Nicholas Shavon Smith v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 3, 2024
Docket1526232
StatusUnpublished

This text of Nicholas Shavon Smith v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Nicholas Shavon Smith v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Nicholas Shavon Smith v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Raphael and White Argued at Richmond, Virginia

NICHOLAS SHAVON SMITH MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1526-23-2 JUDGE KIMBERLEY SLAYTON WHITE DECEMBER 3, 2024 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND Tracy Thorne-Begland, Judge

Elena Kagan, Assistant Public Defender (Catherine French Zagurskie, Chief Appellate Counsel; Virginia Indigent Defense Commission, on briefs) for appellant.

Allison M. Mentch, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

One evening, Officer Lance Barnes-Christian noticed a bulge in the jacket of Nicholas

Shavon Smith as Smith was walking near his apartment. Barnes-Christian called out to Smith,

who did not respond or stop walking, then approached him and asked conversationally whether

Smith had a firearm on him. Being told no, Barnes-Christian asked Smith in a non-threatening

manner if he could pat him down. Smith unambiguously consented. The bulge was discovered

to be a gun, and Smith was charged as a violent felon wrongfully in possession of a firearm. His

motion to suppress the evidence under the Fourth Amendment was denied, and he accepted a

guilty plea conditional on his right to appeal the suppression issue. Finding that Barnes-

Christian stayed within the bounds of Smith’s consent during this consensual encounter, we

affirm the denial of the motion to suppress.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). BACKGROUND

On the evening of February 16, 2023, Officer Barnes-Christian of the Richmond Police

Department was patrolling the Highland Park neighborhood in a marked police vehicle. On that

same evening, Smith was walking to his home in Highland Park. Barnes-Christian was driving

through a roundabout when he witnessed a “bulge” in Smith’s jacket and called out “hey sir” in

Smith’s direction. The officer later stated that he did not know whether Smith lived in the area

and did not suspect him of any criminal activity.

Without acknowledging the officer, Smith changed direction and started walking towards

an apartment building across the street. After Smith failed to respond, Barnes-Christian parked

on a side street, got out of his cruiser, and walked towards Smith. As he approached Smith,

Barnes-Christian called out in a conversational tone, “Hey sir, I was trying to get your attention.”

Barnes-Christian was in uniform, displaying his badge of authority, with his service weapon

visible on his hip. He testified that he did not give Smith any commands.

Smith testified that Barnes-Christian shouted at him to stop as Smith walked towards his

apartment building. Smith eventually responded to the officer by stopping in front of his

apartment building and turning to face Barnes-Christian. The officer told Smith that he had seen

a bulge in his jacket and asked him if he had a firearm. Smith answered “no, I have nothing,”

patting his pants as he shook his head. As they spoke, Smith attempted to continue toward the

door of his building, and Barnes-Christian followed him and moved in front of him. Barnes-

Christian denied blocking or preventing Smith from leaving. In conflict with the officer’s

testimony, Smith testified that Barnes-Christian stepped between Smith and the door. On cross-

examination, Smith elaborated that the officer “stepped in front of me and grabbed my jacket”

before asking to conduct the pat down. Barnes-Christian never told Smith he was free to leave.

-2- Barnes-Christian then asked Smith if he could pat him down “real quick,” and Smith responded

affirmatively by nodding his head.

Smith elaborated on his decision to allow the pat down by saying that it “felt very forced,

so that’s why I just surrendered.” Smith also said, “Even if I kept walking, he still had my

jacket. Like, he was still in front of me, guarding me . . . .”

Barnes-Christian’s body-worn camera was not turned on until after the pat down

occurred.1 He acknowledged that this failure to turn the camera on violated Richmond Police

Department policy, which requires an officer to turn on his body-worn camera when interacting

with citizens.

Barnes-Christian testified that after receiving Smith’s consent he touched the outside of

Smith’s jacket with one hand using an open palm. He felt a metal object which he believed was

a firearm based on its frame and weight. He grabbed the item, asked Smith what it was, and

Smith answered, “It’s a firearm.” The officer grabbed Smith’s jacket with his right hand, pulling

it towards him, while his flashlight-wielding left hand searched the jacket. Smith was arrested

and charged with possession of a firearm by a previously convicted violent felon in violation of

Code § 18.2-308.2.

At trial, defense counsel acknowledged that there was “some dispute over whether there

was an actual call to stop.” Defense counsel emphasized that on cross-examination, Barnes-

Christian acknowledged telling Smith to stop but on re-direct denied giving any commands.

Defense counsel emphasized that “Smith testified unimpeached” that he was ordered to stop.

Additionally, defense counsel argued that Barnes-Christian “exceed[ed] the bounds of the

1 Although Officer Barnes-Christian admitted that he did not turn on his body camera until after the pat down was complete, in violation of the Richmond Police Department’s policy, the body camera “rolls back 30 seconds” after it is turned on, thus displaying the pat down. -3- consent that was given, which was for a pat down, not for a full search,” when he pulled the

jacket and manipulated it.

The trial court rejected the defense’s arguments. It found that the officer had no

credibility issues, whereas Smith had been convicted of crimes of moral turpitude involving

“lying, cheating or stealing” and had an obvious bias to lie in order to “get himself out of hot

water.” The trial court found that Barnes-Christian approached Smith and asked him in a

conversational tone, “Can I talk to you for a minute?” It found that Smith stopped voluntarily

and falsely said no when first asked if he had a firearm. Barnes-Christian asked Smith, “Can I

pat you down?” Smith answered yes. The trial court found that the officer did not have any

physical contact with Smith prior to the pat down and “did not see on the video body-worn

camera any overt blocking.” Barnes-Christian never removed his gun from its holster on his

side.

The trial court credited Barnes-Christian’s testimony and disbelieved Smith. It concluded

that Barnes-Christian did not ask Smith to stop or give any other commands and found based on

the body camera footage that he did not get in Smith’s way. The trial court found that the

incident was a consensual encounter and a consensual, proper pat down. It concluded that it did

not see “any overbearing show of authority that would make a reasonable person feel they

couldn’t leave.” It emphasized that Smith agreed to stop and speak with the officer and found

that Smith consented to the pat down. Without expressly ruling whether Barnes-Christian’s left

hand manipulated the firearm during the search or remained in an open-palm position, the trial

court nonetheless credited the officer’s testimony, which tended to establish that he conducted

the search with an open palm and without manipulation. On direct examination, Barnes-

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