State v. Rakaf, 2008-P-0057 (12-31-2008)

2008 Ohio 6996
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 2008
DocketNo. 2008-P-0057.
StatusPublished

This text of 2008 Ohio 6996 (State v. Rakaf, 2008-P-0057 (12-31-2008)) 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. Rakaf, 2008-P-0057 (12-31-2008), 2008 Ohio 6996 (Ohio Ct. App. 2008).

Opinions

OPINION
{¶ 1} Appellant, Samie Saleh Al Rakaf, appeals from the judgment of the Portage County Municipal Court, Kent Division, which denied his motion to suppress, finding that the arresting officers had a reasonable articulable suspicion to stop his vehicle and investigate further based on an incident that occurred earlier in the night by another officer. *Page 2

{¶ 2} We find this appeal to have merit as we find that the factual findings of the trial court are not supported by competent, credible evidence upon which one could conclude that the arresting officers had a reasonable articulable suspicion to believe a crime had been committed when they stopped Mr. Rakaf.

{¶ 3} Thus, we find that the trial court erred as its finding that a reasonable suspicion relied heavily on a first stop that occurred earlier in the night. The shaky foundation for this suspicion was a vague description of a vehicle, a brief encounter with a white male in his twenties who was seated in the driver's seat of the vehicle, and inference upon inference that an actual crime had even occurred, the information of which, was relayed to another officer. Based upon that information the officers could have arbitrarily stopped half of the downtown population of Kent that night.

{¶ 4} We reverse, determining that a mere hunch about a suspect that is vaguely relayed to other officers about a crime that might have occurred, was not enough to constitute a reasonable suspicion to stop Mr. Rakaf s vehicle in this case.

{¶ 5} Substantive and Procedural History

{¶ 6} The sole issue before the court at the suppression hearing was whether there was a reasonable articulable suspicion for the stop itself, which occurred at approximately 2:30 a.m. on a Thursday night in downtown Kent, in the vicinity of a popular bar, the Barn.

{¶ 7} Earlier in the evening around midnight, Officer Schlosser, and his partner, Officer Fuller, were on foot patrol of the downtown area, which was crowded and busy, with cars parked behind a hardware store across the street, as well as along the street in an angled fashion. Officer Schlosser testified that his partner saw a passenger in a *Page 3 car parked across the street who he believed was drinking out of a bottle of alcohol. Officer Schlosser did not remember the make or model of the vehicle.

{¶ 8} The officers approached the car, and while Officer Fuller was on the passenger side, asking the passenger for his identification, the passenger attempted to get out of the car. At that time, Officer Schlosser was on the driver's side of the vehicle. He observed a "young male sitting there, and I really hadn't made contact with him because this guy [male in passenger seat] was arguing with Officer Fuller and they're arguing back and forth. The guy pushes Officer Fuller and takes off running." Officer Schlosser then told the "person that I made `contact' with, the driver behind the wheel of the car, to just sit still * * *," so he could join the chase.

{¶ 9} Officer Schlosser described his "contact" with the driver as lasting for no more than two minutes, and explained that he never got the driver's identification. He did observe that the vehicle was not being operated and that there were no keys in the ignition. When he ran a LEADS check on the vehicle, he did not pull up a photo of the owner.

{¶ 10} When Officer Schlosser came back from assisting Officer Fuller in apprehending the passenger, who was indeed drunk and underage, the male was gone. The passenger provided no identifying information as to his missing companion.

{¶ 11} Officer Schlosser then advised Officer Kanieski and Jacobs to "keep an eye out on this car because even though I didn't really have contact with the person behind the wheel of the car it appeared to me that he definitely was under the age of twenty-one and probably under the influence of alcohol and that if they saw the car moving to stop it so I could make contact and see if that would be the same person." *Page 4

{¶ 12} Officer Schlosser could not remember if he met with the two other officers who later arrested Mr. Rakaf, or if he dispatched the information over the police radio. He could not give any physical description during his testimony at the hearing besides "[j]ust a young male. This kid probably weighed 115 pounds, dark hair."

{¶ 13} The following colloquy occurred during Officer Schlosser's crossexamination describing his relay of the information from the initial incident to the other officers:

{¶ 14} "Defense: * * * You didn't tell them to stop the vehicle?

{¶ 15} "Officer Schlosser: I only said if they saw it moving to stop it. * * *

{¶ 16} "Defense: Okay, so no discussion over the actual suspect himself, just the vehicle?

{¶ 17} "Officer Schlosser: Um, I told them there was a white male and that they took running after I told them to stay where it was at.

{¶ 18} "* * * *.

{¶ 19} "Defense: So they stopped the vehicle, so to speak, on their own based on your conversation with them earlier?

{¶ 20} "Officer Schlosser: That would be one of the reasons why they stopped him that I know of."

{¶ 21} Officer Kanieski, who was in training at the time and patrolling with Officer Jacobs, testified that he received the information as to the missing male and vehicle over radio dispatch. Dispatch relayed a description of the car and where it was located. While he was driving up East Erie Street, where the vehicle was parked, Officer Jacobs observed a beige Chevy Impala getting ready to back out of a parking spot that *Page 5 seemingly matched the description of the vehicle. Officer Kanieski opined that the vehicle was dangerously close to hitting another vehicle as the parking spots on East Main Street were on an angle and "pretty tight."

{¶ 22} The officers blocked the suspect vehicle by parking their patrol vehicle behind Mr. Rakaf's car, and waited until Officer Schlosser arrived on the scene so that he could identify the vehicle and the driver. Upon his approach to the vehicle, Officer Schlosser immediately recognized that the driver was "definitely not" the male he was looking for, but he then approached the vehicle and asked Mr. Rakaf several questions, eventually asking him to step out of the vehicle. Mr. Rakaf was placed in Officer Kanieski's patrol car, and Officer Schlosser told him to run some field sobriety tests because he detected alcohol on Mr. Rakaf's breath and because his speech was "slurry."

{¶ 23} This was Officer Kanieski's first OVI arrest. He testified that he did not recall getting a license plate number from the dispatch. He simply blocked the vehicle because it was a beige Chevy Impala, which seemed to match the vague description given of the suspect car. He and Officer Jacobs never conducted an independent traffic stop of Mr. Rakaf because he "did not observe any other reason to stop him" and that he was just acting on Officer Schlosser's information.

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Bluebook (online)
2008 Ohio 6996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rakaf-2008-p-0057-12-31-2008-ohioctapp-2008.