Com. v. Bowens, T.

2021 Pa. Super. 210, 265 A.3d 730
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 19, 2021
Docket341 MDA 2018
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 2021 Pa. Super. 210 (Com. v. Bowens, T.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Com. v. Bowens, T., 2021 Pa. Super. 210, 265 A.3d 730 (Pa. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

J-E03006-20

2021 PA Super 210

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : TERRY BOWENS : : Appellant : No. 341 MDA 2018

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered October 23, 2017 In the Court of Common Pleas of York County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-67-CR-0007390-2016

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., BENDER, P.J.E., BOWES, J., LAZARUS, J., OLSON, J., STABILE, J., NICHOLS, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and KING, J.

OPINION BY BOWES, J.: FILED: OCTOBER 19, 2021

Terry Bowens appeals from the judgment of sentence imposed after he

was convicted of multiple drug and firearms offenses. We granted en banc

review to address whether the collection of data from a cell phone that was in

police custody, undertaken more than two days after the issuance of the

warrant that authorized its search, required suppression of the information

obtained. Upon review of that issue and others raised by Appellant, we discern

no cause to disturb the trial court’s suppression ruling and affirm Appellant’s

judgment of sentence.

I. Facts and Procedural History

Appellant’s convictions stem from a traffic stop on Route 30 in York,

Pennsylvania at approximately 6:30 p.m. on October 12, 2016. At that time,

Pennsylvania State Trooper Wesley Johnson, observing traffic from his marked J-E03006-20

police cruiser, saw a gray Chrysler 200 with New Jersey plates commit a traffic

violation. See N.T. Pretrial Motions, 4/6/17, at 4-5.1 He activated his lights

and pulled the vehicle over to find two occupants: Maxi Echevarria in the

driver’s seat and Appellant in the front passenger seat. Id. at 6-7. Echevarria

produced documents revealing the vehicle was registered to his partner, Ms.

Solita Thomas of New Jersey, whom he indicated had given him permission to

drive it. Id. at 7, 11. Echevarria represented that he and Appellant were

journeying from York City to Lancaster, possibly further on to Philadelphia.

Id. at 9. Trooper Johnson ran Echevarria’s information and determined that

he had a suspended license and an active arrest warrant. Id. at 12.

Trooper Johnson then spoke with Appellant who, during the officer’s

interaction with Echevarria, had repeatedly put his hands out the window to

signal Trooper Johnson. Trooper Johnson, based upon his experience,

perceived this as an effort to interrupt his questioning of Echevarria and an

“attempt to control the situation, control the information, conversation, and

their environment.” N.T. Trial, 9/13-15/17, at 144. Appellant offered “Terry

Bowen” rather than “Terry Bowens” as his name, and also provided a birthdate

that was off from the correct date by one day and one year. Appellant was

____________________________________________

1 In discussing evidence pertinent only to Appellant’s pretrial suppression motion, we rely upon the transcript from the pretrial hearing. When referencing testimony or exhibits pertinent to analyzing the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain Appellant’s convictions, we cite to the trial transcript. While the overlap is substantial, it is not complete.

-2- J-E03006-20

unable to supply a social security number. Id. at 145-46. Trooper Johnson

requested that Appellant show him his Facebook profile in an attempt to

establish his identity. Appellant used his Samsung Galaxy smart phone to

access his Facebook profile, which identified Appellant as “Nino Brown.” Id.

at 147-49. Trooper Johnson eventually ascertained Appellant’s identity, as

well as the fact that he also had an active arrest warrant. Id. at 149.

Appellant and Echevarria were both arrested at the scene pursuant to the

outstanding warrants and their phones were seized. Id. at 173-74.

With the owner of the vehicle in New Jersey and both occupants of the

vehicle being taken into custody, Trooper Johnson determined that the vehicle

required a tow and conducted an inventory search. He discovered that the

vehicle’s glove box was locked. After obtaining the key,2 permission from the

vehicle’s owner, and a search warrant, police searched the vehicle and seized

a 9mm Ruger SR9c firearm, a .40 caliber Kahr firearm, heroin, a cutting agent,

and packaging. Id. at 149-50. The Ruger had been reported stolen, while

the serial number on the Kahr had been obliterated, preventing the police

from running a query to see if it had been reported. Id. at 157-59.

2 At the hearing on pretrial motions, Trooper Johnson explained that the vehicle’s owner indicated that Echevarria should have the key, but it was not on the key fob produced by Echevarria on the scene. It was later found on his person after he was transported to central booking. See N.T. Pretrial Motions, 4/6/17, at 14-15.

-3- J-E03006-20

After recovering the contraband, Trooper Johnson applied for and was

issued warrants on October 14, 2016, to search Appellant’s phone as well as

two phones seized from Echevarria. Trooper Johnson secured the devices by

putting them in airplane mode, turning them off, and wrapping them in

aluminum foil to prevent the data thereon from being accessed and altered

remotely. See N.T. Pretrial Motions, 4/6/17, at 113-14. He then immediately

sent the devices to Detective Mark Baker. Id. at 113, 116.

Detective Baker conducted a forensic analysis of Appellant’s phone,

which was the only one of the three that could be analyzed using a Cellebrite

Touch device. See N.T. Trial, 9/13-15/17, at 193-95. Detective Baker was

able to access contacts, applications, texts, photos, and video on Appellant’s

phone. The photographic images recovered were thumbnails located in the

phone’s image cache directory. Id. at 200. The presence of an image in the

cache directory did not mean that the photo was taken by Appellant’s phone,

as opposed to having been received by his phone via text message or other

means. Id. at 200, 204. Rather, it meant only that the photos were viewed

by the phone’s user at some point, and thumbnails saved for faster repeat

viewing. Id. at 200.

Among the nearly 4,000 images recovered were multiple selfies3 of

Appellant, selfies of people other than Appellant, and a photograph of a Ruger

3 Detective Baker explained that “selfie” is a colloquial term for a photographic

self-portrait. See N.T. Trial, 9/13-15/17, at 201.

-4- J-E03006-20

identical to the Ruger recovered from the glovebox of the Chrysler 200. Id.

at 199-201, 231-34, 236, 242-45. Text messages from October 8, 10, and

11, 2016, sent and received between Appellant’s phone and one of the phones

seized from Echevarria,4 revealed plans to secure transportation and both

9mm and .40 caliber ammunition and travel to Lancaster to sell heroin. See

id. at 267-81, Court Exhibit 1 at 14, 22, 44.

Appellant was charged with criminal conspiracy to commit PWID,

possession of heroin, possession with intent to deliver heroin (“PWID”),

possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of a firearm with an altered

serial number, receiving stolen property (“RSP”), and firearms not to be

carried without a license. Prior to trial, Appellant sought to suppress the

images and text messages extracted from his phone, arguing that the warrant

had expired prior to its execution. Unpersuaded, the trial court declined to

suppress the texts between Appellant and Echevarria in the days prior to the

traffic stop.5

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Bluebook (online)
2021 Pa. Super. 210, 265 A.3d 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-bowens-t-pasuperct-2021.