DocketNumber: 2016-SC-000558-DG
Citation Numbers: 542 S.W.3d 276
Judges: Cunningham, Venters
Filed Date: 3/22/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The Commonwealth appeals from a Court of Appeals' decision which upheld the trial court's suppression of evidence discovered as a result of a canine sniff search of Appellee's, John E. Smith, vehicle during a traffic stop. The Commonwealth contends that the Court of Appeals erred by concluding that 1) the sniff search improperly extended the traffic stop; 2) the traffic stop was the only legal justification for stopping Appellee; and 3) the Commonwealth failed to preserve for appellate review its claim that Appellee's parole status alone permitted police to conduct a warrantless, suspicionless search of his vehicle.
We granted discretionary review. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the Court of Appeals' decision.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Franklin County Sheriff's Detective Richard Qualls had been surveilling Appellee for about three weeks trying to corroborate tips received from confidential informants that Appellee had been trafficking in cocaine at a bar in Frankfort. Qualls knew that he lacked probable cause to arrest Appellee on drug trafficking charges. On the evening of Appellee's arrest, Qualls followed in an unmarked police car as Appellee left his workplace in his SUV, went to his residence, left the residence, and then drove to a gas station where he interacted with another resident of his apartment building who leaned into the passenger-side window.
Because Qualls was in plain clothes and driving an unmarked car with no emergency lights or siren, he did not attempt to stop Appellee. Instead, he had prearranged for canine officer Eaton to be on standby, briefed on the situation and ready to respond. Qualls radioed Eaton to inform him of Appellee's improper turn. Eaton responded immediately by stopping Appellee's vehicle. He introduced himself as the sheriff's office canine handler, and he informed Appellee that he was stopped for failure to use his turn signal; an allegation which Appellee denied. Eaton asked Appellee if illegal drugs were in his car, and Appellee said there was none. Eaton described Appellee as fully cooperative but nervous. Eaton went back to his cruiser to get the drug dog and then commenced a sniff search around Appellee's car. When the dog alerted at the driver's door, Eaton asked Appellee to exit the vehicle. He searched Appellee's car and found seven grams of cocaine tucked between the front seats. He then arrested Appellee, searched his person, and found $4,299.00 in his wallet. According to the uniform citation issued by Eaton, eight minutes passed from the time of the traffic violation to the time Appellee was arrested. The citation also noted that Appellee appeared nervous when asked about the presence of drugs.
Appellee was indicted for first-degree trafficking in cocaine, second or greater offense, greater than or equal to four grams of cocaine. He moved to suppress the evidence obtained during the search of his vehicle and his person. He argued that the traffic stop was not legal because the alleged traffic violation did not occur in Eaton's presence, and the officers did not have a reasonable, articulable suspicion of illegal activity to justify the initial investigative stop of the vehicle.
The trial court concluded that Qualls and Eaton together did not have sufficient knowledge of criminal activity to authorize the initial stop, and that the only valid basis for the stop was the alleged turn signal violation which Eaton did not witness. The trial court also concluded that Eaton's continued detention of Appellee to conduct the dog sniff search exceeded what was reasonably necessary to achieve the purpose of the traffic stop, and for that reason, too, the warrantless search was unreasonable. Consequently, the trial court suppressed the cocaine discovered in the car and the cash found in Appellee's wallet.
After the Commonwealth moved to alter, amend, or vacate the suppression order, the trial court reiterated that "[r]egardless of the circumstances imputing probable cause from one police officer to another, it is clear to the Court that the Defendant was detained during the stop longer than necessary to dispose of the alleged traffic violation." The trial court maintained its initial conclusion that Qualls' long surveillance of Appellee produced nothing of substance to justify a reasonable suspicion that Appellee was engaged in illegal drug activity on the occasion of the traffic stop.
The Commonwealth appealed the suppression order. The Court of Appeals agreed that the collective knowledge rule permitted Eaton to rely upon Qualls' observation of the turn signal violation, and so, it held that the stop of Appellee's vehicle was justified. Nevertheless, the Court of Appeals agreed with the trial court's *280conclusion that the police officers' collective knowledge of Appellee's criminal record and informants' reports of his drug-dealing activity were insufficient to justify a Terry
Finally, upon grounds that the issue had not been preserved for appellate review, the Court of Appeals refused to consider the Commonwealth's claim that as an active parolee, Appellee's Fourth Amendment rights were curtailed and the warrantless, suspicionless search of his person and vehicle was proper.
We granted discretionary review, and for reasons stated below, we affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
When reviewing a trial court's ruling on a motion to suppress evidence, we defer to the trial court's findings of fact to the extent they are supported by substantial evidence and are not clearly erroneous. We review the trial court's conclusions of law de novo. Davis v. Commonwealth,
A. THE TRAFFIC STOP WAS VALID UNDER THE COLLECTIVE KNOWLEDGE DOCTRINE, BUT APPELLEE'S DETENTION WAS UNREASONABLY PROLONGED
The Court of Appeals agreed with the Commonwealth that Deputy Eaton was authorized to stop Appellee for the traffic violation witnessed only by Deputy Qualls and communicated by radio to Eaton.
We said in Lamb that "[u]nder the collective knowledge doctrine, an arresting officer is entitled to act on the strength of the knowledge communicated from a fellow officer and he may assume its reliability provided he is not otherwise aware of circumstances sufficient to materially impeach the information received."
Eaton's stop of Appellee's vehicle was proper; but a valid traffic stop can become unlawful if it is prolonged beyond the time reasonably required to issue a traffic citation. Illinois v. Caballes ,
Prolonging a stop beyond what is reasonably required to complete the stop's mission violates the Fourth Amendment's proscription against unreasonable seizures. Rodriguez ,
*282Id. at 1614 ("[I]n determining the reasonable duration of a stop, 'it [is] appropriate to examine whether the police diligently pursued [the] investigation.' " (quoting United States v. Sharpe,
The Commonwealth cites Davis v. United States ,
Under the circumstances of this case, as reflected in the trial court's findings, we cannot conclude that Eaton "diligently pursued" the traffic violation. Eaton did nothing to advance the traffic stop's mission-a citation for not using a turn signal. Cf. Caballes ,
*283B. BUT FOR THE TRAFFIC VIOLATION, THE OFFICERS LACKED A REASONABLE, ARTICULABLE SUSPICION OF ILLEGAL CONDUCT TO JUSTIFY THE STOP OF APPELLEE'S VEHICLE
The Commonwealth asserts that, independent of their authority to stop Appellee's vehicle for a traffic law violation, Eaton and Qualls were also authorized to stop Appellee based upon a reasonable suspicion that Appellee had illegal drugs in his vehicle. Under that theory, the Rodriguez / Davis analysis would be unnecessary. The Commonwealth contends that the collective knowledge of Qualls and Eaton about Appellee's criminal history and the confidential informants' reports of Appellee's trafficking in cocaine supplied Eaton with a reasonable suspicion to stop Appellee for illegal drug activity, thereby redefining the original purpose of the stop as a drug investigation by which Appellee was properly subjected to the sniff search. We disagree.
Certainly, a police officer may rely on the collective knowledge doctrine when initiating an investigative stop, see Lamb ,
The Commonwealth proffers two circumstances known to the officers before the stop as support for its argument that a reasonable, articulable suspicion of drug trafficking existed to authorize the investigatory stop, even without the traffic violation.
As the trial court noted, Qualls did not observe any. suspicious activity while he surveilled Appellee for an extended period during the day of the stop and the Commonwealth admitted that the officers were looking for a traffic violation to provide a pretext basis to stop Appellee's vehicle. Qualls described none of the typical observations *284ordinarily indicative of suspicious drug-related activity. There was no complaint from neighbors about suspicious activity at Appellee's apartment or reports of numerous people coming and going from Appellee's residence. There was no controlled buy of cocaine from Appellee to corroborate the informants' tips. There was no indication that Appellant was using his car to transport cocaine.
In Commonwealth v. Morgan, we recognized that "an officer's knowledge about a suspect's prior record can be a relevant factor in the reasonable suspicion analysis."
The Commonwealth cites Commonwealth v. Bucalo,
C. THE COMMONWEALTH'S CLAIM THAT APPELLEE'S PAROLE STATUS SUBJECTED HIM TO A WARRANTLESS AND SUSPICIONLESS SEARCH AND SEIZURE WAS NOT PRESERVED FOR REVIEW
The Commonwealth argued before the Court of Appeals that under Bratcher v. Commonwealth,
We recognized in Bratcher that the Fourth Amendment affords less protection to parolees and probationers. We also recognized *285that other factors, such as the specific terms of orders of probation and parole, and applicable regulations, such as Department of Corrections Policy No. 27-16-01 II(D), must also be considered. Bratcher ,
Although Appellee's parole status was part of the evidentiary record before the trial court, the Commonwealth did not argue that his status as a parolee made him subject to a warrantless and suspicionless search and seizure. Consequently, the trial court made no specific findings relating to Appellee's parole status or his susceptibility to a warrantless, suspicionless search on account of that status. The Commonwealth complains that the trial court's findings of fact are, therefore, incomplete, arbitrary, and clearly erroneous, since Appellee's parole status was clearly a determinative fact.
RCr 8.20(2) plainly states that "[w]hen factual issues are involved in deciding [the suppression] motion, the court shall state its essential findings on the record." Nevertheless, even if Appellee's parole status was as determinative as the Commonwealth now contends, it was obliged to raise the omission by motion under CR 52.02 asking the trial court to make the additional findings and amend its order accordingly. The Commonwealth did not do so.
An appellate court may decide only those issues which were fully presented to the trial court. Combs v. Knott County Fiscal Court ,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reason set forth above, we affirm the opinion of the Court of Appeals.
All sitting.
All concur.
Cunningham, J., also concurs by separate opinion in which Keller and Venters, JJ., join.
Another officer, Captain Wyatt of the Franklin County Sheriff's Office, also surveilled Appellee from another vehicle. He saw the other resident lean into Appellee's car window.
Terry v. Ohio ,
The Court of Appeals specifically noted that Appellee's nervousness during the officer's questioning was not sufficient to create such suspicion.
The Commonwealth does challenge the trial court's failure to specifically address the significance of Appellee's parole status, an argument we address below in Section C.
The trial court's initial suppression order rejected application of the collective knowledge rule, but in response to the Commonwealth's motion to alter, amend, or vacate that order the trial court corrected itself in that regard, citing Commonwealth v. Vaughn ,
Lamb, rendered February 16, 2017, was decided after the September 16, 2016 Court of Appeals' decision. Lamb was not mentioned in the briefing for this Court. Prior to Lamb, in Brumley v. Commonwealth,
Turley was cited in the order granting Appellee's motion to suppress.
Caballes and Rodriguez were cited in the order denying the Commonwealth's motion to alter, amend, or vacate.
"[T]he harsh sanction of exclusion 'should not be applied to deter objectively reasonable law enforcement activity.' Evidence obtained during a search conducted in reasonable reliance on binding precedent is not subject to the exclusionary rule."
The Commonwealth also cites Appellee's nervousness when questioned about the presence of drugs as a third circumstance allowing the stop's extension to conduct the canine sniff search. But Appellee's nervousness was not a circumstance known prior to the stop, so it cannot contribute to the accumulation of information that might otherwise add up to reasonable suspicion for initiating a Terry stop.
See United States v. Wood ,