People v. Powell

180 Misc. 2d 627, 691 N.Y.S.2d 263, 1999 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 191
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 180 Misc. 2d 627 (People v. Powell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Powell, 180 Misc. 2d 627, 691 N.Y.S.2d 263, 1999 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 191 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Phylis Skloot Bamberger, J.

The defendant is charged with two counts of criminal possession of a narcotic substance in the third degree. A pretrial hearing was held on a motion to suppress a bag containing narcotics. The issue raised at the hearing was whether police officers can properly pursue a person who enters and then leaves the courtyard of a building whose managing agent has signed on to the Police Department’s “Operation Clean Halls.”1 Sergeant John Gilcher was the only witness at the hearing. He testified about events he observed and about what other officers told him. The motion to suppress is granted.

Testimony

Sergeant Gilcher testified that authority for the Police Department’s Operation Clean Halls was based on an agreement between a landlord or a group of tenants that allowed police to enter a particular building and the immediate area and to stop anyone found there and ask for identification. Gilcher explained that, in carrying out Operation Clean Halls, the police go up and down the stairways in a building checking the landings and the grounds for anyone who might be there. The officers stop all who are found, question them as to why they are in the building or on the grounds, and ask for identification showing that they live in the building or for an apartment number to verify a legitimate visit.

Gilcher testified he was in charge of Operation Clean Halls on the night of January 16, 1998, a windy night with drizzle. The operation involved eight police officers including Officer Chin at 3444 Corsa Avenue. The building was one of several, called the Hillside Houses, bounded by Eastchester Road, Boston Road, Corsa Avenue and Hicks Avenue. Entrances to the courtyard from the street were from Corsa Avenue and Eastchester Road; one could also enter the courtyard through a tunnel. That night, over a 21/2-hour period, seven people who were coming in from the courtyard were arrested.

[629]*629Gilcher and his driver, Officer Wong, were in an unmarked police car. Officer Chin and another officer were inside the courtyard of the building next to the tunnel. Chin and his partner stopped two people, one a male Hispanic for trespassing. The Hispanic man fled toward Eastchester Road, and at that moment Chin saw another man, a black man in dark colored clothing, enter the courtyard from the Corsa Avenue entryway, make a U-turn and run out of the courtyard back onto Corsa Avenue. Gilcher claimed that Chin said the black man looked at him and saw the two men who were being detained.

Referring to the first man who ran, one of the two officers in the courtyard broadcasted over the radio that a male Hispanic had fled toward Eastchester Road. In response Gilcher and Wong, in their police vehicle, drove toward Eastchester Road, stopped a Hispanic man and handcuffed him. Officer Chin then approached and identified the man as the Hispanic man who had run away from the Eastchester Avenue entryway to the courtyard.

It was at the moment that Chin confronted the Hispanic man that he first told Gilcher that a black man in dark clothing entered the courtyard. Gilcher, acting on Chin’s information, left the Hispanic man with Chin and along with Wong went on to Corsa Avenue in search of the black man.

Gilcher testified that one black man was walking toward them on the sidewalk. He was wearing a dark colored coat. Gilcher did not know from where the man was coming. No one else was in the vicinity. As the black man was almost parallel with the car, Gilcher opened the door a little bit and he and Wong shouted for the black man to stop. Gilcher testified that he wanted to stop the defendant to question him “for the criminal trespass,” to see if he lived in the building or had identification documents on his person. Gilcher testified that if it turned out that the defendant had no identification documents on him, Gilcher would have had Chin come and identify the defendant as the person in the courtyard and would have issued a summons for the criminal trespass that occurred in the courtyard.

According to Gilcher, the black man, later identified as the defendant, made eye contact with him and immediately ran toward Boston Road. When the defendant started to run, Gilcher and Wong got out of the car and chased him. A marked police van blocked the defendant who was then trapped between the van and Gilcher (who was 10 feet away). The defendant [630]*630reached into his coat and tossed three ziplock bags onto the roof of a bodega. The bags landed on the ground. The officers arrested the defendant about five minutes after the arrest of the Hispanic man and Chin’s conversation with Gilcher on the street. Gilcher picked up the bags and found that they contained crack. Five minutes later, Chin came to the location and said the defendant “fit the description of the male he saw entering the courtyard.” He did not specifically identify the defendant. The defendant was never charged with trespassing.

Posthearing Submissions

After the conclusion of the hearing, and as part of the memorandum of law, the People attached a copy of a form that purports to be an affidavit of the managing agent of 3444 Corsa Avenue and is dated November 1, 1997. The form states that the owner or managing agent of a series of buildings, including 3444 Corsa Avenue, has asked the police to arrest anyone found trespassing in the building. The form further states that a person is trespassing in the building if the person is not a tenant, an invitee or an invited guest.

Findings and Conclusions

The question to be resolved here is whether, based on the information known to Gilcher at the time Gilcher began to chase the defendant, the chase and the consequent entrapment of the defendant between two sets of officers was a legal exercise of police power. The People argue that the form signed by the building agent was the tenants’ permission to ask anyone in the building for identification and that any inquiry made is pursuant to the permission is per se a level two inquiry under People v De Bour (40 NY2d 210 [1976]).2 The argument continues that the De Bour level three stop and inquiry3 is triggered when anyone refuses to comply with the police request and runs away. A refusal, assert the People, establishes reasonable suspicion to believe that “the crime of trespass has just been committed” and gives the officer the right to detain the person for questioning.

[631]*631The Court of Appeals has clearly articulated the rule that “[p]olice pursuit of an individual ‘significantly impede [s]’ the person’s freedom of movement and thus must be justified by reasonable suspicion that a crime has been, is being, or is about to be committed.” (People v Holmes, 81 NY2d 1056, 1057-1058 [1993], citing People v Martinez, 80 NY2d 444, 447 [1992].) The Court went on to explain that “[f| light alone, however, or even in conjunction with equivocal circumstances that might justify a request for information * * * is insufficient to justify pursuit because an individual has a right ‘to be let alone’ and refuse to respond to police inquiry”. (People v Holmes, 81 NY2d, supra, at 1058 [citations omitted].)

A stop or pursuit of a person “must be premised upon what the officer does know, namely, that there are reasons to suspect a particular individual of criminal involvement.

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Bluebook (online)
180 Misc. 2d 627, 691 N.Y.S.2d 263, 1999 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-powell-nysupct-1999.