Gorman v. State

897 A.2d 242, 168 Md. App. 412, 2006 Md. App. LEXIS 57
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 26, 2006
Docket1282 September Term, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 897 A.2d 242 (Gorman v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gorman v. State, 897 A.2d 242, 168 Md. App. 412, 2006 Md. App. LEXIS 57 (Md. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

*416 ADKINS, Judge.

Christopher Gorman was arrested and charged with numerous narcotic and firearm possession offenses. Before trial, he moved to suppress the physical evidence seized in his apartment, claiming that it was obtained pursuant to a warrantless entry that violated the Fourth Amendment. The Circuit Court for Baltimore City denied his motion on the grounds that the warrantless entry was justified by exigent circumstances. A jury convicted Gorman of four firearm possession charges, and he was sentenced to ten years in prison.

In this appeal, Gorman contends that the suppression court erred when it denied his motion to suppress. He claims that there were no exigent circumstances, and that even if there were, warrantless entries to arrest for marijuana possession are presumptively unreasonable because that crime is a “minor offense.” We disagree, and will affirm the judgment because we conclude that the warrantless entry was reasonable under the circumstances.

FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

On July 9, 2002, at about 10:00 p.m., Sergeant Steven Nalewajkl, a twenty-one year veteran with the Baltimore City Police Department, was called to investigate a shooting in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Baltimore City. 1 Upon arrival at the scene, Sgt. Nalewajkl observed that Christopher Gorman had suffered a gunshot wound. He also encountered Gorman’s girlfriend, Leslie Nicole Harmon, who was pregnant and not wearing any shoes. Because he wished to question Harmon about the shooting, Sgt. Nalewajkl, accompanied by Detective Clarence Grear, escorted the woman in an unmarked police cruiser to her apartment to retrieve her shoes. Harmon shared this apartment, located about five blocks from the *417 scene of the shooting, at 932 East Patapsco Avenue, with Gorman and his brother, Curtis Painter.

When they arrived at the apartment house, Sgt. Nalewajkl accompanied Harmon to the second floor apartment, explaining that he did so because “possible witnesses to shootings disappear on you.” Harmon attempted to open the door to the apartment, but it was locked. She “jingled the handle,” and then knocked on the door. From inside the apartment, a man asked her to identify herself, and after a “minute or two,” Painter answered the door. Painter appeared to Sgt. Nalewajkl to be very nervous:

STATE: Okay. When the door was opened, did you notice anything unusual?
NALEWAJKL: I noticed his mannerisms. He was extremely nervous, appeared to be breathing hard, and just very nervous in general.
STATE: When you first had your observations of him, were you still outside the door—meaning not inside the apartment yet?
NALEWAJKL: Yes.

Sgt. Nalewajkl also “smelled the odor of burnt marijuana emanating from the apartment.” 2 His observation of Painter and the smell of marijuana caused his “intent” to change while at the apartment door:

STATE: So your only reason for going into the apartment was for the shoes?
NALEWAJKL: My only intent to go up to the apartment was to get her shoes.
STATE: Did that change?
NALEWAJKL: Yes.
STATE: What did it change to?
NALEWAJKL: Well, when I went up to the apartment and [Painter] didn’t immediately open the door, that arose [sic] *418 my suspicion, and, then, when he opened the door, I could smell the odor of burnt marijuana, and he was extremely nervous.
And when I asked him what he was so nervous about, he said he had two bags of weed.

Nalewajkl then entered the apartment and placed Painter under arrest:

NALEWAJKL: At that point, he was under arrest, when I could smell the burnt marijuana. He said he had two bags of weed. He was under arrest at that time.
STATE: And, at this point, were you inside the apartment? NALEWAJKL: Yes.
Nalewajkl clarified the sequence of events:
[S]he just knocked on the door, and I stepped into the apartment with her and immediately smelled the odor of burnt marijuana on the inside. I’m inside—I’m right at the doorway where they opened the door, and he opens the door, I could smell the burnt marijuana. I could see him extremely nervous.
So, then, I asked him why he was nervous. He said he had two bags of weed, so instantaneously he was under arrest.

Harmon testified that she walked into the apartment and immediately entered her bedroom, which was three feet to the right of the doorway. She never told Nalewajkl to enter the apartment, but could hear him questioning Painter while she 'was in the bedroom. She first noticed that Nalewajkl had come inside when she emerged from the bedroom with her shoes. Painter similarly testified that Nalewajkl simply followed Harmon into the apartment and began questioning him, and that neither he, nor Harmon, ever invited Nalewajkl in.

Upon entering the apartment, Sgt. Nalewajkl placed Painter under arrest. He called Detective Grear, who was still sitting in the cruiser, to come place handcuffs on Painter. He then “secured the apartment for any persons that might be in the *419 apartment” because he “was going to get a search warrant.” When asked what he meant by “secure the apartment,” Nalewajkl explained:

NALEWAJKL: It’s to check the apartment for any other persons in the apartment—
STATE: And why do you do that?
NALEWAJKL:—and I would bring them out to the living room for officer’s safety reasons and—
And the fact that if you don’t secure the apartment, evidence could be destroyed.

As the sergeant went through the apartment, he noticed a chair in an open closet. The back of the chair was facing outwards. Because it was “unusual to have a chair in the closet,” and because he “believed [a] person may have been standing on the chair to secret himself in the closet,” Sgt. Nalewajkl went to investigate. He observed that inside the closet “there was an attic that was open and there was the butt of a handgun on the ledge of the closet.” He then “secured the rest of the house.”

A search warrant was obtained, pursuant to which police seized cocaine, various firearms, walkie-talkie radios, digital scales, and assorted drug paraphernalia. As a result of the seizure of these goods, most of which were found in the closet, Gorman was named in two separate indictments, totaling 26 counts for various narcotic and firearm possession offenses.

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Bluebook (online)
897 A.2d 242, 168 Md. App. 412, 2006 Md. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorman-v-state-mdctspecapp-2006.