State of Maine v. Warren

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 29, 2019
DocketCUMcr-18-1278
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
State of Maine v. Warren, (Me. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

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STATE OF MAINE UNIFIED CRIMrNAL DOCKET CUMBERLAND, ss No. CR-18-1278

STATE OF MAIN E STATE OF MAINE Cumberland, SS. Clerk's Office

MAR 2 9 2019 V. RECEIVED ORDER

ANDREW WARREN,

Defendant

Before the court is a motion by defendant Andrew Warren to suppress evidence obtained

during a motor vehicle stop on March 6, 2018, which led to the pending charge of Operating After

Suspension for an OUI offense. A hearing on the motion was held on March 7, 2019.

The State has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the stop of the

vehicle driven by Warren was based on reasonable articulable suspicion and that the stop was not

unduly prolonged.

The court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

1. On March 6, 2018 at about 10:30pm officer Todd Meslin and another Gorham police

officer went to an apartment building located on Main Street in Gorham seeking Jacob Haskell,

who was sought on an arrest warrant for forgery. Outside the building they encountered a man who

identified himself as Paul Patriotti, accompanied by a woman who identified herself as Francesca

Gallant. The officers spoke to Patriotti and Gallant, who indicated they were visiting a tenant in

the building.

2. The nearest vehicle parked outside the building was a red van, and the officers ran the

registration number of that vehicle and found it was registered to Andrew Warren ( (

3. After Patriotti had entered the building and entered an upstairs apartment, Officer Meslin

learned from the dispatcher that there was an active probation warrant for Patriotti. The officers

then went in search of Patriotti but learned from the occupant of the apartment that Patriotti had

fled out of the back of the building. Meslin could not remember whether Gallant was still in the

building at that time, but at a later point it became apparent that she was no longer there as well.

4. Looking for Patriotti, the Gorham officers requested a K-9 unit, which followed a scent

that led to Libby Avenue. The officers also ran a records check on Francesca Gallant and learned

the make, model, color, and license plate number of a vehicle registered to her.

5. Approximately one-half hour later Officer Meslin and another Gorham officer, Sgt.

Edwards, still looking for Patriotti and were in their vehicles watching Libby Avenue from Patio

Park when they saw what appeared to be the vehicle registered to Gallant approaching along Libby

Avenue.

6. This event is captured on video (with audio only of radio traffic) introduced as State's

Ex. 1. As the car approached, the officers could not make out who was driving or whether there

were any passengers. Once they confirmed that it was Gallant' s vehicle, knowing that Gallant had

accompanied Patriotti earlier, and believing that the car could contain Patriotti and/or Gallant, Sgt.

Edwards turned on blue lights and stopped the vehicle.

7. When the officers approached the car, they found that it did not contain either Gallant or

Patriotti. The only occupant was the driver, who produced a driver's license identifying himself as

Andrew Warren, the defendant in this action and the person whose van had been parked outside

the apartment building from which Patriotti had fled. Approximately 90 seconds later one of the

officers can be heard on State's Ex. I apparently reading Andrew Warren's name and birthdate to

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the dispatcher. Officer Meslin also looked up Warren's driver's license information on his

computer.

8. During the course of the stop, Officer Meslin also asked Warren about Patriotti, about

Gallant, and about Jacob Haskell, 1 but Warren was uncooperative and did not offer any

information in response to those questions.

8. In checking Warren's driver's license, Meslin learned that Warren's right to operate had

been suspended, and he then arrested Warren for operation after suspension. With the exception

of a very short conversation between the officers about the possible connection between Warren

and Patriotti and Gallant and Meslin's few brief attempts to question Warren about Patriotti and

Gallant, the stop did not take any longer than required to check Warren's license. The stop

generally did not exceed the normal time that it takes for an operator's driver's license to be

checked.

9. From a review of the video, approximately seven minutes and 45 seconds elapsed

between the time when the Gallant vehicle came to a stop and Warren's arrest for operating after

suspension.

10. The Gorham officers had a reasonable articulable suspicion that justified their stop of

the Gallant vehicle. This was because Gallant had accompanied Patriotti before he fled, because

Gallant herself had left the building around the same time or shortly thereafter, and because the

vehicle was in the same vicinity as the location to where the K9 unit had tracked a scent.

Accordingly, the officers had a sufficient basis to conclude that the vehicle potentially contained

Patriotti or that it contained Gallant, a person who potentially could provide information as to

Patriotti' s location.

1 No evidence was offered, however, that there was any connection known to the officers between Jacob Haskell and defendant.

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11. The remaining question is whether the stop of the Gallant vehicle driven by defendant

was too prolonged. The defense argues that once the officers had ascertained that neither Patriotti

nor Gallant were in the vehicle, they were not entitled to detain Warren for the seven plus minutes

it took to ascertain that he was under suspension and arrest him.

12. The defense acknowledges that the Law Court has held that "[a]fter an officer stops a

vehicle, he may request verification of the operator's right to drive, even when the original reason

for the stop has disappeared. or evaporated, before the request is made." State v. Gulick, 2000 ME

1701 15, 759 A.2d 1085 (citations omitted). However, the defense argues that once Warren had

shown that he had a driver's license, they should have allowed him to leave and that any further

detention violated the Fourth Amendment.

13. The leading U.S. Supreme Court case with respect to whether a roadside stop has been

too prolonged is Rodriguez v. United States, 135 S. Ct. 1609 (2015). However, in Rodriguez a

records check had already been performed and a written warning issued before the detention was

extended for a canine search. 13 5 S.Ct. at 1613. The Rodriguez decision states that after stopping

a vehicle, officers may make "ordinary inquiries incident to the traffic stop" and that such inquiries

typically involve "checking the driver's license, determining whether there are outstanding

warrants against the driver, and inspecting the automobile's insurance and proof of insurance."

135 S.Ct. at 1615. If officers are entitled to perform a records check for outstanding warrants, it

follows that they are also entitled to perform a records check to determine whether a driver's

license has been suspended.

14. There are several Law Court decisions that have upheld roadside detentions long

enough to allow a records check on the driver even after the original reason for the stop had

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evaporated. See State v. Gulick, 2000 ME 170 ~~ 5, 11, 19-20; State v. Huether, 2000 ME 59 ~~ 4,

8.

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Related

State v. Gulick
2000 ME 170 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2000)
State v. Huether
2000 ME 59 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2000)
Rodriguez v. United States
575 U.S. 348 (Supreme Court, 2015)

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