State of Iowa v. Jaheim Romaine Cyrus

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 17, 2023
Docket21-0828
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Jaheim Romaine Cyrus (State of Iowa v. Jaheim Romaine Cyrus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Iowa v. Jaheim Romaine Cyrus, (iowa 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA

No. 21–0828

Submitted September 29, 2023—Filed November 17, 2023

STATE OF IOWA,

Appellee,

vs.

JAHEIM ROMAINE CYRUS,

Appellant.

On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Brendan E. Greiner

(suppression ruling) and Odell G. McGhee II (sentencing), District Associate

Judges.

Defendant, claiming he was unlawfully seized in his parked car, seeks

further review of court of appeals decision that affirmed the district court’s ruling

denying his motion to suppress. AFFIRMED.

Waterman, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices

joined. Martha J. Lucey, Appellate Defender, and Josh Irwin (argued) and

Stephan J. Japuntich (until withdrawal), Assistant Appellate Defenders, for

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Genevieve Reinkoester (argued),

Assistant Attorney General, for appellee. 2

WATERMAN, Justice. In this appeal, we must decide whether the defendant was seized in

violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and

article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution. A woman called the police to report

a suspicious car parked in front of her home at night. A uniformed police officer

responded in a marked patrol car and pulled alongside the parked car, activated

rear-facing lights, shined a mounted spotlight into the car, and walked over and

asked the driver, “How are you tonight?” Upon smelling a strong odor of burnt

marijuana, the officer searched the driver, found a bullet in his pocket and a

stolen loaded handgun in his front-seat console, and arrested him. The

defendant, charged with firearm violations, filed a motion to suppress, which the

district court denied, finding the officer did not seize him before detecting the

odor of marijuana. The defendant, a nineteen-year-old Black male, was convicted

on the minutes of testimony and appealed, arguing his minority status should

have been considered in evaluating whether he had been seized at the outset of

the encounter. We transferred the case to the court of appeals, which affirmed

the suppression ruling. We granted the defendant’s application for further

review. On our de novo review, we agree with the district court and court of

appeals that the officer did not unlawfully seize the defendant. We apply an

objective totality-of-the-circumstances test. The lone officer did not activate his

siren or front-facing emergency lights, display a weapon, block in the defendant’s

already parked vehicle, or command the driver to stay in his car. On this record,

the use of the spotlight was insufficient to escalate their initial encounter into a

seizure. We follow the great weight of authority and decline to modify our

objective “reasonable person” test to factor in the defendant’s race in evaluating the officer’s actions. For the reasons further explained below, we affirm the 3

decision of the court of appeals and the district court’s suppression ruling and

judgment of conviction.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

At 9:20 p.m. on October 16, 2020, less than five months after George

Floyd’s fatal encounter with Minneapolis police, a woman called the Des Moines

Police Department to report a “suspicious” car on Ashby Avenue. She said the

car initially stopped in her neighbors’ driveway, then parked nearby on the street

before moving again to remain in front of her home. When asked what kind of

car she saw, the caller said, “[A] gold Impala. Like an older, like probably 2005,

2006.” But when asked for the license plate, she said that she could not see it.

A uniformed police officer, Shawn Morgan, was dispatched to investigate.

Officer Morgan drove to the caller’s neighborhood in his marked patrol car,

and the Impala came into his view. The Impala was legally parked with its engine

off on the north side of the T-intersection at Ashby Avenue and 26th Place. Officer

Morgan aimed his mounted, directional spotlight to “attempt to see into the

vehicle” and “see who was sitting in the vehicle or what was going on in the

vehicle.” Officer Morgan turned on his patrol car’s rear-facing lights “to make

sure anyone coming from behind didn’t strike [his] vehicle.” He did not activate his siren or front-facing emergency top lights.

Officer Morgan’s dashcam video shows that as he slowly pulled alongside

the Impala, Jaheim Cyrus, the Impala’s driver, opened its door into the patrol

car’s path.1 Officer Morgan stopped in the middle of the street, without blocking

in the Impala. Cyrus looked back at Officer Morgan and showed his hands. Cyrus

stayed in the Impala; the spotlight was still directed at the left side of the Impala.

As Officer Morgan exited his patrol car, he said in a conversational tone, “How

1Officer Morgan did not capture the interaction with Cyrus on his bodycam. He “forgot to

grab it off the charger” because he “exited the vehicle a little bit quicker than [he] normally would have.” 4

are you tonight?” Those words are clearly heard on the dashcam audio. No

further conversation between the officer and driver is audible as Officer Morgan

walked around the front of the patrol car, nodded his head toward Cyrus, and

spoke into his shoulder-mounted radio. Cyrus put one foot outside the Impala

and placed his left hand on top of the car door—as if to get out—but then sat

back into the driver’s seat.

Cyrus testified at the suppression hearing that he asked the officer

something like, “Can I get out of my car?” and was told, “No, just stay in the car.”

Cyrus did not describe the officer’s tone. Officer Morgan testified he did not recall

directing Cyrus to remain in the car and his practice is not to give such a

command when first responding to “suspicious vehicle” complaints, which often

“don’t involve criminal activity.”

The video shows Officer Morgan walking to the rear of the Impala. The

dashcam audio recorded the officer’s recitation of the license plate number

moments later. Next, Officer Morgan walked to the driver’s-side window where,

as he later testified, he “immediately smelled the strong odor of burnt

marijuana.” He then placed his left hand on the top of the car door and asked

Cyrus for his identification. He noticed Cyrus’s hands were shaking. He opened the car door, pulled out his flashlight, and asked Cyrus about the marijuana

odor; Cyrus denied using or possessing any marijuana.

Officer Morgan placed Cyrus in handcuffs, patted him down, and found a

round of ammunition in his left front jacket pocket. He put Cyrus in the back

seat of his patrol car before searching the Impala. Officer Morgan discovered a

Ruger LC9 9 mm handgun with an extended magazine holding nine live rounds

of ammunition in the center console.

As Officer Morgan read Cyrus his Miranda warning, he noticed a “green leafy substance” on Cyrus’s tongue and bottom molars. Cyrus admitted to eating 5

a small blunt and said it was the first day he had ever used marijuana. Cyrus

explained that he was in the neighborhood to see his girlfriend because they had

just had a fight, and he was waiting for her to get home. Cyrus admitted to

parking several places on the street because he did not know her exact address.

Cyrus denied knowing anything about the Ruger, which Officer Morgan later

learned was reported stolen.

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State of Iowa v. Jaheim Romaine Cyrus, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-jaheim-romaine-cyrus-iowa-2023.