City of Platteville v. Travis Jon Knautz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedDecember 5, 2024
Docket2024AP001291, 2024AP001292
StatusUnpublished

This text of City of Platteville v. Travis Jon Knautz (City of Platteville v. Travis Jon Knautz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Platteville v. Travis Jon Knautz, (Wis. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

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. December 5, 2024 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Samuel A. Christensen 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.2024AP1291 Cir. Ct. No. 2024TR215 2024TR450 2024AP1292 STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT IV

CITY OF PLATTEVILLE,

PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,

V.

TRAVIS JON KNAUTZ,

DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT.

APPEALS from orders of the circuit court for Grant County: CRAIG R. DAY, Judge. Affirmed.

¶1 BLANCHARD, J.1 The City of Platteville appeals a circuit court order granting Travis Knautz’s motion to suppress all of the evidence that police

1 This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 752.31(2)(f) (2021-22). All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021-22 version unless otherwise noted. Nos. 2024AP1291 2024AP1292

obtained following an investigatory traffic stop, or Terry stop, of a car that Knautz was operating.2 The City used this evidence to pursue two drunk driving forfeiture violations against Knautz. The court ruled that the City failed to show that there was reasonable suspicion for the stop and therefore the Fourth Amendment was violated. The City argues that it proved reasonable suspicion. I agree with Knautz and accordingly affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶2 The only witness at the suppression hearing was the police sergeant who made the traffic stop. The circuit court appeared to fully credit the sergeant’s description of events. Neither party argues that the court clearly erred in any aspect of its fact finding. The sergeant testified in pertinent part as follows.

¶3 At the time of the hearing, the sergeant had approximately 14 years of police experience with the City.

¶4 One Friday night in January 2024, the sergeant was on duty and performing a “general patrol” in Platteville. He was driving an unmarked gray sport utility vehicle. At about 11:50 p.m., while sitting in this vehicle at a traffic light at the intersection of East Mineral Street and Business Highway 151, the sergeant took notice of a parked car. More specifically, the sergeant looked east, across the parking lot of an auto parts shop, to a car located in the parking lot of a chiropractic business beyond the auto parts shop. The car was properly parked in

2 See Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968) (setting forth an exception to the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement that can allow an officer, under limited circumstances, to stop a person without a warrant or probable cause); WIS. STAT. § 968.24 (“[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 ….”).

2 Nos. 2024AP1291 2024AP1292

a parking stall on the “front side” of the chiropractic business—i.e., on the western side of the business, at a spot within sight of vehicles passing on the highway. The headlights and tail lights of the car were on, but not its interior lights, and its engine was running.

¶5 There did not appear to be any lights on inside the building housing the chiropractic business. The chiropractic business is “attached to a financial services business.” The sergeant knew that the building was not “normally open” at that time of night.

¶6 From his original vantage point at the light-controlled intersection, the sergeant watched the parked car for about one minute. There appeared to be one person in the car. The person appeared to be in the driver’s seat and was “moving around,” although the sergeant “could not tell what they were doing.” The sergeant did not observe this person holding anything, such as a tool that could be used in a break-in or to vandalize. At no time did the sergeant see any person outside the car, nor did he see a door of the car open.

¶7 After the initial minute of observation, the sergeant drove across the highway and pulled into the parking lot of a commercial business directly across the highway from the chiropractic business. The sergeant did this with the purpose of “parking there for maybe a few more minutes to see if I could see anybody coming in or out of” the chiropractic business. As the sergeant entered this parking lot he turned off the headlights of his unmarked sport utility vehicle. Also as the sergeant entered the lot, the car he was keeping track of across the highway backed out of the stall that it had been parked in and headed toward a

3 Nos. 2024AP1291 2024AP1292

highway ramp.3 The sergeant proceeded to drive toward the car and then pulled it over on the highway ramp. Knautz was the driver.4

¶8 At no time did the sergeant observe Knautz engage in any irregular or illegal driving behavior.

¶9 The chiropractic business had a “back lot,” separate from where the sergeant initially observed the car parked. Unlike the area where the sergeant first observed the parked car, the back lot was not next to the highway, which sees “a fair amount of traffic” at around midnight on a Friday.

¶10 The circuit court aptly summarized the core relevant facts that preceded the traffic stop as follows:

[I]t’s 11:50, ten minutes to midnight on a Friday night. The Officer’s on routine patrol, [and] spots this vehicle in [the] chiropractic parking lot. The vehicle has its lights on. It appears, from the Officer’s observations, to be running. It sits there about a minute. The driver’s moving around, but other than that, there really isn’t anything happening. [The car] catches the Officer’s eye.

The Officer decides to get a vantage point to surveil the vehicle. As he’s driving around into the parking lot of the [commercial space across the highway] with his headlights off, the vehicle backs out and pulls away.

3 The sergeant testified to the perception that, “as soon as I entered the parking lot across the road from it, [the occupants of] the vehicle decided that they wanted to leave,” which he testified added to his suspicion of possible criminal activity. But the circuit court found that, given the undisputed testimony about the sergeant’s activities in the unmarked SUV relative to the car that he decided to surveil, that perception was not “well-founded.” On appeal, the City concedes that the sergeant could not reasonably have considered the timing of the car’s departure from its original parking spot relative to his movements in his unmarked SUV as a fact counting toward reasonable suspicion. I do not address this concept further. 4 Events that occurred after the stop produced the evidence that was used by the City to pursue two drunk driving forfeiture violations against Knautz. Those events are not pertinent to any issue in this appeal.

4 Nos. 2024AP1291 2024AP1292

¶11 I now summarize evidence and findings of the circuit court on one topic that the State attempted to develop at the hearing. The City sought to advance the proposition that the chiropractic business was located in an area in which break-ins and other property crimes were especially common at the time of the traffic stop here. The sergeant testified that, in preparation for the hearing, counsel for the City asked the sergeant to compile a list from police records of “burglary, thefts, or damage to … property for businesses along [the] business Highway 151 corridor” that had occurred over the 14 years that the sergeant had served with the police department.

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Related

Terry v. Ohio
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State v. Young
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State v. Gordon
2014 WI App 44 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2014)

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Bluebook (online)
City of Platteville v. Travis Jon Knautz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-platteville-v-travis-jon-knautz-wisctapp-2024.