State v. Paiva

967 A.2d 1103, 2009 WL 901678
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 3, 2009
Docket2007-33-C.A.
StatusPublished

This text of 967 A.2d 1103 (State v. Paiva) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Paiva, 967 A.2d 1103, 2009 WL 901678 (R.I. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

Chief Justice WILLIAMS (ret.),

for the Court.

The defendant, Dora M. Paiva (defendant), was convicted of one count of possession of cocaine after she stipulated to the evidence on record and waived her right to a jury trial. She appeals the hearing justice’s decision to deny her suppression motion, arguing that the arresting officer’s initial investigatory stop was devoid of reasonable suspicion.

I

Facts and Travel

At approximately 9:20 p.m. on July 17, 2005, Sergeant Julio Medeiros, an eighteen-year veteran of the Smithfield Police Department, noticed headlights on Lydia Ann Road heading toward the intersection at Douglas Pike, in Smithfield, Rhode Island. From Douglas Pike, Lydia Ann Road starts off as a blacktop road, abutted by a few businesses, but progresses into the forest and becomes a bumpy, dirt-and-gravel road. Smithfield police officers regularly patrol the wooded portion of Lydia Ann Road because, over the course of Sergeant Medeiros’s career, it had become a site of “kids partying, fireworks, and drugs,” as well as a dumping ground for cars, an old gun range, and the scene of two homicides.

*1104 At the time Sergeant Medeiros noticed the headlights on Lydia Ann Road he had not been dispatched for any complaint, nor was he acting on any tip. When he saw a vehicle traveling slowly up the road, however, he became suspicious. He therefore pulled into the “last little business on the right” of Lydia Ann Road, waiting for the vehicle to pass by. Unaware of who was in the vehicle or what they were doing, and noticing no traffic infractions, Sergeant Medeiros turned on his overhead lights and pulled the driver over.

When the officer approached the vehicle he observed the driver, a male, and defendant, a female passenger. The two were “disheveled”: his pants zipper undone; her blouse unbuttoned. Sergeant Medei-ros immediately called for backup, asked the parties for identification, and ran a license and warrant check on both. He discovered that defendant had an outstanding warrant for her arrest for failure to appear, loitering, and prostitution. The officer placed defendant under arrest, but allowed the driver to proceed on his way.

At the police station, defendant indicated that she wanted a cigarette from her purse, just before the police were to inventory her belongings. While he was retrieving a cigarette from her purse, Sergeant Medeiros noticed what appeared to be a small rock of crack cocaine, and upon further investigation, noticed a few more pieces in her purse. Sergeant Medeiros performed a field test, which determined the substance to be, indeed, crack cocaine.

The defendant thereafter was charged with one count of possession of cocaine in violation of G.L. 1956 § 21-28-4.01(c)(2)(i). She filed a motion to suppress the cocaine evidence, arguing that Sergeant Medei-ros’s initial stop of the vehicle was done without reasonable suspicion, and therefore violated her constitutional rights. A hearing on the issue was held on July 25, 2006.

The only witness to testify at the suppression hearing was Sergeant Medeiros. The state entered into evidence the crack cocaine rocks found in defendant’s purse, as well as a toxicology report generated from the Rhode Island Department of Health. The defendant stipulated that the substance was, in fact, cocaine. The hearing justice denied defendant’s motion to suppress and set the matter down for trial later the same day.

In the afternoon session, after a conference with the hearing justice, defendant agreed to waive her right to a jury trial and stipulate that the record evidence presented at the suppression hearing would be the only evidence that the hearing (now trial) justice need consider in rendering his decision. Furthermore, with the understanding that the state would seek a probationary sentence, defendant waived her right to a presentence report. The trial justice thereafter found defendant guilty; she was sentenced to three years’ probation.

II

Analysis

On appeal, defendant argues that the trial justice erroneously denied her motion to suppress, alleging that the arresting officer lacked the requisite reasonable suspicion needed to make the initial stop of the vehicle. We must first, however, determine whether defendant properly preserved this issue for appeal.

A well-established rule in this jurisdiction precludes a conditional plea of guilty subject to an appeal of pretrial motions. See State v. Beechum, 933 A.2d 687, 690 (R.I.2007); State v. Dustin, 874 A.2d 244, 246 (R.I.2005); State v. Keohane, 814 A.2d 327, 329 (R.I.2003); State v. Soares, *1105 633 A.2d 1356, 1356 (R.I.1993) (mem.). We previously have noted that although Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure provides a defendant with such a possibility, its Rhode Island counterpart is silent on the issue. Keohane, 814 A.2d at 329; Soares, 633 A.2d at 1356. 1 We again decline to recognize such an option.

Moreover, we recently held that we will not allow a defendant to circumvent our rule against conditional pleas subject to an appeal of pretrial motions and “escape the consequences of admitting guilt or pleading no contest — by forcing the court to find him guilty and impose a sentence in the absence of an adversarial proceeding and without the benefit of a presentence report.” Dustin, 874 A.2d at 247; see also Beechum, 933 A.2d at 690. Although we proceeded to the merits in Dustin — in which the defendant also agreed to a jury-waived, stipulated-evidence trial — we noted that we did so with express reservation. Dustin, 874 A.2d at 246. Today we make certain that our rule is firm: we will not sanction any agreement or procedure designed to circumvent our rule against conditional pleas. See Beechum, 933 A.2d at 690.

Here, there is a strong indication on the record before us that the disposition below was nothing more than a conditional plea packaged as a jury-waived trial. For instance, the trial justice stated that “it is often said that a stipulated fact trial, if you want to call them that, are nothing more than a slow guilty plea. To the extent that anybody suggests that is all this is, I hope they wouldn’t * * Yet, he continued by informing defendant of possible consequences to her immigration status as a result of her case’s disposition — an admonition required by statute when a defendant agrees to enter a plea of guilty or nolo contendere. G.L. 1956 § 12-12-22.

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Related

State v. Dustin
874 A.2d 244 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2005)
State v. Soares
633 A.2d 1356 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1993)
State v. Beechum
933 A.2d 687 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2007)
State v. Keohane
814 A.2d 327 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
967 A.2d 1103, 2009 WL 901678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-paiva-ri-2009.