Commonwealth v. Darosa
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Opinion
SHIN, J.
*636 The defendant appeals from his conviction of possession with intent to distribute marijuana. 2 The police recovered the marijuana during a traffic stop, which led to a search of the defendant's vehicle because he did not have a valid driver's license. With probable cause to arrest for the license violation, two detectives searched the front compartment of the vehicle while the defendant, already pat frisked, sat at the rear of the vehicle, guarded by a third detective. The motion judge found the search lawful and denied the defendant's motion to suppress on the rationale that, because the detectives had not yet decided whether to arrest the defendant, they were entitled to conduct a "protective sweep prior to allowing [him] to return to his vehicle." But the evidence did not show, and the Commonwealth did not argue, that the detectives had a reasonable belief that the defendant was armed and dangerous, and the detectives did not decide to arrest him until they discovered contraband during a more thorough search conducted after the arrival of a K-9 unit. 3
No recognized exception to the warrant requirement applies in these circumstances. To hold otherwise would confer a police
*637
entitlement to search based on probable cause to arrest for any offense, including minor traffic offenses, in contravention
*134
of G. L. c. 276, § 1,
4
and the United States Supreme Court decision in
Arizona
v.
Gant
,
Factual background
. We summarize the facts as found by the judge and as derived from the detectives' testimony at the suppression hearing, which the judge implicitly credited in full. See
Commonwealth
v.
Isaiah I
.,
As the detectives traveled on Main Street, a minivan in front of them pulled alongside a Mercedes sport utility vehicle parked on the side of the road. The detectives observed an arm come out of the minivan and hand a plastic grocery bag to someone in the Mercedes. The vehicles were stopped in an area that was heavily trafficked and illuminated by lights from a nearby court house and businesses. No person in either vehicle made an attempt to conceal the transfer of the bag, and none of the detectives testified that it was consistent with a drug sale. In fact, two detectives affirmatively testified that the transfer did not resonate as suspicious based on their training and experience. 6
Because the minivan was blocking traffic, Donahue sounded his horn. When the minivan began moving again, the detectives *638 followed it and observed the driver abruptly change lanes without signaling. Donahue then activated the emergency lights on his vehicle and effectuated a traffic stop without incident.
The defendant was the driver and only occupant of the minivan. Upon Donahue's request the defendant could produce a registration but not a license. He told Donahue that he did not have his license with him, but continued to search the headboard and middle console area of the driver's compartment. When Donahue asked what he was looking for, the defendant replied, "[my] license," prompting Donahue to ask, "[W]hy are you looking for it if you already told me you don't have it with you?" The defendant then stopped looking around and complied with Donahue's request to write down his name and date of birth. Leaving the defendant in the minivan, Donahue returned to his vehicle and conducted a computer query, which revealed that the defendant's license was *135 revoked and that he had a criminal record for narcotics violations. 7
Nothing until this point caused Donahue or the other detectives to perceive the defendant as armed and dangerous. To the contrary, Donahue agreed that the defendant did not "do anything other than cooperate" during the course of the stop. Likewise, Carpenter agreed that he saw "nothing ... in [the defendant's] manner, mood, gestures, or anything else" to suggest that he was going to pose a "problem." Four officers testified in total, and none indicated that the defendant appeared to be armed and dangerous. Indeed, Donahue acknowledged that he had no evidence that "there would be a weapon in the [minivan]." 8
Nonetheless, because the defendant did not have a valid license, Donahue ordered him out of the minivan, pat frisked him, *639 and told him to sit on the curb at the rear of the minivan. The defendant remained there, guarded closely by Carpenter, while Donahue and Vardaro searched the front driver and passenger compartments. During the search Donahue smelled fresh marijuana and saw and smelled fabric softener sheets, which he knew from experience are often used to mask the odor of drugs. Vardaro also discovered a large package of money under the front passenger seat.
Based on these discoveries, Donahue requested that a K-9 unit respond to the scene. The canine, trained to detect drugs, alerted to a bag in the rear compartment of the minivan. Inside the bag was a large amount of marijuana. 9 At this point Donahue placed the defendant under arrest "for the license being revoked."
Judge's decision .
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SHIN, J.
*636 The defendant appeals from his conviction of possession with intent to distribute marijuana. 2 The police recovered the marijuana during a traffic stop, which led to a search of the defendant's vehicle because he did not have a valid driver's license. With probable cause to arrest for the license violation, two detectives searched the front compartment of the vehicle while the defendant, already pat frisked, sat at the rear of the vehicle, guarded by a third detective. The motion judge found the search lawful and denied the defendant's motion to suppress on the rationale that, because the detectives had not yet decided whether to arrest the defendant, they were entitled to conduct a "protective sweep prior to allowing [him] to return to his vehicle." But the evidence did not show, and the Commonwealth did not argue, that the detectives had a reasonable belief that the defendant was armed and dangerous, and the detectives did not decide to arrest him until they discovered contraband during a more thorough search conducted after the arrival of a K-9 unit. 3
No recognized exception to the warrant requirement applies in these circumstances. To hold otherwise would confer a police
*637
entitlement to search based on probable cause to arrest for any offense, including minor traffic offenses, in contravention
*134
of G. L. c. 276, § 1,
4
and the United States Supreme Court decision in
Arizona
v.
Gant
,
Factual background
. We summarize the facts as found by the judge and as derived from the detectives' testimony at the suppression hearing, which the judge implicitly credited in full. See
Commonwealth
v.
Isaiah I
.,
As the detectives traveled on Main Street, a minivan in front of them pulled alongside a Mercedes sport utility vehicle parked on the side of the road. The detectives observed an arm come out of the minivan and hand a plastic grocery bag to someone in the Mercedes. The vehicles were stopped in an area that was heavily trafficked and illuminated by lights from a nearby court house and businesses. No person in either vehicle made an attempt to conceal the transfer of the bag, and none of the detectives testified that it was consistent with a drug sale. In fact, two detectives affirmatively testified that the transfer did not resonate as suspicious based on their training and experience. 6
Because the minivan was blocking traffic, Donahue sounded his horn. When the minivan began moving again, the detectives *638 followed it and observed the driver abruptly change lanes without signaling. Donahue then activated the emergency lights on his vehicle and effectuated a traffic stop without incident.
The defendant was the driver and only occupant of the minivan. Upon Donahue's request the defendant could produce a registration but not a license. He told Donahue that he did not have his license with him, but continued to search the headboard and middle console area of the driver's compartment. When Donahue asked what he was looking for, the defendant replied, "[my] license," prompting Donahue to ask, "[W]hy are you looking for it if you already told me you don't have it with you?" The defendant then stopped looking around and complied with Donahue's request to write down his name and date of birth. Leaving the defendant in the minivan, Donahue returned to his vehicle and conducted a computer query, which revealed that the defendant's license was *135 revoked and that he had a criminal record for narcotics violations. 7
Nothing until this point caused Donahue or the other detectives to perceive the defendant as armed and dangerous. To the contrary, Donahue agreed that the defendant did not "do anything other than cooperate" during the course of the stop. Likewise, Carpenter agreed that he saw "nothing ... in [the defendant's] manner, mood, gestures, or anything else" to suggest that he was going to pose a "problem." Four officers testified in total, and none indicated that the defendant appeared to be armed and dangerous. Indeed, Donahue acknowledged that he had no evidence that "there would be a weapon in the [minivan]." 8
Nonetheless, because the defendant did not have a valid license, Donahue ordered him out of the minivan, pat frisked him, *639 and told him to sit on the curb at the rear of the minivan. The defendant remained there, guarded closely by Carpenter, while Donahue and Vardaro searched the front driver and passenger compartments. During the search Donahue smelled fresh marijuana and saw and smelled fabric softener sheets, which he knew from experience are often used to mask the odor of drugs. Vardaro also discovered a large package of money under the front passenger seat.
Based on these discoveries, Donahue requested that a K-9 unit respond to the scene. The canine, trained to detect drugs, alerted to a bag in the rear compartment of the minivan. Inside the bag was a large amount of marijuana. 9 At this point Donahue placed the defendant under arrest "for the license being revoked."
Judge's decision . The judge issued a three-page memorandum of decision denying the defendant's motion to suppress. 10 The decision begins with a statement of the facts, which is drawn directly from the detectives' testimony. The judge then made the following "[f]indings and [r]ulings" regarding the events that occurred prior to the arrival of the K-9 unit:
"The initial stop of the defendant's motor vehicle was proper and valid. The defendant's vehicle was double parked in an active travel lane. It was observed *136 making a transfer to a second vehicle in an area that is known for narcotic activity. Commonwealth v. Thompson ,427 Mass. 729 , 735 [696 N.E.2d 105 ] (1998). Donahue further observed the operator change lanes without signaling and cutting off other motorists in the process. Commonwealth v. Santana ,420 Mass. 205 , 207 [649 N.E.2d 717 ] (1995).
"The scope of the stop is often fluid. The degree of suspicion the police reasonably harbor must be proportional to the level of intrusiveness. Commonwealth v. Sinforoso ,434 Mass. 320 [749 N.E.2d 128 ] (2001). The defendant's inability to produce a driver's [license] was problematic. The fact that the defendant's right to operate had in fact been revoked caused the situation to rise *640 to the level of ongoing criminal activity. Donahue also became aware of the defendant's criminal history involving narcotics.
"As the defendant was subject to arrest it was proper to detain him away from the vehicle. Thus it was proper to ask the defendant to exit the vehicle and pat frisk him for the safety of the officers present. Commonwealth v. Bostock ,450 Mass. 616 , 619-621 [880 N.E.2d 759 ] (2008). The defendant was informed that his right to operate had been revoked. At that time the officers could have released the defendant and summonsed him to court to answer to the charge at a later date. Accordingly, the defendant could have regain[ed] access to the vehicle. The search of the front [driver] and passenger compartment was an appropriate step for the police as a protective sweep prior to allowing the defendant to return to his vehicle. Commonwealth v. Santiago ,53 Mass. App. Ct. 567 , 571 [760 N.E.2d 800 ] (2002). See also Commonwealth v. Lantigua ,38 Mass. App. Ct. 526 , 528 [649 N.E.2d 1129 ] (1995)."
The defendant moved for reconsideration, and the judge held a nonevidentiary hearing. After the hearing, the judge denied the motion based in part on "recent decisional case law" -- namely,
Commonwealth
v.
Wright
,
Discussion
.
11
Warrantless searches are per se unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and art. 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, "subject only to a few specifically established and well-delineated exceptions."
Gant
,
1.
Search incident to arrest
. The Commonwealth's primary argument is that the search was permissible as incident to the defendant's arrest for operating a motor vehicle without a license. This argument faces the threshold problem that, at the time of the search, the defendant was not arrested. While it is true that a search can qualify as incident to arrest even where it precedes a formal arrest, the search and the arrest still must be "substantially contemporaneous."
Commonwealth
v.
Washington
,
Here, the defendant was not arrested until after the K-9 unit arrived, conducted a more thorough search, and discovered the marijuana in the rear of the minivan. The Commonwealth presented no evidence establishing within a reasonable degree of certainty how much time elapsed between the initial search and the arrival of the K-9 unit, 14 or how much additional time elapsed *642 until the discovery of the marijuana. 15 Thus, even accepting the Commonwealth's assertion that the search incident to arrest doctrine allowed the officers to delay their decision to arrest until after seeing the results of the search, 16 the *138 Commonwealth did not meet its burden of showing that the search and the arrest were substantially contemporaneous.
Moreover, even assuming contemporaneity, the search was not a lawful search incident to arrest under either
Gant
or G. L. c. 276, § 1, the latter of which "is more restrictive than the Fourth Amendment."
Commonwealth
v.
Mauricio
,
The Commonwealth did not meet this burden either. The judge did not find that the defendant was in reaching distance, and the *643 evidence would not support such a finding. As noted supra , the defendant was seated on the curb toward the rear bumper of the minivan, guarded by Carpenter, while Donahue and Vardaro conducted the search. The defendant was already pat frisked and secured by Carpenter, who stayed "in close proximity" to him during the search. The detectives could not reasonably have believed in these circumstances that the defendant was within reaching distance of a weapon inside the minivan. This is supported by Donahue's testimony, which he reiterated several times, that he searched the minivan not because he thought the defendant could reach for a weapon, but because the detectives might have allowed him to get back in the minivan and leave the scene.
The Commonwealth points out that, unlike in
Gant
, the defendant was not handcuffed or restrained inside a police vehicle. This is a factual distinction with no legal difference.
Gant
itself acknowledges that "officers have many means of ensuring the safe arrest of vehicle occupants," such that "it will be the rare case in which an officer is unable to fully effectuate an arrest so that a real possibility of access to the arrestee's vehicle remains."
Gant
,
2. " Search incident to probable cause to arrest ." While the Commonwealth strives on appeal to justify the search as one incident to arrest, the judge, as noted, based his ruling on the opposite supposition -- that the defendant might not have been arrested and thus "could have regain[ed] access to the vehicle." The Commonwealth relies on the judge's rationale in the alternative, arguing that the search was justified -- "even were [it] not to fit within the search incident to arrest exception" and even absent " Terry prerequisites" -- because "if [the officers] were to allow the defendant to contact an acquaintance to drive his minivan, the defendant would most likely have returned to his minivan either while they waited or once his acquaintance arrived."
The Commonwealth's position is untenable and would eviscerate the limitations imposed by
Gant
, which sought to rein in the previously "unbridled discretion" of officers "to rummage at will among a person's private effects" based on the person's commission of an arrestable traffic offense.
Gant
,
Upholding the search here on the assumption that the officers might not have arrested the defendant and might have let him return to his vehicle would permit an end run around
Gant
. It would be tantamount to conferring an automatic police entitlement to search a vehicle whenever there is probable cause to arrest a recent occupant. But if there is no police entitlement to
*645
search incident to formal arrest, there certainly can be no entitlement to search incident to probable cause to arrest. See
Washington
,
3.
Search based on reasonable suspicion that defendant was armed and dangerous
. This brings us to the ground cited by the dissent -- that the search was a valid
Terry
-type search for weapons. For this exception to apply, the Commonwealth had to show that the officers "possess[ed] a reasonable belief based on 'specific and articulable facts which, taken together with the rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant[ed]' the officer[s] in believing that the [defendant was] dangerous and [could] gain immediate control of weapons."
Long
,
As noted above, the Commonwealth did not argue
Terry
before the judge.
19
Perhaps as a result, the judge made no findings on whether a reasonable officer would have been warranted in believing that the defendant was dangerous and could have weapons in his minivan. Although we can in some situations affirm on grounds other than those relied on by the judge, we cannot do so where, as here, the findings and the record do not support the alternative ruling. See
Mauricio
,
*141 draw uncompelled inferences from the evidence").
Specifically, two of the factors relied on by the dissent have no support in the judge's findings or the record. First, the dissent concludes that the defendant's handing of the grocery bag to the person in the Mercedes was an "apparent street-level drug deal."
Post
at ----, 118 N.E.3d at ----. But none of the officers so testified, and the judge made no such finding. The transfer was conducted out in the open, in a heavily trafficked and well-lit area,
20
and none of the officers testified that he believed it to be consistent with a drug sale based on his training and experience. In fact, Carpenter affirmatively agreed that, "as a trained detective," the transfer did not appear to him as "anything other than maybe ... a little odd"; likewise, Vardaro agreed that, although the transfer "perked [his] interest," it "didn't really resonate as anything suspicious happening at that point." Thus, our conclusions regarding the transfer are based on the officers' uncontested testimony, which the judge implicitly credited, and are not the result of our own fact finding, as the dissent claims. And in light of that testimony, this is not a case where the judge could have inferred that the features of the transfer fit the pattern of a typical street-level drug sale. Cf.
Commonwealth
v.
Kennedy
,
*647 interaction as a drug sale"). We surely cannot draw such an inference ourselves on appeal.
In concluding otherwise, the dissent puts much emphasis on Carpenter's testimony that he found the transfer to be "odd" and on Vardaro's testimony that the transfer "perked [his] interest."
21
Post
at ----, 118 N.E.3d at 145. But an officer's belief that a person has done something odd or interesting does not equate to a belief that that person has engaged in a drug transaction. Indeed, Carpenter and Vardaro confirmed that to be the case. And while it is true, as the dissent notes, that drug sales can "occur in a seemingly open and nonsuspicious manner,"
post
at ----, 118 N.E.3d at 146, there was no testimony to that effect introduced at the hearing. Contrary to the dissent's view, we cannot rely on notions of "common sense" to overcome not just the complete absence of testimony about the officers' inferential processes, but also affirmative testimony from the officers that, based on their experience and training, the observed transaction did
not
resonate as a drug sale. See
Kennedy
,
Second, the dissent concludes that the defendant made a furtive movement when asked to produce his license.
Post
at ----, 118 N.E.3d at ----. But the judge did not find that the movement was furtive. Rather, he simply stated, in the "[f]acts" section of his decision, that "[t]he defendant continued to search the driver's compartment" after telling Donahue that he did not have his license with him, and the judge did not factor the movement into his "[f]indings and [r]ulings." Ascribing a sinister motive to the movement amounts therefore to appellate fact finding, made all the more improper by the dissent's disregard of the
*142
testimony of all three detectives present at the scene that the defendant did not do anything to suggest that he was dangerous. Donahue observed the defendant's rummaging firsthand and did not react with concern for his safety; he merely asked the defendant what he was doing, asked him to write down his biographical information, and left him in the minivan while Donahue conducted a computer query. Given Donahue's testimony, the rummaging cannot reasonably be viewed as a furtive gesture suggesting that the defendant was reaching for or hiding a weapon. See
Commonwealth
v.
Daniel
,
The remaining factors cited by the dissent do not establish reasonable suspicion that the defendant was armed and dangerous. The defendant's criminal history did not include any firearms offenses or other violent offenses. See
Commonwealth
v.
Gomes
,
This case is materially indistinguishable from
Gomes
. There, an officer observed the defendant -- a known "impact player" in the local drug market,
id
. at 508,
The dissent relies heavily on
Lantigua
,
Judgment vacated . Verdict set aside .
McDONOUGH, J. (dissenting, with whom Trainor, J., joins).
"Under art. 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, the touchstone of our analysis of police conduct that results in a search or seizure is whether that conduct was reasonable.... The reasonableness of the particular conduct at issue here involves an evaluation of whether the police exceeded the permissible scope of the stop, which is an issue of proportion.... Judicial second-guessing of that exercise of judgment, especially in a rapidly developing situation, is inappropriate."
Commonwealth
v.
Watts
,
Discussion . The judge found that three experienced Brockton detectives had justification for this limited vehicle protective sweep for weapons where (a) probable cause existed to arrest the defendant for engaging in ongoing criminal activity - - driving with a revoked license; (b) in a high crime area known for narcotics activity, the detectives witnessed the defendant engage in what can reasonably be inferred as an apparent street-level drug deal, and learned that the defendant had a "significant" criminal history that included narcotics convictions and open cases; (c) the defendant moved and answered furtively *144 when asked to produce a driver's license; 2 (d) the defendant, once removed from the minivan but uncuffed and unsecured, could have regained access to the minivan; and (e) to ensure their safety, before allowing the defendant to reenter the minivan, detectives conducted the protective sweep for weapons limited to the front seat area. I submit that these critical circumstances, explained more fully infra , were established by the judge's findings, supplemented with facts he implicitly credited 3 that are consistent with his decision, and justify the detectives' limited protective sweep.
a.
Defendant's ongoing criminal conduct
. The majority agrees that the detectives were warranted in stopping the defendant for a traffic violation. See generally
*651
Commonwealth
v.
Buckley
,
b. Defendant's narcotics convictions, open cases, and apparent street-level drug deal . The majority concludes that neither the judge nor the detectives viewed the defendant's bag handoff to an occupant of the Mercedes sport utility vehicle (SUV), through their open windows, at 10 P.M. in a high crime area known for illegal narcotics activity, as an apparent street-level drug deal. Ante at ----, 118 N.E.3d at ----. The majority further concludes that "this is not a case where the judge could have inferred that the features of the transfer fit the pattern of a typical street-level drug sale." Ante at ----, 118 N.E.3d at 141. I submit that the majority's conclusions concerning the bag handoff are at odds with the judge's explicit and implicit findings, and with the detectives' testimony. First, the judge twice discussed the defendant's bag handoff in his findings. Under the "[f]acts" heading in his memorandum of decision, the judge wrote:
"This is a densely populated commercial district which hosts retail businesses as well as bars and nightclubs.... It is also an area with a high instance of criminal activity.... As [Detective Donahue, 'an experienced investigator with a background in violent crime and narcotics cases' and Detective Carpenter and Detective Sergeant Vardaro] were traveling northbound [the defendant's minivan], directly in front of them, pulled alongside of a black Mercedes SUV, which was parked on the side of the roadway, and stopped. The officers observed an arm come out of the [minivan] and hand a large paper bag to an occupant of the Mercedes."
The judge returned to the defendant's bag handoff further on, under his "[f]indings and [r]ulings" heading.
"[The defendant's vehicle] was observed making a transfer to a second vehicle in an area known for narcotic activity."
*145 Moreover, the judge found that just after the stop the detectives learned of the defendant's "significant criminal history that included narcotics violations," which according to Carpenter's testimony, included "open" narcotics cases. Thus, I submit that the *652 majority's conclusion that the bag handoff was not, nor could be, viewed by the judge and the detectives as a likely drug deal fails to pay sufficient deference to the judge's findings.
It is a "well-settled proposition that the judge's findings of fact are 'binding in the absence of clear error ... and [we] view with particular respect the conclusions of law which are based on them.' "
Commonwealth
v.
Bottari
,
Again, because the judge credited his testimony, we know that Carpenter, when asked generally what he saw when the defendant's minivan stopped directly behind the Mercedes, singled out the defendant's bag handoff: "We observed the operator of the minivan extend his arm from the driver's door window towards the black Mercedes and pass an item to a passenger in the black Mercedes." On cross-examination, Carpenter rejected defense counsel's
*653
premise that the bag handoff was an "innocent gesture" when he was asked, "[T]here was nothing that you noticed about -- or drew your attention for police enforcement reasons of the car in front of you when the shopping bag -- when the plastic bag was ... passed from one car to the other; correct? It ... just looked like an innocent gesture, didn't it?" Carpenter, like Vardaro, held his ground, answering, "We -- we found it to be odd.... [It drew] attention that a vehicle is stopped in the middle of the roadway ... blocking traffic to pass something from one vehicle to another."
5
*146
While neither the detectives nor the judge used the talismanic words "apparent street-level drug deal" when characterizing the defendant's bag handoff, I submit that in matters of common sense the obvious is often left unspoken.
6
Commonwealth
v.
Crowe
,
I address one final point made by the majority concerning the defendant's bag handoff. In concluding that the judge could not properly infer that the transfer "fit the pattern of a typical street-level drug sale,"
ante
at ----, 118 N.E.3d at 141, the majority relies on the seemingly innocuous scene and circumstances of the handoff, stressing that "[t]he vehicles were stopped in an area that was heavily trafficked and illuminated by lights from a nearby court house and businesses," and that "[n]o person in either vehicle made an attempt
*654
to conceal the transfer of the bag."
Ante
at ----, 118 N.E.3d at 134. But the judge's findings do not include any reference to these factors. Here the majority necessarily makes an "independent [finding of fact] in order to reach a conclusion of law that is contrary to that of [the] motion judge" who upheld the protective sweep as lawful.
Commonwealth
v.
Jones-Pannell
,
c.
Defendant's furtive answers and movements
. The majority concludes that the defendant's "rummaging [for his license seconds after telling Donahue he did not have it with him] cannot reasonably be viewed as a furtive gesture suggesting that the defendant was reaching for or hiding a weapon" because "Donahue observed the defendant's rummaging firsthand and did not react with concern for his safety."
Ante
at ----, 118 N.E.3d at 142. Respectfully, I submit this conclusion cannot be reconciled with the judge's findings. The judge made no finding -- explicit or implicit -- that Donahue was unconcerned about the defendant's contradictory answers and his unexplained searching movements. And neither did Donahue so testify. By detailing in his findings the defendant's contradictory answers and his searching movements prompted by Donahue's questioning, "[i]t may be inferred from the judge's findings,"
Commonwealth
v.
Blevines
,
d.
The defendant was not secured
. Once outside the minivan, the defendant was escorted, without handcuffs, to the rear of the minivan to be with Carpenter. Here, the majority concludes that "[a]lthough [the defendant] was not handcuffed, he was still secured in a practical sense."
Ante
at ----, 118 N.E.3d at 138. I respectfully submit that here the majority is again engaging in "independent fact finding" which undercuts the judge's ultimate conclusion that the sweep was lawful.
Jones-Pannell
,
The judge credited Donahue's concern that the defendant might "regain" access to the minivan because Donahue had not yet decided either to arrest him or "just do a [c]ourt complaint on him for the license [revocation]." Concerned about the prospect that the defendant might reenter his minivan as a passenger (with a driver he might contact), the judge found that *657 the detectives' check of the front seat area for weapons was "an appropriate step for the police as a protective sweep prior to allowing the defendant to return to his vehicle." Donahue's concern was, as he put it, "anything within the lunge and reaching area of the -- of the vehicle, of the driver if someone came to drive the vehicle away or if [the defendant] got into the passenger seat of the vehicle." Donahue said that his interest in doing so was for "[m]y safety and the safety of the other officers present." 12 Pressed on the point during cross-examination, *149 Donahue explained that his concern was "[i]n case [the defendant] did get back into the vehicle if he was allowed to leave the scene," adding, "I have that right, sir." Thus, the record amply supports the judge's finding that the protective sweep was limited in purpose and area to a check for weapons the defendant could access upon reentering the minivan.
e. Lantigua controls. I agree with the judge that in the circumstances, the "
Terry
-type"
13
protective sweep of the defendant's minivan limited to the driver and the front passenger areas was lawful under the principles of
*658
Lantigua
,
"Inability to produce a license or a registration reasonably gives rise to a suspicion of other offenses, such as automobile theft, and justifies heightened precautions for the officers' own safety.
"Faced with this situation, the officer's entry into the car was justified .... First, prior to allowing the defendant to reenter the car to obtain the registration, the officers could properly effect a Terry -type search of the areas of the car which would be readily accessible to the defendant on reentering. The purpose of the search would be protective only, analogous to a pat frisk of the defendant's person for weapons. The reasonableness of a scan for weapons turns, we think, not so much on the finding that the defendant bent down and to the right before leaving the car, ... but on the particular danger to an officer when the person he is investigating is seated in a car with his movements concealed from the officer's view. The same concerns that allow an officer investigating a traffic violation to order the driver out of the car for the officer's safety ... also allow a limited search of the passenger compartment for weapons before the passenger reenters the car to obtain the *150 registration. Courts cannot be oblivious to the recent escalation in the numbers of incidents reported wherein police officers have been killed or wounded while performing routine traffic functions. '[W]e think it crucial to remember that, as shown by many staged climaxes to threshold police inquiries, 'the answer might be a bullet.' " Commonwealth v. Silva , [366 Mass. 402 , 407,318 N.E.2d 895 (1974) ], quoting ... [ Terry ,392 U.S. at 33 ,88 S.Ct. 1868 ] (Harlan, J., concurring). In such encounters officers must be allowed to take reasonable precautions for their own safety."
The majority insists that the judge's reliance on
Lantigua
is misplaced because
Lantigua
was limited "to its facts" in
*659
Commonwealth
v.
Santos
,
Eschewing
Lantigua
, the majority submits that this case is controlled by
Gomes
,
f.
Sweep was cursory check for weapons of front seat area
. Our courts have long held that "a
Terry
type of search may extend into the interior of an automobile so long as it is limited in scope to a protective end."
Silva
,
The majority fears that upholding this limited, cursory protective sweep for weapons would "eviscerate the limitations imposed by
Gant
, which sought to rein in the previously 'unbridled discretion' of officers 'to rummage at will among a person's private effects' based on the person's commission of an arrestable traffic offense.
Gant
,
Conclusion
. "It is important to distinguish this case from the cases ... where the driver of a vehicle stopped for a traffic violation produces a valid driver's license and registration."
Watts
,
The defendant was also charged with possession with intent to distribute a class B substance, carrying a firearm without a license, receiving a firearm with a defaced serial number, possessing a firearm without a firearm identification card, and operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license. For reasons not reflected in the record, all these charges were dismissed before trial at the Commonwealth's request.
The defendant does not independently challenge the legality of the later search or the patfrisk of his person.
"A search conducted incident to an arrest may be made only for the purposes of seizing fruits, instrumentalities, contraband and other evidence of the crime for which the arrest has been made ... and removing any weapons that the arrestee might use to resist arrest or effect his escape." G. L. c. 276, § 1.
"It appears doubtful that the Commonwealth has enough evidence to reprosecute the defendant[ ], but we will leave the final decision on that matter to the district attorney ...."
Commonwealth
v.
Torres
,
Notably, the Commonwealth does not rely on the transfer in defending the subsequent search of the defendant's vehicle.
Although the judge found that the defendant's record "included" narcotics violations, there was no evidence that the defendant had been charged with or convicted of any other type of violation.
When asked then why he searched the minivan, Donahue replied, "I have that right." Cf.
Gant
,
Although not material to our decision, the judge erred in finding that the bag also contained weapons. A weapon was discovered in the minivan, but not until after it had been towed to the police station. There, officers searched the minivan again and found a loaded revolver and Percocet pills secreted in the dashboard.
The Commonwealth did not file a written opposition to the defendant's motion to suppress. Furthermore, although the judge requested at the end of the hearing that both parties incorporate their closing arguments into supplemental written memoranda, the Commonwealth failed to do so.
We review the judge's subsidiary findings of fact for clear error but "review independently the application of constitutional principles to the facts found."
Commonwealth
v.
Wilson
,
We agree with the Commonwealth's concession at oral argument that it was not inevitable that the minivan would have been impounded and the items in it discovered during an inventory search. At the time of the seizure, the officers had not yet decided to arrest the defendant, nor was it virtually "certain as a practical matter" that the minivan would have been impounded even had he been arrested.
Commonwealth
v.
O'Connor
,
Terry
v.
Ohio
,
The only evidence on this point was Donahue's testimony that the K-9 unit arrived "within a few minutes."
When asked how long the K-9 unit was at the scene, the K-9 handling officer testified that he "really [did not] know," but that the process "usually [does not] last [as] long" as ten or fifteen minutes. Later, he testified that the canine was in the minivan for "[f]ive minutes maybe" but reiterated that he "really [did not] know."
The assertion is dubious given that the underpinning for the search incident to arrest exception, as applied here, is to search for and remove weapons that the arrestee might use "to resist arrest or effect his escape."
Chimel
,
Contrary to the view taken by the dissent, post at ----, 118 N.E.3d at ----, we are not engaging in fact finding to reach a conclusion contrary to that of the judge. The judge did not conclude that the search was justified as incident to arrest, and so made no finding whether the defendant was within reaching distance of the minivan. What we reject is the Commonwealth's argument on appeal that, as a matter of law, the defendant was unsecured because he was not handcuffed or restrained inside a police vehicle. In any event, given the dissent's agreement that this was not a valid search incident to arrest, the quarrel with our conclusion that the defendant was secured is of no significance. For purposes of the Terry analysis, as discussed infra , we accept the judge's premise that the officers might have eventually allowed the defendant to return to the minivan.
See
Santiago
,
The Commonwealth's brief cites Terry once -- to argue that the validity of the search "is not dependent on Terry prerequisites." The words "armed" and "dangerous" do not appear at all in the brief.
Donahue agreed that there was nothing "secret or hidden" about the way that the defendant handed over the bag.
The judge did not mention this testimony in his decision.
See also
Commonwealth
v.
Hooker
,
I agree with the majority that, as the judge implicitly concluded, this limited protective sweep for weapons cannot be justified as a search incident to an arrest. The defendant was not arrested until after police conducted a full search of the minivan prompted in part by the results of the sweep.
Commonwealth
v.
Washington
,
These three circumstances constitute plus factors supporting reasonable suspicion of ongoing criminal conduct. See generally
Commonwealth
v.
DePeiza
,
I agree with the majority that "the judge implicitly credited in full" the detectives' testimony. Ante at ----, 118 N.E.3d at 134.
As is discussed more fully
infra
, a reviewing court may not engage in "independent fact finding" based on the record in order to reach a conclusion of law that is contrary to that of a motion judge.
Commonwealth
v.
Jones-Pannell
,
So compelling was the inference that the defendant's bag handoff was an apparent drug deal that, on appeal, the defendant argues that it was improper propensity evidence "suggesting that [the defendant] was a drug dealer" and that the erroneous admission created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.
See
People
vs.
Osuna-Avila
, Cal. Ct. App., 3rd Dist., No. C064685,
Indeed, if the facts found by the judge support an alternative legal theory, a reviewing court is free to rely on an alternative legal theory. See
Commonwealth
v.
Cast
,
Indeed, I point out -- for context only -- that the Commonwealth's expert at trial, State police Trooper Erik Telford, testified that dealers typically arrange for drug exchanges in "some public area, parking lots, any street corner, any street, inside bathrooms, fast food stores, restaurants, [and] bars ... [t]o make it seem as innocuous or benign as just a meet -- as a meet between two people, and unless you're street savvy ... [you do not know that] it's actually a street level drug transaction .... It's just a safe way to insulate the dealer and the customer to make it look like normal legal activity ...." See
Commonwealth
v.
Singer
,
That the item here exchanged, a plastic grocery bag, was by itself innocuous does not undercut the suspicious nature of the handoff. See, e.g.,
Commonwealth
v.
Santiago
,
A suspicious verbal response qualifies as furtive behavior. See, e.g.,
United States
v.
Curcio
,
"Although nervous or furtive movements do not supply reasonable suspicion when considered in isolation, they are properly considered together with other details to find reasonable suspicion."
Commonwealth
v.
DePeiza
,
A police officer does not have to testify specifically that he was in fear for his own safety. "[T]he officers' concern for their own safety is a fact that can be inferred from all the circumstances: it does not necessarily depend on direct testimony."
Commonwealth
v.
Fitzgibbons
,
The majority,
ante
at note 8, compares Donahue's statement -- "I have that right, sir" -- to the officer's testimony in
Arizona
v.
Gant
,
The majority claims that a
Terry
-type search was not raised by the Commonwealth.
Ante
at ----, 118 N.E.3d at ---- I disagree. In its brief, the Commonwealth cites
Terry
and
Lantigua
, the latter of which is an extension of the
Terry
-type frisk to a protective search of the interior of a vehicle limited to situations where concern remains "that a driver or passenger returning to the vehicle may gain access to a weapon that may be used against the police."
Commonwealth
v.
Douglas
,
See
Commonwealth
v.
Manha
,
Our holding in
Lantigua
was recently cited approvingly by the Supreme Judicial Court in
Commonwealth
v.
Sheridan
,
As in the case before us (but unlike
Santos
where the defendant was handcuffed in a cruiser), the defendant in
Lantigua
was neither handcuffed nor secured when the officer entered the vehicle.
Lantigua
,
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
118 N.E.3d 131, 94 Mass. App. Ct. 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-darosa-massappct-2019.