People v. Holiman

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 2022
DocketA160142
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
People v. Holiman, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 3/28/22 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A160142 v. ANDREW HOLIMAN, (Solano County Super. Ct. No. FCR331055) Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Andrew Holiman was found in possession of illegal drugs and a handgun during a traffic stop initiated based on his failure properly to signal a right-hand turn he made after stopping at a stop sign, while the arresting officer’s patrol car was stopped directly behind him. Holiman did signal the turn, but the basis for the traffic stop was that he did not turn on his signal blinker early enough: for the 100 feet he drove before coming to a stop. The arresting officer cited him for violation of Vehicle Code section 22108. The trial court denied his motion to suppress the seized evidence, following which he pled guilty to two felony drug charges and was sentenced to a prison term. He now appeals, arguing (1) the warrantless seizure of the evidence violated the Fourth Amendment because the police lacked an objectively reasonable suspicion that the manner in which he signaled his right-hand turn violated Vehicle Code section 22108; and (2) even if he did violate the Vehicle Code, the police violated his rights to equal protection

1 under the federal and state constitutions because the traffic stop was the result of racial profiling. We do not reach the equal protection issue because we agree the traffic stop was not supported by reasonable suspicion. Holiman’s turn did not violate the Vehicle Code, and no reasonable police officer could think that it did. Therefore, we will reverse the judgment. BACKGROUND On the afternoon of June 19, 2017, rookie police officer Laura Bellamy was driving in her patrol car in downtown Vallejo, California. She had been a member of the police force for only one month and was on patrol accompanied by a field training officer for mandatory on-the-job training. It would be another three months before she would complete her training and be ready to go on patrol unaccompanied. She had not yet completed the traffic phase of her training. Officer Bellamy first saw Holiman’s car when her patrol car came to a stop at another intersection, not at issue here. At that first intersection, she saw Holiman’s car come to a stop at a stop sign on the cross-street to her right, and then make a left-hand turn in front of her patrol car and onto the street she was stopped on, in the opposite direction her patrol car was facing. Two years later at the suppression hearing, she testified that as Holiman made the left turn, she saw him “look[] at me and then quickly look[] away as if to want to hide his face” which she “found . . . curious,” and “so I turned around and followed him,” details not noted in her contemporaneous police report because she believed they had no “evidentiary value.” After the “furtive glance,” she did a U-turn and began following the car to “assess his driving behavior.” She followed him for about two short city blocks until the two cars reached another intersection with a three-way stop sign. Holiman

2 came to a full stop, and then he proceeded ahead and made the right turn. There, she testified, he turned on his turn blinker “[j]ust prior” to making the right-hand turn. Officer Bellamy did not immediately initiate a traffic stop. Rather, she continued following Holiman’s car for about four more minutes, at a distance of nearly a mile, before activating her emergency lights and pulling the car over at a gas station. After stepping out of her patrol car, she approached the driver’s side of his car with her hand on her gun, which was something she often did but did not always do during traffic stops. Her field training officer also got out of the patrol car, walked around to the other side of the car and leaned over, peering inside the front passenger side window. Holiman disclosed he was on parole (for armed robbery) and, after Officer Bellamy confirmed he was subject to search terms, she searched his person and found a pill bottle and some cash, and then placed him in handcuffs in the backseat of her patrol car. In the ensuing search of his car she found a loaded semiautomatic handgun, a baggie containing methamphetamine and a jar containing marijuana. On his phone were texts indicating his involvement with possible drug sales. He was then arrested. From the time Officer Bellamy began following Holiman until she stopped him, many other motorists in plain view committed traffic infractions, both before and after she observed Holiman make the right turn at issue here, and Bellamy did not stop any of them. The People charged Holiman with five felony counts (four weapons offenses and one drug possession offense), together with allegations of a prior strike conviction. He moved to suppress the evidence seized from the car, arguing that the stop and search violated the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution. He also moved to dismiss the charges against

3 him, on the ground that the traffic stop violated the equal protection clause of the United States Constitution because Officer Bellamy had singled him out from dozens of other motorists she also saw violate the traffic laws that day, because he is Black. After a hearing at which Officer Bellamy testified and video footage from the dashboard camera of her patrol car was admitted into evidence, the trial court received supplemental briefing and then denied both motions at a subsequent hearing. The trial court ruled Officer Bellamy had a reasonable suspicion that Holiman had violated the Vehicle Code and thus the stop was lawful. It explained the basis for its ruling as follows: “I find, while whether or not there was a Vehicle Code violation, because the way the road bends, the short time span for this action, there could be an argument as to whether or not there was, in fact, a Vehicle Code violation under the reasonable doubt standard.[1] There’s little argument that there wasn’t reasonable suspicion to believe that a Vehicle Code violation had occurred. [¶] All of the incidences in terms of the way the road bends or the entire block was at a certain speed, those go to whether the law was violated, not whether or not an officer had reasonable suspicion of there being a violation which was enough to begin the stop. “Then the officer saw what, in my notes I indicated was a furtive glance or perhaps a suspicious look.· If the standard is objective, but we don’t look beyond the objective standard, the fact that the officer saw the Vehicle Code violation, the officer can then use that Vehicle Code violation to follow the

1 The court’s comments concerning a bend in the road appear to be a reference to an alternative argument pressed by the defense below, not reprised on appeal, that there was no Vehicle Code violation because, given the shape of the road, no actual turn was made but, rather, defendant had simply yielded.

4 vehicle to see if his subjective hunch turns out. [¶] It’s also possible that a defendant on parole, with what turns out to be guns and drugs within his car when he made the stop—he made the furtive glance, under the current standard of looking at this objectively, the Court denies the motion, as the officer had reasonable suspicion to believe that a Vehicle Code violation had occurred, and when the officer pulls the defendant over, it turns out he’s on . . . [¶] [p]arole. . . . and the officer could conduct the search.” The trial court also implicitly denied Holiman’s nonstatutory motion to dismiss. 2 Holiman then pleaded no contest to two drug-related charges and admitted the prior strike allegation, and the remaining charges were dismissed. The trial court subsequently imposed sentence (a prison term of seven years and four months).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Robey v. Superior Court
302 P.3d 574 (California Supreme Court, 2013)
People v. Logsdon
164 Cal. App. 4th 741 (California Court of Appeal, 2008)
People v. Miranda
17 Cal. App. 4th 917 (California Court of Appeal, 1993)
People v. Suff
324 P.3d 1 (California Supreme Court, 2014)
People v. Zaragoza
374 P.3d 344 (California Supreme Court, 2016)
People v. Carmona
195 Cal. App. 4th 1385 (California Court of Appeal, 2011)
People v. Durant
205 Cal. App. 4th 57 (California Court of Appeal, 2012)
People v. Campuzano
237 Cal. App. Supp. 4th 14 (Appellate Division of the Superior Court of California, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
People v. Holiman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-holiman-calctapp-2022.