In re E.A.

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 4, 2025
Docket23-FS-1042
StatusPublished

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In re E.A., (D.C. 2025).

Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 23-FS-1042

IN RE E.A., APPELLANT,

Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (2023-DEL-000214)

(Hon. James A. Crowell, IV, Trial Judge)

(Argued May 21, 2025 Decided September 4, 2025)

Areeba Jibril, Public Defender Service, with whom Samia Fam and Jaclyn Frankfurt, Public Defender Service, were on the brief, for appellant.

Llewellyn X. Richie argued the case for appellee. Caroline S. Van Zile, Solicitor General, Ashwin P. Phatak, Principal Deputy Solicitor General, Carl J. Schifferle, Deputy Solicitor General, and Lucy E. Pittman, Senior Assistant Attorney General, were on the brief for appellee.

Before BECKWITH and DEAHL, Associate Judges, and THOMPSON, Senior Judge.

DEAHL, Associate Judge: Police radio dispatches alerted officers to a group of

people driving a stolen car and committing an ongoing series of robberies or

attempted robberies. Officers in a helicopter spotted the car—it was driving

erratically into oncoming traffic and eventually crashed. E.A., who was a passenger

in the car, fled from the crash and was stopped by officers a minute or so afterward. 2

Police frisked E.A. and found a handgun in his front sweatshirt pocket. He was later

adjudicated delinquent of two firearms-related offenses.

E.A. appeals those adjudications, arguing that the trial court should have

granted his motion to suppress the handgun because it was the fruit of a search that

violated his Fourth Amendment rights. We disagree and affirm.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

The following facts are undisputed for purposes of this appeal. One afternoon,

officers with the Metropolitan Police Department received reports via radio about a

string of robberies or attempted robberies. One officer on the ground spoke with a

complaining witness and radioed about a “possible . . . attempted robbery” occurring

at 4:54 p.m. at 800 Hamilton Street NW, adding that “the vehicle lookout is probably

going to be that same white Nissan Rogue that[ was] carjacked a couple of days

ago.” The officer followed up, saying there was “one incident where one witness

saw two males” and a “second incident where we got the complainant right now”

that involved “two females.” When asked over the radio whether these were armed

robberies, the officer said, “right now no weapons,” and that one incident involved

“an attempt to take a cellphone.” The license plate number for the Nissan Rogue

was also read over the radio, which matched the plate number of the Nissan Rogue

that “was taken in another offense.” Another officer then chimed in to say he had a 3

lookout for one of the 800 Hamilton suspects, describing her as a “Black female”

with “dark skin,” standing at 5’ 2” and “wearing a red hoodie, a black bonnet, and

black pants.”

A new report was then radioed that someone else “was almost robbed” near

the block of 1367 Hamilton Street NW, about five blocks from the incident on the

800 block of that same street. That incident apparently occurred at 4:50 p.m., four

minutes before the 800 Hamilton attempted robbery, and also involved “two males

[and] two females” who had been driving a “white Nissan Rogue.” An officer

further reported that a victim he had spoken with confirmed the license plate number

of the Nissan Rogue that was recited earlier on the radio. 1

At 5:19 p.m., a helicopter launched by the MPD spotted the Nissan Rogue,

and officers in police cruisers began to converge toward it. A dispatch from an

officer in the helicopter indicated that the car was traveling “extremely fast,” driving

in the wrong lane to pass traffic, and running through “stop signs and stoplights.”

That same officer then saw the car collide with another vehicle at the intersection of

Kansas Avenue and Madison Street, and observed four people “bail out” and “flee

1 There was also some evidence of a noontime robbery involving “three Black males [and] three Black females” at the corner of 7th and Peabody NW, which the trial court referred to as “[t]he first robbery” in its factual findings. But there is no mention in the record of a connection between the white Nissan Rogue and that incident. 4

the area of the crash.” He described how the car’s driver fled north while three

others, including someone in a “green jacket,” fled east.

At 5:22 p.m., an officer on the ground cornered the trio who ran east in an

alley just two blocks from the crash site. That officer and Officer Noah Duckett,

who arrived seconds later, drew their weapons and yelled at the three individuals to

get on the ground and show their hands. Officer Duckett’s body worn camera shows

three individuals—a young male in a green jacket, and two young females—

immediately lying face-down on the ground. One of the females is Black and

dressed in a red hoodie, a black bonnet, and black pants, precisely matching the

description of one of the 800 Hamilton suspects.

Officer Duckett handcuffed the person in the green jacket, who was later

identified as E.A., and rolled him on his side. As Duckett flipped E.A. on his side

and partially lifted him off the ground, Duckett patted E.A.’s front pant pocket and

grabbed the outside of his front sweatshirt pocket. Duckett then felt around the sides

of the sweatshirt pocket, and the body worn camera footage shows a handgun poke

out from the other side of that pocket. Duckett testified at the suppression hearing

that “a firearm came out right as we rolled [E.A.] over,” and that he “[h]eard it hit

the ground” and “[i]mmediately knew it was a pistol.” Another officer then

confiscated the gun and E.A. was arrested. 5

E.A. moved to suppress the gun on the grounds that (1) officers did not have

reasonable articulable suspicion to stop and frisk him; and (2) in any event, their

actions exceeded the scope of a Terry stop, so that the officers in fact arrested him

and did so without the requisite probable cause.

The trial court denied the motion. It reasoned that a “collection of factors

known to the police officers indicate that [E.A.] was part of a group” of four people

suspected in a series of recently committed robberies, attempted robberies, and

traffic violations that were committed while driving a vehicle that had been reported

stolen. According to the court, those circumstances—in combination with E.A.’s

flight from the vehicle after it crashed—gave the officers reasonable articulable

suspicion that E.A. was involved in a common enterprise of criminal activity with

the Nissan Rogue passengers, authorizing police to conduct a temporary stop and

protective patdown that uncovered E.A.’s handgun. The trial court’s ruling was

somewhat unclear about whether officers exceeded the scope of a Terry stop prior

to recovering a gun. But the court more clearly ruled that, in any event, officers had

probable cause to arrest E.A. for “the litany of other crimes that allegedly had

occurred at that point,” and to search him incident to his arrest. Under that reasoning,

it did not matter if officers exceeded the permissible bounds of a Terry stop and frisk. 6

E.A.

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