Alfred v. State

487 A.2d 1228, 61 Md. App. 647, 1985 Md. App. LEXIS 325
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 14, 1985
Docket667, September Term, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 487 A.2d 1228 (Alfred v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alfred v. State, 487 A.2d 1228, 61 Md. App. 647, 1985 Md. App. LEXIS 325 (Md. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

MOYLAN, Judge.

For all of the Supreme Court’s commendable movement toward general reasonableness as a realistic touchstone of Fourth Amendment propriety, there is still no such thing as a legitimate investigatory arrest or a legitimate frisk incident to a consensual trip to the station house. With that brief prologue, we turn our attention to the conviction of the appellant, Patrick Larell Alfred, by a Montgomery County jury for theft. The sole issue before us on this appeal is the failure of a pretrial hearing judge to grant the appellant’s motion to suppress a small gold chain and a silver brooch taken from the appellant’s rear pants pocket a little more than one hour after the theft occurred.

The seizure of these two items of stolen jewelry hangs by a chain of justification consisting of five separate links, no one of which is more than modestly adequate and several of which are structurally flawed to the constitutional breaking point. To support its ultimate burden, the State must establish the sustaining adequacy of each of five propositions:

1) That there was articulable suspicion for the stop of the appellant as of the very inception of that stop;

2) That the stop, even if properly initiated, was not, in terms of its duration, unreasonably excessive in scope prior to the critical frisking;

3) That there was articulable suspicion for the frisk;

*653 4) That the frisk was truly an incident of the stop and not an incident to a consensual trip to the station house; and

5) That the frisk remained appropriately limited in scope to an actual probe for offensive weapons and did not degenerate into a search for and seizure of suddenly suspected stolen goods.

THE STOP

The initial police response in this case was alert, intelligent, and highly commendable in every way; it simply became a bit unravelled (in the constitutional sense, not in the investigative sense) as the evening wore on. 1 The real dilemma, vis-á-vis this appellant, was that the police were walking the razor’s edge, having too much (in their judgment) to let him go but not having enough to hold him further. They were required to respond in black or white, when their legitimate investigative senses perceived only gray. The hard reality is that they are not permitted to equivocate even when all the surrounding circumstances are equivocal.

The victim, Norma Solis, was watching television in her Pear Tree Lane apartment, when she heard noises from her bedroom as if Venetian blinds were rattling. Thinking that she had shut the bedroom window, she went to investigate. She discovered the top of one of her jewelry boxes on the floor and a second jewelry box, normally sitting on a *654 dresser right under the open window, missing. She immediately called the police, reporting a burglary and describing items of missing jewelry. The time was about 10:30 p.m.

At least three police cruisers responded to the scene within minutes. Officer Thomas Abbamonte was in the lead cruiser. As he turned from Connecticut Avenue into, a relatively large apartment complex, which contained the victim’s apartment house, he observed a Datsun, occupied by three or four black males, leave the apartment complex at a higher than normal rate of speed. The execution of a “U” turn presented a difficult maneuver. Word was passed back to the third cruiser in the convoy, driven by Officer Thomas Scafide, to go in pursuit of the Datsun. There is no quarrel with this judgment to trail and stop the Datsun; it was alert police work.

By the time that Officer Scafide negotiated his “U” turn and began the pursuit southbound on Connecticut Avenue, the Datsun had made a right-hand turn on Grand Pre Road and disappeared from Officer Scafide’s view. When, moments later, he turned north on Grand Pre Road, the Datsun was out of sight. Within blocks, however, he found the Datsun, unoccupied but with its motor still running, at the side of the road. There was no key in the ignition; it had been hot-wired. A radio check soon revealed that it had been stolen from the Seabrook area of Prince George’s County. Officer Scafide, shortly reinforced by other officers, began combing the area for three or four young black males. A neighboring resident, walking his dog, reported to one of the officers that he had just seen a young black male, dressed in a green hospital gown and cut-off shorts, run from the vicinity of the abandoned automobile into an apartment development across the street.

The police had this information when a few minutes later, Samuel Hall, a black male, came jogging by in a green hospital gown and cut-off shorts. After an unassailable Terry -stop, brief questioning revealed that Hall was from the same neighborhood in Prince George’s County from *655 which the Datsun had been stolen. Minutes later, Jeffrey Jones, a black male, came walking by and was similarly stopped. He also gave the Seabrook area of Prince George’s County as his address. The explanations of both Hall and Jones as to what they were doing in the neighborhood and particularly why Hall was out jogging were classically unsatisfactory. The detention of both, under the general guidelines of Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 88 S.Ct. 1868, 20 L.Ed.2d 889 (1968), and Sibron v. New York, 392 U.S. 40, 88 S.Ct. 1889, 20 L.Ed.2d 917 (1968), was beyond reproach, but those stops are not dispositive of the constitutionality of the later stop of the appellant. At that point, however, the police were still legitimately scouring the surrounding area for one, or perhaps two, other black males.

The entire case hinges exclusively on the judgment made approximately ten minutes later and approximately one mile (by road) away by Officer Charles Penney. He was driving northbound on Georgia Avenue when he saw the appellant and Anthony Alexander, both black males, walking southbound on Georgia Avenue and just about to cross Ralph Road. He stopped them, thereby initiating a process that soon involved a number of other officers and that culminated between 45 minutes and an hour later when Officer Abbamonte searched the appellant’s pants pocket and recovered the two items of stolen jewelry.

For reasons to be discussed in a moment, we hold that this was the critical instant when a Terry -level stop, requiring no less than articulable and particularized suspicion, and not a mere accosting, requiring no Fourth Amendment justification, occurred. If it had been a mere accosting, of course, Officer Penney would have required no justification at all under the Fourth Amendment, for the gears of the Fourth Amendment would not even have been engaged. Florida v. Royer, 460 U.S. 491, 497, 103 S.Ct. 1319, 1324, 75 L.Ed.2d 229, 236 (1983), was very clear in this regard:

*656

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Bluebook (online)
487 A.2d 1228, 61 Md. App. 647, 1985 Md. App. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alfred-v-state-mdctspecapp-1985.