State v. Thorpe

754 S.E.2d 213, 232 N.C. App. 468, 2014 WL 619400, 2014 N.C. App. LEXIS 177
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 18, 2014
DocketCOA13-791
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 754 S.E.2d 213 (State v. Thorpe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals 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. Thorpe, 754 S.E.2d 213, 232 N.C. App. 468, 2014 WL 619400, 2014 N.C. App. LEXIS 177 (N.C. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

HUNTER, JR., Robert N., Judge.

Devine Thorpe (“Defendant”) appeals from the denial of his motion to suppress, arguing (1) that the conduct and duration of his detention constituted a warrantless arrest that required probable cause; (2) that statements taken at the police station after his arrest were impermissible fruits of the unlawful arrest; (3) that Defendant’s statement taken in a police car was done in violation of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966); (4) that Defendant’s statements to the arresting officer were coerced; and (5) that Defendant’s statements taken at the police station were also taken in violation of the United States Supreme Court’s ruling in Missouri v. Seibert, 542 U.S. 600 (2004).

*469 We conclude that the trial court failed to make adequate findings to permit review of its determination that Defendant was not placed under arrest when he was detained for nearly two hours. Specifically, on remand the trial court must make appropriate findings about whether Officer Mellown diligently pursued his investigation so as to justify an extended detention.

I. Facts & Procedural History

On 7 February 2011, Defendant was indicted in Durham County on one count of Felonious Breaking and/or Entering and one count of Conspiracy to Commit Felonious Breaking and Entering. On 25 April 2011, Defendant moved to suppress the oral and written statements he made to investigating officers, alleging that they were taken in violation of his Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. The State moved to dismiss Defendant’s motion. Durham Superior Court Judge Orlando Hudson held a suppression hearing on Defendant’s motion on 29 June 2011. The trial court denied Defendant’s motion to suppress orally at the hearing and filed a written order on 28 July 2011. The transcript of the hearing tended to show the following facts.

T. J. Mellown (“Officer Mellown”) is an investigator with the Durham County Sheriff’s Office, where he has worked since August 1997. Officer Mellown testified that on 10 December 2010, he was on duty as radio calls were made about the incident around 11:00 a.m. Officer Mellown said there were “various calls on the radio that there had been a subject who had been found shot” and that a residence was broken into in the southern part of Durham County. Officer Mellown also said there were conflicting radio reports of multiple subjects fleeing the scene. Officer Mellown said he heard that a number of other officers were heading to the scene, so instead he went to Duke Hospital arriving around 11:00 a.m. Officer Mellown previously worked in emergency medicine and said

I’ve seen situations like this that have happened before where people have been shot during the commission of a crime. My experience has been that, lots of times, people will drive themselves to the hospital. I thought that if one person had been shot, there was a chance that other people had been shot, and so I went to the ER to see if anybody would show up.

When Officer Mellown reached Duke Hospital, he testified that he parked his vehicle in front of the emergency department and stepped inside the hospital. Officer Mellown told the security guards why he was present and that he “was waiting to see if anyone would show up *470 from this incident.” Officer Mellown said he began “calling the emergency departments over at Durham Regional Hospitals and also at UNC Hospitals” to ask them to contact him if anyone arrived in a personally owned vehicle with a gunshot wound.

After “approximately ten minutes,” Officer Mellown testified he saw a white Dodge Charger pull in front of the emergency room. Officer Mellown said two men, Defendant and Gary Brady (“Brady”), pulled a critically injured passenger from the front passenger seat. Officer Mellown believed the man was shot and said “it looked like he was going to die in about the next hour or so.” Officer Mellown saw Defendant as one of the men pulling the passenger from the car, although he “wasn’t sure what his role was in relation to this incident at all,” but that he had a “hunch” that Defendant was involved.

Officer Mellown said he was concerned about the safety of Defendant and the public, and so he attempted to detain Defendant and the other young man as they approached the front of the hospital. Officer Mellown frisked both Defendant and Brady, although he “did not know what was going on” at that time. Officer Mellown said Defendant and Brady were “very emotionally charged up. They were upset, they were excited. When I tried to tell them that I needed to pat them down, that I needed to figure out what was going on before anything else happened, there was a lot of yelling back and forth.” Officer Mellown said Defendant and Brady “told [him] that [he] did not have the right to detain them, that [he] didn’t have the right to pat them down.” Officer Mellown said it took a few minutes to calm everyone down to a level where he could proceed. Officer Mellown then performed a pat down and found no weapons on Defendant or Brady. During the pat down, Officer Mellown noticed a gunshot wound to Brady’s arm and subsequently Brady was taken by the Duke nursing staff for treatment.

Officer Mellown said he then handcuffed Defendant, took Defendant to his police car, put Defendant in the front passenger seat, and then sat in the driver’s seat next to Defendant. Officer Mellown told Defendant “he was being detained, and I had to find out what was going on before I knew what to do.” Officer Mellown explicitly told Defendant he was not under arrest, but also said Defendant was not free to leave his vehicle.

Officer Mellown said Defendant “made no verbal threats,” but that Defendant “was edging into personal space” while Officer Mellown was frisking Brady. Officer Mellown did not provide Miranda warnings at that time to Defendant, and began asking where the man who was shot came from, Defendant’s date of birth, and other demographic questions. *471 Defendant responded to Officer Mellown’s questioning by telling him he was playing “video games with some people on the house on Rowena Avenue, and that he [received] a phone call saying that his cousin had been shot in some area behind Parkwood, and that he went there, picked up his cousin, and drove him to the hospital.” Officer Mellown said he went through this story a few times with Defendant, who at that point did not admit to anything beyond that statement. Officer Mellown’s “concem[s] about gang reprisals kind of went away after [Defendant] told me where they picked up the gentleman who had been shot at.”

After ten or fifteen minutes of questioning, Officer Mellown placed Defendant with one of the security guards at the hospital, and “left him sort of in the care of him,” while Defendant was still handcuffed. Officer Mellown then went to speak with Brady, saying that there was not a “solemn decision that [Defendant] was going to be arrested” at that time. Defendant was not placed under formal arrest until he was taken to the police station at around 1 p.m.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
754 S.E.2d 213, 232 N.C. App. 468, 2014 WL 619400, 2014 N.C. App. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-thorpe-ncctapp-2014.