People v. Suttles

685 P.2d 183, 1984 Colo. LEXIS 586
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 16, 1984
DocketNos. 83SA347, 83SA348, 83SA349
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 685 P.2d 183 (People v. Suttles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Suttles, 685 P.2d 183, 1984 Colo. LEXIS 586 (Colo. 1984).

Opinions

ROVIRA, Justice,

delivered the Opinion of the Court in Part I and Part IIA and announced the Judgment of the Court in Part IIB.

The defendant, Vernon T. Suttles, is charged in three criminal cases with four counts of aggravated robbery1 and violent crime.2 He filed motions to suppress evidence in all of the cases. After a consolidated hearing, the trial court concluded that the police had no reasonable suspicion to stop or probable cause to arrest him. The court then suppressed all testimony from the victims of the four robberies establishing an in-court identification of the defendant. It also suppressed a chrome-plated revolver and an earring found in the back of the automobile in which Suttles was riding as a passenger before his arrest. The People filed this interlocutory appeal pursuant to C.A.R. 4.1. We reverse.

I.

The evidence introduced at the suppression hearing established that, prior to December 22, 1982, a series of armed robberies of convenience stores, gas stations, and fast-food restaurants had taken place in Denver. The robbers were identified as two black men, one of whom always wore a brown leather jacket and carried a chrome-plated revolver. In an effort to identify and apprehend the robbers, Detective Chris Erickson installed a camera in a business known as “Swede’s Place.” As anticipated, Swede’s Place was robbed on November 1, 1982, and several photographs of the robbers were taken. One photograph showed one of the robbers to be a black male wearing an earring in his left ear and a brown leather jacket. Another photograph showed the same robber carrying a [185]*185chrome-plated revolver in his right hand. The first photograph only showed a small portion of the man’s face, however, and could not be used for a positive identification. The second photograph was cut off at the shoulder.

The first photograph and a circular describing the modus operandi of the robbers were widely circulated throughout the Denver Police Department. The circular described the robbers as two black males, ages 23-25, approximately 5' 10" and 6' tall, each weighing one-hundred sixty pounds, one with curly black hair and a mustache, and the other with an “afro.” It also noted the brown coat, the chrome-plated revolver, and a white, or blue and white vehicle.

On December 22, 1982, Officers David Castellano and John Schwab were on duty wearing plain clothes and driving an unmarked police car. As they left a Denver restaurant at approximately 5:00 p.m., Officer Schwab saw three black males in a blue and black automobile parked near a gas station. At least two of the men wore plastic shower caps on their heads. Schwab drove the police car to within five feet of the parked automobile and saw one of the men, later identified as the defendant, Suttles, sitting alone in the back seat. He testified that Suttles was wearing clothing that he thought matched the description in the police department circular. Officer Castellano also observed the automobile and its passengers. He testified that the person in the back seat was wearing a brown coat that looked like the brown coat in the photograph of the robber taken at Swede’s Place.

When the automobile started moving, the officers followed it for about thirty-five blocks. At some point during the surveillance, they decided to stop the vehicle. Before doing so, however, they radioed for back-up assistance because their unmarked car did not have emergency equipment. A back-up unit arrived just as the suspect automobile stopped at a gas station. The driver, later identified as Jesse Fuller, the owner of the car, went into the gas station. Officer Schwab parked the police car and walked toward the driver’s side of the automobile, while Officer Castellano went over to the passenger’s side. Castellano testified that the passenger in the front seat, later identified as Houston Broadnex, had a coat “underneath his left leg and part of the coat exposed on his right leg,” in which the officer observed the silhouette of a gun. Castellano allegedly grabbed the coat, felt the gun, and ordered Broadnex and Suttles not to move. He then ordered the two men out of the car and, after searching the car’s interior, found a knife and a chrome-plated revolver under the back seat.

Broadnex testified on behalf of the defendant. He stated that Castellano approached the car with a drawn gun and ordered him first to put his hands on the dashboard and then to get out of the car. Immediately afterward, the officer ordered Suttles out of the car and asked both of them for identification. Broadnex testified that his coat was on the floor, not on his lap, and that the gun was not discovered in his coat until after he had gotten out of the car.

Following the arrest and search, Suttles was taken to police headquarters, where he was interviewed3 and photographed. An officer noticed that Suttles’ left ear was pierced. He therefore contacted the officers still at the scene and told them to look for an earring, which they subsequently found on the floor in the back of the car. No testimony was introduced at the suppression hearing concerning ownership of the earring. Using the photograph taken of Suttles, the police then conducted a pho[186]*186tographic lineup with the four victims of the robberies for which the defendant was later charged. All of the victims identified the defendant as being one of the robbers. Besides moving to suppress the gun and the earring, Suttles also moved to suppress

“any and all evidence of or resulting from any photo display or lineup and any courtroom identification of the Defendant on the grounds that any previous identifications were ... so suggestive as to be in violation of Defendant’s right to due process and any courtroom identification at trial would be the result of previous improper identifications.”

The trial court concluded that the defendant’s arrest was unlawful. It found that Officers Schwab and Castellano, with only a “generic description” of the robbers, acted on “good police instinct” in deciding to follow the suspect automobile; however, instinct cannot take the place of reasonable suspicion to stop or probable cause to arrest the defendant. According to the court:

“[W]hen Officer Castellano went over [to the stopped car], I find that he placed the defendants under arrest. I find then he said at that time, ‘Freeze. Put your hands on the front seat.’ Mr. Broadnex did that. Mr. Suttles did it, at which point Officer Castellano, admittedly with gun drawn, ordered the men out of the car. They got out of the car. They were frisked. Nothing was found on them, at which point Officer Castellano and Officer Schwab, without probable cause and without a warrant, searched the vehicle they were in.
“Officer Castellano stated earlier he had gotten an excellent view or good view of the coat that Mr. Suttles was wearing in the back seat and hinged the reasonableness of the stop on the fact that this coat, according to Castellano, matched or was almost identical to the coat he had seen pictured in the robberies and stiekups at Swedes and other places. The defense has shown through credible visual evidence [4] that that view was simply not available to the officers, and I so find. Until Mr. Suttles was actually removed from the car, there simply was no way to get a view of that coat....”

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Bluebook (online)
685 P.2d 183, 1984 Colo. LEXIS 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-suttles-colo-1984.