Commonwealth of Virginia v. Kenneth Darrell Jenkins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 10, 2018
Docket0212182
StatusUnpublished

This text of Commonwealth of Virginia v. Kenneth Darrell Jenkins (Commonwealth of Virginia v. Kenneth Darrell Jenkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth of Virginia v. Kenneth Darrell Jenkins, (Va. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Chafin, Russell and Senior Judge Clements UNPUBLISHED

Argued by teleconference

COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0212-18-2 JUDGE WESLEY G. RUSSELL, JR. JULY 10, 2018 KENNETH DARRELL JENKINS

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND Beverly W. Snukals, Judge

Virginia B. Theisen, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellant.

Samantha Offutt Thames, Assistant Public Defender, for appellee.

Pursuant to Code § 19.2-398(A)(2), the Commonwealth of Virginia appeals the circuit

court’s pretrial order granting Kenneth Darrell Jenkins’ motion to suppress evidence seized by

police prior to his arrest on July 19, 2017. On appeal, the Commonwealth contends that the trial

court erred in finding that the police lacked a reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity to

support the stop of Jenkins. For the reasons that follow, we reverse.

BACKGROUND

Prior to trial, Jenkins filed a motion to suppress, arguing that an investigative detention

violated his Fourth Amendment rights because police lacked reasonable, articulable suspicion that

he was engaged in criminal activity. At the January 31, 2018 motion to suppress hearing, the only

evidence offered by either party was the testimony of Detective Michael Poerstel, the law

enforcement officer who initiated the detention in question.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. Poerstel testified that, during the summer of 2017, he was assigned to the Fourth Precinct

Focus Mission Team. The team focused on activities in the Brooklyn Park Boulevard area of

Richmond (“Brooklyn Park”), with a substantial portion of its time being spent investigating illegal

drug activity.

Two years earlier, Poerstel served an arrest warrant on Jenkins.1 More recently, Poerstel

received information from Detective Jon Bridges that “an individual named Kenneth Jenkins” was

involved in a January 2017 homicide investigation that Bridges was conducting. Between January

and July of 2017, Bridges continued to contact Poerstel about Jenkins, including providing

information that Jenkins was involved with disposing of a firearm that was involved in a homicide

and that Jenkins was “actively involved” in the distribution of narcotics in Brooklyn Park. In the

month preceding Poerstel’s detention of Jenkins, Poerstel received information from Bridges on

multiple occasions, including a report seven days prior to the detention. Bridges informed Poerstel

that a confidential informant had reported that Jenkins was selling narcotics in that area.

In addition to the information supplied by Bridges, Poerstel also searched for information

about Jenkins in the Richmond Police Department records management system and learned that

Jenkins had had field contacts related to narcotics with the police department and had been involved

in an assault by mob. Poerstel saw “alerts,” including a reference that Jenkins was a gang member,

that Jenkins was a narcotics seller or user, and that he probably was armed. The alerts also indicated

that Jenkins was subject to a barment in the area.2 Poerstel’s review of the records management

system did not reveal any arrests for narcotics offenses.

1 The record does not reveal the charge upon which Jenkins was arrested. 2 The system simply referenced a barment in the area; it did not specify the exact location. Poerstel learned of the specific location (and that it was a few blocks away) after detaining Jenkins. -2- Around 6:15 on the evening of July 19, Poerstel was on patrol in Brookland Park when he

and his partners saw Jenkins. Poerstel described the area where the officers first encountered

Jenkins as having “a very high level of drug activity.”

Jenkins was walking with two other men in the opposite direction of Poerstel’s patrol car.

Poerstel described one of the other men as older and having a disheveled appearance with hollowed

cheeks, sunken features, and dirty clothes. Poerstel felt that his appearance was consistent with a

narcotics user.

The officers saw the three men walk a short distance to a convenience store known to the

police from confidential informants as a business in which drug transactions occur. Poerstel

watched Jenkins and the older man walk inside while the third man stood outside watching the

police vehicle. Based on his experience policing the area for drug activity, Poerstel suspected that

Jenkins and the older man were conducting a narcotics transaction inside the store while the third

man acted as a lookout outside the store. He testified that multiple confidential informants and

arrestees had informed him that, when police were present on the street, drug sellers and their

customers would enter this particular convenience store to conduct drug transactions out of police

view.

Shortly after he had entered the store, Jenkins exited the store alone and began walking back

in the direction from which he had come. The officers circled the block and pulled into an alley in

front of Jenkins. Upon seeing the officers, Jenkins abruptly turned around and walked in the

opposite direction towards a barber shop. In one hand, Jenkins carried a soda can that he

presumably had acquired in the convenience store; his other hand was “cupped” as if holding

something small. The officers stopped Jenkins before he could enter the barber shop.

The footage from Poerstel’s body camera revealed the following exchange:

Poerstel: Hey, what’s going on sir?

-3- Jenkins: Alright.

Poerstel: Alright? Just step over here for me. Do you have any weapons or anything on you?

Jenkins: No. I don’t want you to search me [inaudible].

Poerstel: Put your hands out to the side.

Jenkins: Man . . . what are you talking about?

Poerstel: Just making sure you don’t have any weapons on you.

Poerstel testified that “the first action I took was to ask him if he had weapons and to pat him

down.” Poerstel explained that multiple factors led him to pat Jenkins down, including:

the information that I had advising about his involvement in a homicide and dealing with a firearm. There was . . . the alert of possibly armed. There was the - - there were the observations that I made that day, as I said, made me believe, from activities taking place, specifically drug activity or possibility of a drug transaction, and then I know that individuals who sell drugs carry firearms for protection, and then the area itself, as I said, high narcotics activity, but also associated with violent crime with it.

During the pat down, Poerstel did not detect any weapons, but did feel what he believed to

be a prescription pill bottle in Jenkins’ pants pocket. Poerstel called Bridges and also requested that

a canine unit come to the scene. Approximately seventeen minutes passed from the time Poerstel

stopped Jenkins until the time the canine arrived. When the drug dog arrived, it alerted on Jenkins.

Officers then searched Jenkins, discovering a pill bottle containing suboxone and marijuana and a

small bag containing heroin.

At the motion to suppress hearing, Jenkins argued that the initial investigative stop, the pat

down, and the extra time needed to secure the dog all violated his rights under the Fourth

Amendment. The trial court ruled:

I think after hearing everything[,] I have to say that . . .

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