T.W. v. United States

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 2023
Docket19-CF-0849
StatusPublished

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T.W. v. United States, (D.C. 2023).

Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 19-CF-0849

T.W., ∗ APPELLANT,

V.

UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.

Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (2018-CF2-003695)

(Hon. Todd E. Edelman, Trial Judge)

(Argued April 6, 2022 Decided April 20, 2023)

KC Bridges, Public Defender Service, with whom Samia Fam and Alice Wang, Public Defender Service, were on the brief, for appellant.

David P. Saybolt, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Channing D. Phillips, Acting United States Attorney at the time, Chrisellen R. Kolb, John P. Mannarino, and Jamie Carter, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on the brief, for appellee.

Before EASTERLY and DEAHL, Associate Judges, and THOMPSON, Senior Judge.

∗ Appellant has moved that we refer to him by his initials only given that he was sentenced under the Youth Rehabilitation Act and is eligible to have his arrest records expunged. The United States indicated that it opposes the motion, but did not file a written opposition or otherwise offer any reasons for its position. The division has granted appellant’s motion. 2

Opinion of the court by Associate Judge DEAHL.

Dissenting opinion by Senior Judge THOMPSON at page 34.

DEAHL, Associate Judge: T.W. appeals his convictions for carrying a pistol

without a license and other gun-related charges, stemming from police officers

finding a loaded firearm on him after T.W. consented to a pat-down search. T.W.

argues that the trial court should have granted his motion to suppress that firearm

because it was the fruit of an unlawful seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment.

The government concedes that, if officers did in fact seize T.W. before he consented

to a pat-down search, the seizure was unlawful, the motion to suppress should have

been granted, and we must reverse T.W.’s convictions. It contends only that T.W.

was not in fact seized when he consented to a search.

We agree with T.W. that he was unlawfully seized in violation of the Fourth

Amendment before he consented to the search, and therefore reverse his convictions.

I.

The relevant facts are largely undisputed and were captured by body-worn

camera footage submitted at the suppression hearing. Officers Dmitry Gendelman

and Krishaon Ewing of the Metropolitan Police Department were patrolling in the 3

Woodland neighborhood of Southeast, D.C., at around 5:30 p.m. one March evening.

Both officers were part of an MPD “crime suppression team,” which proactively

patrols high-crime areas for guns, drugs, and other illegal activity. The officers were

armed and in full police uniform, with Gendelman wearing a bulletproof vest “with

big white letters that say ‘Police’ . . . on the front.” They rode as passengers in a

marked police vehicle, and another marked police vehicle followed closely behind.

As they approached an apartment building at 2348 Ainger Place SE,

Gendelman saw somebody, later identified as T.W., “pop out” of a side alley

connecting the apartment building’s parking lot to the street. T.W. seemed to notice

the approaching police vehicles before he walked back into the alley toward the

apartment building’s nearby entrance. Gendelman found T.W.’s conduct suspicious,

and the vehicle’s driver sped up and then turned into the alley after T.W. As the

officers pulled up, T.W. was in front of the steps leading to the apartment building’s

entrance, set back several feet from the alley.

The first police vehicle went just past T.W. and came to a stop, with T.W.

several feet from the car’s rear passenger’s side. Gendelman and Ewing, whose hand

was on the car door’s handle as the car pulled up, quickly exited the car the moment

it stopped. Ewing exited from the front passenger’s seat and approached T.W. from 4

his right, while Gendelman exited the rear driver’s side door and walked around the

back of the vehicle, so that he approached T.W. from his left side. At that same time,

a second police vehicle pulled into the alley, and at least two officers began exiting

that vehicle, too, as Gendelman and Ewing started questioning T.W.

T.W. raised his hands in the air upon seeing the two officers exit the front

vehicle. Ewing asked T.W. whether he had a gun on him, and T.W. responded no.

Ewing and Gendelman continued approaching T.W. from each side, and Ewing

asked “You sure?” to which T.W. replied, “Yeah, I’m positive.” Gendelman then

asked, “I can pat you down just to make sure?” 1 T.W. said “Yeah,” and Gendelman

responded, “My man,” as he began to pat T.W. down. Gendelman found a gun in

T.W.’s waistband. The encounter lasted about ten seconds from when the first

officers exited their vehicle to when the pat-down search began, and it took just

about another five seconds for the officers to find the gun on T.W. He was charged

1 The trial court recounted this as “Can I pat you down just to make sure,” and the parties do likewise in their briefs. The body-worn camera footage is clear, however, that this statement, while inflected as a question, was phrased as a declaration—“I can pat you down just to make sure?” While that is a subtle discrepancy, we rely on the statement as clearly reflected in the video footage. See Henderson v. United States, 276 A.3d 484, 489 (D.C. 2022) (applying clear error standard “to the trial court’s factual determinations” regarding its “evaluation of the body-worn camera footage”). 5

with carrying a pistol without a license, possession of an unregistered firearm,

unlawful possession of ammunition, and possession of a large-capacity ammunition-

feeding device. 2

Before trial, T.W. moved to suppress the gun, its magazine, and its

ammunition. He argued that he was unlawfully seized in violation of the Fourth

Amendment when he consented to a pat-down search, and that his consent was the

fruit of the illegal seizure. During a hearing on his motion to suppress, T.W. testified

that he was “scared and nervous,” never having been arrested before, and did not

think he could say “no” to Gendelman’s pat-down request. Asked why not, T.W.

responded, “Because of how they came up on me. I felt like I couldn’t walk away.”

T.W. further highlighted his youth (21 years old at the time), his “complete lack of

experience” with police, “and the fact that he was confronted by multiple officers”

who “essentially jumped out on [him] and immediately began asking accusatory

questions.”

2 D.C. Code §§ 22-4504(a) (carrying pistol without license), 7-2502.01(a) (possession of unregistered firearm), 7-2506.01(a)(3) (unlawful possession of ammunition), 7-2506.01(b) (possession of large-capacity ammunition-feeding device). T.W.’s gun had an extended magazine with 28 rounds of ammunition, the capacity to hold two additional rounds, plus the gun itself had one round in the chamber. 6

The trial court denied the suppression motion after concluding that T.W. was

not seized before consenting to a search. The court stressed that the officers’ tone

when they engaged T.W. was “conversational,” and that the officers were not

positioned “such that [T.W.] could not have physically walked away down the street

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