State v. McGowan

2011 Ohio 5663
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 3, 2011
Docket96232
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2011 Ohio 5663 (State v. McGowan) 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. McGowan, 2011 Ohio 5663 (Ohio Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. McGowan, 2011-Ohio-5663.]

Court of Appeals of Ohio EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION No. 96232

STATE OF OHIO

PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT

vs.

ANDRE McGOWAN DEFENDANT-APPELLEE

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED

Criminal Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Case No. CR-541216

BEFORE: Stewart, J., Blackmon, P.J., and Cooney, J.

RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: November 3, 2011 ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT

William D. Mason Cuyahoga County Prosecutor

By: Marcus A. Henry Assistant County Prosecutor The Justice Center 1200 Ontario Street, 8th Floor Cleveland, OH 44113

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE

Paul A. Daher 700 West St. Clair Avenue, Suite 214 Cleveland, OH 44113

MELODY J. STEWART, J.:

{¶ 1} The state of Ohio appeals from a ruling that suppressed marijuana seized

from defendant-appellee, Andre McGowan. Police gave chase to two men, one whom

they later claimed was McGowan, after they unexplainedly fled upon seeing the officers.

They located him in an apartment building and found the marijuana during a pat-down

they conducted when he appeared to reach into his pocket. The court was unpersuaded

that the police accurately identified McGowan as the person who fled into the apartment.

The state’s sole assignment of error contests this ruling.

I {¶ 2} Two police officers testified at the suppression hearing. They were

partners in a patrol car and received an order to investigate a complaint of drug activity in

front of an apartment building. When they arrived at the site of the complaint, they saw a

group of people gathered in front of the building. One of the officers testified that two

men, upon seeing the police car, “ran inside the building”; the other officer testified that

they “quickly walked in” the building. The officers identified themselves as police

officers and told both men to stop, but were ignored. The apartment building was a

three-story building with 19 apartments. It had a center staircase with windows that

allowed the officers to watch the two men climb the stairs and enter a second-floor

apartment.

{¶ 3} The building had a locked front entrance that prevented the officers from

following the men. After a “few moments,” a male exited the same apartment that the

two men entered and asked the officers for an explanation. The male identified himself

as the tenant of the apartment. When the officers asked the tenant to identify the two

men who ran into the apartment, the tenant told them that they were “some people he

knew, they weren’t really friends, but they were acquaintances, and he was surprised to

see them.” The officers asked if they could speak to the men, so the tenant took them

inside. By this time, two more police officers had arrived as backup.

{¶ 4} The police entered the apartment and saw McGowan and another male

sitting on the couch. McGowan “seemed very nervous.” They asked McGowan why he

ran, at which point McGowan started reaching into his pocket. Concerned that he might be reaching for a weapon, the police ordered McGowan to put his hands on his head and

then conducted a pat-down for their own safety. During the pat-down, an officer felt

“numerous small hard lumps”that he knew from experience were drugs. He “visually

inspected” the pocket by pulling it open to ensure that there were no needles or razor

blades that could harm him. He then removed 14 individually-wrapped bags of

marijuana from McGowan’s pocket.

{¶ 5} The tenant testified for McGowan and said that he had invited McGowan to

visit. They were talking and drinking beer when his girlfriend came over to visit. The

tenant went downstairs to let her in and saw the police. The police told him to hold the

door and asked, “who ran in through [tenant’s] apartment?” The tenant replied, “[n]o

one.” He said that the police grabbed him by the arm and walked him up the stairs,

telling him “if [he doesn’t] open the door, they’ll take me to jail.” They entered the

apartment and the police ordered the tenant to restrain his dog. After he secured the dog,

he learned from the police that they found drugs on McGowan. The tenant testified that

McGowan and the other male had been in his apartment the entire time and that they did

not leave the apartment and then run back inside.

{¶ 6} Ruling from the bench, the court stated that it was “troubled that the police

had the right person.” It wondered how the police were able to claim that they saw

McGowan run into the building, climb a flight of stairs, and enter the apartment in the

daylight: {¶ 7} “So you just ask yourself: how exactly in essentially daylight, 7 o’clock in

August, do you look inside a building? *** And then you have to accept that in this

19-suite apartment building the person who just this second is opening the door to the

building is the person who belongs to that door that the police officers saw the people run

into. What luck is that?

{¶ 8} “So it’s just very hard to believe that the police officers are doing anything

other than going in the building to look for the 2 fleeing people, happening upon [the

tenant] and then they have [the tenant] take them upstairs to his place, and lo and behold

we have some people.

{¶ 9} “Now I’m not sure that I believed everything [the tenant] had to say. But

the plane [sic] fact of the matter is that it just hasn’t been explained to me how the police

developed reasonable suspicion to stop this particular human being or whether they were

just looking, you know, to see if they could happen upon — this is a 19-suite apartment

building.

{¶ 10} “***

{¶ 11} “I’m always troubled when we have people running away in this set of

circumstances. But the biggest deficiency here is whether there is sufficient evidence to

get me to believe that the police really found the person who ran into that building. So

that’s what I hang my hat on.”

II {¶ 12} An exception to the warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment to the

United States Constitution exists for investigatory stops. Investigatory stops are brief

seizures by police officers and are lawful when justified by a “reasonable suspicion” that

criminal activity has or is about to occur. Terry v. Ohio (1968), 392 U.S. 1, 20-21, 88

S.Ct. 1868, 20 L.Ed.2d 889. A “reasonable suspicion” exists when an officer can “point

to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those

facts, reasonably warrant th[e] intrusion.” Id. at 21. To determine whether a reasonable

suspicion exists at the time of the encounter, the courts use a “totality of the

circumstances” test. United States v. Arvizu (2002), 534 U.S. 266, 275-277, 122 S.Ct.

744, 151 L.Ed.2d 740. When police reasonably suspect that a person is engaged in

criminal activity, police may stop and question that person for a limited period of time.

A generalized fear of criminal activity and the presence of a suspect in a high-crime

neighborhood are factors that, standing alone, do not justify seizure. Brown v. Texas

(1979), 443 U.S. 47, 99 S.Ct. 2637, 61 L.Ed.2d 357. These factors can be used by the

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