D.D.B. v. State of Alabama

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMarch 27, 2026
DocketCR-2025-0386
StatusPublished

This text of D.D.B. v. State of Alabama (D.D.B. v. State of Alabama) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.D.B. v. State of Alabama, (Ala. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Rel: March 27, 2026

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals OCTOBER TERM, 2025-2026 _________________________

CR-2025-0386 _________________________

D.D.B.

v.

State of Alabama

Appeal from Tuscaloosa Juvenile Court (JU-24-372.01)

COLE, Judge. CR-2025-0386

D.D.B. appeals his delinquency adjudication based on the charge of

certain persons forbidden to possess a pistol, a violation of § 13A-11-72(b),

Ala. Code 1975. 1 For the reasons discussed below, we reverse.

Facts and Procedural History

On June 20, 2024, a delinquency petition was filed in the

Tuscaloosa Juvenile Court, alleging that, on June 19, 2024, D.D.B., a

minor, possessed or owned a pistol, a violation of § 13A-11-72(b). The

juvenile court appointed D.D.B. counsel, and D.D.B. then filed two

motions with the juvenile court.

The first motion that D.D.B. filed challenged the constitutionality

of § 13A-11-72(b) under the Second Amendment to the United States

Constitution and Art. I, § 26 of the Alabama Constitution. Specifically,

D.D.B. argued that § 13A-11-72(b) was facially unconstitutional because

nothing within either the United States Constitution or the Alabama

Constitution limited the right to possess a firearm to adults and that,

historically, minors had been permitted to possess firearms. The second

motion that D.D.B. filed was a motion to suppress the evidence gathered

1Because this appeal involves a juvenile-delinquency adjudication,

initials are used to protect D.D.B.'s anonymity. See Rule 52, Ala. R. App. P. 2 CR-2025-0386

on June 19, 2024, because, he said, the Terry2 stop that led to the

discovery of that evidence was unlawful. A hearing on those motions was

held on March 18, 2025.

At the hearing, both D.D.B. and the State argued their respective

positions regarding D.D.B.'s constitutional challenge to § 13A-11-72 (b).

Then, regarding the motion to suppress, the State called Corporal Jason

Seibert, with the Tuscaloosa Police Department ("TPD"), to testify as

follows. On June 19, 2024, Cpl. Seibert, along with his partner Officer

Logan Wilson, were patrolling in the City of Tuscaloosa. That day, Cpl.

Seibert patrolled in the 300 block of 24th Avenue East, which is "Alberta

City." Cpl. Seibert explained that the TPD "patrol[s] Alberta City pretty

heavily because there's been a bit of gang violence and UB&Es [(unlawful

breaking and enterings)] in the area." (R. 21.)3 Based on those crimes,

the TPD put on "extra patrol" for "about two weeks," which involved

officers "routinely patrol[ling] that area" to ensure that "there's nobody

2Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968).

3The transcript in the record on appeal is not consecutively paginated. References to testimony from the reporter's transcript of the suppression hearing held on March 18, 2025, will be referred to with an "R." 3 CR-2025-0386

walking around pulling on door handles, nobody stealing packages,

people driving through neighborhoods shooting firearms out a window,

stuff like that." (R. 21.) On June 19, 2024, extra patrols were ordered in

Alberta City based on "weapons discharges coming from vehicles." (R.

39.)

While Cpl. Seibert was patrolling in Alberta City, he encountered

D.D.B. Cpl. Seibert explained that a homeowner on 24th Avenue East

had "requested … on three different occasions" for him to drive by and

check on her house "because she ha[d] a lot of gang kids hanging out in

her driveway, parking out front of her street, and trying to elicit her son

to participate in some of these gang activities." (R. 22, 41.) Cpl. Seibert

testified that the homeowner's son "was already a gang member" and that

the individuals loitering by her house were attempting to get him back.

(R. 40.) About "two weeks" before June 19, 2024, the homeowner's house

"had been shot into from a car standing out front just like [D.D.B.'s] was."

(R. 23.) Cpl. Seibert conceded that he did not get any service calls

regarding the 24th Avenue East home on June 19, 2024; that no previous

complaints had involved a description of D.D.B.'s vehicle; and that the

previous complaints had not described the individuals involved.

4 CR-2025-0386

However, Cpl. Seibert testified that, on June 19, 2024, he approached

D.D.B.'s vehicle because it was near the 24th Avenue East home.

According to Cpl. Seibert, D.D.B.'s vehicle was merely "parked …

on the street next to the curb in front of [the 24th Avenue East] house."

(R. 24-25.) Moreover, D.D.B.'s vehicle was legally parked. There was

also no loud music coming from D.D.B.'s vehicle, and Cpl. Seibert had

heard no gunshots. (R. 43-44.) Nonetheless, once Cpl. Seibert observed

D.D.B.'s vehicle, he "flip[ped] [his emergency] lights on and [he] got

behind [D.D.B.'s] vehicle." (R. 25.) Cpl. Seibert explained that he

intended "[t]o conduct a [Terry] stop of [D.D.B.'s] vehicle." (R. 25.) The

Terry stop, according to Cpl. Seibert, was based on previous criminal

activity and previous complaints from the homeowner on other occasions,

to which he had testified. Cpl. Seibert radioed dispatch that he was

"conducting a suspicious vehicle stop," and Officer Wilson began

approaching the passenger's side of D.D.B.'s vehicle. (R. 26.)

Before Cpl. Seibert and Officer Wilson "turned [their emergency]

lights on," the passenger doors of D.D.B.'s vehicle were closed. (R. 26.)

Officer Wilson exited the police car to "make contact with the front seat

passenger, who also stepped out of [D.D.B.'s] vehicle" but did not run. (R.

5 CR-2025-0386

27 (emphasis added).) Cpl. Seibert also approached the vehicle and "put

[him]self in between … the car and the front seat passenger" so that "[the

passenger] [was]n't able to escape outwards or inside the vehicle." (R. 28

(emphasis added).) While Cpl. Seibert was speaking with D.D.B., he

observed what he believed to be marijuana candy on the front passenger

seat. Then Cpl. Seibert smelled the odor of marijuana coming from

D.D.B.'s vehicle. Cpl. Seibert had D.D.B. step out of his vehicle so that

he could conduct a search of the vehicle, and Cpl. Seibert then saw "a

firearm in the floorboard." (R. 30-31.) At the time, D.D.B. was only 17

years old. D.D.B. lived just "around the corner" from where the Terry

stop occurred.

When asked to explain his reasonable suspicion for the Terry stop,

Cpl. Seibert stated:

"Okay. Suspicion when it comes to our extra patrols gets very broad. We are told to make contact with anyone in the area that could possibly be committing any crimes or doing anything, especially -- it's the same when it comes to your patrolling a neighborhood at midnight and there's people in hoodies walking around your area, it's the same specific type of patrol and contact made with someone."

(R. 42-43.) Cpl. Seibert agreed that he made contact with D.D.B.

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