DocketNumber: No. 21746.
Citation Numbers: 876 N.E.2d 1304, 172 Ohio App. 3d 780, 2007 Ohio 4575
Judges: Wolff, Fain, Grady
Filed Date: 8/31/2007
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 782
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 783
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 784 {¶ 1} Terrell L. Strozier pleaded no contest to possession of heroin in an amount more than ten grams but less than 50 grams after the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas overruled his motion to suppress evidence. The court found him guilty, and it sentenced him to two years of incarceration and a six-month driver's license suspension. Strozier appeals, raising one assignment of error.
{¶ 2} "The trial court erred when it failed to suppress certain incriminating statements made to officers prior to the Miranda warning."
{¶ 3} The testimony presented at the motion-to-suppress hearing reveals the following facts. At approximately 3:30 a.m. on August 3, 2005, Sergeant Eric Wilson of the Trotwood police department observed a maroon pickup truck driving erratically. The vehicle crossed the center line a couple of times and rolled through a stop sign. Wilson, who was driving behind the truck, ran the license plate number and learned that the vehicle had been reported stolen. Wilson called dispatch to verify that the truck had been entered as a stolen vehicle, and dispatch confirmed the report. Wilson followed the truck into the city of Dayton and requested assistance.
{¶ 4} The truck stopped in front of 833 Osmond Avenue, and a male passenger, Strozier, exited. Wilson turned on his overhead lights, exited his cruiser, and ordered Strozier to return to the truck. Wilson stated that he wanted all of the occupants of the vehicle in the truck for safety reasons. Specifically, he did not want to risk the passenger circling back and harming him from behind. Strozier returned to the vehicle. Wilson also ordered the driver to turn off the vehicle and toss the keys out of the window. The driver complied.
{¶ 5} At this time, two or three officers from the Dayton police department and a Trotwood officer, Roy McGill, arrived. With guns drawn, the officers ordered the driver, a female passenger, and Strozier to exit the truck and to lie prone on the ground. Wilson and McGill both testified that they did not have any facts to lead them to believe that Strozier, the passenger, had a weapon. Wilson stated, "[T]hat's why they were ordered to the ground because we did not know, and we were going to make sure." Wilson and McGill emphasized that they were conducting a "felony stop" and that the stop occurred in a high-crime area. *Page 785
{¶ 6} Wilson focused on the driver. Wilson patted down the driver and placed him in his cruiser. Dayton police officers took custody of the female passenger because she had an outstanding warrant.
{¶ 7} McGill testified that he "secured" Strozier by handcuffing him while he was on the ground and then stood him up to conduct a pat-down search. McGill stated that prior to conducting the pat-down, he asked Strozier if he had "anything on [him] I need to know about? Anything that might stick me?" Strozier responded that he had a plastic bag with some brown stuff in it in his pocket. McGill retrieved the bag from Strozier's left pants pocket and, based on his experience, he believed that the bag contained heroin. McGill placed Strozier in his cruiser and informed him of his Miranda rights. Strozier indicated that he understood his rights and that he was willing to talk to McGill. Afterwards, Strozier told McGill that he had picked up the bag off the ground at Delphos Market and that he thought he could trade it for other drugs or money. Strozier indicated that he used marijuana and crack cocaine and that he couldn't use needles. When McGill told Strozier the brown substance was heroin, Strozier stated, "That's three grams of heroin then."
{¶ 8} On March 9, 2006, Strozier was indicated for possession of heroin, in violation of R.C.
{¶ 9} On July 11, 2006, the trial court overruled the motion to suppress. The court first concluded that Wilson was justified in stopping the pickup truck and in detaining the passengers until he could determine whether any of them posed a risk to his safety. The court continued:
{¶ 10} "The question then becomes whether Defendant was under custodial interrogation prior to being mirandized. As set forth above, Defendant was handcuffed and asked by McGill prior to his pat-down, ``Do you have anything on you I need to know about? Anything that might stick me?' The Court acknowledges that being ordered out at gunpoint and handcuffed is a more drastic form of detention than used under most Terry stops. However, ``Terry does recognize that the police are entitled to take reasonable measures to ensure their own safety, including handcuffing should the situation warrant it.' [State v. Jones (Dec. 3, 1999), 1st Dist. No. C-990125,
{¶ 11} "Furthermore, under the ``public safety exception to the Miranda rule, a suspect's answers to questions from a police officer are admissible in the absence *Page 786
of a Miranda warning so long as the questions asked of the suspect are reasonably prompted by a concern for the public safety.' State v. Morgan [2d Dist. No. 20987],
{¶ 12} On appeal, Strozier claims that his incriminating statement regarding the drugs in his pocket was the product of police interrogation and, because he made the statement prior to being advised of his Miranda rights, he asserts that it should have been suppressed. Strozier contends that the trial court erred in applying the public-safety exception to the Miranda rule. Although Strozier focuses on his statement, we presume — as does the state — that he intends to argue that the heroin itself also should have been suppressed as fruit of the unlawfully obtained statement.
{¶ 13} In reviewing the trial court's ruling on a motion to suppress evidence, this court must accept the findings of fact made by the trial court if they are supported by competent, credible evidence. See State v. Morgan
(Jan. 18, 2002), Montgomery App. No. 18985,
{¶ 14} As an initial matter, Strozier understandably has not challenged the trial court's conclusions that Wilson was justified in stopping the pickup truck and that he lawfully detained the passengers. The fact that the pickup truck had been reported stolen provided probable cause for Wilson to stop the vehicle. "When a lawfully stopped vehicle contains passengers, the
{¶ 15} The
{¶ 16} The right to Miranda warnings is grounded in the
{¶ 17} "Not all seizures rise to the level of a formal arrest. Under Terry v. Ohio (1968),
{¶ 18} "In a typical investigatory detention, such as a routine traffic stop, individuals are not ``in custody' for purposes of Miranda [v. Arizona (1966),
{¶ 19} Although the trial court apparently found that Strozier was subjected to an atypically "drastic form of detention" under Terry, the parties apparently agree that Strozier was in custody when McGill asked him questions prior to conducting the pat-down. We likewise agree that Strozier was in custody. Strozier was ordered out of the vehicle by at least five officers at gunpoint, told to lie on the ground, and handcuffed. Although the trial court correctly noted that placing a suspect in handcuffs does not necessarily result in the suspect being in custody, see Keggan
at ¶ 41, the officers' conduct in this case is consistent with a formal arrest. See New York v. Quarles (1984),
{¶ 20} The state asserts that McGill's questions to Strozier — "Do you have anything I need to know about? Anything that might stick me?" — did not constitute "interrogation" for purposes of Miranda.
"Interrogation" includes express questioning as well as "any words or actions on the part of the police (other than those normally attendant to arrest and custody) that the police should know are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from the suspect." Rhode Island v. Innis
(1980),
{¶ 21} The state asserts that McGill could not have known that his question would lead Strozier to respond that he had a plastic bag with some brown stuff in his pocket. The state argues that McGill did not ask about weapons, drugs, or contraband, and that he asked the question because he had previously been stuck by a needle while conducting a pat-down. The state contends that McGill could *Page 789 not have known that Strozier would admit to having an object other than one that could have stuck McGill. In contrast, Strozier argues that it was the first question — "Do you have anything on you I need to know about? — "that elicited his admission. Consequently, Strozier asserts that he was interrogated in violation of Miranda.
{¶ 22} In our view, McGill's initial open-ended question was reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from Strozier. Although McGill apparently intended to qualify his initial broad question by limiting it to anything that might stick him during the pat down, the officer should have known that his question would be reasonably interpreted as asking Strozier if he had anything illegal on his person, particularly weapons or drug paraphernalia. Strozier apparently responded to the initial question as to whether he had anything McGill should know about. Accordingly, McGill's questions constituted an interrogation under Miranda.
{¶ 23} "Under the ``public safety' exception, a suspect's answers to questions from a police officer are admissible in the absence of a Miranda warning so long as the questions asked of the suspect are ``reasonably prompted by a concern for the public safety.' New York v.Quarles (1984),
{¶ 24} In Quarles, "[t]he police * * * were confronted with the immediate necessity of ascertaining the whereabouts of a gun which they had every reason to believe the suspect had just removed from his empty holster and discarded in the supermarket. So long as the gun was concealed somewhere in the supermarket, with its actual whereabouts unknown, it obviously posed more than one danger to the public safety: an accomplice might make use of it, a customer or employee might later come upon it." Quarles,
{¶ 25} The public-safety exception does not apply to all situations in which a suspect is believed to have used a weapon in the commission of a crime, and it does not permit officers to ask questions that are not necessary to secure their safety or that of the public. State v. Jergens
(Sept. 3, 1993), Montgomery App. No. 13294,
{¶ 26} As argued by Strozier, the facts of this case are distinguishable from Quarles. Wilson and McGill both testified that they had no facts to lead them to believe that Strozier was armed, other than the fact that they were conducting a "felony stop" and were in a high crime area. There is no evidence that the offense for which they were stopped involved a weapon or that Strozier or his companions had discarded a weapon nearby. In short, the record is devoid of any evidence that there was an objectively reasonable need to protect the public from an immediate danger from a weapon.
{¶ 27} Although the present circumstances do not involve an immediate threat to the public, we agree with McGill that the avoidance of being stuck by a needle during a lawful pat-down is a legitimate safety concern for police officers.1 McGill testified at the suppression hearing that he asked Strozier whether he had anything that might stick him "[t]o make sure * * * as I'm searching for weapons that I didn't get stuck with a needle like I've found before on a subject in his shirt sleeve." *Page 791
{¶ 28} In order to invoke the public-safety exception to Miranda under these circumstances, the officer's question must be narrowly tailored to address only
that concern. Officers may not ask investigatory questions absent Miranda warnings. In the present circumstances, McGill's initial question went beyond the specific concern regarding being stuck by a needle. The result of the initial expansive question was that Strozier responded with an admission to possessing a "plastic bag with some brown stuff in it." Under these circumstances, the officer's question exceeded the public-safety exception. Strozier's response — and the heroin that was seized as a result of his response — should have been suppressed. See State v. Farris,
{¶ 29} The assignment of error is sustained.
{¶ 30} The judgment of the trial court will be reversed and the case will be remanded for further proceedings.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
FAIN and GRADY, JJ., concur.
State v. Boyce, 06-Ca-64 (5-4-2007) , 2007 Ohio 2131 ( 2007 )
Maryland v. Wilson , 117 S. Ct. 882 ( 1997 )
State v. Williams, 22924 (4-3-2009) , 2009 Ohio 1627 ( 2009 )
State v. Thompson-Shabazz , 96 N.E.3d 1146 ( 2017 )
State v. Cash , 2015 Ohio 3792 ( 2015 )
State v. Johnson , 46 Kan. App. 2d 387 ( 2011 )
State v. Lipsinic , 2017 Ohio 8187 ( 2017 )
State v. Craw , 2018 Ohio 1769 ( 2018 )
State v. Maranger , 110 N.E.3d 895 ( 2018 )
State v. Reindel , 2017 Ohio 28 ( 2017 )
State v. Hall , 2014 Ohio 1731 ( 2014 )
State v. Cross , 2014 Ohio 1534 ( 2014 )
State v. Millerton , 2015 Ohio 34 ( 2015 )
State v. Goines , 2015 Ohio 3505 ( 2015 )
State v. Brown , 2016 Ohio 4973 ( 2016 )
State v. Holley , 2017 Ohio 7430 ( 2017 )
State v. Lancaster , 104 N.E.3d 951 ( 2018 )
State v. Black , 2018 Ohio 3066 ( 2018 )
State v. Sanderson , 2019 Ohio 3589 ( 2019 )
State v. Hill , 2019 Ohio 3921 ( 2019 )
State v. King , 2011 Ohio 3417 ( 2011 )