In re A.B

2016 COA 170
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 17, 2016
Docket15CA2015
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 COA 170 (In re A.B) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re A.B, 2016 COA 170 (Colo. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS 2016COA170

Court of Appeals No. 15CA2015 City and County of Denver Juvenile Court Nos. 15JD668 & 15JD699 Honorable D. Brett Woods, Judge

The People of the State of Colorado,

Petitioner-Appellee,

In the Interest of A.B.,

Juvenile-Appellant.

JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, SENTENCE VACATED, AND CASE REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS

Division III Opinion by JUDGE WEBB Hawthorne and Navarro, JJ., concur

Announced November 17, 2016

Cynthia H. Coffman, Attorney General, Joseph G. Michaels, Assistant Attorney General, Denver, Colorado, for Petitioner-Appellee

Michael S. Juba, Alternate Defense Counsel, Denver, Colorado, for Juvenile-Appellant ¶1 The Denver Juvenile Court found A.B., a juvenile, guilty of

possession of a weapon by a previous offender (POWPO),

adjudicated him a delinquent, and imposed a sentence of one to two

years in the Division of Youth Corrections. On appeal, A.B.

contends the court erred in denying his motion to suppress the

weapon as the fruit of an unlawful seizure; in treating a pending

deferred adjudication as a prior adjudication for purposes of

POWPO; and in finding him a repeat juvenile offender — based on

the same deferred adjudication — for sentencing. Both of the

deferred adjudication contentions raise novel questions in Colorado.

¶2 We affirm the denial of A.B.’s motion to suppress because even

assuming that a seizure of A.B. occurred when the police contacted

him, they had a reasonable suspicion that he had violated Denver

Revised Municipal Code 38-39, entitled “Disturbance of the peace.”

But because we conclude that a prior deferred adjudication does

not satisfy the prior adjudication element of POWPO, we reverse

A.B.’s adjudication.1

1 Given this conclusion, we need not address A.B.’s repeat juvenile offender contention, which affects only sentencing.

1 I. Background and Procedural History

¶3 On May 6, 2015, the Adams County District Court accepted

A.B.’s agreement to a deferred adjudication on a charge of

aggravated motor vehicle theft in the first degree, a felony, and

deferred entry of adjudication for one year. Based on the county of

A.B.’s residence, the case was transferred to the Denver Juvenile

Court as 15JD668.

¶4 Less than four months later, Denver police officers arrested

A.B. on the POWPO charge at issue.

¶5 The juvenile court held an evidentiary hearing on A.B.’s

motion to suppress the weapon. One of the officers testified to how

he had found a handgun in the back seat of a car in which A.B. was

a passenger, as discussed fully in Part II below. The court denied

the motion. Then the court proceeded to trial, with the officer

presenting the same testimony. The prosecution’s evidence

included the deferred adjudication in 15JD668.

¶6 When the prosecution rested, A.B. moved for judgment of

acquittal. He conceded the deferred adjudication involved a felony,

but he argued that it did not constitute proof of a prior adjudication

for purposes of POWPO. As to juveniles, POWPO prohibits

2 possessing a firearm “subsequent to the person’s adjudication for

an act which, if committed by an adult, would constitute a felony.”

§ 18-12-108(3), C.R.S. 2016 (emphasis added). The court denied

the motion, A.B. declined to present any evidence, and the court

found him guilty.

¶7 At sentencing, the prosecutor urged the court to find A.B. a

repeat juvenile offender, again based on the deferred adjudication.

The court revoked the deferred adjudication, on that basis found

A.B. a repeat juvenile offender, and imposed a sentence of one to

two years in the Division of Youth Corrections.

¶8 The Attorney General agrees that all of the issues A.B. raises

in this appeal were preserved.

II. Motion to Suppress

¶9 A.B. first contends the trial court erred by denying his motion

to suppress the handgun. A.B. asserts that the search was

unconstitutional because when police officers ordered him to get

back in the car, they seized him but lacked reasonable suspicion to

do so. We conclude that the trial court properly denied A.B.’s

motion.

3 A. Standard of Review

¶ 10 A trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress presents a mixed

question of fact and law. People v. Martinez, 165 P.3d 907, 909

(Colo. App. 2007). We defer to the trial court’s findings of fact if

they are supported by competent evidence in the record, but we

review its conclusions of law de novo. Id. Of course, “[w]e review de

novo the trial court’s ultimate legal conclusion of whether a seizure

violated constitutional prohibitions against unreasonable searches

and seizures.” People v. Funez-Paiagua, 2012 CO 37, ¶ 6.

B. Additional Background

¶ 11 A.B. did not testify at the suppression hearing. One of the

police officers testified that around 9 p.m. on the night of A.B.’s

arrest, he heard “loud music coming from [a parked] vehicle . . .

around 100 feet” away in an alley. The officer and his partner

decided to contact the occupants of the vehicle “solely to investigate

the noise violation,” although they were not “responding to any

citizen complaints.” They pulled their patrol car behind the suspect

vehicle, parking at a forty-five-degree angle. Immediately, all three

occupants in the suspect vehicle “exit[ed] at the same time.” A.B.

got out of the “driver’s side rear door.”

4 ¶ 12 As the officers left the patrol car, they “order[ed] everybody

back into the [suspect] vehicle.” Both officers were “yelling.” A.B.

then “turned his back to [the officer] and [that officer] saw him

reach towards his waistband with his right hand.” The officer

“observed a gun leaving his hand as he threw it into . . . the

vehicle.”

¶ 13 As to the noise violation, the officer explained that the loud

music “was coming from a radio . . . [i]n the vehicle,” although the

officer did not see A.B. “operating the radio.” Nor did the “vehicle

have a permit for sound amplification.”

¶ 14 A.B.’s counsel argued that the officers’ actions in blocking the

suspect vehicle and then ordering the occupants back inside

constituted a seizure, which required “reasonable articulable

suspicion of criminal activity.” But according to counsel, the

officers lacked such suspicion as to A.B. because as “a rear

passenger in [the] vehicle,” he could not “possibly violate [Denver

Rev. Mun. Code 38-89] where the noise is coming from the car radio

being operated from the front by a driver or possibly from the front

passenger.”

¶ 15 In denying A.B.’s motion, the trial court found:

5  “The evidence is that [the officers heard] the loud noise

coming from the car.”

 “The officers pulled up behind the car. It’s unclear as to

precisely how they parked, whether they blocked the car or

not but the officers had probable cause to be there because of

the loud music coming from the car.”

 “[A]ll three people got out of the car at about the same time, at

the same time that [the officer] yelled at them.”

 “And then [A.B.] turned, and that’s when he reached for his

waistband, and that’s when [the officers] saw the gun.”

C. Law

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