State v. Lovin

454 S.E.2d 229, 339 N.C. 695, 1995 N.C. LEXIS 101
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 3, 1995
Docket192A92
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 454 S.E.2d 229 (State v. Lovin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Lovin, 454 S.E.2d 229, 339 N.C. 695, 1995 N.C. LEXIS 101 (N.C. 1995).

Opinion

WEBB, Justice.

The defendant’s first assignment of error deals with a motion by the defendant to suppress all evidence and items obtained by a search of the defendant at the Asheville Airport, all evidence obtained from the defendant as a result of his arrest, and all oral and written statements of the defendant made after he was taken into custody. The court held a hearing on this motion prior to the commencement of the trial.

The evidence at the suppression hearing showed that after the defendant had killed the victim, he took the victim’s watch and his wallet. He also took the victim’s Porsche automobile. The defendant went to a shopping mall and had a hair weave procedure performed, which thickened and lengthened his hair. This procedure cost $340.72, and the defendant put this charge on the victim’s credit card. The defendant then called the airport and made a reservation in the name of the victim to fly to Kansas. The defendant put the cost of the ticket on the credit card.

*702 The evidence showed further that in the afternoon the victim’s supervisor went to the victim’s condominium and entered it with the help of a locksmith. The supervisor discovered the victim’s body and called the Sheriff’s Department. A bulletin was broadcast on the radio of the Sheriff’s Department notifying listeners to be on the lookout for the victim’s Porsche automobile. An administrative assistant for the Blue Ridge Parkway heard the broadcast. While driving home some time after 4:00 p.m., she saw a Porsche automobile which matched the description of the victim’s car. She followed the automobile until it stopped at a stoplight. She stopped behind the Porsche and observed that it was being operated by a male with a “lot of hair,” a gold watch, and large frame glasses. She followed the Porsche until it turned onto Airport Road. She then went to her home, called the Sheriff’s Department, and reported what she had seen.

Several law enforcement officers went to the airport and found the Porsche in the long term parking lot. The hood was still warm. The officers went into the airport terminal and checked the ticket counters. They found that a reservation had been made for a flight to Kansas in the name of the victim. A ticket agent pointed the defendant out to the officers as a man who had been acting nervously at her counter. She told the officers that the defendant was acting suspiciously at “our ticket counter.” She described the “suspicious guy” as having “long hair, brown hair, wearing a gold watch.”

The officers approached the defendant at approximately 5:30 p.m. The officers asked the defendant for some identification and he produced his own driver’s license. The defendant told the officers he had come to the airport in a Yellow Bird Cab. The officers knew that the airport was served by the Yellow Cab Company and the Red Bird Cab Company, but there was not a company named Yellow Bird Cab Company. The officers then asked the defendant to go to a stairwell for more privacy, which the defendant agreed to do.

When they reached the stairwell, one of the officers asked the defendant for permission to search his bag, to which the defendant agreed. The bag contained a Rolex watch, defendant’s birth certificate, and receipts from LensCrafters in the name of the victim. One of the officers asked the defendant if he had any car keys and the defendant produced a set of keys, among which was a Porsche key. An officer took the key to the Porsche in the parking lot and determined that the key fit the Porsche. The defendant was then placed *703 under arrest. The defendant was patted down and the victim’s wallet was found in his pocket.

When the defendant was being placed in the patrol car to be taken to the Sheriff’s office, he asked, “[wjhat’s going on?” He was advised that the victim was dead and he said, “when I left there this morning, he was okay.”

When the defendant arrived at the Sheriff’s office, he was placed in a room with Mike Bustle, a detective with the Sheriff’s Department. Det. Bustle was not to interrogate the defendant but was to stay with him until Hank Whitmire, the detective in charge of the investigation, arrived. Det. Bustle explained to the defendant that he knew nothing of the case and did not want to talk to him about it. The defendant told Det. Bustle that he had done something wrong and was trying to decide what to do, and asked Det. Bustle’s advice. Det. Bustle told the defendant that when he was very young he had been taught in Sunday School that the first thing was to confess and ask for forgiveness. He nevertheless asked the defendant not to' talk to him anymore and told the defendant that only he could make the decision as to what to do.

Det. Whitmire arrived at approximately 7:15 p.m. He advised the defendant of his rights, and the defendant waived them. After he had waived his rights, the defendant asked Det. Bustle if he “should do what we talked about.” Det. Bustle said that it would be helpful. The defendant then made an inculpatory statement. The court did not make findings of fact but denied the defendant’s motion to suppress.

The defendant’s principal argument under his first assignment of error is that evidence which had been illegally gained was used against him. He says that the evidence seized at the airport was obtained as a result of an unconstitutional detention and that his statement to Det. Whitmire in the Sheriff’s office was the result of an unconstitutional arrest. The defendant argues first that he was seized by the officers at the airport without any reasonable, articulable suspicion that he had been involved in a homicide. He argues further that as a result of the unconstitutional detention, evidence was obtained which led to his arrest. He says that his statement to the officers, made while he was being unconstitutionally held, should have been excluded.

In Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 20 L. Ed. 2d 889 (1968), the United States Supreme Court recognized the right of a law enforcement officer to detain a person for investigation of a crime without probable *704 cause to arrest him if the officer can point to specific and articulable facts, which with inferences from those facts create a reasonable suspicion that the person has committed a crime. Any investigation that results must be reasonable in light of the surrounding circumstances.

In this case, when the airline employee directed the officers’ attention to the defendant the officers knew: that the victim had been murdered; that his Porsche automobile had been taken; that a person with a “lot of hair,” a gold watch and large frame glasses had been seen driving the automobile toward the airport; that the Porsche was in the airport parking lot with the hood still warm; and that a clerk who directed them to the defendant told them that he had long brown hair, was wearing a gold watch and acted suspiciously. If this was not enough evidence to show probable cause that the defendant had murdered the victim, it provided the officers with articulable facts which created a reasonable suspicion that he had committed the crime. The officers could detain the defendant to investigate the matters about which they were suspicious.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
454 S.E.2d 229, 339 N.C. 695, 1995 N.C. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lovin-nc-1995.