State v. Adams

13 A.3d 1162, 2008 Del. Super. LEXIS 532, 2008 WL 8226361
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedAugust 22, 2008
DocketCriminal Action Nos. IN-07-12-0915, IN-07-12-0916, IN-07-12-0917, IN-07-12-0918, IN-07-12-0919, IN-07-12-0920; ID No. 0711017054
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 13 A.3d 1162 (State v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Adams, 13 A.3d 1162, 2008 Del. Super. LEXIS 532, 2008 WL 8226361 (Del. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

HERLIHY, Judge

Defendant Steven Adams has moved to suppress two separate sets of evidence. The first set was from a car, stopped for a traffic offense, in which he was a passenger. He contends the police lacked reasonable articulable suspicion to detain him, did not follow proper detention procedures and, finally, lacked probable cause to arrest him and seize the evidence from the car.

Subsequent to that arrest, the police obtained a search warrant for his residence. Adams claims the affidavit of probable cause is insufficient and, therefore, the evidence seized .from his residence should also be suppressed.

A suppression hearing was held during which the circumstances of the car stop and arrest were developed. , The hearing revealed an additional issue, however. The actual “searching” of Adams’ residence began after 10:00 p.m., but the search warrant was issued at 9:59 p.m. It did not explicitly authorize a nighttime search which Delaware law expressly requires for searches occurring after 10:00 [1164]*1164p.m. However, officers waiting at the residence entered it at 9:59 p.m. when told of the warrant’s issuance. The issue of whether an express nighttime authorization was needed in this case came into focus.1

The Court has determined that the arrest and evidence seized at the scene of the traffic stop are valid but that the search warrant lacked sufficient probable cause to permit the search of the residence. Based on that finding, the Court need not resolve the nighttime search warrant issue.

Factual Background

The factual setting for this motion is a combination of the affidavit of probable cause for the search warrant and testimony at the suppression hearing. There are two parts to this matter, Adams original arrest which was more fully brought out in the suppression hearing and the subsequent search of his residence set in motion by that arrest. As noted, Adams challenges the propriety of both.

First the affidavit of probable cause:

1)Your affiants are Detective Mitchell Rentz and Detective Andrea Janvier, both sworn member of the Wilmington Department of Police, are assigned to the Drug Organized Crime and Vice Division. Your affiants have over 19 years of police experience. Your affiants have authored and/or coauthored in over fifty search wai'rants. Your affiant has arrested over one hundred drug offenders leading to numerous drug convictions. Your affiants have attended numerous schools dealing in the illegal distribution of controlled substances as well as the preferred methods of drug traffickers.
2) Your affiants can state that during the second week of October 2007 a confidential informant advised that a black male known possibly as “Tar-mel” sells cocaine from within 1903 w. 8th Street, Apartment # 1, Wilmington, Delaware. This individual is also known to frequent the area of 8th and N. Jefferson Street, or the 600 block of W. 8th street, Wilmington.
3) Your affiants can state that on numerous occasions during second, third week of October and the first two weeks of November 2007 visual surveillance was set up in the described area. A black male approximately 5'08, 170-180 with muslim beard and bald head, and frequently wears a kufe (* *muslim garb) was observed traveling from the 600 block of w. 8th street, directly to 1903 N. Lincoln Street, apartment # 1. This individual would enter the dwelling and return within 3-10 minutes. Often he would be driven by different females, who stayed in them vehicles. On other occasions he would occupy rental vehicles.
4) Your affiants can state that a deljis check was conducted for the nickname of “tarmel”. The only one was identified as Sean Mckenzie, bmn 03-10-1971.
5) On 14 November 2007 your affiants along with assisting units set up visual surveillance on 1903 w. 8th street, apartment #1. At approximately 2038 hours a grey in color Hyundai bearing Maryland registration 6BYE75 pulled into the 1900 block of w. 8th street. A black male wearing dark clothing, with a black kufe on his head exited the passenger side of this vehicle and responded in with [1165]*1165keys to 1903 w. 8th street, apartment #1. At approximately 2047 hours this male exited the dwelling and reoccupied the passenger seat of the vehicle.
6) Your affiants can state that as the described vehicle pulled into the flow of traffic from a parked position she did not signal. Further, the front seat passenger did not have a seat-belt on. Assisting units with emergency equipment came to assist. At approximately 2052 hours a motor vehicle stop was conducted at 6th and n. franklin street. The passenger identified as steven adams, bmn 06-24-1974 opened the door of the vehicle and put his right arm in the passenger floorboard area. He then looked as if he was going to run. He was placed into custody. In plain view on the described floor board area a clear knotted bag was located containing a tan, chunky substance to wit crack-cocaine (*later field tested positive with a approximate weight of 7.5 grams, further a small knotted bag containing marijuana was located (* *field tested positive with an approximate weight of 1.0 grams). The operator of the vehicle was identified as Natisha Winder, bfn 07-14-1975. Her son Marquis Carpenter, bmn 06-07-1999 was a rear seat passenger.
7) It should noted that Steven Adams has an address of 1903 w. 8th street, apartment # 1 his ID card. Further, as of June 20, 202 he is a convicted drug felon. He was found guilty of possession of schedule II narcotic within 300 ft of a park.
8) Your affiants can state that units immediately responded to the described residence to conduct continued surveillance while these investigators applied for said search warrant.2

This affidavit relates some of the details of Adams’ arrest, but not all. Wilmington police officer Andrea Janvier testified at the hearing. The “Tamel” described in the affidavit is not Adams. It was a Sean McKenzie. The surveillance, as it turned out, was of Adams, not McKenzie. On November 14, 2007, the police observed Adams in a car with Maryland tags. The car pulled out onto a public street from a parking space on that street without first signaling. The car was stopped. A female was driving. Adams was a passenger.

Another officer went up to Adams. He felt that a movement or movements Adams made was an attempt to flee. Adams had opened the passenger door and put an arm out. The other officer from outside the car saw on the floorboard inside the car a bag with a tannish chunky substance in it and another small bag. Field tests, as the affidavit describes, was positive for cocaine and marijuana, respectively. These items were in plain view from the car’s exterior; a fact which Adams does not dispute.

From there Detectives Andrea Janvier and Mitchell Rentz went to Justice of the Peace Court # 20 to obtain a search warrant for 1903 W. 8th Street (near Lincoln Street in Wilmington). Other officers went to that address. Officer Janvier called those officers at 9:59 p.m. to tell them the warrant had been issued. They went inside, Officer Todd Riley testified— who was one of those at the scene-with the keys seized from Adams at the traffic stop. Riley said none of these officers searched the residence; they only secured it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 A.3d 1162, 2008 Del. Super. LEXIS 532, 2008 WL 8226361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-adams-delsuperct-2008.