Juliano v. State of Delaware

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 10, 2021
Docket320, 2019
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Juliano v. State of Delaware, (Del. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

HEATHER JULIANO1, § § No. 320, 2019 Defendant Below, § Appellant, § Court Below: Family Court § of the State of Delaware v. § § ID No. 1901018130(K) STATE OF DELAWARE, § § Plaintiff Below, § Appellee. §

Submitted: June 16, 2021 Decided: September 10, 2021

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, VAUGHN, TRAYNOR, and MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Justices, constituting the Court en banc.

Upon appeal from the Family Court of the State of Delaware. REVERSED.

Patrick J. Collins, Esquire, COLLINS & ASSOCIATES, Wilmington, Delaware for Appellant Heather Juliano.

John R. Williams, Esquire, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Dover, Delaware for Appellee State of Delaware.

1 The Court previously assigned pseudonyms to the parties under Supreme Court Rule 7(d). TRAYNOR, Justice, for the Majority:

After the sport-utility vehicle in which Heather Juliano was a passenger was

stopped because of a suspected seat-belt violation, one of the investigating officers

detected an odor of marijuana coming from the vehicle. Based on that odor alone,

the occupants of the vehicle, including Juliano, were immediately ordered out of the

vehicle and placed under arrest. The police searched Juliano at the scene and then

transported her to their station where they told her that they intended to perform a

strip search, prompting Juliano to admit that she had concealed contraband—

marijuana and cocaine—in her pants. Juliano was then escorted to another room

where she retrieved and handed over the drugs. Juliano was then charged with

several drug offenses.

Before her trial, Juliano moved to suppress the drugs that the police seized

from her, claiming, among other things, that her arrest and the ensuing searches were

not supported by probable cause. The State responded that the odor of marijuana

emanating from the area of the vehicle where Juliano was seated and on her person

provided probable cause for Juliano’s arrest. And, the State argued, because the

arrest was lawful, the searches of Juliano at the scene and at the station were incident

to her arrest and hence lawful.

In two separate orders—one following the suppression hearing and the other

on remand by this Court of that first order—the Family Court agreed with the State

2 and denied Juliano’s motion. In this appeal, Juliano contends that, although the odor

of marijuana may support the extension of a traffic stop or serve as a factor

contributing to probable cause to search a person or vehicle, it does not, standing

alone, authorize a full custodial arrest.

In this opinion, we hold that, under the totality of the circumstances presented

by the State in this unusual case, including the vagueness of the officers’ description

of the marijuana odor, the timing of their detection of that odor, and the absence of

any other observations indicative of criminality, Juliano’s arrest was unreasonable

and therefore violates the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and

Article I, Section 6 of the Delaware Constitution. It follows that the evidence

obtained following Juliano’s unlawful arrest should have been suppressed as fruit of

the poisonous tree. This being so, we reverse.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Juliano’s arrest and the searches that followed

Our discussion of the facts surrounding Juliano’s arrest draws from our

November 2020 opinion, as well as a fresh review of the record and the Family

Court’s Order on Remand.

On January 29, 2019, Corporal Robert Barrett of the Dover Police Department

was on patrol in Dover. Barrett was accompanied by Probation Officer Rick L.

Porter as part of the Department’s Operation Safe Streets (OSS) program, an

3 “enhanced law enforcement . . . initiative” that pairs adult probation officers with

police officers, which, when it was conceived in the late 1990s and early 2000s,

“targets high-risk probationers to ensure that they remain in compliance with

curfews and other conditions of their probation.”2 In the current environment,

however, the Safe Streets task force engages in a broader range of law enforcement

activity and is not limited to the supervision of high risk probationers. According to

Corporal Barrett, for instance, Safe Streets officers target “violent offenders, . . .

guns[,] and drugs,”3 by, among other things, making traffic stops for minor

violations and “tak[ing] every traffic stop as far as [they] can.”4

On the afternoon in question, Corporal Barrett spotted a sport-utility vehicle,

driven by Shakyla Soto, leaving an area of Dover known as Capitol Green and

noticed that the occupant of the front passenger seat—believed by Barrett at the time

to be a Black male in his early twenties5—was not wearing a seat belt. This

observation prompted Barrett to pull the SUV over. In our November 2020 opinion,

we described what happened next:

2 Richard J. Harris & John P. O’Connell, Operation Safe Streets/Governor’s Task Force: Review and Impact, at ii (Dec. 2004), https://cjc.delaware.gov/wp-content/uploads/sites/61/2017/06/oss- gtf-20041207-min.pdf. 3 App. to Supp. Opening Br. at A44. 4 Id. at A47. 5 21 Del. C. § 4802(a)(2) provides that “[t]he driver of a motor vehicle shall secure or cause to be secured in a properly adjusted and fastened seat belt system…each occupant of the passenger compartment who is 16 years of age or older.” Had Barrett recognized that the passenger was under the age of 16 when he effected the stop, he would not have had a reasonable basis to believe that a seat-belt violation had occurred. 4 Barrett approached the SUV on the driver’s side, while Porter was on the passenger side. Barrett recognized the passenger as Juliano and noticed that she was putting her seat belt on. Almost immediately after Barrett initiated contact with the driver, he heard Porter say “1015 which [, according to Barrett,] means take . . . everybody into custody.” As of that moment, Barrett had not smelled an odor of marijuana or noticed any other evidence of foul play, and he was not sure why Porter was directing him to take all of the car’s passengers, including back- seat passengers, Zion Saunders and Keenan Teat, into custody. At the time, Barrett speculated that Porter had detected “an odor of marijuana or a weapon or contraband.” Porter later told Barrett that, indeed, it was the odor of marijuana that prompted his instructions.

Three other Dover Police Department officers arrived on the scene in very short order. In fact, one of the officers—James Johnson, the one who took custody of and searched Juliano—arrived on the scene before any of the car’s occupants had exited the vehicle.

In response to Porter’s “10-15” directive, Barrett took Soto into custody and placed her in handcuffs. Barrett then searched Soto—like Juliano, a female—and found nothing . . . . [A]s Barrett escorted Soto to the rear of the SUV for the purpose of searching her, he “could smell marijuana very strong coming from Ms. [Juliano].”

According to Barrett, all four occupants of the SUV were removed from the vehicle and handcuffed in response to Porter’s order. The SUV was then searched, but no contraband was found. The officers then searched each of the vehicle’s occupants. Barrett confirmed that these searches went beyond a pat-down for weapons[.]

...

One officer searched Teat and found a knotted bag containing crack cocaine in one of his pants pockets. Another officer searched Saunders and found both marijuana and heroin in his jacket pockets.

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Juliano v. State of Delaware, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/juliano-v-state-of-delaware-del-2021.