DocketNumber: 17–P–963
Filed Date: 4/6/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
The defendant was arrested when he was sitting in the passenger seat of a stolen car. He was charged with receiving a stolen motor vehicle, subsequent offense, and receiving stolen property over $250 with respect to certain items found in the car. The defendant filed a motion to suppress the statements he made to a police officer after the arrest. That motion was allowed by a Boston Municipal Court judge. On the Commonwealth's interlocutory appeal, we affirm.
Background. The following facts were elicited at a hearing on the motion to suppress.
Three uniformed patrol unit officers then removed the defendant from the car and placed him in handcuffs. Shortly after, the first officer approached and attempted to administer Miranda warnings. However, as the officer was giving the warnings, the defendant volunteered that he knew that the car had been stolen but that he had not stolen it. After the officer succeeded in completing the Miranda warnings, the defendant repeated his statements. In response to the officer's inquiry whether he would find the defendant's fingerprints on the vehicle's steering wheel, the defendant added that he had started the car in order to charge his telephone and turn on the air conditioner. The defendant also stated that a cellular telephone and a "tablet" device found in the car were his but might have been stolen because he bought them "on the street."
Arguing that the police lacked probable cause to arrest him and search the vehicle, the defendant moved to suppress the statements he made to police following those events. The judge allowed the motion and the Commonwealth appealed.
Discussion. As noted, the judge fully credited the testimony of the Commonwealth's sole witness, and there is no dispute as to the subsidiary facts. We "conduct an independent review of [the motion judge's] ultimate findings and conclusions of law." Commonwealth v. Jimenez,
We begin our review by examining the grounds on which the judge relied in allowing the defendant's motion. The judge stated that he was allowing it "due to the fact that the [patrol unit] officers seized and arrested the [d]efendant prior to [the first officer's] administering of the Miranda rights" (emphasis supplied). To the extent the judge meant the latter part of the statement to be taken literally, his referenced ground finds no support in the case law, as both parties acknowledge. Indeed, while there is no prohibition on giving Miranda warnings before a defendant is arrested, they are typically given after arrest.
At the same time, the judge's statement may simply have been a slip of the tongue, as the Commonwealth acknowledged at oral argument. It may well be that the actual reason the judge allowed the motion was the one argued by the defendant, namely that his arrest was unsupported by probable cause and that the statements he made must be suppressed as the fruit of the poisonous tree. See Commonwealth v. Lunden,
The Commonwealth correctly does not dispute that in the circumstances the patrol unit officers effected an arrest of the defendant, which required probable cause in order to be lawful.
As is uncontested, the police plainly had a solid basis for believing that the vehicle was stolen. Whether the police had a sufficient basis to believe that the defendant "possessed" the vehicle lies in at least some doubt. For purposes of G. L. c. 266, § 28(a ), we have interpreted possession as "the exercise of dominion and control over the motor vehicle." Commonwealth v. McArthur,
With respect to knowledge that the vehicle has been stolen, we have long held, in the context of analyzing the sufficiency of evidence at trial, that possession alone is not enough to establish knowledge. See Commonwealth v. Johnson,
On the record before us, the Commonwealth is unable to point to any evidence that the police had prior to the defendant's arrest that could support a reasonable belief that he was aware that the car had been stolen. Acknowledging that, the Commonwealth asks us to adopt a rule that-for purposes of assessing probable cause-police can infer a defendant's knowledge that a vehicle was stolen from his mere possession of it.
In sum, because the Commonwealth did not demonstrate that the police had probable cause to arrest the defendant, the statements he made subsequent to his arrest must be suppressed.
Order allowing motion to suppress statements affirmed.
The motion judge made no written findings of fact, but he credited "in full" the testimony of the police officer who was the sole witness at the motion hearing.
The officer testified that the car was not running at that time.
The Commonwealth presented no evidence at the suppression hearing indicating that the detention and handcuffing of the defendant was justified on a lesser basis than probable cause, such as being within the scope of a lawful investigatory stop or reasonably necessary to ensure officer or public safety. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Williams,
There is no evidence in the record as to when the vehicle was stolen. Compare Commonwealth v. Hunt,
The Commonwealth has not argued that if the arrest was unlawful, the evidence at issue was not the fruit of the poisonous tree. In any event, we note that giving Miranda warnings to the defendant did not purge the taint of his illegal arrest, as administering Miranda warnings alone is insufficient attenuation when statements are made by a defendant following his or her unlawful arrest. See Commonwealth v. Damiano,