Commonwealth v. Ruiz

746 N.E.2d 544, 51 Mass. App. Ct. 346
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedApril 13, 2001
DocketNo. 99-P-788
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 746 N.E.2d 544 (Commonwealth v. Ruiz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Ruiz, 746 N.E.2d 544, 51 Mass. App. Ct. 346 (Mass. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Jacobs, J.

After their convictions by a Superior Court jury on various weapons and assault charges relating to an attempted home invasion in Lowell, the defendants appeal, claiming that their motions to suppress should have been allowed. The defendant Mosquea raises an additional issue, alleging the improper admission of prior bad act evidence. We affirm the convictions.

1. The motions to suppress. The relevant facts as found by the motion judge, who was not the trial judge, and supplemented by uncontroverted testimony at the suppression hearing, see Commonwealth v. Rivera, 33 Mass. App. Ct. 311, 312 (1992), are as follows: Responding to a radio call of “a suspicious motor vehicle” at about 10:40 p.m. on April 12, 1997, Lowell police Officer Donald Crawford drove to the comer of Vamum Avenue and Bennington Street. The police dispatcher had related that a caller at 805 Vamum Avenue (an address at the comer of Vamum and Bennington Street) reported that four men had gotten out of a car parked on Bennington Street and walked into the nearby woods. No description of the car or of the men was given. When he arrived, the officer did not see the men, and while he noticed two cars parked on Bennington Street about a hundred feet from the comer of Vamum Avenue, he saw nothing suspicious, so he left.

About forty minutes later, the officer received a second radio message stating that a caller had reported a home invasion in progress at 842 Vamum Avenue, involving four men with guns. Responding to the call and at a point about two hundred yards away from 842 Varnum Avenue, he saw two men walking toward Bennington Street in the heavy rain. He saw one of them pulling off a face mask, which he described as a kind of “ski” mask. Believing they were involved in the reported incident, he drove past them, called for a backup cruiser, and then turned around to look for the men.

As Officer Crawford turned onto Bennington" Street, he saw the backup cruiser approach from the opposite direction and also turn onto Bennington Street. The following events occurred “pretty much simultaneously.” He observed two men, whom he believed to be the same two men who had walked past him on Varnum Avenue, getting into one of the two cars parked on [348]*348Bennington Street that he had seen earlier. One of the men sat in the driver’s seat and the other in the rear passenger seat. The officers had stopped their cruisers in such a way as to block forward motion of the car.

As the backup officer was getting out of his cruiser, he called Officer Crawford’s attention to two other men running down Bennington Street. The backup officer thought he saw one of them with a gun.3 For his safety, Officer Crawford drew his revolver as he got out of his cruiser, and remained behind his door, using it as a shield, and ordered the two men in the car to keep their “hands up” and “not to move.” He then moved to a more protected position, this time using the backup cruiser as a shield. Officer Crawford used a flashlight to illuminate the car, and intermittently turned it on and off as a safety measure.4 Both defendants were “very fidgety,” and the defendant in the back seat suddenly brought his hands up with what appeared to be the handle of a weapon. Officer Crawford told him not to move or he would be shot. Turning away from the officer and making a motion with his hand as if dropping the weapon, that defendant turned back with the weapon no longer in his hand. Additional backup officers had arrived at that time, and the defendants were ordered to get out of the car and “secured on the ground,” but not handcuffed. The officers then discovered a loaded, sawed-off shotgun and two live shells on the ground two or three feet from the rear passenger door of the car and a nylon mask outside the driver’s side door, whereupon they arrested the defendants.

The defendants challenge the motion judge’s conclusion that the police had probable cause to arrest them when the officers [349]*349blocked their car,5 essentially arguing that the radio calls were based on tips from anonymous callers, which did not meet the requirements of the Aguilar-Spinelli6 test. Their reliance on this analysis is misplaced. The cases in which police rely primarily on radio transmissions as grounds for stopping a car are inapposite. Contrast Commonwealth v. Medeiros, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 240, 242 (1998). Here, the case turns on citizen reports of ongoing suspicious activity and criminality and police observations made in the course of responding to those reports. Compare Commonwealth v. Matthews, 355 Mass. 378, 381 (1969); Commonwealth v. Stoute, 422 Mass. 782, 790-791 (1996). Contrary to the defendants’ argument, we need not examine the reliability of the information given to the police by the callers, who did not identify or describe any person or vehicle and who, in any event, appear to have been eyewitnesses. Compare Commonwealth v. Smigliano, 427 Mass. 490, 492 (1998); Commonwealth v. White, 44 Mass. App. Ct. 168, 172 (1998). As Officer Crawford approached the scene of the attempted home invasion soon after it was reported, he reasonably was suspicious of the two men he saw walking nearby, particularly when he saw one of them puffing off a face mask.7 When the officer met the backup cruiser and saw the two men getting into one of the cars he had seen earlier when responding to the first report of four men leaving a car and going into the woods nearby, and also saw two other men running down Bennington Street, his suspicion that the men entering the car had committed a crime was well founded and substantial, and more than adequate to justify a Terry-type investigative stop.8 Commonwealth v. White, supra at 173. The critical issue is whether the police actions in conducting the stop converted it to an arrest.

[350]*350“Once the investigative circumstances for a stop are established, ‘[t]he pertinent inquiry is whether the degree of intrusion is reasonable in the circumstances.’ Commonwealth v. Moses, 408 Mass. 136, 141 (1990).” Commonwealth v. Varnum, 39 Mass. App. Ct. 571, 575 (1995). “The extent of the danger is important in assessing whether the force used by the police in the encounter was commensurate with their suspicion. The police are, of course, entitled to take reasonable precautions for their protection.” Commonwealth v. Willis, 415 Mass. 814, 820 (1993).

Given the suspicion of the defendants’ involvement in the home invasion, the report that they were armed, and their entry into a car where their actions could not be fully observed, the police were warranted in taking steps for their own safety before conducting an inquiry. Those steps included (1) blocking the car to prevent flight, which could have been dangerous to the officers standing outside of their vehicles and might have been accompanied by gunfire; (2) drawing their revolvers and remaining shielded by the cruisers; (3) illuminating the defendants’ car with lights from the cruisers and a flashlight; (4) ordering the defendants not to move and to keep their hands visible; and (5) ordering the defendants from the car and directing them to lie on the ground. Less intrusive investigatory measures may have put the officers in significantly greater danger.

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Bluebook (online)
746 N.E.2d 544, 51 Mass. App. Ct. 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-ruiz-massappct-2001.