Commonwealth v. Borek

68 Va. Cir. 323, 2005 Va. Cir. LEXIS 196
CourtCharlottesville County Circuit Court
DecidedAugust 4, 2005
DocketCase No. 05-128
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 68 Va. Cir. 323 (Commonwealth v. Borek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Charlottesville County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Borek, 68 Va. Cir. 323, 2005 Va. Cir. LEXIS 196 (Va. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

By Judge Edward L. Hogshire

In her appeal from a conviction in the General District Court, Lindsey Borek has filed a motion to suppress evidence obtained against her. An initial evidentiary hearing was held on the motion on June 27, 2005. Briefs were submitted to the Court and the motion was argued further on July 11, 2005. After due consideration of the applicable law and arguments presented, the Court denies the motion in part and grants it in part.

Statement of Facts

The facts of the case are largely undisputed. For purposes of this motion, the Court will utilize the “Statement of Facts” contained in the Commonwealth’s brief dated June 29, 2005, supplemented by Defendant’s “Statement of Facts” dated July 11, 2005. At the July 11 hearing, the parties concluded that the only discrepancy between the two accounts was with the statement that Defendant made to Officer Acord upon handing him a Cabela’s credit card. The Commonwealth agreed to stipulate that Defendant stated that the card “had her information.”

[324]*324On April 10, 1987, the University of Virginia Police Department and Charlottesville Police Department entered into a Memorandum of Agreement appointing UVA officers as “special City police officers,” pursuant to Va. Code § 19.2-17. In an effort to address various public safety issues in areas of the City where a large proportion of University students lived and socialized, the special officers were to have concurrent jurisdiction with the City officers within a “Cooperative Patrol Area.” Later that month, this Court entered an order approving the plan and effecting the Memorandum. Subsequent to these events, Code § 19.2-17 was repealed by the General Assembly, although Va. Code § 15.2-1726 and § 23-234, both of which deal with similar jurisdictional agreements, remain in force.

On September 9, 2004, Officer C. D. Acord of the University of Virginia Police Department was on patrol in the “Comer” district of Charlottesville. Officer Acord testified that at approximately 2:00 a.m., he noticed Defendant’s car traveling at a high rate of speed, although he utilized neither his radar nor odometer, and was unable to predict how fast she was traveling. When he witnessed Defendant make a rolling stop before turning right on red at the intersection of Main and 10th Street, Acord activated his lights and pulled her over. He testified that as Defendant pulled to the side of the road, she crossed a bike path and pulled her right-side tires over the curb. According to the officer, when he approached the driver’s side window, he smelled alcohol and noticed that Defendant had bloodshot eyes and was speaking “fast.” Defendant produced only a Cabela’s credit card for purposes of identification, and was unsteady on her feet upon exiting the vehicle. When Acord asked Defendant whether she had been drinking, she responded that she had had two beers that night. Officer Acord testified that he next requested that Defendant perform several field sobriety tests. She completed these tests with varying degrees of success, and was next offered a PBT test. Defendant blew a .24, and was at that point arrested and taken to jail where she performed a breath analysis test.

Officer Acord testified at the hearing that he had received no indication that the Memorandum of Agreement was invalid or otherwise not in full force. Defendant now moves to suppress the evidence obtained against her on the grounds that the Memorandum of Agreement is invalid or, in the alternative, that the terms of the Agreement were exceeded, that the citizen’s arrest and “under color of office” doctrine were violated, and that the breath test was illegally performed.

[325]*325 Questions Presented

1. Whether the Memorandum of Agreement and Circuit Court Order are invalid as violations of Virginia statute, rendering the arrest illegal as effected outside of the officer’s jurisdictional limits.

2. If the arrest was illegal, whether it also amounted to a constitutional violation, triggering the exclusionary rule as the appropriate remedy.

Analysis

The 1987 Memorandum of Agreement and Circuit Court Order referred to above were executed explicitly in accordance with Va. Code § 19.2-17, which gave the courts authority to appoint “special policemen” to work in specific areas of the Commonwealth. The statute was repealed in 1996, but is survived by several similar provisions. Code § 23-234 reads, in relevant part:

A campus police officer appointed as provided in § 23-233 or appointed and activated pursuant to § 23-233.1 may exercise the powers and duties conferred by law upon police officers of cities, towns, or counties . . . (iv) upon approval by the appropriate circuit court of a petition by the local governing body for concurrent jurisdiction in designated areas with the police officers of the county, city, or town in which the institution, its satellite campuses, or other properties are located. The local governing body may petition the circuit court pursuant only to a request by the local law-enforcement agency for concurrent jurisdiction.

Va. Code § 23-234.1 In addition, § 15.2-1726 states:

Any locality may, in its discretion, enter into a reciprocal agreement with . . . police of any state-supported institution of higher learning appointed pursuant to § 23-233 ... for such periods and under such conditions as the contracting parties deem advisable. [326]*326Va. Code § 15.2-1726. The Commonwealth argues that, although § 19.2-17, upon which the Agreement was initially based, has been repealed by the legislature, the Memorandum and Order nevertheless remain in effect by virtue of their satisfaction of the two above-cited statutes. In contrast, Defendant maintains that the two documents are in violation of the provisions of § 23-234 and § 15.2-1726.

Code § 23-234(iv) contains an explicit provision that, in order to secure a circuit court order granting concurrent jurisdiction, the local law-enforcement agency must request that the local governing body petition the court on its behalf. Likewise, § 15.2-1726 states that a locality is authorized to enter into a reciprocal agreement consolidating law-enforcement jurisdiction. The Memorandum of Agreement and Circuit Court Order at issue in this case both fail to adhere to the clear terms of the statutes. The first line of the Memorandum states that the respective police departments have agreed to its terms, and the only signatories to the document are the chiefs of each department. Similarly, the Order indicates that only the chiefs of the Charlottesville and UVA police departments, by counsel, appeared before the Court. Although the Charlottesville City Attorney signed the Order, he did so explicitly as counsel for the Charlottesville Chief of Police, and made no representation on behalf of the actual governing body of the locality. See, e.g., City of Richmond v. Confrere Club, 239 Va. 77 (1990). As a result, the two documents fail to conform to the mandates of either § 23-234 or § 15.2-1726, and conferred no valid jurisdictional authority upon Officer Acord. Therefore, the arrest in question was conducted beyond the officer’s jurisdictional limits and was not a lawful arrest.

Because the arrest was illegal, the certificate of breath analysis may not be introduced as evidence. In order for Va.

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Related

United States v. Atwell
470 F. Supp. 2d 554 (D. Maryland, 2007)
Commonwealth v. Thompson
69 Va. Cir. 283 (Charlottesville County Circuit Court, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 Va. Cir. 323, 2005 Va. Cir. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-borek-vacccharlottesv-2005.