State v. Stallings

60 A.3d 1119, 2012 WL 7760113, 2012 Del. Super. LEXIS 554
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedDecember 24, 2012
DocketCriminal Action Number IN-12-05-1255
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 60 A.3d 1119 (State v. Stallings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Stallings, 60 A.3d 1119, 2012 WL 7760113, 2012 Del. Super. LEXIS 554 (Del. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

HERLIHY, Judge.

Defendant, Vincent Stallings, has moved to suppress a statement he gave to the Wilmington Police, and a gun seized from his residence. He contends the warrant for the search of his residence was illegal, as it was based primarily upon an earlier illegal inventory search of a vehicle, and that he was detained for an unreasonable time during which he gave a statement to the police.

The Court finds that the underlying inventory was properly conducted and the search warrant is valid. Further, there was no unreasonable delay in holding Stallings which, would rule his statement inadmissible. Accordingly, his motion to suppress is DENIED.

Factual Background

The Wilmington Police had received complaints about drug dealing, indecent exposure, and loitering in a parking lot in the 800 block of W. Fifth Street. The lot is U-shaped between two apartment buildings.

Around 9:30 a.m. on April 26, 2012, Corporals Harold Bogeman and Donald Cram-er drove by the parking lot. They observed a blue Taurus in the lot with two occupants. Cpl. Cramer approached the driver, Samuel Dawson, and Cpl. Bogeman went to the passenger, Quiniqua Lloyd. Cpl. Cramer asked Dawson for his driver’s license and the vehicle registration. He had none and said he had borrowed the car that night from a “Vincent,” whom he also knew as “Black.” When speaking separately to the car’s occupants there was a divergence in stories over their relationship. But they agreed Dawson had driven her there to drop her off. One of the officers checked the vehicle’s registration and found it to be unregistered. He also learned Dawson’s license had been suspended.

The police decided the car had to be towed, and this meant an inventory had to be taken. Cpl. Bogeman looked through some items in the backseat after the two occupants had been removed. One item he found was a scale. Cpl. Bogeman then moved to the trunk where he saw a Gucci bag; it was heavy and bulged in an odd way.1 He opened the bag and found a fully loaded .45 semi-automatic gun. He also found gloves and baggies in a CD changer in the trunk. Cpl. Cramer gave Dawson his Miranda2 rights. Dawson denied knowing of the gun in the trunk. At that time, Stallings arrived. Dawson indicated to the police that he recognized Stallings as “Black.” Stallings ran up to the police saying, “That’s my ride, what are you doing with my ride?”3 Around 9:45 a.m.-9:50 a.m., the police detained or arrested Stallings. It is unclear to the Court what the police view of his status was at that point, arrested or detained.

[1122]*1122After Stallings was taken to the police headquarters, he was not then questioned. Back at police headquarters, the police further questioned Dawson. He told them that Stallings had a gun in his apartment, hidden in a couch. The police drove with Dawson to locate Stallings’ residence, as he did not know Stallings’ address. Somewhere between 11:45 a.m. and noon, the police learned that because of Stallings’ record, he was prohibited from possessing a gun.

This led to Det. Conner obtaining a search warrant around 1:80 p.m. The pertinent portions of the affidavit state:

2. Your affiant can truly state that on 26 April 2012, at approximately 1000 hours, patrol officers responded to 801 W. 5th Street at the request of the property manager to address trespassing and loitering on the property. The officers observed two subjects seated in a 2004 Ford Focus. The occupants were contacted and separated and asked their reason for being there. The white male occupant stated that he did not know who owned the vehicle just that he was given the vehicle by a black male subject known as Black and that his first name was Vincent. The vehicle was unregistered and was to be towed. An inventory search was conducted on the vehicle and a handgun was located inside the trunk of the vehicle. The occupants were then taken into custody. The white male occupant, Samuel . Dawson, stated that it was not his gun and that Black gave him the vehicle.
3. Your affiant can truly state that the officers were then approached by a black male who stated “what are you doing with my car”. The white male occupant of the Ford Focus stated that was Black and he is the one that gave me the car. The officers then took Vincent Stallings (4/19/91) into custody. The 2004 Ford Focus bearing DE registration 111928 which was driven up to the officers by Stallings was registered to a Lori Eldreth 1/11/98.
4. Your affiant can truly state that this writer interviewed Samuel Dawson 10/27/76, at central. He had advised the patrol officers that Vincent Stall-ings had another handgun inside of his apartment on Lancaster Avenue. This writer assisted by patrol officers transported Dawson to 8 Court Drive and Dawson advised that Stallings lived on the 3rd floor left apartment with his girlfriend named Lori. This writer then contacted the owner of that property and he advised that the occupant was Lori Eldreth and that was the only apartment(E) occupied on the third floor. This writer showed a photo of Lori Eldreth 1/11/93, to Dawson and he confirmed that was Vincent Stallings girlfriend. Dawson also advised that the handgun was in the couch in that apartment and that he saw it there yesterday.
5. Your affiant can truly state that Vincent Stallings was convicted of [a] felony on 1/14/2010, by the Superior Court State of Delaware. It should also be noted that Stallings has a door key that is a match for the 8 Court Drive, Wilmington, DE key supplied by the landlord.4

The search started at 2:00 p.m. and ended at 2:45 p.m. Once back at police headquarters, the police questioned Stallings starting around 3:10 p.m.-3:15 p.m. After [1123]*1123he was given his Miranda rights, he waived them and provided a statement to the police.

Parties’ Contentions

Stallings seeks suppression of the gun and other items seized from his residence and the statement he made to the police. He claims that the search warrant was illegal, presumably based on the underlying inventory search of his car. Further, since he was detained for over six hours, that was an illegal detention — over two hours — his statement and the gun seized in his residence are the “fruits of the poisonous tree.”5

The State contends the inventory search of the car was legal and lawfully led to the discovery of the evidence in it. It asserts the police had reasonable grounds to arrest Stallings at the scene and again once the gun was found in his house. In a supplemental post-hearing filing, the State has indicated that Stallings is charged as a person prohibited only for the weapon found in his residence not the gun found in the car. The State says Dawson has been indicted in connection with the weapon found in the Gucci bag in the trunk and the paraphernalia found in the ear.

That clarification, the State contends, means the police search of the bag in the trunk is irrelevant to two of the three grounds Stallings raises, namely the propriety of the inventory search and the validity of the search warrant. The Court, therefore, need only address the detention issue.

Discussion

The Court disagrees with the State’s latest position for several reasons.

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Related

State v. Dewitt
Superior Court of Delaware, 2017

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 A.3d 1119, 2012 WL 7760113, 2012 Del. Super. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stallings-delsuperct-2012.