State v. Darden, Unpublished Decision (11-24-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 24, 1999
DocketC.A. Case No. 17395. T.C. Case No. 97 CR 1523.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Darden, Unpublished Decision (11-24-1999) (State v. Darden, Unpublished Decision (11-24-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Darden, Unpublished Decision (11-24-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION
DaJuan Darden1 appeals from a judgment of the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas which found him guilty of possession of crack cocaine in violation of R.C. 2925.11(A).

The evidence presented at the hearing on the motion to suppress established two different versions of the events in question. The state presented the following version of events.

On June 3, 1997, Officers Joseph Wiesman and George Hughes, members of the Strike Force Unit of the Dayton Police Department, were on routine patrol. As members of the Strike Force, their assignment was to strictly enforce traffic laws and to stop any vehicle that committed a traffic violation. Around 11:30 p.m., they were traveling southbound on Dennison Avenue behind a gray Chevrolet Suburban. After observing the driver of the Suburban turn westbound onto Germantown Street without using a turn signal, the officers activated their lights in an attempt to initiate a traffic stop of the vehicle.

The driver of the Suburban did not immediately pull to the curb, but instead proceeded for six to seven blocks. While the officers were behind the Suburban, they could see through the rear window that there were four people in the vehicle. Further, they could see the back seat passenger on the driver's side, later identified as Darden, moving around in the vehicle. Officer Wiesman testified that Darden "raised up high in the seat" and "went all the way over * * * towards the [other] back seat passenger of the car." Officer Hughes testified that Darden was "all over [the] back seat" and was "reaching down below him[self]." As soon as Darden stopped moving, the driver of the Suburban pulled the vehicle to the curb.

Immediately after the vehicle pulled to the curb, the driver and front passenger "jumped out of their vehicle, began shouting obscenities back toward [the officers]," and started walking toward the police cruiser. The officers ordered the two individuals to stop, made contact with them, and placed them into the back seat of the cruiser. During this time, Darden and the other rear passenger remained in the vehicle.

The officers decided to approach Darden because his movements in the back seat and the actions of the driver and front passenger had made them suspect that he was concealing a weapon. When they asked Darden to step out the vehicle, he was very nervous and his hands were shaking. Officer Wiesman conducted a pat down of Darden, who tightened up and became even more nervous as Officer Wiesman reached his buttocks area. During the pat down, Officer Wiesman felt a "large rock substance in the seat of [Darden's] pants that [he] recognized to [be] crack cocaine."

Darden was asked to return to the Suburban until additional police crews arrived. Officer Stephen Bergman received the call for assistance and arrived on the scene. Officer Wiesman asked Officer Bergman to place Darden in his cruiser, and Officer Bergman conducted a pat down of Darden before allowing him to enter the cruiser. Officer Bergman testified that, during the pat down, he "[had felt] a bulge, [a] very rock hard, abnormal bulge in [Darden's] buttocks area" and that he had immediately suspected it to be crack cocaine. The officers then asked Darden to remove the contraband, but he stated that he did not know what they were talking about. Sergeant Ellis Willis was then called to authorize a strip search of Darden.

Darden was transported to the Third District Dayton Police Headquarters. He was taken into a men's restroom with Officers Wiesman, Hughes, Bergman, and Sergeant Willis.

While Officer Hughes secured the door so no one could enter the room, Officer Wiesman donned rubber gloves and pulled down Darden's pants and underwear. Although the actual crack cocaine was concealed between Darden's buttocks, part of the baggie containing the crack cocaine was immediately apparent. Officer Wiesman removed the baggie without having to separate Darden's buttocks. Darden was then arrested for possession of crack cocaine.

The defense's version of the events differed from the state's version in several key respects. The following people testified on Darden's behalf: Wade Jackson, the driver of the Suburban; Michael Bannister, the front seat passenger of the Suburban and a relative of Jackson; James Thompson, a relative of Bannister and Jackson and witness to the latter part of the traffic stop; and Darden himself.

According to the occupants in the vehicle, Jackson had used his turn signal before turning onto Germantown Street. He had then proceeded down Germantown Street, eventually turning onto Gard Street, where he pulled to the curb in front of Bannister's house. The occupants of the vehicle claimed that there had been large speaker boxes in the back of the Suburban which would have blocked all of the rear window except the top one or two inches.

Bannister and Jackson stated that, as they had exited the Suburban and walked toward Bannister's house, they saw, for the first time, a police cruiser with its lights activated. The cruiser pulled up behind them and Jackson and Bannister asked the officers, without yelling obscenities, "what [is] the problem?"

According to Darden, he was patted down four different times during the traffic stop. Thompson testified that, after being patted down the second time, and while in the back of Officer Bergman's police cruiser, Darden had asked for a lawyer, but that Bergman had acted as if he did not hear Darden's request. Darden stated that he had asked for an attorney "several different times" while at the Third District Headquarters before the strip search occurred, but that his request was ignored. Darden claimed that during the strip search, Wiesman "forcibly put his hands between [Darden's buttocks]."

Darden pled not guilty and filed a motion to suppress arguing, inter alia, that the officers had not possessed reasonable articulable suspicion to make the traffic stop or to pat him down, and that the strip search had been conducted without a warrant in violation of the Fourth Amendment and R.C. 2933.32. A suppression hearing was held on December 5, 1997, January 8, 1998, and January 15, 1998. On April 9, 1998, the trial court overruled the motion to suppress. Darden changed his plea to no contest and was convicted of possession of cocaine in violation of R.C. 2925.11(A) on August 10, 1998. The trial court sentenced him to two years in jail and suspended his driver's license. Darden now appeals the denial of his motion to suppress.

Darden advances three assignments of error.

I. THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED PREJUDICIAL ERROR IN NOT SUPPRESSING EVIDENCE OBTAINED BY OFFICER WIESMAN WHEN HE DID NOT STATE A REASONABLE ARTICULABLE SUSPICION TO BELIEVE THAT MR. DARDEN HAD A WEAPON.

Darden argues that Officers Wiesman and Hughes did not have reasonable articulable suspicion to justify searching him for a weapon. Specifically, he argues that the movements the officers allegedly had seen him make in the back seat were insufficient to give them a reasonable articulable suspicion that he was armed and dangerous.

"When considering a motion to suppress, the trial court assumes the role of the trier of fact and is therefore in the best position to resolve factual questions and evaluate the credibility of the witnesses." State v. Clary (Sept. 30, 1996), Lawrence App. No. 96CA7, unreported, at *2, citing State v. Mills (1992),62 Ohio St.3d 357, 366,

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Darden, Unpublished Decision (11-24-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-darden-unpublished-decision-11-24-1999-ohioctapp-1999.