Cutter v. State

617 S.E.2d 588, 274 Ga. App. 589
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 27, 2005
DocketA05A0031
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 617 S.E.2d 588 (Cutter v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cutter v. State, 617 S.E.2d 588, 274 Ga. App. 589 (Ga. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Phipps, Judge.

Bronsilaw Cutter was charged with cocaine trafficking and marijuana possession. He filed a motion to suppress evidence of the drugs. After a hearing, the suppression motion was denied and his case proceeded to a bench trial. At the close of the evidence, Cutter renewed his suppression motion based upon the additional evidence adduced at trial. The trial court again denied the motion and found Cutter guilty as charged. Cutter appeals, contending that evidence of the drugs should have been suppressed. Because he has failed to present any meritorious argument that the trial court erred and we find a substantial basis for the court’s ruling, we affirm.

When reviewing a trial court’s decision on a motion to suppress, this court’s responsibility is to ensure that there was a substantial basis for the decision. The evidence is construed most favorably to uphold the findings and judgment, and the trial court’s findings on disputed facts and credibility are adopted unless they are clearly erroneous. Further, since the trial court sits as the trier of fact, its findings are analogous to a jury verdict and will not be disturbed if there is any evidence to support them. 1

The following evidence was adduced through the state’s witnesses at the motion hearing and/or at the trial; 2 Cutter presented no witnesses. Corporal John Ricciardi of the Savannah Police Department testified that at about 10:45 p.m. on September 28,2002, he and about ten to fifteen other law enforcement officers were “checking known drug areas” in response to complaints from citizens about drug *590 activity. The officers, traveling in a convoy of about five to ten marked and unmarked cars, stopped to investigate a certain street corner of a housing project. The officers exited their vehicles wearing what Ricciardi described as “raid gear”: black pants, black shirts, and vests announcing “Police.” Each officer was armed.

The officers approached four men who were standing at that street corner, identified themselves as narcotics agents, and began interviewing the men. While background checks were being conducted on the men, Ricciardi spotted an individual, later identified as Cutter, sitting alone in the front passenger seat of a car in the housing project’s parking lot, about ten feet away from where the four men were being interviewed. Cutter immediately ducked down, which made Ricciardi suspicious that he was attempting to steal the car. Ricciardi therefore approached the passenger side of the car. Another law enforcement officer, Harry Glenn, accompanied Ricciardi and stood at the driver side of the car.

Ricciardi testified that Cutter “sat up, real scared and paranoid.” Ricciardi asked Cutter politely for his identification. Ricciardi testified that Cutter said nothing, provided no identification, rolled up the windows, locked the doors, and then “just froze up.”

Ricciardi testified that he shined his flashlight into the car, but saw no evidence of thievery such as damage to the steering column or to the dashboard. The keys were in the ignition, and an investigation of the car tag did not show that the car had been stolen. Ricciardi testified that he no longer suspected that Cutter was attempting to steal the car and that it appeared to him that Cutter was waiting for someone to return to the car. But he remained suspicious of Cutter because Cutter “looked like a statue, he was so scared.”

Ricciardi advised Cutter that he was free to go. He asked Cutter repeatedly whether he was okay, to provide his identification, and to open the car door. Ricciardi testified that at no time did he touch the car door. Cutter did not attempt to leave and did not comply with Ricciardi’s requests. Nor did Cutter comply with Glenn’s subsequent requests for his identification. Within Cutter’s hearing, Glenn next called a K-9 Unit so that a dog with narcotics training could sniff the air around the car. Describing the scene, Ricciardi testified, “[Cutter’s] waiting in the car, so we could wait, too. So, we just waited for K-9 to come.” Describing Cutter, Ricciardi testified, “[He] just maintained the same pose, just remained froze up.”

Another law enforcement officer, Winston Maxey, decided to intervene. He had heard Ricciardi ask Cutter repeatedly, without success, to get out of the car and talk to him. In addition, he had heard Ricciardi and Glenn ask Cutter several times, without success, for his identification. Maxey went to the car and asked Cutter for his identification. Cutter only stared at him. Maxey eventually told *591 Cutter that “we can clear this whole matter up” if he would hand him his identification. In court, Maxey testified that the matter that they were trying to “clear up” was whether “[Cutter] was wanted for anything, the reason why he was trying to hide in the vehicle to begin with. Usually, when somebody hides they’re hiding something else other than just their person.”

Maxey testified that Cutter then lowered a window about an inch and slid a cardholder to him through the opening. Holding the cardholder, Maxey could feel a rock-type substance that felt to him like crack cocaine. As Maxey pulled out Cutter’s identification, the officer saw the hard substance underneath the identification and handed it to Ricciardi. Based on its appearance, Ricciardi believed the substance to be hashish. The substance field tested positive for tetrahydrocannabinol.

Ricciardi then advised Cutter that he was being arrested based on possession of a controlled substance. Cutter exited the car, at which point Ricciardi conducted a patdown search incident to arrest and found in Cutter’s pocket what was later confirmed to be approximately 127 grams of a mixture with a purity of 54.2 percent of cocaine.

Maxey testified that approximately ten or fifteen minutes had passed from the time Ricciardi and Glenn walked to Cutter’s car until he obtained Cutter’s identification. He testified that the drug dog arrived about ten or fifteen minutes after that. The record indicates that Cutter complied with Maxey’s request about the time the K-9 unit arrived and that the drug dog alerted on the car after the field test of the suspected hashish, but before Cutter had exited the car.

Seeking suppression of the drug evidence, Cutter argued that his encounter with the law enforcement officers had evolved into a seizure that was unsupported by reasonable suspicion and that the unlawful seizure coerced him into handing the police his cardholder wherein contraband was found. In denying Cutter’s motion to suppress, the trial court ruled that Cutter had not yet been seized when he handed Maxey his cardholder.

1. Cutter contends that the trial court erred in determining that he had not been seized by the time he complied with Maxey’s request to produce his identification.

There are three tiers of police-citizen encounters: (1) communication between police and citizens involving no coercion or detention and therefore without the compass of the Fourth Amendment, (2) brief seizures that must be supported by reasonable suspicion, and (3) full-scale arrests that must be supported by probable cause.

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Bluebook (online)
617 S.E.2d 588, 274 Ga. App. 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cutter-v-state-gactapp-2005.