Com. v. Jaquez-Jaquez, A.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 19, 2023
Docket2048 EDA 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Jaquez-Jaquez, A. (Com. v. Jaquez-Jaquez, A.) 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. Jaquez-Jaquez, A., (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

J-A14032-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellant : : : v. : : : ARGENTIS JAQUEZ-JAQUEZ : No. 2048 EDA 2022

Appeal from the Order Entered August 3, 2022 In the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-39-CR-0002894-2021

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., DUBOW, J., and SULLIVAN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY SULLIVAN, J.: FILED OCTOBER 19, 2023

The Commonwealth appeals the order granting Argentis Jaquez-

Jaquez’s (“Jaquez”)1 motion to suppress evidence.2 We affirm.

The evidence presented at the suppression hearing was as follows. On

April 12, 2021, between 3:00 and 3:30 p.m., Pennsylvania State Police

Trooper Brian Konopka (“Trooper Konopka”) was parked on the median of

I-78 in Allentown in an unmarked SUV equipped with lights and sirens.

Trooper Konopka was working as part of the Safe Highways Initiative thru

Effective Law Enforcement and Detection (“SHIELD”) drug interdiction unit.

See N.T., 4/20/22, at 6-10, 20.

____________________________________________

1 Appellee identifies himself as “Jacquez” in his appellate brief.

2 The Commonwealth is permitted to take an appeal as of right from an order

that does not end the entire case where, as here, it certifies that the order “will terminate or substantially handicap the prosecution.” Pa.R.A.P. 311(d). J-A14032-23

Jaquez, who was driving a Honda Accord with heavily tinted windows

and a New Jersey license plate, passed Trooper Konopka while driving above

the speed limit. See id. at 10-12, 49-50. Despite the fact that he was not

significantly exceeding the speed limit, Jaquez applied his brakes several times

as he passed Trooper Konopka’s unmarked SUV, unlike the other cars driving

in the same direction. See id. at 10-12, 42-43. Jaquez’s car had been newly

registered. Trooper Konopka testified that in his experience drug trafficking

organizations often re-register cars in other people’s names. See id. at 12,

49-50. The car’s heavy window tint also indicated to the trooper a design to

prevent the observation of the type of day-time drug transactions he

frequently investigated. See id. at 13.

Trooper Konopka followed Jaquez’s car, which was still exceeding the

speed limit, to the point where Route 145 merges with South Fourth Street in

Allentown. See id. at 13-14. The trooper pulled beside the car but could not

see into it. He conducted a traffic stop of Jaquez, who had a female passenger

later identified as Yaritza Jaquez (“Yaritza”). The trooper’s vehicle had a Motor

Vehicle Recorder (“MVR”) which began recording when the trooper began

following Jaquez’s car.3 Jaquez pulled his car over to the side of the road

when directed to do so. See id. at 14-20; Exhibit C-1 at 00:48.

3 The MVR recording was introduced as Commonwealth Exhibit C-1 (“Exhibit

C-1”). See N.T. 4/20/22, at 17.

-2- J-A14032-23

Trooper Konopka approached Jaquez’s car and told him and Yaritza he

stopped the car because of Jaquez’s speed and the car windows’ excessive

tinting. Trooper Konopka asked Jaquez for his driver’s license and told him

that “as long as everything’s good, I’ll give you a warning, okay?” See N.T.,

4/20/22, at 22, Exhibit C-1 at 1:02-1:45. Jaquez gave the trooper his driver’s

license. The trooper asked Jaquez for his registration and proof of insurance.

When Jaquez paused, the trooper told him to bring those materials to his

SUV’s passenger side and walked back to the SUV. See Exhibit C-1 at 1:45-

2:00.

Jaquez joined Trooper Konopka moments later and leaned into the open

passenger-side window. The trooper asked Jaquez whether he spoke English,

and Jaquez answered in English, “a little.” See Exhibit C-1 at 2:17. The

trooper asked, in Spanish, where Jaquez was going. Jaquez said, in English,

that he was visiting his cousin “right here.” See Exhibit C-1 at 2:23-24. The

trooper asked Jaquez whether he lived in Jersey City, as his license stated, or

Trenton, as his registration stated. Jaquez answered Jersey City. Jaquez

handed the trooper his cell phone with his insurance information. The trooper

returned it twenty seconds later. See N.T., 4/20/22, at 23-24; Exhibit C-1 at

3:15. The trooper asked Jaquez if Yaritza was his girlfriend. Jaquez said,

“Yes.” See Exhibit C-1 at 3:21-22. The trooper asked how long Jaquez would

be in Allentown, and Jaquez answered that he was going back to New Jersey

that night. After the trooper ran a computer check and worked on a “contact

-3- J-A14032-23

data” report, he started typing a warning on TraCS. 4 He asked Jaquez what

he did for work and Jaquez answered that he worked for Uber and had also

worked in construction for four or five years. See N.T., 4/20/22, at 23, 55,

57; Exhibit C-1 at 3:25-4:10.

Trooper Konopka told Jaquez he was going to give him a warning with

“no points, no fine, nothing goes on your license, okay? See Exhibit C-1 at

4:12-4:20. He started to warn Jaquez to be “cognizant,”5 then asked if Jaquez

came to Pennsylvania a lot. Jaquez said he had been in Allentown two weeks

before and had family there. When the officer asked where the family lived,

Jaquez paused before saying that they were on Fourth Street. Having noticed

a car seat, Trooper Konopka asked if Jaquez had children and Jaquez said that

he had a two-year-old child and his wife had a child at home. In response to

a series of questions, Jaquez said he would only be in Allentown for two or

three hours and had a cousin who lived there. When asked for the cousin’s

name, Jaquez paused before saying, “Eric Espino.” See Exhibit C-1 at 5:27-

28. As the trooper typed into his computer, Jaquez volunteered that it was

cold in Allentown compared to New Jersey. After a pause during which he

typed into his computer, the trooper responded conversationally. The trooper

4 The Commonwealth did not present testimony about what TraCS is.

5 The trooper appeared to be ready to warn Jaquez about returning to Pennsylvania with heavily tinted windows but found himself using a word, “cognizant,” Jaquez might not understand.

-4- J-A14032-23

said he (the trooper) needed to get out of the car, rolled up the passenger

side window, and went to speak to Jaquez’s passenger. See Exhibit C-1 at

6:38-54. The trooper testified Jaquez’s conduct of repeatedly tapping his

brakes, as well as the window tinting, the new registration of his car, and what

the trooper testified was Jacquez’s hesitation and lack of specificity when

asked about the name of his cousin and his reason for being in Allentown,

raised his suspicions and caused him to conduct a further investigation. See

N.T. 4/20/22, at 23-25.

Trooper Konopka went to speak to Yaritza, a New Jersey resident, and

asked for her identification. The trooper did not recognize the form of

identification Yaritza provided. In answer to the trooper’s questions, Yaritza

said she did not know where she was going, had slept on the drive, and would

be going home the same day. See id. at 26-28; Exhibit C-1 at 6:55 to 7:25.

When asked, Yaritza said she had met Jaquez about one month before, and

he did some type of construction work. She stated they were in Allentown to

visit his friend, whose name she did not know, which was inconsistent with

Jaquez’s statement they were going to see his cousin.

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