State v. Adekola John Adekale ( 2023 )


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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.
    March 9, 2023
    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.           2022AP1351-CR                                              Cir. Ct. No. 2020CT71
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                            IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT IV
    STATE OF WISCONSIN,
    PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
    V.
    ADEKOLA JOHN ADEKALE,
    DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the circuit court for La Crosse County:
    TODD W. BJERKE, Judge. Affirmed.
    ¶1         KLOPPENBURG, J.1 Adekola John Adekale appeals the judgment
    of conviction, entered upon his guilty plea, of operating a motor vehicle while
    1
    This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 752.31(2)(c) (2021-22).
    All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021-22 version unless otherwise noted.
    No. 2022AP1351-CR
    under the influence as a second offense. Adekale argues that the circuit court
    erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence obtained after a state trooper
    initiated a traffic stop in a motel parking lot. Specifically, Adekale argues that the
    state trooper unlawfully arrested him when, during the stop, the trooper
    unreasonably transported Adekale to another part of the motel parking lot to
    conduct field sobriety tests. I reject Adekale’s argument that he was unreasonably
    transported because he was transported within the vicinity of the stop and the
    purpose for transporting him was reasonable. Accordingly, I affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2     The State charged Adekale with operating a motor vehicle while
    under the influence and operating a motor vehicle with a prohibited alcohol
    concentration, both as second offenses, following a traffic stop in February 2020.
    Adekale filed a motion to suppress evidence obtained after he was transported
    from the location of the traffic stop to another location for field sobriety tests.
    ¶3     The circuit court held an evidentiary hearing on Adekale’s
    suppression motion at which the state trooper who initiated the stop and
    transported Adekale to the other location testified. During the trooper’s testimony,
    portions of the trooper’s squad car camera video of the stop were played. Portions
    of the body camera video from another officer who arrived as backup were also
    played, without any accompanying testimony. The following facts are taken from
    the state trooper’s testimony, which the circuit court credited.
    ¶4     At approximately 2:50 a.m. on February 16, 2020, in the City of La
    Crosse, Trooper Cody Digre of the Wisconsin State Patrol observed a vehicle
    traveling above the speed limit and with a defective taillight.            After Digre
    2
    No. 2022AP1351-CR
    activated his lights and siren, the car stopped in a parking lot on the south side of a
    Motel 6. Digre approached the vehicle after calling for backup.
    ¶5     There were seven people in the vehicle: six passengers and the
    driver, later identified as Adekale. While Digre was asking Adekale a series of
    questions, passengers “kept chiming in” and asking questions about the stop.
    Some of the passengers were yelling and at one point one of the passengers
    honked the vehicle’s horn. Digre smelled an odor of intoxicants and observed that
    Adekale’s eyes were glossy and his speech was slurred. Adekale “admitted to
    drinking.”
    ¶6     When the backup officer arrived, Digre asked the passengers to
    leave and the passengers walked toward the front or side entrances of the motel.
    Digre could not see whether the passengers went inside the motel.              As the
    passengers left the vehicle, one of the passengers lingered and asked Adekale to
    leave the keys at the front desk for him, and another passenger walked back to the
    vehicle to get his phone.
    ¶7     Digre decided to move Adekale to another location to conduct field
    sobriety tests “for officer safety” because of the number of passengers, because the
    passengers appeared to have been drinking and were “belligerent and acting out
    and loud,” and because one passenger had lingered around the vehicle before
    heading to the motel. Digre informed Adekale three times that he was not under
    arrest and that he was just “being detained to do [the field sobriety tests] at another
    location.” Digre handcuffed Adekale, patted him down, placed him in the back
    seat of the squad car, and drove him for less than one minute to another part of the
    same parking lot on the north side of the motel, “just on the other side of the
    3
    No. 2022AP1351-CR
    motel.” Digre took Adekale’s handcuffs off and had Adekale perform the field
    sobriety tests.
    ¶8        The circuit court denied Adekale’s motion to suppress the evidence
    obtained after he was transported to the other part of the parking lot for the field
    sobriety tests.      The court found that no facts showed that the transport was
    unreasonable.
    ¶9        Adekale subsequently entered his plea and was convicted and
    sentenced. This appeal follows.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶10       The issue on appeal is whether Adekale was unreasonably
    transported for field sobriety tests from the location of the traffic stop in the
    parking lot on one side of the motel to a different part of the parking lot on the
    other side of the motel.           As I explain, I conclude that Adekale was not
    unreasonably transported from the part of the parking lot where the traffic stop
    was initiated to a different part of the parking lot for field sobriety tests because he
    was transported within the vicinity of the stop and the purpose for transporting
    him was reasonable.2
    2
    Adekale notes that Digre handcuffed him and placed him into the back of the squad car
    before transporting him. However, Adekale does not argue that by taking these actions Digre
    converted the traffic stop into an arrest because a reasonable person in Adekale’s position would
    have believed that the person was in custody. See State v. Swanson, 
    164 Wis. 2d 437
    , 446-48,
    
    475 N.W.2d 148
     (1991) (stating that the test for transforming a stop into an arrest is “whether a
    reasonable person in the defendant’s position would have considered [the person] to be ‘in
    custody,’ given the degree of restraint under the circumstances.”) (quoted source omitted).
    Indeed, it is undisputed that Digre explained his actions and told Adekale three times that
    Adekale was not under arrest. Rather, Adekale argues only that the transport was unreasonable,
    and that is the only argument that this opinion addresses.
    4
    No. 2022AP1351-CR
    ¶11      When an appellate court reviews a decision on a motion to suppress
    evidence, it upholds the circuit court’s findings of historical fact unless they are
    clearly erroneous. State v. Blatterman, 
    2015 WI 46
    , ¶16, 
    362 Wis. 2d 138
    , 
    864 N.W.2d 26
    .        However, it independently reviews whether those facts satisfy
    constitutional principles. 
    Id.
    ¶12      A temporary detention following a traffic stop constitutes a seizure
    within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution
    and article I, § 11 of the Wisconsin Constitution, and implicates the constitutional
    protections against unreasonable searches and seizures.         State v. Guzy, 
    139 Wis. 2d 663
    , 674-75, 
    407 N.W.2d 548
     (1987).
    ¶13      “Pursuant to Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    [, 22] (1968), a police officer
    may, under certain circumstances, temporarily detain a person for purposes of
    investigating possible criminal behavior even though there is not probable cause to
    make an arrest.” Blatterman, 
    362 Wis. 2d 138
    , ¶18. A person who is detained
    under a Terry investigation may be moved “in the general vicinity of the stop
    without converting what would otherwise be a temporary seizure into an arrest” if
    (1) the person was moved within the vicinity of the stop, and (2) the purpose in
    moving the person within the vicinity was reasonable. State v. Quartana, 
    213 Wis. 2d 440
    , 446, 
    570 N.W.2d 618
     (Ct. App. 1997); see WIS. STAT. § 968.24.3
    3
    WISCONSIN STAT. § 968.24 states:
    (continued)
    5
    No. 2022AP1351-CR
    ¶14    The first prong of the Quartana test is whether Adekale was
    transported within the vicinity of the original stop. Quartana, 213 Wis. 2d at 446.
    “Within the vicinity” means within “‘a surrounding area or district,’ or ‘locality.’”
    Id. at 447. In Quartana, the court concluded that transporting Quartana from the
    location of the stop to the scene of an accident, which was one mile away and
    within walking distance of the initial location, was within the “vicinity.”
    ¶15    It is undisputed that Adekale was stopped in a parking lot on one
    side of a motel, and the circuit court found that Adekale was transported to the
    other side of the motel, “very close” to where Adekale had been stopped. The
    parties do not dispute that, as Digre testified and one of the videos played at trial
    showed, the transport took just under one minute of travel time. I conclude that
    these facts establish that Adekale was transported within the vicinity of the stop.
    ¶16    The second prong of the Quartana test is whether the purpose for
    transporting Adekale was reasonable.          Id. at 446.      The circuit court credited
    Digre’s testimony that the passengers’ conduct while Digre was interacting with
    Adekale was disruptive. The court found that the passengers left when Digre told
    them that “he had to do some paperwork,” that Digre could not see whether all of
    the passengers actually entered the motel, and that it was possible that the
    passengers “could have returned to the scene” if they saw Digre instead
    After having identified himself or herself as a law enforcement
    officer, a law enforcement officer may stop a person in a public
    place for a reasonable period of time when the officer reasonably
    suspects that such person is committing, is about to commit or
    has committed a crime, and may demand the name and address
    of the person and an explanation of the person’s conduct. Such
    detention and temporary questioning shall be conducted in the
    vicinity where the person was stopped.
    6
    No. 2022AP1351-CR
    conducting field sobriety tests. I conclude that Digre’s transport of Adekale to the
    north side of the motel parking lot had the reasonable purpose of ensuring the
    undisrupted conducting of the field sobriety tests and ensuring the officer’s safety.
    ¶17    Adekale focuses on appeal on the second prong of the Quartana
    test, whether he was transported for a reasonable purpose, and contends that the
    purpose for transporting him was unreasonable.         I now explain why each of
    Adekale’s arguments in support of this contention fail.
    ¶18    Adekale argues that the circuit court applied the wrong legal
    standard by considering Digre’s subjective view that the transport was reasonable
    instead of whether the transport was objectively reasonable based on the facts of
    record. The court did not apply the wrong legal standard. The court properly
    considered Digre’s stated purpose for transporting Adekale along with Digre’s
    testimony, which the court credited, and the facts of record, and concluded that the
    facts did not show that that the transport was for an unreasonable purpose.
    Moreover, as stated above, this court reviews whether the facts satisfy the legal
    principles independently of the circuit court. Accordingly, this argument does not
    help Adekale.
    ¶19    Adekale argues that the purpose for transporting him was
    unreasonable because, unlike in Quartana, it was not “the quickest way for the
    police to confirm or dispel their suspicions.”        See id. at 449 (stating that
    transporting the defendant from his residence, where an assisting officer found
    him, to where the investigating officer was at the scene of the accident in which
    the defendant was involved, “was the quickest way for [the investigating officer]
    to confirm or dispel [his] suspicions.”).      Adekale does not explain why the
    investigating officer’s delay here of several minutes in conducting the field
    7
    No. 2022AP1351-CR
    sobriety tests suffices to render unreasonable the purpose to ensure that that tests
    were conducted safely and without disruption.
    ¶20    Adekale argues that the purpose for transporting him was
    unreasonable because, also unlike in Quartana, Digre did not transport him to a
    place he had previously been or a place that was public. See id. at 450 (concluding
    that the defendant was not arrested when he was transported from his residence
    because he was transported to the scene of the accident where he had been earlier
    and his detention was “public in nature”). Rather, Adekale argues that he was
    transported to “a secluded location” away from where his passengers had been.
    Adekale does not explain how the location in the parking lot on the other side of
    the motel, which was also behind a Pizza Hut, was no less “public in nature” than
    the location in the same parking lot where he was stopped. In Quartana, this
    court considered, for purposes of determining whether the defendant’s detention
    when the officer returned him to the scene of the accident was an arrest, not
    whether anyone could see the defendant, but rather whether the scene being on a
    public street militated against the detention being an arrest. Id. This court did not
    require that the transport be to a public street in order for the transport to be for a
    reasonable purpose. In any event, Adekale fails to persuade this court that the fact
    that he was transported to a part of the motel parking lot that may have been less
    visible to his passengers renders his detention there unreasonable.
    ¶21    Adekale argues that the purpose for transporting him was
    unreasonable because “the issue” of the passengers’ behavior no longer existed at
    the time of the transport, rendering Digre’s concerns that the passengers would
    disrupt the field sobriety tests or threaten his safety unfounded. Adekale notes that
    before he was transported the passengers “remained in the vehicle when they were
    supposed to and left when they were allowed to leave,” and that they had not
    8
    No. 2022AP1351-CR
    during that time posed a threat to Digre’s safety. Therefore, Adekale’s argument
    continues, “there was no reason to believe that any of the passengers would have
    come back and caused a scene or endangered the officers.” Moreover, Adekale
    notes that, if the passengers did do so, Digre was assisted by another officer and
    was, therefore, neither alone nor vulnerable.           However, the possibility of the
    passengers, who appeared to have been drinking and were disruptive during
    Digre’s initial interactions with Adekale, returning to the scene and resuming their
    disruptive behavior persisted even after they headed to the hotel.               It is not
    objectively unreasonable to be concerned that at least some of them may have
    been watching what was going on with Adekale once they left him and may have
    returned to disrupt Digre’s conducting of the field sobriety tests and to threaten his
    safety.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶22   For the reasons set forth above, I conclude that the circuit court
    properly denied Adekale’s suppression motion because Adekale was transported
    within the vicinity of the stop and for a reasonable purpose. Therefore, I affirm.
    By the Court.—Judgment affirmed.
    This   opinion   will   not       be   published.    See     WIS. STAT.
    RULE 809.23(1)(b)4.
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2022AP001351-CR

Filed Date: 3/9/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024