Rakim Moberly v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 2018
Docket2016-SC-0429
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Rakim Moberly v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, (Ky. 2018).

Opinion

RENDERED: APRIL 26, 2018 TO BE PUBLISHED

jBupreme (four! of

2016-SC-000429-DG

RAKIM MOBERLY APPELLANT

ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS V. CASE NO. 2015-CA-000370-MR FAYETTE CIRCUIT COURT NO. 14-CR-00102

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE VENTERS

REVERSING

Appellant, Rakim Moberly, appeals from the Court of Appeals’ decision

which affirmed the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence

discovered in his vehicle during a traffic stop. Upon entering a conditional plea

to preserve the issue for appeal, Appellant was convicted of possession of a

controlled substance, first degree, and carrying a concealed deadly weapon.

The controlled substance and the weapon were found after a canine sniff

search indicated the presence of drugs. We granted discretionary review to

consider whether the initial traffic stop had been impermissibly prolonged to allow the canine search to proceed. For the reasons stated below, we reverse

the Court of Appeals’ decision.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Lexington Police Officer Roman Sorrell was following a vehicle in the very

early hours of a December morning. He performed a registration check on the

vehicle license number and discovered that the vehicle’s registration had been

cancelled because it had no liability insurance coverage. Sorrell initiated a

traffic stop of the vehicle at 3:35 a.m. Appellant was driving the vehicle.

At Sorrell’s request, Appellant provided his driver’s license. He told

Sorrell that the car was not his and that he could not provide proof of

insurance. Sorrell described Appellant as fully cooperative but abnormally

nervous and sweating at the brow. Appellant was smoking a cigarette and

blowing the smoke into the vehicle’s interior. He kept looking toward the right

side of the car.

Sorrell took Appellant’s driver’s license back to his cruiser and began

writing the traffic citation. He also spent about five minutes accessing a jail

website and a police database to find out more information about Appellant.

That inquiry disclosed that Appellant had been charged previously with

trafficking in marijuana and carrying a concealed deadly weapon; it did not

indicate whether Appellant had been convicted of these charges.

Sorrell returned to Appellant’s vehicle. He told Appellant that he knew

about the prior charges. He asked if Appellant had drugs or weapons in the

vehicle. Appellant said he did not. Sorrell asked for consent to search the

2 vehicle, and Appellant declined. Sorrell acknowledged that at that point in the

usual traffic stop, he would have given the driver a citation and let him leave.

However, because Appellant seemed nervous, was sweating, blew his cigarette

smoke into the vehicle instead of toward the officer, kept looking to the right

side of the car, and had prior charges, Sorrell decided that he would detain

Appellant further while he called for a canine unit to conduct a sniff search of

the vehicle.

The canine handler, Officer Jones, arrived with the dog within a few

minutes. After speaking to Sorrell and Appellant, Jones retrieved the dog and

conducted a sniff search of the car. The dog alerted to indicate the presence of

drugs on the driver’s side of the vehicle.

Sorrell and yet another officer who had arrived on the scene then

searched Appellant’s vehicle. In the glove compartment (not on the driver’s

side of the car as the dog indicated), they found a cigarette box containing

cocaine and methylone, a controlled substance they thought was heroin. They

also found a handgun under the driver’s seat. Appellant was arrested at 4:20

a.m., some forty-five minutes after the initial stop.

Appellant was indicted on two counts of trafficking in a controlled

substance (heroin1 and cocaine); receiving stolen property (the firearm); and

carrying a concealed deadly weapon. He moved to suppress the incriminating

1 This charge was amended to trafficking in a controlled substance, second degree.

3 evidence on the basis that he was detained by the sniff search beyond the time

reasonably required to complete the traffic stop.

After the trial court denied the suppression motion, Appellant preserved

his right to appeal by entering a conditional guilty plea to one count of

possession of a controlled substance, first degree, cocaine, and carrying a

concealed deadly weapon. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s

denial of Appellant’s motion to suppress. We granted discretionary review.

II. ANALYSIS

When reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, the

findings of fact are reviewed under a clearly erroneous standard, and the

conclusions of law are reviewed de novo. Davis v. Commonwealth, 484 S.W.3d

288, 290 (Ky. 2016) (citations omitted). Since the parties do not challenge the

trial court’s findings of fact, we turn our attention to the trial court’s

conclusions of law.

The trial court concluded, and no one disputes, that the initial traffic

stop was justified when Sorrell obtained information indicating that the vehicle

was uninsured. Wilson v. Commonwealth, 37 S.W.3d 745, 749 (Ky. 2001) (“[A]n

officer who has probable cause to believe a civil traffic violation has occurred

may stop a vehicle regardless of his or her subjective motivation in doing so.”).

The trial court also acknowledged our holding in Commonwealth v.

Bucalo, 422 S.W.3d 253, 258 (Ky. 2013), that a lawful traffic stop may

nevertheless violate an individual’s Fourth Amendment rights

4 ‘if its manner of execution unreasonably infringes interests protected by the Constitution’2 or it ‘last[s] longer than is necessary to effectuate the purpose of the stop.’3 Generally, if an officer unreasonably prolongs the investigatory stop in order to facilitate a dog sniff, any resulting seizure will be deemed unconstitutional.

We also said in Bucalo that a traffic stop may be prolonged beyond the

time required to effectuate the purpose of the stop when additional information

properly obtained during the stop provides the officer with a reasonable and

articulable suspicion that other criminal activity is afoot. Id. at 259 (citing

Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 30 (1968)).

At the time of its ruling, the trial court did not have the benefit of the

Supreme Court’s more recent statement on this issue in Rodriguez v. United

States, 135 S. Ct. 1609 (2015), nor did it have our post-Rodriguez decision,

Davis v. Commonwealth, 484 S.W.3d 288 (Ky. 2016). Davis and Rodriguez

involved the increasingly common scenario we see here: a police officer

ostensibly stops a vehicle for an observed traffic violation but also harbors

suspicions of criminal drug activity inadequate to justify a search. A drug dog

arrives on the scene within minutes to conduct a sniff search concurrently with

the traffic stop. Rodriguez highlighted and clarified several principles relevant

to this scenario.

First, the Fourth Amendment tolerates certain unrelated investigations

conducted during a routine traffic stop as long as they do not lengthen the

2 Quoting Illinois v. Caballes, 543 U.S. 405, 407 (2005). 3 Quoting Florida v.

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