters
    parked the police truck “inside the entrance” to the lot, not blocking the entrance,
    adding that the truck “may have been close to the entrance.”
    ¶8      Both officers testified to their assessments of whether, after Sgt.
    Walters brought the police truck to a stop, Christensen could have driven her car
    out of the lot. Both said they thought she could, although Sgt. Walters testified
    that “[i]t would have been tight.” Walters testified, “I don’t know if [she] would
    have been able to do it in one maneuver. [She] may have had to back up and pull
    forward to go around the back side of my vehicle.”
    3
    The two officers gave different estimates for the distance between the police truck,
    once stopped, and the already parked car in which Christensen was sitting. The circuit court
    credited Sgt. Walters’ estimate of 10 feet (putting aside whatever reasonable inferences the circuit
    court might have drawn from video evidence regarding distances).
    4
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    ¶9      Sergeant Walters shined a post-mount spotlight attached to the
    police truck on the car Christensen was in. Walters did not activate the truck’s
    blue and red emergency lights.
    ¶10     Officer Pagliaro got out of the police truck from the passenger side
    and approached the car Christensen was in on its passenger side.                           As he
    approached, Pagliaro announced that he was a police officer. He knocked on the
    front passenger-side window.4 At issue here are all circumstances bearing on a
    potential seizure leading up to, and including, the knock on the window.
    ¶11     For context, I note the following additional allegations testified to by
    Ofc. Pagliaro. The passenger lowered the car window in response to the knock, at
    which point Pagliaro could smell burnt marijuana coming from inside the car.
    ¶12     Christensen moved to suppress evidence that resulted from what she
    contended was an unjustified seizure before Ofc. Pagliaro allegedly smelled burnt
    marijuana. As part of this argument, Christensen contended that the officers did
    not have reasonable suspicion that a crime was afoot before Pagliaro knocked on
    the window. The State contended that Christensen was not seized for Fourth
    4
    There was uncontested evidence that Ofc. Pagliaro knocked on the passenger window
    of the car Christensen was in, although this requires explanation. After the close of evidence at
    the initial motion hearing, Christensen’s counsel said that “there certainly wasn’t a rapping on the
    window,” and that the officer could not have rapped on the window because it was “already
    rolled down.” Counsel apparently based this statement on her interpretation of the video
    evidence that is not contained in the record on appeal. But whatever counsel meant to convey,
    based on whatever evidence, there was no evidence offered to rebut Pagliaro’s testimony that he
    knocked on the passenger window. In addition, the State takes the position on appeal that the
    knock occurred. Further, I assume the existence of all facts that could have been revealed in the
    video shown at the hearing that favor the court’s suppression ruling. In granting the motion to
    suppress, the circuit court did not explicitly discuss the knock, “but ‘if a circuit court fails to
    make a finding that exists in the record, an appellate court can assume that the circuit court
    determined the fact in a manner that supports the circuit court’s ultimate decision.’” See County
    of Grant v. Vogt, 
    2014 WI 76
    , ¶41, 
    356 Wis. 2d 343
    , 
    850 N.W.2d 253
     (quoted source omitted).
    5
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    Amendment purposes by the time Pagliaro alleged that he smelled burnt
    marijuana. Christensen does not dispute that, as of that time, the officers could
    justifiably search the vehicle for evidence of crimes. In the alternative, the State
    made the argument (now abandoned on appeal) that, even before Pagliaro
    allegedly smelled marijuana, the totality of the circumstances provided reasonable
    suspicion that could justify a seizure.
    ¶13    The circuit court initially denied Christensen’s motion based solely
    on a determination that the officers had reasonable suspicion before Sgt. Walters
    parked the police truck behind the car that Christensen was in. The court did not
    address the issue of whether the totality of the circumstances before the knock on
    the window constituted a seizure. The court effectively assumed without deciding
    that this did constitute a seizure and with that assumption concluded that the
    seizure was justified by reasonable suspicion.
    ¶14    Christensen moved for reconsideration, which the court denied.
    Christensen then moved to reopen evidence related to the suppression motion so
    that she could submit the results of a public records request that she had made for
    records documenting police responses to the DNR parking lot regarding alleged
    drug dealing (relevant because part of the State’s argument for reasonable
    suspicion was an alleged history of drug dealing at the lot). Because the State has
    abandoned the reasonable suspicion issue on appeal, the exact nature of this
    evidence or the grounds for the reconsideration motion are not pertinent to the
    analysis.
    ¶15    In light of the newly submitted evidence, the circuit court held
    another evidentiary hearing and reevaluated its earlier ruling on the suppression
    6
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    motion.     Based on the results of that hearing and its reconsideration of the
    suppression motion, the court granted the motion to suppress.
    ¶16     Regarding Christensen’s ability to drive out of the lot after Sgt.
    Walters parked the police truck, the court found that “Christensen was—I’m not
    going to say cornered, but it would have been very difficult for her to just back
    out.” The court went on to note that the police truck was marked, that what the
    court referred to as the truck’s “take-down” light was used to illuminate the car,
    and that “two uniformed government agents, both armed” approached the car
    leading up to the knock on the window.5 The court then further said:
    [G]iven all those circumstances, especially the positioning
    of the vehicles and the either … actual or perceived
    inability [of Christensen] to just [drive] out of that lot,
    where I land [is that this] was … not a consensual contact.
    5
    I now explain why I assume that the circuit court’s potential findings regarding the
    number of “government agents” has little or no significance in determining whether there was a
    seizure. I understand the circuit court’s reference to “two uniformed government agents” to mean
    that Christensen would have been aware of Sgt. Walters’ presence during pertinent events,
    perhaps because Walters had gotten out of the truck and begun approaching the car before Ofc.
    Pagliaro knocked on the window. (There is no dispute that, at some point, Walters approached
    the car and made contact with Christensen.) Although Walters testified that he was still in the
    police truck when Pagliaro made contact with the passenger of the car, and there appears to be no
    evidence in the record that contradicts that testimony, the circuit court’s apparent finding that
    Walters was at a minimum visible to Christensen, or perhaps approached the car, before Pagliaro
    knocked on the window could be supported by the video evidence that is missing from the record.
    However, assuming without deciding that the circuit court’s apparent finding was
    supported by the video evidence, I question whether it would be significant to the analysis. The
    mere presence of Sgt. Walters on the scene, even if he had gotten out of the truck during the
    pertinent time frame, could not contribute meaningfully to a determination that a seizure occurred
    in the absence of evidence of assertive or intimidating behavior on his part. See State v.
    Williams, 
    2002 WI 94
    , ¶32, 
    255 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    646 N.W.2d 834
     (“the presence and behavior of the
    back-up officer was not so intimidating as to convert … consensual exchange into a seizure”
    when the officer stood at the passenger side of the defendant’s vehicle). In sum, it was significant
    that at least one uniformed officer approached Christensen’s car, announced his office, and
    knocked on the window, but the fact that another officer was present could at most play only a
    small role in the analysis.
    7
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    And … I think what the testimony indicated was
    that that there was only one point of exit and entrance to
    that DNR lot. That would have had an impact too if there
    [had been] another egress point for vehicular traffic.
    Because the seizure was not supported by reasonable suspicion, the court granted
    the motion to suppress. The State appeals, seeking reversal of the suppression
    ruling. See WIS. STAT. § 974.05(1)(d)2. (“appeal may be taken by the state from
    any[] … [o]rder … the substantive effect of which results in” the suppression of
    evidence).
    DISCUSSION
    ¶17    The sole issue on appeal is whether Christensen was seized by the
    time Ofc. Pagliaro knocked on the passenger-side window of the car. The State
    argues that the answer is no and therefore the lowering of the window was part of
    a “consensual encounter” to which Fourth Amendment requirements do not apply.
    See County of Grant v. Vogt, 
    2014 WI 76
    , ¶¶19, 24, 26, 
    356 Wis. 2d 343
    , 
    850 N.W.2d 253
     (constitutional protections “are not implicated until a government
    agent ‘seizes’ a person”; distinguishing between seizures and consensual
    interactions between law enforcement officers and persons they interact with). I
    understand Christensen to take the position that, given all of the circumstances, a
    reasonable person in her position would not have felt free to drive away from the
    lot as of the moment when Pagliaro knocked on the window, and that as a result
    she was seized no later than that moment. I agree with Christensen.
    ¶18    A two-part standard of review applies. See id., ¶17. I “will uphold
    the circuit court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous,” but
    independently apply constitutional principles to those facts. See id.
    8
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    ¶19      In order for a seizure to occur, an “‘officer, by means of physical
    force or show of authority,’” must “‘in some way restrain[] the liberty of a
    citizen.’” Id., ¶20 (quoting United States v. Mendenhall, 
    446 U.S. 544
    , 552
    (1980)). Not every show of authority by police creates a seizure. See 
    id.
     (“‘a
    person has been “seized” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment only if, in
    view of all of the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person
    would have believed that he was not free to leave’” (quoting Mendenhall, 
    446 U.S. at 554
    )).6       “The test is an objective one, focusing not on whether the
    defendant himself felt free to leave but whether a reasonable person, under all the
    circumstances, would have felt free to leave.” State v. Williams, 
    2002 WI 94
    , ¶23,
    
    255 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    646 N.W.2d 834
    . “[E]xamples of circumstances that might suggest
    a seizure” include “‘the threatening presence of several officers, the display of a
    weapon by an officer, some physical touching of the person of the citizen, or the
    use of language or tone of voice indicating that compliance with the officer's
    request might be compelled.’”                See Vogt, 
    356 Wis. 2d 343
    , ¶23 (quoting
    Mendenhall, 
    446 U.S. at 554
    ).
    ¶20      I conclude that following circumstances created a seizure:                        the
    stopping of the marked police truck close behind the parked car, causing a
    reasonable person in Christensen’s position to have an “actual or perceived
    inability” to drive away from the police; the use of post-mounted light to
    illuminate the car; the presence of uniformed officers in the marked truck, at least
    6
    An additional rule is that there can be no seizure if “the citizen [does not] actually yield
    to [the] show of authority,” see State v. Kelsey C.R., 
    2001 WI 54
    , ¶¶32-33, 
    243 Wis. 2d 422
    , 
    626 N.W.2d 777
     (discussing California v. Hodari D., 
    499 U.S. 621
     (1991)), but the State here does
    not argue that the conduct of either Christensen or the passenger before the knock on the window
    constituted a failure to yield to the show of authority.
    9
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    one of whom approached the car; and Ofc. Pagliaro’s announcing himself as law
    enforcement and knocking on the passenger-side window. As Christensen notes,
    the State does not contend that any of the court’s factual findings were clearly
    erroneous.    Under these circumstances, a reasonable person in Christensen’s
    position would not have felt free to leave. I now explain this conclusion further,
    beginning with the significance of the circuit court’s findings regarding both the
    ability of a reasonable person in Christensen’s position to leave the police by
    driving out of the lot and the reasonable perception of that person about her ability
    to do so.
    ¶21    On the topic of the police truck’s stopped position relative to the
    parked car, the State characterizes the circuit court’s findings as “just that it would
    have been difficult for [Christensen]” to “have driven away.” This is at best an
    incomplete interpretation of the court’s findings.
    ¶22    First, the court found that it would have been “very difficult” for her
    to drive out of the lot past the police truck. This was a finding that, from the
    perspective of an objective observer looking down on the scene, it would in fact
    have been a challenge for Christensen to maneuver herself out of the lot. She
    objectively might have been able to accomplish this, but it would have been “very
    difficult.”
    ¶23    Second, and critically, the court also found that there was an “actual
    or perceived inability” to do so. This was a finding that a reasonable person in
    Christensen’s position would have worried that she could not actually drive off the
    lot. In other words, this would have been a reasonable perception under the
    circumstances.
    10
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    ¶24    As I now explain, this distinguishes the instant case from two cases
    with otherwise generally similar facts (police vehicles, without activating
    emergency lights, come to a stop near vehicles parked in lots) that the State cites:
    Vogt, and this court’s unpublished one-judge decision in State v. Snyder,
    No. 2013AP299-CR, unpublished slip op. (WI App Oct. 2, 2014).
    ¶25    In Vogt, our supreme court surveyed case law from other
    jurisdictions and concluded that it “demonstrate[d] that when an officer parks near
    a person’s vehicle, gets out, and knocks on the person’s window, the officer has
    not necessarily displayed sufficient authority to cause a reasonable person to feel
    that he or she was not free to leave.” Vogt, 
    356 Wis. 2d 343
    , ¶38 (emphasis
    added). Under the particular facts of Vogt, there was not a seizure, although the
    court characterized it as a “close case.” Id., ¶¶3, 54. There, the officer parked
    “right behind” Vogt’s vehicle, which also had obstacles on either side, thus “‘the
    location of Mr. Vogt’s vehicle in the parking lot was not conducive to simply
    driving away.’” Id., ¶40 (quoting briefing from Vogt). But, while “not conducive
    to simply driving away” due to the obstructions on three sides, Vogt “might have
    had 50 feet in front of him in which he could have pulled forward and turned
    around” to exit the lot. Id., ¶42. That contrasts sharply with the facts here. Based
    on the circuit court’s findings here, unchallenged on appeal, the combination of
    the parked police truck, the location of the car, and the layout of the gravel-dirt lot
    presented a much stronger indication of a seizure.
    ¶26    In Snyder, this court reasoned that the mere fact that a person needed
    to maneuver a vehicle to drive around a parked police vehicle in order to leave the
    presence of police was not a basis to distinguish Vogt and did not weigh
    significantly in favor of a seizure. Snyder, No. 2013AP299-CR, ¶19. But Snyder
    could not, and does not purport to, go beyond Vogt, which itself does not articulate
    11
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    a rule that the only way a police vehicle stopping near a parked car can contribute
    to a seizure is by entirely eliminating any possibility of driving away. And, as
    with the fact in Vogt, the facts in Snyder presented far less obstruction of the
    defendant’s vehicle than do the facts here. See Snyder, No. 2013AP299-CR, ¶4
    (trooper parked two car-lengths away, facing defendant’s car, with 20 feet of open
    “driveway” available for the defendant to drive through).
    ¶27    Staying on the topic of the ability to drive away from a nearby,
    parked police vehicle, this court’s decision in State v. Evans, No. 2020AP286-CR,
    unpublished slip op. (Jan. 28, 2021), is persuasive in reinforcing my conclusion.
    In Evans, this court concluded that the driver of a parked car would not have felt
    free to leave after two marked police cars pulled up approximately on either side
    of the driver’s car in a “pincer-like formation,” even though there was space for
    the driver to back out between the two police cars. Id., ¶¶13, 20-21, 27. Despite
    the driver’s ability to drive away in Evans, the other circumstances of the police
    cars’ approaches created an “adversarial” interaction that sent a “strong and
    unambiguous signal of authority.” See id., ¶¶22-26. This court further noted that
    “[n]umerous federal courts have found that blocking the movement of a vehicle
    may be a seizure, even if the car is not wholly blocked from leaving.” Id., ¶17
    (gathering authority).
    ¶28    Several additional facts here support the circuit court’s suppression
    ruling. The use of a spotlight to illuminate the car, while not sufficient by itself to
    create a seizure, is an “indicia of police authority.” See State v. Young, 
    2006 WI 98
    , ¶65, 
    294 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    717 N.W.2d 729
    . The State concedes that the use of the
    spotlight constituted a relevant show of authority.
    12
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    ¶29    Further, while also not dispositive, the presence of uniformed
    officers arriving on the scene in a marked truck, with at least one of the officers
    getting out and approaching the car on foot, weighs in favor of a seizure. I reject
    the State’s thinly developed argument to the contrary. It is sufficient to explain
    that the State appears to misinterpret passages in Vogt addressing the existence of
    general “social norms” under which many members of the public naturally comply
    with the inquiries of police officers.    See Vogt, 
    356 Wis. 2d 343
    , ¶31.        The
    reasoning in Vogt is consistent with the fact that, all else being equal, an
    interaction that an individual has with uniformed, visibly armed officers who have
    approached from a marked vehicle is more intimidating than an interaction
    involving the approach of the same number of officers in plain clothes, without
    weapons displayed, who arrive in an unmarked vehicle.
    ¶30    Moreover, given all of the surrounding circumstances such as the
    approach of at least one uniformed officer, I conclude that Ofc. Pagliaro’s
    announcing himself as a law enforcement officer and knocking on the passenger’s
    window added authoritative signals to the occupants of the car that they were not
    free to drive away without first interacting with the officers. In making this point,
    I am mindful of our supreme court’s analysis in Vogt, noted above. See id., ¶¶26,
    31, 42-43. Vogt confirms that, in itself, an officer knocking on the window of a
    parked car does not necessarily result in a seizure, depending on all other relevant
    circumstances. However, Vogt cannot be interpreted to mean that similar police
    conduct cannot contribute to a reasonable person’s belief that the person is not free
    to leave. Here, in contrast to the facts in Vogt, Pagliaro’s knock, paired with the
    way the officers parked their truck, trained their spotlight, and approached the car,
    clearly communicated an intent not only to contact the car’s occupants, but to
    detain them, either briefly or more long term.
    13
    No. 2022AP500-CR
    ¶31     One final note regarding next steps in this case.         The parties’
    respective requests for relief in this criminal case are limited to either the
    affirmance or reversal of the circuit court’s suppression motion ruling in its
    entirety. The parties do not address the scope of the suppression ruling, nor do
    they request that this court address the need for, or scope of, further proceedings in
    the circuit court following remand. All such next steps are left for the circuit court
    to address on remand, consistent with this opinion.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶32     For all of these reasons, I affirm the circuit court’s order granting
    Christensen’s motion to suppress evidence and remand the case for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    By the Court.—Order affirmed and cause remanded for further
    proceedings.
    This   opinion   will   not    be   published.     See    WIS. STAT.
    RULE 809.23(1)(b)4.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2022AP000500-CR

Filed Date: 9/9/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024