Com. v. Grigger-Cross, D.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 16, 2024
Docket1652 EDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Grigger-Cross, D. (Com. v. Grigger-Cross, D.) 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. Grigger-Cross, D., (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-S25024-24

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : DEVON MARCELIUS GRIGGER- : CROSS : : No. 1652 EDA 2023 Appellant

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered May 24, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-46-CR-0001997-2022

BEFORE: DUBOW, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and BECK, J.

MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.: FILED OCTOBER 16, 2024

Devon Marcelius Grigger-Cross appeals from the judgment of sentence

entered following his convictions for firearms not to be carried without a

license, persons not to possess firearms, possession of firearm with altered

manufacturing number, and two counts each of possession of a controlled

substance with intent to deliver and possession of a controlled substance.1 He

challenges the denial of his motion to suppress. We affirm.

In March 2022, following a vehicle stop, Grigger-Cross was charged with

multiple firearm and drug offenses. He filed a motion to suppress.

At a hearing on the motion to suppress, Grigger-Cross argued, among

other things, that a frisk police conducted went beyond a permissible Terry

____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 6106(a)(1), 6105(a)(1), and 6110.2(a) and 35 P.S. § 780-

113(a)(30) and (a)(16), respectively. J-S25024-24

frisk and constituted a search of his person without probable cause. He also

contended that the search of a backpack constituted a “warrantless search of

what was in the car. It was not an inventory to search.” N.T., Jan. 25, 2023,

at 4-5. Following the hearing, the court made the following factual findings:

1. The arresting officer who testified, Trooper Giovanni DiSalvatore, was a six-year veteran of the Pennsylvania State Police who had previously been a correctional officer. He had had 100 hours of training in drug investigations, and over 200 arrests involving illegal drugs and/or firearms, which he knew from his experience often accompanied each other. He was well familiar with identifying these items, including identifying marijuana by smell, and with the packaging of cocaine and marijuana in particular for resale.

2. The trooper, of course, was intimately familiar with firearms. He carried one on or off duty.

3. Trooper DiSalvatore’s normal detail was working out of the Philadelphia barracks patrolling highways including I-76, I-95, 309, and 422 for traffic violations but also helping to interdict chains of supply of illegal drugs, firearms, human trafficking, and money-laundering. Interstate 76, the Schuylkill Expressway, was a corridor for such activity, especially westbound leaving Philadelphia, a source city for such trade.

4. We found Trooper DiSalvatore to be a credible witness. We particularly apply this finding to his testimony about encountering and arresting [Grigger-Cross], much of which the trooper narrated as we watched video of the events recorded by a camera mounted in his police vehicle. (The audio portion of the recording was not available.)

5. Just after midnight on the night in question, the trooper was on patrol westbound on I-76 in Lower Merion Township, Montgomery County, which adjoins Philadelphia. His partner was driving their marked patrol vehicle, with Trooper DiSalvatore in the front passenger’s seat.

6. They came behind a car soon determined to be driven by [Grigger-Cross], a red Chevy Cruz, going sixty-two miles

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per hour in a fifty-five-mile-per-hour zone. They clocked the car for three tenths of a mile, using their vehicle’s speedometer, which was calibrated for accuracy on a yearly basis.

7. They called in the car’s license plate, and word came back registration was not correct for that vehicle. The Commonwealth illustrated what this meant by introducing as an exhibit a certification from the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, Bureau of Motor Vehicles, on the plate, which was registered to [Grigger-Cross’s] brother, who was also riding in the car that night, stating, “The license plate that you requested information for [that the Chevy Cruz displayed] cannot be used on any motor vehicle. This type of record is referred to as a ‘tag only’ record. Pa. Dep’t Transp. Vehicle R. Abstract 1, Jan. 24, 2023 (Tag Only Record) (boldface and capitalization omitted).

8. The troopers initiated a stop of the Cruz by activating their overhead flashing lights. Automatically, as we saw from the footage played at the hearing, the police vehicle’s camera started recording retroactively forty-five seconds before the lights went on.

9. The Cruz took about twenty seconds to move from the left lane in which it was traveling and cross the right lane to come to rest on the shoulder of the highway. By the time the car came to a full stop, the shoulder had narrowed to the point that there was practically no space between where the car had parked and the white fog line of the highway, which was being traversed by fast-moving traffic.

10. While the Cruz was maneuvering to stop, Trooper DiSalvatore saw the car’s occupants making furtive movements left and right and dipping down from view. He was worried they might be hiding something that could harm him—a gun or a knife. But he couldn’t see what they were doing.

11. From the troopers’ car positioned behind the Cruz, Trooper DiSalvatore alighted and approached its passenger’s side, as he commonly did for such stops, both for general safety reasons and because of lack of room to go on the driver’s side without being in the lane of travel. He observed [Grigger-Cross] in the driver’s seat, another man (who turned out to be [Grigger-Cross’s] brother) in the

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front passenger’s seat, and a small child asleep across the backseat; none of the occupants was wearing seatbelts or restraints.

12. [Grigger-Cross’s] window was down, and the trooper detected the smell of raw marijuana coming from the car. The trooper (from his passenger’s-side vantage point) asked the driver (Grigger-Cross) for his license, et cetera, and he produced only a Pennsylvania identification [card], which indicated to the trooper that Grigger-Cross did not have a valid driver’s license.

13. As Grigger-Cross looked for other documentation in the glove box, the trooper spotted an empty gun holster, which he knew, by itself, was not illegal to possess. Besides the trooper’s testimony, the Commonwealth produced no other evidence of this holster, as it was neither seized nor photographed—unlike the gun the trooper would soon find on [Grigger-Cross’s] person.

14. The trooper asked the men if there was a gun in the car. They tensed up, looked at each other, and got extremely nervous. Each said no, and did so again when asked again, but their responses were weak and uncertain. The men’s behavior and responses indicated criminal activity to the trooper and increased his suspicion; he believed they were being deceptive.

15. The trooper asked [Grigger-Cross] to step out of the car. He exited the driver’s side, where the trooper’s partner was now standing, and came to the back of the vehicle. The trooper saw a bulge in [Grigger-Cross’s] waistband where, the trooper said, people normally keep firearms. Cf. Hicks, 652 Pa. at 375 & n.11, 208 A.3d at 929 & n.11 (addressing evidence defendant had a firearm concealed in his waistband and/or a holster).

16. The trooper frisked [Grigger-Cross] for purposes of safety, considering, among other things, the bulge, the furtive behavior he had witnessed, and the marijuana. (The trooper had already testified to his experience with the well- known linkage between possession of illicit drugs for sale and possession of guns. Cf.

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Com. v. Grigger-Cross, D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-grigger-cross-d-pasuperct-2024.